tv The Five FOX News April 18, 2018 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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♪ >> jesse: i'm jesse watters with kimberly guilfoyle, juan williams, dana perino and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five." we begin with a major diplomatic breakthrough with north korea. a secret meeting just revealed to the world. cia director mike pompeo met with kim jong un over easter weekend, paving the way for a potential summit between president trump and the dictator. the president spoke about the trip and his secretary of state nominee at mar-a-lago. >> i think mike pompeo is extraordinary. number one at west point, top at
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harvard. he's a great gentleman. i think he will go down as truly a great secretary of state. he just left north korea, hedda great meeting with kim jong un, and god along with him really well, really great. he has that kind of a guy. he's really smart but he gets along with people. so i think mike will be in good shape. we'll see what happens. a lot of people are predicting other things. but i have a feeling it's going to work out very well, and i think our country really needs him. he's going to be a great leader. >> jesse: this is pretty high level, kimberly. james clapper, president obama's top intel chief, went over there. madeline albright went over there. mike pompeo goes over there on a secret mission, pretty big. how does the trump administration not get suckered into a deal like previous administrations, the bush and administrations, and make that
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same mistake. >> kimberly: mike pompeo somebody has, i am not going to speak to the nature and qualities of past administrations but as it relates to pompeo, the relationship he has with the cia, the position is in. it's a wise choice and it shows the united states is willing to engage in diplomatic lives of discourse to be able to solve complex geo particle problems. it's a positive for everybody. taking it seriously, putting focus and attention on the, being open-minded. we want to talk to them and work out something in a good way that's going to be beneficial, not just to the united states and north korea, south korea, china, but globally, the world at large. put some positivity into it. hopefully he's going to be able to make some inroads. you can't do anything unless you try. >> jesse: he is trying. hard, and he's negotiating for vision of strength, unlike previous administrations. a day now, some of the other democrats on the senate intel
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committee are not so happy with mike pompeo. they may vote against him for the white house is saying please don't undercut him during this overture like this. we have some sound of some democrats explain their position. let's listen. >> director pompeo has shown disdain for diplomacy, putting military action at a higher priority. i think he sets a poor example in terms of american values. so i will strongly oppose his nomination. >> i do expect for someone who is the nominee to be the secretary of state, when he speaks with the committee leadership, and when he was asked specific questions about north korea, to share some insights about such a visit to. >> i think the diplomat that represents this country as secretary of state, especially under this president, has to be somebody who really has a strong orientation toward diplomacy and not somebody was going to exacerbate the president's worst tendencies. >> dana: it takes a lot to get
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me worked up, but i worked up about this. how is it that blumenthal, senator from new jersey, can say, or connecticut, can say pompeo has a disdain for diplomacy? he spent his easter weekend flying to north korea to sit down and actually talk to kim jong un which i believe is diplomacy. the president also benefits from this being the beginning of his administration when this is happening. for example, madeleine albright, when she went, they only had two months left. president clinton had a choice. he could work on middle east peace or north korea. he chose to middle east peace. that deal fell apart. later tells madeleine albright, i wish i would have done the north korea deal. things happen. president of president. i feel like the democrats are picking a fight that they do not want to have. i don't think they will win it. it's not sustainable to have this argument. the other thing about senator menendez being frustrated that pompeo didn't tell them. he is saying he wasn't
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forthcoming in his testimony. well, yeah, because he had a secret meeting to go to north korea, and he is the cia director. they confirmed him a year ago. to assume that he can't be cia director, he can't be state apartment had but can run the cia in nine months is preposterous to me. i think this is a really bad example for the united states to set for the world. you don't have to like mom -- t have to like mike pompeo but let him do his job. >> greg: how can they handle this kind of achievement from somebody they despise? we are going to have to truck in thousands of therapy llamas from peru to deal with the mental breakdown that's going to happen with all of the haters who want so badly for trump to fail, even if a success could mean an incredible transformation in world safety. i mean, if you denuclearize
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north korea up, if this happens, you're going to have to make room on mount rushmore. >> jesse: juan, get the chisel out. >> greg: must be hard for cnn and msnbc because they are too busy covering a -- imagine if cnn were around when the berlin wall fell. they were would be covering a e boat reunion. that's how stupid this is. i think it was a week ago or so, we were talking about how comey said he compared trump to a mafia boss. i think we realized a mafia boss beats a massage therapist. it's not a bad thing to have someone who talks tough who reset the table and it comes down to a system that we have noticed. trump enters, he throws the table over and says everything has changed now. he takes the hardest position, and you have to walk towards him. they understand that linkage. you cannot understand ambiguous
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intellectual paralysis of analysis linkage. but you can understand that. i think that's why this is working. >> jesse: greg is saying he came in and he pulls out of tpp, puts the security deal on the table with the south koreans, slapped sanctions on the chinese, war games with our allies like japan and south korea. it looks like things are moving in the right direction. do you give the president any credit for any action he has taken? >> juan: i was waiting for you to tell me what moved in the right direction. >> jesse: this is a historic summit. >> juan: potentially. >> jesse: 60 or 70 years on the eve of a historic summit between the north and south. >> juan: it's not like the first time people have gone over there. you said right in the beginning that not only had james clapper gone but the secretary of state madeleine albright had gone. steve forget don't forget rodman. >> juan: i won't. the problem is the north koreans always say we will do something.
