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tv   The Five  FOX News  June 12, 2018 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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if this deal had not gone through, this wouldn't be in play. but they're scrambling here right now and saying, we better be in and we better open our wallet. we're on it. "the five" is now. >> greg: i'm greg gutfeld with kimberly guilfoyle, juan williams, brian kilmeade. a crouton is her loofah. dana perino. >> chairman kim and i signed a joint statement in which he reaffirmed his unwavering commitment to complete denuclearization of the korean peninsula. >> greg: they interrupted "the bachelorette" for that? this is big ns t it's only a start. a first date, if you will. verification is key, for in the past month gray has been about as trustworthy as sushi from the drugstore on a thursday in the
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summertime. maybe that past is dead. check out this movie trailer president trump presented to kim. >> destiny pictures presents a story of opportunity. a new story, a new beginning. one of. two men, two leaders. one destiny. a story about a special moment in time when a man is presented with one chance that may never be repeated. what will he choose? vision and leadership? or not? a new world can begin today. one of friendship, respect, and goodwill. be part of that world where the doors of opportunity are ready to be opened. >> greg: okay. that's amazing. it's got to be a first. showing a world leader with the
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world cou be like if you change your ways. as a movie trailer, who does this? donald trump. why? why did he show him this? >> i showed it because that's the future. that could very well be the future. the other alternative is just not a very good alternative. >> greg: not at all! it's about two options. the golden off-ramp over the cliff to nowhere. it's not politics. it's persuasion. it reframes the futures of the past is the past. this is in thinking outside the box. it's getting rid of the box. jump to the sales presentation on freedom. no one has done that before. will kim do what's right? >> i think he's going to do these things. i may be wrong. i may stand before you in six months and say hey, i was wrong. i don't know that i will ever admit that but i will find some kind of an excus >> greg: that is transparency. they should feel like good news,
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but if you still believe the summit was itself a confession but that it won't. with that thinking, why have diplomacy? what should reassure you? is isn'ty, hillary,or b rhodes,s oufor legacy. they were all carried. the new guys mostly stick which makes the care possible. the establishment will last. the same people who thought trump was leading us to war are mad that he is averting it. as for you, you should read the news with hope. let's check back in a year. worst case we are back at square one. path tried.onfession, just a what did one great philosopher say? >> we're going to have to see what happens. we will see what happens. we're going to see what happens. we are going to see what happens. we will see what happens. >> greg: we will see what happens. okay, kilmeade, i'm going to you first because frankly i feel bad for you.
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has anybody ever done this before? present a video. it's like a time-share condominium video that a salesman will show you to get you to go on the tour. this could be the start of something new. you gerountries a go, this is what you could hav. >> brian: it's great. i could not back your decision to come to me first. i watched itot up at 1:30 two do the show at 5:00. he also said this on the condo episode. he said watching the vessels, the rockets take off when they i am thinking myself 's a beautiful beach. we could put condos. i know there's a lot of reasons to say it's not going to work but all i can say is keep your powder dry if you are quick to criticize the president because this is just step number one of
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a brand-new series of stairs. because nobody knows where this is heading, but i know for sure it's not done yet. the pressure is really on them because this is the best chance they will ever have give their people a future and give their monarchy, whatever you call it, some type of security. if they wanmple. it is vietand china. economies where we never want to live but they are found ways to put market principles in there. vietnam probably gets along better with us than china and russia these days. i am encouraged by the chance. plenty of reasons to poke holes in it. this term, which i think is not great, competes to work -- clearition.work towards it's a first s next week bolton and pompeo pick up where this summit left off. game on. >> greg: what do you think,
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dana? i am skeptical but i ave a feeling of hope. >> dana: i think that's true. i kind of feel the same as i did yesterday. i had some uneasiness looking at the flags side-by-side. no he's an equal partner. kim rlly did get a lot of out of this. all the propaganda he can use back home. now russia has to come to him to have a meeting. the chinese are going to come to him to have a meeting. he no longer has to go there. the video does remind me of the idea i had a long time ago that i asked general petraeus about. create a video showing the suicide bombers, what could happen and how risky it could b be. >> greg: present the alternative. >> dana: i had a woman on today, a former cia deputy