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we will come along. maybe they say will we will stop selling the stuff. stop selling it to the pakistanis and the people in the middle east. or think about maybe not making so much but they never say will give up our current arsenal of weapons. so the question for pompeo, and i disagree with dana pretty strongly on this. >> jesse: how dare you, juan? >> juan: pompeo, first right, go right ahead. he disagrees with diplomacy when it comes to the climate deal but to the iranian deal. >> dana: he is going to go to war over the climate deal? >> juan: no, no, no. you are saying he want to north korea over the easter holiday, so of course he believes in diplomacy. to the contrary. he has a history of undermining diplomatic deals. i think there are people in the senate, they are saying wait a second. >> dana: what deal? >> kimberly: what has been undermined? >> juan: the iran deal, the
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climate deal. to say he is somehow going to -- >> jesse: a deal isn't good just because it's a deal, juan. sometimes deals are bad enough to get out of it. >> juan: i don't think those are bad deals. >> jesse: a lot of other americans do. >> juan: the deal as the american people, that was our government and you can say i show up and i'm a great deal maker, so i'm going to bluster my way through. i think a lot of people say it's exactly what did pompeo get from his visit? what's the news out of the visit? did he get concessions or is it the case that we are giving everything to north korea in terms of -- >> greg: wait, wait, wait. i have to point out the hypocrisy. on one side he is saying that pompeo was mean for being hard on the claimant deal and now he's being soft on north korea. everybody agrees the climate deal was a lousy deal. cost $100 trillion over a century. doesn't mean there's not -- yes. i have looked at it. you have not. i am right.
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you are wrong. all right, my point is this. he actually went there, right? the trump presidency is regarded as hard, not soft. it changes the whole way, the atmosphere. it's not like -- i don't think they're going to push trump around because they have seen him bomb syria twice. there are red lines it won't be crossed. >> juan: what surprises me is the conservative point of view. don rumsfeld said to colin powell who came in after madeleine albright and said i would like to see if we can get some negotiations going. dick cheney, donald rumsfeld said no. we are not playing ball with this guy. he wants a meeting with president. he will use it to convince his people that nuke dealers devices have brought the u.s. to the table with north korea. >> dana: that was true. but the calculus has changed now that they have nuclear weapons. >> juan: they had nuclear weapons then. >> jesse: they have nuclear weapons because we secured a number of bad deals with them and they cheated on everyone. what's different this time as we
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believe sanctions that brought them to their knees and we have serious gunships encircling them, country starving, and good progress being made between the north and south. let's hold out hope maybe something positive comes. >> dana: don't forget john bolton is very skeptical about the north koreans. he was very critical of condoleezza rice who was trying also to make a deal with our allies and north korea. he has now onboard at the national security council. i think if that's the concern, there is at least somebody at the table with a voice saying be careful. >> kimberly: just to say the president didn't undermine these deals. he is the commander-in-chief and he asked to evaluate them and decide what's the best interest of the united states and what's not. he made a calculation that the iran deal was not and that the paris climate change accord deal was not as well. then he acted prudently to withdraw from those. >> jesse: we celebrate the life of former first lady barbara bush and pay our
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respects to the beloved american icon gone at the age of 92. back in a moment. >> one of the reasons i made the most important decision of my life to marry george bush is because he made me laugh. it's true. sometimes we laugh through our tears but that is shared laughter and it's been one of our strongest bonds. find the joy in life because as ferris buehler said on his day off, life moves pretty fast, and you don't stop and look around once in a well, you're going to miss it. as a control enthusiast, i'm all-business when i travel... even when i travel... for leisure. so i go national, where i can choose any available upgrade in the aisle - without starting any conversations- -or paying any upcharges.
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>> i am a huge believer in loving god. i pray. george and i pray every night. out loud. and sometimes we fight over whose turn it is, but we do. and i have no fear of death, which is a huge comfort because we are getting darn close. and i don't have a fear of death for my precious george or myself. because i know that there is a great god, and i'm not worried. >> kimberly: comforting words. an outpouring of love from across the country for former first lady barbara bush who
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passed away yesterday at the age of 92. while many are mourning the loss of this great woman, her beloved husband of 73 years, president george h.w. bush, has a different request. the president releasing the statement earlier today saying "i always knew barbara was the most beloved woman in the world. the outpouring of love and friendship being directed at the enforcer is lifting us all up. we have faith she is in heaven and we know that life will go o on. so cross the bushes off your worry list." her son recalled his final moments with his mom. >> we were needling each other. the doctor came in it she turned to the doctor and said do you know why george w is the way he is? because i drink and smoked while i was pregnant with him. she is funny. she had great faith. she truly believes that there's
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an afterlife. that she will be wonderfully received in the arms of a loving god, and therefore did not fear death. as a result of her soul being comforted on the deathbed, my soul is comforted. >> kimberly: isn't that incredible? what a wonderful life lesson for people who have suffered the loss of loved ones. the sentiment that they shared with everybody, how wonderful she was, the enforcer, the matriarch of the family, beloved and very funny. >> dana: he used to say i have my daddy's eyes and my mother's mouth. he and his mom used to get in trouble for the fact that they spoke so frankly. their nickname for her at home was frank. everybody called her that because how she would tell it like it is. watching her talk about her precious george, it's almost unfathomable to most of us that you could be married to summative for 73 years, that you would marry the first man that
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you ever kissed and you will go on to have, basically be the founder of a big political family. they are not just a political family. they do a lot of public service. i remember one time hearing advice she had for people in a marriage, that each person has to be willing to go 60% of the way. that's a good reminder for those of us who need to be nicer to our loved ones. >> greg: who was not directed at? >> dana: peter, i will be nicer. i want to point out when he talked about the comfort she had because of her faith, a lot people don't remember all of the times. she had a second child after george w. bush. her name was robin and she died at 4 years old of leukemia. mark steyn this morning said he believed, and i think it's true, that that's when her hair turned prematurely white. she never chose to hide that. she really just was who she was.
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it was an honor to know her. >> kimberly: very sweet. god bless her. >> greg: i want to get the negative stuff out of the way because not all people headed an outpouring. the worst place you can go when someone major dies is twitter. if you want to google fresno professor and barbara bush, you probably should. let fresno know what you think about what this woman said about barbara bush. this professor has tenure. she is an incompetent bucket of slime. anyway, to something positive. she reminds me of my mother. that's what i like about her. when i dedicated my book to my mom, to the woman who smoked and drank while she was pregnant with me. >> kimberly: explains a lot as well. >> greg: an older woman who enjoys a cocktail, there's nothing more enjoyable to be around because they have been on the planet for a long time.