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director for korean issues. she said overall net plus. i thinks probably where i was yesterday. hopeful but skeptical. i think that personnels policy in a lot of ways. the fact that bolton and pompeo are going on there is good. i wonder, the people critical of it, many on the left, people are critical of it because they're looking at this and saying it's not strong enough. they were theame ones who praised president obama for iran. i think the skip skepticism is warranted. >> greg: president trump is going to be ononight. they are going to talk about the early rhetoric donald trump employed. let's roll that tape. >> i think without the rhetoric, we wouldn't of been here. we did sanctions and all the things you would do but i think without the rhetoric,ther
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administrations, i don't want to get specific on that but they had up policy of salads. very threatening and horrible,d just don't awer. that's not the answer. that's not what you have to do. the rhetoric, i hated to do it. sometimes i felt foolish doing it but we had no choice. >> greg: what do you think, juan? >> juan: he is celebrating himself, rationalizing what he did before. >> greg: he just said he might have made a mistake. >> juan: no, he didn't. >> greg: he said he might've felt bad doing it. >> juan: he said it worked. to me, this whole thing come i listened to you and i think look at the defenders of trump today. this is like a wet firecracker. this is like the end of "the sopranos" where you go, what happened to my tv? what happened here? >> greg: that was a great series. >> brian: don't stop believing
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on the jukebox. >> juan: the man who set the bar for this was none other than our tv star, donald trump. donald trump said no lengthy negotiations like my predecessors. he said no concessions that will stall and simply give this horrible regime more time to perpetrate their terror. he said quite clearly we are going to talk about human rights, otto warmbier. today he says otto warmbier didn't die in vain. but you didn't bring it up. >> greg: yes, he did. it was amazing. repatriation as well. be accurate. >> juan: i will be accurate. here's what kim said, we agreed to let the past be the past. we are moving on. that's what he said. let me finish. here you have a situation, you say, are these lemmings? john kerry and others are lemmings. is otto warmbier one of the lemmings? did he just go away, go off the
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edge? >> greg: that makes no sense. i did not say tha. that was so wrong, juan. i did not call warmbeir a lemming, you moron. >> juan: i guess you never read about bill clinton and the framework agreement in which the north koreans took concessions, don't deliver. how about the six party talks. >> greg: i stopped listening to you when you said i called -- enough, enough. you accused me of saying something i didn't say. >> juan: saying that these guys are lemmings. >> brian: they did bring up human rights. kimberly. >> kimberly: thank you. what are we, north korea right now? i have an opinion too. i think it was incredible to watch last night. so many of us were riveted, it's an important moment in international discourse and diplomacy. i really hope and pray that this
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is the first step of many meetings between the united states and north, south korea, china, to be able to work together. nuclear scientists involved, to be able to trust but verify which is reagan's policy, and really work towards peace. no one benefits for more. in that sense, i think this was something that was important, a step in the right direction. can you say he trusts the actions of that man that has run a brutal regime of torture and behaves horrifically to his own people? perhaps we have a small park to play in stopping that, shedding some light on it and not continuing to have them isolated. to create and commit their horrors without the rest of the world knowing about it. i believe the president when he says otto warmbier did not die in vain. that really did cast a very bright light on what was going on in north korea. i think so pivotal in terms of being able to get pows, m.i.a.
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remains home, to be able to negotiate for the other hostages that were held there. that does matter to those families and those that have been grieving and looking to bury their loved ones. i say let's give this a chance. kudos to our president for being able to make this happen which some people didn't think -- >> juan: what do we get out of this? we say we're going to stop our exercises with south korea. what do we get in return? we get promises, pledges. oh, my gosh. >> greg: you are such a baby, juan, about this. >> juan: we got complete denuclearization? >> kimberly: we got a promise to work towards it. it's better than not doing it. >> juan: your people who say the iran deal stinks, right? the iran deal, the iranians didn't have nukes. we had a deal to stop them from getting them. >> greg: now they are quickly getting them. how did that happen? >> juan: the north koreans have nukes.