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having a drink with them is like, you learn what really goes on in the world because they have a more accurate take on it than most men. it's a valuable experience to be with somebody who was older, drinking a bourbon. >> kimberly: there you go. jesse. jesse will have something nice to say. >> jesse: of course. the matriarch of one of the most distinguished political dynasties in american history. >> kimberly: of the world. >> jesse: probably. wife of a president, mother of a president, mother of a governor. to think that someone like this came from this area, i think a lot people understand she is cut from a certain cloth if you live in long island or connecticut or westchester county. for me, she reminded me of my great grandmother, my grandmother with the white hair, the way she dressed. the way she made you feel when you were around her. because of barbara bush was around, you made sure your time
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is right, sit up straight, spoke with perfect english, , and you conducted yourself in a way that was honorable and presentable to the general public. you never wanted to disappoint her. she inspired a feeling of a commitment to excellence in the way you conducted yourself and the way you should conduct yourself as an american or as a young adult. she is just an amazing woman, and she raised such a beautiful family. i think the family and their success is a testament to her wonderful nature. >> dana: she would have sent you some great texts. [laughter] >> kimberly: so cute, you see the pictures and the images. very sweet. juan. >> juan: i was around during these years and i must say she was extremely popular. you look at the poll numbers on someone, especially a first lady, they send to be pretty popular. nancy reagan wasn't all that popular. people had issues with her. here comes barbara bush.
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people were like wow, she is so approachable and warm and direct. i think everybody this table can remember when she was asked if jeb should run for president. she said no, there's been enough bushes. pretty direct. she would say i don't want to hear that news about body big during the war. she was a real person. i used to fly around with her. i spent more one-on-one time with her husband than any other president. i would occasionally talk with her. her attitude towards the press was you guys are a bunch of, you know, baloney. don't say anything in front of the press, even juan, that kind of thing. i just fell in love because i don't think you may realize this but she's actually a year younger, jesse, then her husband. people saying she looks like a grandmother. she she used to think this was hilarious. people would say why doesn't she dress up in fancy clothes. it wasn't barbara bush. when i look at back on her, i think one of the most real,
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lovable people in public life that i have ever come across. >> kimberly: very sweet. >> juan: let me throw this in there, something close to my heart. she is big on literacy and did a lot with her family foundation to say it, we need more americans to know how to read. >> greg: especially my books. >> kimberly: exactly. i think everybody would join us may barbara bush rest in eternal peace. god bless her. >> dana: i going to do the 2:00 show on friday from houston. >> kimberly: fired fbi director james comey appeared on "the view" and asked a direct question. did he write his towel for the money. the answer is next. awwwww...did mcgruffy wuffy get a tippy wippy? i'm serious! we gotta move fast before- who's a good boy? is him a good boy? erg...i'm just gonna go.
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where he was pressed on the number of subjects including his intention for writing writing s tell-all. >> it's worth noting that david axelrod, big democrat, former chief strategist to president obama, said i have no doubt about its brilliance when it comes to book sales. maybe he should've called it "higher royalties." what about people who say you are doing this for money and attention? >> i would ask him to read the book. i am not saying he should agree with me but if he reads the book, he will see i am trying to make choices between bad options and doing it in a way that i think he would want something as director of the fbi to do it. >> dana: he was also questioned about his decision to include disruptions of president trump's physical appearance in his memoir. >> you are right. if i headed to do over again, i wouldn't put that paragraph in. i wasn't trying to pick on donald trump. i could hear my editors voice saying "bring the reader. close but that's what i'm trying to do. i wasn't making fun of his
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hands. in fact i say in the book's hands seemed normal sized to me. >> dana: greg, i want to pick up on that with you. from an editor's perspective. you've written a lot of books, and when you have the editors voice saying maybe you should not put that in there, maybe you shouldn't put it in there. i think it's in there because they know it was going to get attention. >> greg: it's all part of his gimmick which is to wrestle with his conscience in public. this entire thing is about every day is a challenge being me. because i'm so highly moral in a world that's gone amoral. what do i do? maybe i shouldn't have done that but where does he go when they talk shows run out? i have an idea. he needs to write a book of sonnets for hillary. call it prayers for a pantsuit. i wrote the first one. why did i pillory poor ms. hillary? it was a con to unseat don. now you have had your fill of me. a little tear dropped my face.