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given we are saying this is about nonproliferation. >> greg: using your old, traditional, bad diplomacy. >> juan: let me say we are rewarding -- [all speaking] gettg nothing for it. >> brian: i cannot believe you're acting like donald trump rewarded bad behavior. >> juan: he did. >> brian: what did bill clinton do? he met with him and is starting a series of talks. >> juan: why do you think other presidents didn't do it? >> brian: there's a reason. they didn't have nuclear weapons, they weren't a threat. multistage rockets can hit the lower 48 and there was a legitimate military threat. >> greg: we are goi another block on this, believe it or not. more reaction to the many big moments from the historic trump-kim summit. stay with us. to most people,
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♪ >> juan: more reaction to president trump's historic summit with north korean leader
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kim jong un. here's another comment from the president, this one caught my attention. >> he knows that no other president ever could have done it. he knows the president. he knows who we had. he said no other president could have done this. i think he trusts me and i trust him. >> juan: kimberly, this is a key point. we were discussing this earlier, under president clinton, president bush, president obama. everybody says we will give you a little bit and then we expect you will act faithfully. but history indicates he doesn't. >> kimberly: writes. has to be wise. pay attention to history. do not ignore it in the hopes you will learn lessons from it and move forward more effectively, smarter, brighter, especially towards achieving such incredibly important goals is denuclearization and having peace in the region. it's been so many years coming and i applaud the efforts of presidents past for putting their effort forward to try to make this happen. it's all part of the process.
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perhaps this time around, there was a little bit of a unique approach. i mentioned yesterday i do think part of it is something kim jong un seems a little bit fascinated by president trump and who he is as an individual and who he was prior tog president of the united states. it's somebody he feels different words. perhaps that relationship is one that can move the ball forward because it's a unique, unconventional diplomacy that the president engages in. that's why he said i don't need to be preparing for hours and hours. i have been ready to do this negotiation. so far, it has produced very auspicious results. i think this is part of a new chapter going forward with north korea and south korea and china. >> juan: greg, i was saying earlier i don't see how you can oppose the iran deal and say i'm graded paper kim's room service. i'm going to pay for whatever he wants. especially saying we are going to stop our military exercises
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without any concession coming from the north. >> greg: there is a great contrast. if you hear what ben rhodes said about how they pulled the wool over the neck and publicize, echo chamber and compared to the press conference trump held which was effortless, on point, and transparent. the american public, i believet. that's why that video played to a lot more than kim jong un. it played to everybody. it was a public display for everybody so it makes it hard to back away from it. it framed the future for that guy, kim jong un, because now he feels like he has something. it's easier to try to want something then lose something. heeels he has something. trump has got him past the sale. he's envisioning himself in this world. once you get somebody to test drive that car, it's hard to get them out of the car. i think the lesson here is this
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is a framework that could be used with iran. iran, a transparent way in which you don't lie to the american people. >> juan: let me go toa. we stopped doing our exercises with the south, that's a clear concession. but i don't see anything from the north. what do you say? >> dana: you read the statement. it's pretty ambiguous. it's less than what they agreed to before, but the i think this is the first meeting and at the chance for president trump to size of his adversary. he said i will know in the first minute and i guess he must've felt is worth continuing. when history of this is written, it will be interesting to find out how much the cia influenced the video because of the profile they have of kim jong un. people keep talking about past presidents and how they couldn't do this or that. true, but also they weren't dealing with this guy. they were dealing with the original from 255 and then kim
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jong il. they were not enraptured by the west. they didn't care about basketball and pop culture, they didn't want all of this stuff. there is something happening there that i wonder if the cia eventually may be an 80 years will be able to reveal the documents and show us what it is. when it comes to military exercises, i too wonder. but i feel like president trump can turn that on a dime. why would he care? if the north koreans aren't going to live up to their end of the bargain, we can turn back on our military exercises very quickly. >> brian: the big differences three of the four resolutions by the security council in the u.n. are the strongest anyone has ever seen. russia and china signed on. special thanks to i think a future president, nikki haley. they really suffocated the regime that was already suffering and they tightened up the border on top of that. i think he made it clear. the president says i will solve this in my first term, one way