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juan is moved. >> dana: democrats certainly feel -- >> juan: a minute ago you were looking at twitter when someone died. i am thinking i am alive. >> dana: democrats are obviously mad. meghan mccain brings up that david axelrod is the one is that he's trying to sell books. >> juan: i guess he is trying to sell books. >> dana: of course. like anyone who has written a book. >> greg: not me. i do it for the passion. >> juan: i must say i think he is a little self-righteous but on the other hand, he's not a perfect person. these autonomous name of the currently trying to act in good faith. i don't think that anybody thinks that he was there doing his job as fbi director because he was trying to make money or set himself up. i think you got caught here in very difficult situation. so it's not, greg, you you were saying as a citizen, having this normative conscience. he is fbi director.
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i think you talk to any fbi director, they will tell you they get into tough positions. one last thing to say on this is that trump tweets out no problem. i fired comey because he was reckless. he told osterholt he fired him because of the russia probe. >> dana: yes, there was that interview. one thing that the clintons don't ever seem to take responsibility for is that their whole reason there was an investigation the first place is because she set up the private email server. >> jesse: that's true, but she doesn't take responsibility. i want to back to the top of the cycling. did you have country music bump in? >> dana: her name is casey musgrave. her new song from her new album. >> jesse: and quality control. i wanted to make sure. >> dana: called "lonely weekend," which you might end up having. you want to help with your demo? you have to get with the program. >> jesse: i was researching this segment. i did a deep dive, greg.
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i forgot comey put martha stewart in prison. >> dana: you forgot that? >> jesse: this guy is a scoundrel. i understand now why trump fired him. a long list of boxed prosecutions. now it makes perfect sense. >> dana: what do you think about that case, kimberly? we didn't allow you time to do a deep dive on martha stewart but people look back. that is questionable for some people that she ended up having to go to jail. >> kimberly: seems very unfair, doesn't it? is she a big danger and threat? >> dana: they said she lied. >> kimberly: wright, did she make false statements? did you not tell the truth? that's typically how they get you in terms of prosecution. making false statements. did you not tell the truth. especially with this mueller
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investigation, where's it going? obstruction of justice. what happens? similar parallels. they will try to do a deep dive, wide net and see if they can get you on anything if they are zeroed in on you. >> dana: the book tour continues tomorrow. i'm sure we will have more. coming up, president trump's thoughts on the sketch put out by stormy daniels yesterday. the best simple salad ever? heart-healthy california walnuts. the best simple pasta ever? california walnuts. the best simple dinner ever? great tasting, heart-healthy california walnuts. so simple, so good. get the recipes at walnuts.org.
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♪ >> greg: yesterday on "the view," stormy daniels and her lawyer revealed the sketch of the man who allegedly threatened her. >> there you go. >> to your recollection, is that the person that threatened you? >> absolutely. seven years ago. >> you remembered to that detail. looks like an actor, sort of. >> that's why he's turned out to me. i thought he was sort of
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handsome. when i saw him when i was parking, oh, that is somebody's husband. >> greg: the president today responded to this saying a sketch years later about a nonexistent man, total con job, playing the fake news media for fools but they know it. his tweet linked to a comparison in which a twitter user thinks there's a comparison between the mystery man in stormy's husband. for the media gets on their high horse, be aware everything a media mouthpiece is doing the very same thing. the sketch invites comparison. and in a circus like this, a circus made more absurd every day by media and legal hysterics, it's another mad attraction to challengers any decorum we have left. after stormy shows up in court and reveals the sketch on a morning gabfest. it's hard to take any of it seriously, especially as the president makes potentially historic progress with
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north korea. who is the guy in the sketch? this guy or that guy or this guy. i don't know. i am beginning to think no one else does either. i have to read, michael avenatti, is that how you say it? stormy's husband's lawyer as well. responded to trump's tweet and i want to read them. "in my experience there is nothing better in litigation that having a completely unhinged, undisciplined opponent prone to shootings of the foot foot. always leads to big problems like new claims. second tweet. as the walls close and reality sets in for the most damaging witnesses, no longer protected. all right, i have to -- >> kimberly: news that avenatti is on another network saying he's going to add a
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defamation case against the president of the united states. >> greg: i have to give him credit. this is a meme. people have tom brady, kato kaelin. >> dana: i saw one of you. >> greg: i did too. that wasn't funny. i'm not that good looking. >> kimberly: it should be taken seriously if somebody threatened her and said you are not to cooperate, intimidation, harassed her to the point where she felt she needed to be silenced. however, never the less, now they are on the view and laughing about it. all over the internet, everybody making comparisons. a variety people say it looks like them. frankly because it does resemble so many different people, as a former prosecutor, i will tell you it makes it very difficult for positive identification. it could be anybody. let's just prosecute anybody. that's the problem.