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or another. the military threat was legitimate, china was way to stand in the way. they could not control this guide. >> juan: one thing, the critics, the harshest critics say we gave kim jong un the legitimacy he craved by having this meeting. how do you react? >> brian: a legitimate point you bring up, but i think the alternative would have been war. 30 million dead. the president said i give them something. they have been in power for 70 years. this is not al qaeda or isis. you are not meeting with al-baghdadi. >> kimberly: who cares about the room service? >> brian: a valid point. a calculated risk. but i think it's worth it depending on how it ends up. a >> juan: either that or war, not containment. >> dana: it's not contained. >> brian: you bring up a good point. >> juan: iran, russia, they have it. >> kimberly: he hasn't been contained.
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that's where we have arrived here. >> juan: we have people who have nukes and we are containing them. more reaction t this historic sit down between the president andim jong un straight ahead. at first, president trump responding in a big, funny way to robert de niro's latest attack. what might seem like a small cough to you... can be a big bad problem that you could spread to family members, including your grandchildren babies too young to be vaccinated against
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liberty stanu. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ >> dana: with midterm polls tightening, democrats are trying to hollywood for help that the dnc can't give them. dnc and some members of congress quietly consulting with actors, writers, and producing in l.a. to collaborate on messaging and voter turnout. members reportedly include alyssa milano and helen hunt. an update to a story we told you about yesterday. president trump responding to attacks from actor robert de niro by writing on twitter: "robert de niro, a very low iq individual, has received to many shots to the head by real boxers in movies.
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i watched him last night and truly believe he may be "punch-drunk." i guess he doesn't realize the economy is the best it's ever been with employment ing at an all time high, and many companies pouring back into our country. wake up punchy!" [laughter] >> kimberly: you reading trump's tweets is hilarious. >> dana: i like it. i find myself talking that way normally just for fun. anyway. democrats turning to hollywood. >> greg: i think it's a great idea. get your political messaging from alyssa milano who spends 90% of her time on twitter belittling anyone who wasn't like her. an emotional frenzy since 2016. hollywood messaging helped the democrats lose. you think about does hollywood portray americans? bigoted, warlike, stupid, planet hating, the cause of all
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oppression, tormentors of marginalized, responsible for evils. that's left-wing politics. detailed candidates, tell hollood, please call more people racist. accuse them of polluting the planet. everybody is morons. that wou be the hollywood blank. >> brian: the hollywood playbook. they want to talk more about abortion. >> dana: they don't have an economic plan. >> brian: hollywood knows how to market, clearly. but not the actors for the actors don't know how to do it. they know how to memorize lines. they are famous people. they have this big, massive thing. i'm sorry. you didn't call on me. >> dana: go ahead. >> brian: i don't think a democrat who studied the last election should save themselves the key is getting more celebrities involved. >> dana: i have a list here from our new handy-dandy
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associate, segment producer. scott sanders gave me the list. hillary clinton celebrity rallies. three pages, juan. it didn't really help. >> juan: why do you say that? >> greg: [laughs] >> juan: she won the popular vote. >> greg: that's how he keeps score. >> dana: i hear you. >> juan: your point is that these folks are famous, they are in movies and they get a lot of attention. they have fans, especially among young people and millennials. >> dana: that's true. >> juan: the hard news of your point in this discussion about what is the democrats' messaging, what are they going to hollywood for a question mark what do they think could be effective in the midterms in 2020? this morning in the editorial pages of "the wall street journal" and "new york times," both editorials were about health care at about the decision made by the trump administration to go -- do not
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defend the affordable health care act being sued by several states in court and try to let it wither on the vine. "the wall street journal" says well, you know, it's withering on its own. "the new york times" says this is going to be a big issue for democrats to use against -- >> dana: if you watch "the daily briefing," we are on it every day. can hollywood help the democrats? >> kimberly: a big loss. that's the plaook. it did not work for hillary clinton. it's not going to work forhem. i am praying, please rely on hollywood. not going to go anywhere for them. no one relates to them. it is so ironic and hypocritica hypocritical. the democrats are going to rely on hollywood. they make a living selling sex, drugs, violence movies. wait a second. how is it going to work?
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how will you messaging resonate. it didn't. it failed horribly with hillary. she is still in a state of shock, practically comatose over the fact that she didn't won the election and she wasn't in singapore. >> greg: instead of going to wisconsin, she hung out with katy perry. that is the message. instead of going to wisconsin, she hung out with miley cyrus. >> dana: october 22nd. >> greg: that is one vote per person. >> juan: who put eastwood on stage? was that a republican or democrat? when the democrats say -- >> greg: we are talking about campaigning. >> dana: not everyone sees the singapore summit as a success. some of the most extreme criticism when we return.
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♪ >> kimberly: president trump facing criticism for his historic summit with kim jong un. some of the left are railing against trump's meeting with the north korean. >> president trump has granted a brutal dictatorship the international legitimacy it has long craved. >> this is the weakest statement i've ever seen come out of any engagement with north korea. >> the president touching kim jong un. it's not mutual. >> it's not as if other presidents couldn't have done this. it's that they didn't want to. >> the spectacle of seeing the american flag with the dprk flag and the handshake is jarring to see, to witness. i would say it's somewhat disgusting. >> kimberly: bonkers, brian, when you hear the stop and what
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they are saying. did we watch the same thing? >> brian: if he walked out and he said the koreans are dropping the nuclear sites and there's 39 and here's the locations, there would've been some critics. anything short of that, the same people are going to say the same thing. this is the beginning. if this is the end, i agree with them, but it's just the beginning. next week you are going to see that beginning. the president doesn't say this for no reason. you go in to see the dismantlin dismantling. you're going to hear about the progress with pompeo and bolton. it's going to get tighter and hotter and it's going to get more and more interesting as we move forward. it's not so much of the video. this guys out of options. he has the security to keep them in place but now he's got the ability to get his economy going. 34 years old, he has the ability
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to do something different. >> kimberly: they need the cash. we should be rooting for a positive outcome. dana, it's the people he chose. nikki haley, pompeo and bolton working behind the scenes to make this happen. >> dana: earlier on, i would put tillerson in that category. the president said fire and fury. the next day rex tillerson said something kind of conciliatory and the media would say wait a second. looks like the president and secretary of state are not on the same page. i think when the history was written, this was a strategy to eat the north koreans off balance. it was courted from the beginning. part of it is the personnel issue. 50,000 americans died in the korean war in order to protect the south koreans from having to live under a communist regime. there is a lot of blood and treasure there. this does mean a lot to a lot of people. senator mcconnell said today he wants any sort of deal to be submitted to the senate as a
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treaty which is something that the obama administration could not do with the iran deal because it would not have passed. what senator mcconnell has the position, makes for a stronger deal to be more likely and more long-lasting. >> brian: trump has the position too. >> dana: it should. otherwise it gets reversed, like he just did to obama. >> greg: going back to the montage one msnbc was mocking the fact that the two men were touching each other. is joy reid in charge of their editorial? what's the problem with two guys touching each other, msnbc? >> brian: their poins not enough touching back. >> greg: critics don't look well. it's emotionally trying on them. every day they have to signal to their peers that they are still in the fold. they still hate this guy. when the good news betrays their emotions may creates a cognitive dissonance a create so much
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turmoil. i watched a guy on cnn. he looked like he was going to implode. i won't say his name because 's a nice guy. the criticism will be familiar. past criticism of trump about other things unrelated north korea. what about cuba? what about-ism. this is what happens when you can't argue the central merits of a story. you go after other stuff. >> kimberly: dennis rodman on another network was quite emotional. he said listen, i tried to tell you this was someone w wanted peace, wanted to be rzed and he was willing to do this. he went over there and got to know him. people are criticizing dennis rodman about it. greg. >> greg: i was a critic. >> kimberly: thank you. being honest. it was an emotional moment. he said this is someone i know in the world get the chance to know him too. if we can do something positive and denuclearized, who wouldn't be for it? >> juan: i agree with you.