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it is rife with problems in terms of identification, reasonable doubt, looks like this person. are you sure? the passage of time, inability to make up positive i.d.? what are you going to do? >> dana: is impossible the material they seized and michael cohen's raid and his emails would lead them back to this mysterious actor person? >> kimberly: you know what, dana? anything is possible. if there was the identity of a person and in fact he was acting in concert as specified for someone to go, maybe but i doubt his name will be written in big bold print somewhere. that's why you have to have i think a special, going through all the documents to make sure only what you are supposed to to uphold the attorney-client privilege. there could be a lot of variety of different things in there that aren't pertinent. >> greg: it is so good we have a prosecutor here. i will need help later.
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juan, do you have a theory? everyone is adding to this, guess who the guy is if the guy exist. >> juan: i think it's probably a publicity stunt. i don't know. i think kimberly is right, it people are being intimidated or harassed, we shouldn't dismiss it. >> kimberly: even if there is a passage of time. is pc evan why is the president tweeting about it? i don't like it. >> greg: what are you going to do. >> juan: the president of the united states. then he said it didn't happen, so let it be. it was a good strategy on his part but now he's tweeting about her into me it's like a tawdry display. >> greg: it is. >> jesse: i don't think the president can help himself. i think we are beyond that point. i get that sex sells. 15 minutes has to be up soon.
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it's about a nondisclosure agreement that allegedly broken. a court should fast-track it. someone is going to get a judgment or they are going to settle. or go to arbitration. but when you pileup these stunts, the sketch to the photo of the lie detector test to the nationwide strip club tour to this guys all over every single cable outlet, and then what else are they doing? first of all, the lawyer is a highly paid democratic attorney who has represented thousands of democrats. teed him up with a publicity seeking porn star. not saying the allegations are inaccurate. they go hand-in-hand. you have the media ushering them along. it's a recipe for disaster. they don't ask her challenging questions. they never debate her. they take everything she says as fact. it's beyond the point of no return. it's about a campaign finance violation. bernie sanders settled her
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campaign finance violation for $14,000 because he accepted donations from australia. this is the exact same type of violation. they raided the president's lawyer's office over this? >> greg: president obama had to do the same thing raftery came in. a mom admits she has a favorite child, probably me. people react. (vo) lately, i've been selective
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♪ >> juan: it's a taboo topic. when you are a parent, an unwritten rule, you don't say whether you have a favorite child. in english mama four, she went there. sending the internet aghast. >> kennedie is your favorite. >> she has all-around nice to be around. >> your other kids ever heard you say that? >> i will admit i have that bond with kennedie. i have a bond with them. >> juan: kimberly, were you your favorite or your mom or dad? >> kimberly: yeah. my brother would say that. he would say you are the favorite. i was the one with straight
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as, perfect attendance. there he is. he looks more puerto rican than me. i think he has better looks. >> juan: does he have a feeling he was treated unfairly? >> kimberly: no, not at all. my parents were both super lovely, nice to him. he was just more mischievous and probably had more fun. >> juan: jesse, were you the favorite? >> kimberly: [laughs] mom text coming. >> jesse: it would appear my parents like my sister more because i was trouble as a chil child. they have a lot more in common. they are both liberal academics. deep down, i always really know they really do like me more. >> juan: take it easy. take it easy. >> kimberly: it's a little emotional for him. look at his eyes. >> juan: day now. >> dana: i think my parents absolutely loved my sister more. maybe not loved more. angie is certainly the favorite. she is the favorite of every party, every event, everything.