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i think with rodman, it struck me as so self reverent. he said he was upset with obama because obama wouldn't meet with them but trump would. reminded me of kanye west. trump apparently like the celebrities. in terms of diplomacy, to me, what you get here is the echo chamber on the right generally saying okay, we've got to defend trump despite the fact that he got so little. you do see people on the right, they are saying the plain fact. what did we get as americans in terms of further security or assurance of denuclearization? the answer is zip. you can say critics are mean. at least they are sitting and talking. i would grant that point. i like the idea that you have something that we can work forward to. brian, greg all said this. that's an important point but i do wonder about the fact it's
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not just otto warmbier but it is slave camps that still exist in north korea. >> brian: the only chance we have is to bomb them out. >> juan: no. >> brian: or renegotiate them out. >> juan: you keep coming back like it is a or b and in fact s a big c,tainment, and making it clear to them that our sanctions are still punishing that they need to reconsider their bad behavior. >> kimberly: sanctions are still there. this is why this is working. wait and see. it is like "build the wall." you are going to see steps towards denuclearization. wait for it. bill clinton does it again. we will show you next. days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424.
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kyle, we talked about this. there's no monsters. but you said they'd be watching us all the time. no, no. no, honey, we meant that progressive would be protecting us 24/7. we just bundled home and auto and saved money. that's nothing to be afraid of. -but -- -good night, kyle. [ switch clicks, door closes ] ♪ i told you i was just checking the wiring in here, kyle. he's never like this. i think something's going on at school. -[ sighs ] -he's not engaging.
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♪ >> brian: bill clinton's blunders keep on coming. after embarrassing himself on recent tv interviews about monica lewinsky, the former president receiving new backlash. this time. stunning remarks about sexual misconduct in light of former democratic senator al franken's scandal. >> the norms have really changed in terms of what you can do to
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somebody against their will, how much you can cloud their space, make them look miserable. this franking ce is a difficult case, her case. there may be things i don't kno know. maybe i'm just an old-fashioned person. >> brian: time to change. it's amazing. it's amazing what you can do to someone against their will, those rules have changed. dana, marie the first ones to tell him the rules are changed and that we never had a rule where you could do something to someone against their will. >> dana: there is always been a rule against that. he is trying to sell this book that he cowrote or collaborated with james patterson on. i truly believe that book would have been a besller if he had not done any interviews. i'm not sure he is helping himself. >> brian: you don't have to physically assault someone to make them feel uncomfortable,
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greg. >> greg: i feel for james patterson. in these interviews coming is sitting off to the side like this. this book was supposed buy me a beach house. james patterson is richer than god. you don't need to do this. why are you doing this to yourself? this -- he has been sitting with guys and he has to go through this. you've made enough money. you don't have to do this. >> brian: he gets asked about monica lewinsky. he says i'm happy she seems to have moved on and she had a good time talk. >> kimberly: i don't know. this is very unfortunate. >> brian: he is ruined. >> kimberly: one statement after the next. he really should pretty much wrap it up. zip it on this book tour. >> greg: don't use that word.