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they would probably never say it out loud. absolutely. i think angie would agree, and my mom and dad would agree. >> juan: why? >> dana: i was a typed a annoying person. who wants to get up at 5:00 in the morning to take me to my speech tournament on saturday? nobody. that's why i had a driver's license and a car. i had to drive myself. >> juan: greg. >> greg: i'm not going to answer that question. this crazy lady who spells her kids name kennedie with a i, e. the real sin is that she overs shared at the expense of her kids. she decided to sacrifice her kids feelings for fame, it gave me an idea for a website. fametokensclose web.com. >> juan: this is a bad thing? >> greg: what she did was a bad thing.
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the story has been done. done every year. let me add the story has been done over and over again by people seeking attention. it's all it is. >> dana: her kid is 2. the other kids are 7, 9, and 12. of course you like the 2-year-old better. she hasn't learned how to talk yet. >> juan: she said she had more time with the come out to bond with the child. let me say the firstborn child is often the most popular. i am the third born and my sister was the most popular, the smartest, the best. my dad couldn't have loved my sister anymore. anyway, "one more thing" is up next. hold on dad... liberty did what? yeah, liberty mutual 24-hour roadside assistance helped him to fix his flat so he could get home safely. my dad says our insurance doesn't have that.
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they helped me out. she means we helped with her llc, trademark, and a lot of other legal stuff that's a part of running a business. so laura can get back to the dogs. would you sit still? this is laura's mobile dog grooming palace and this is where life meets legal. ♪ >> jesse: it's time for "one more thing." some people asked me on twitter, what's that thing around your wrist. it's a bracelet i have. it says "every day is a victory." on the other side, full-court press on als. lou gehrig's disease. i have a special guest here, my man michael here in studio who came up to visit and watch the show today. he is behind the organization that raises awareness for als. also raises money for funding for medical research as well. i want to give a special shout out to my man mike in studio
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today. greg gutfeld. >> greg: he is kind of a bigger fan of me. >> jesse: more of a "redeye" fan. >> greg: allows me to make crude jokes and he laughs. he types out the laugh, which i love. podcasts. foxnewspodcast.com. with king bob so -- king buzzo from the melvin's. we talk about pop music. it's pretty awesome. >> kimberly: i want to take a moment to honor girl power captain tammie jo schults, the pilot being hailed as a hero for the way she handled an emergency none like she'd ever encountered before. the engine of the southwest plane failed. she calmly steered the plane toward safety. she is no stranger to going
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against the odds because she's one of the first female fighter pilots in our military. classmate of hers described her as a true pioneer who outworked her male counterparts for all the women fighting for a chance. captain tammie jo schults, a true american hero. >> jesse: bravo. >> juan: we talked about barbara bush. two other prominent people have also died. radio broadcaster carl castle and professional wrestling legend bruno sammartino. carl castle was a friend from my days on npr. terrifically friendly north carolina accented baritone. his voice became a prize for contest winners. they got carl kasell's voice on their answering machine. the italians superman, wrestling
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career, sold out the garden. two men who made their mark on america. rest in peace. >> dana: jesse mentioned it yesterday but tomorrow i'm going to be on "the view." currently in honor of jasper. i have a chance to go on a chat with them. hopefully we will talk about jasper. >> greg: how much do you think it's going to be jasper? >> dana: i think that picture will help me talk about jasper. >> greg: keep bringing it back to jasper. >> dana: that's easy for me to do. i want to do this "one more thing." journalist found out if they had won a pulitzer. "washington post" and "new york times" but you might not have heard about the daily paper in santa rosa, california. they got the pulitzer for their coverage of the wildfires. adam housley, a report here for fox news, says it's an amazing paper. they do terrific work. a lot of clarity for the readers. congratulations to them, local papers are so important to
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communities. >> jesse: they eked me out. watters' world was this close. this close. that's it for us. stay tuned for "special report" up next. news conference with president trump and japanese premised or shinzo abe. bret baier. >> bret: how close, jesse? this is a fox news alert. i am bret baier in washington. we are moments when from a major news conference featuring president trump and japanese premised or shinzo abe. you are looking live. we expect to hear from a number of important topics such as north korea. the trip by the ca director, it's secretary of state nominee mike pompeo. syria, russia sanctions, trade, and there could be questions about the special counsel investigation, maybe even stormy daniels. the president tweeted about her this morning. let's get an overview. check in with chief white house correspondent john roberts.
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