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>> brian: locked-in president obama's reelection at that convention. it's not the same guy we are watching being interviewed. or is it the same guy being exposed? >> juan: i find those comments in indefensible. >> kimberly: is it possible he misspoke? >> juan: referring back to the idea that in a different era, men behave differently and that men had different standards. the idea that you would do something against aerson's will, that sounds a little much. >> dana: he had a poor choice of words. >> greg: encompassing words and making people feel uncomfortable. i think that's -- >> juan: if you go back to the thing with franken, it's like my can you put your arms around a woman, put it around her waist. what if you touch part of her as you are moving your hand? but that's never acceptable. you shouldn't have been doing it, if it was intentional, anyway. >> kimberly: an accident is
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one thing. >> brian: i -- >> greg: people keep asking him these questions. >> dana: you don't have to do additional interviews. >> brian: "one more thing" is next. e it. wish we got money back on gym memberships. get money back hilarious. with claim-free rewards. switching to allstate is worth it.
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♪ >> time for one more thing.
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>> i have a happy birthday message for president george h.w. bush. he's 94 today. he's the oldest living president in united states history. he is celebrating their with his son, 43, george w. bush, and they are up in maine and that is so funny. that is in 2008 after they did an interviewr. >> you look different. >> i look really different. you have no idea how tired i was right there. 41, this is about you. we congratulate you on this wonderful life you live so far and we know that you are heartbroken about barbara bush but of course everybody is praying for you and cheering you on. >> what a fighter. >> thank you so much. harris faulkner is a great friend to all of us here and this is her book, a long time in the making and it's called nine rules of engagement and it is becoming -- >> do you need more rules about engagement? [laughter] >> thank you, greg.
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not only is harris faulkner in a y a journalist, she has part of an incredible military family in the book pays tribute to her father, retired u.s. army lieutenant bob harris who served two tours in vietnam as a combat pilot and harris grew up in this military family which she admits was not always easy. that's why there are so many valuable life lessons that came out of this aere know she credier father and her family for her successes in life. i really encourage you to get this book. it's excellent and you get to know a lot more about harris and why should grow to be the person she has. >> you've got to admit, that was a good joke. you've got to admit, that was on the fly, kimberly. >> i will say, great book. >> right? >> that was a great show, brian! >> big day in washington and i'm not talking about the summit, folks. if it was the stanley cup victory parade for the
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washington capitals down constitution avenue. a first time one of washington's four major league teams has won a championship since the early '90s and it's the first time the caps have ever won and they ve been around for more than 40 years. the players had quite a weekend taking the cup around town but today was for every long-suffering fan from virginia, maryland, d.c. and they packed the streets. congratulations to the capitals. >> very nice. >> is that hockey? >> is it really? i wouldn't know. >> a russian president. we will be right back. >> greg, that's repulsive! if you have any children in the room right now, get them out of there, this is absolutely disgusting. let's roll this tape. i came across this horrible, disgusting video of a cat being given a bubble bath using a toothbrush. as you can see wearing a little protection for the hair, the head which is called i guess the
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cranium, the cat cranium. this tape lasts 45 hours, i play it all the time. >> cats don't even need a bath. they don't even like water. >> don't like water. >> quite attractive. shall we move over to brian kilmeade or should we jus? >> the war in history continues. after 200 years, andrew jackson's grave was defiled. it took 11 weeks to put it together, but they actually were able to clean it up, painted killer on him and his wife's grave. yesterday howard keitel was able to marshal the forces and get the war of 1812 guys out. they fed the gravesite. i think it's absolutely terrible but it's great that our seventh precedent is restored and now they have security cameras sadly to watch his own. a perfect segue to my book. >> shameless! >> today is the last day i can sign it. i'm glad it's cleaned up, go to
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the hermitage. >> thank youmy friend. do you want more? here's chris wallace from singapore. hi, chris. >> hey greg, and i want you to know i'm bringing you back a singapore sling. president trump and kim jong a deal aimed at denuclearization of the korean peninsula. we will have details and reaction. plus, another busy day for primary elections and a big victory for at&t in court. this is "special report" from singapore. ♪ >> chris: good evening, i'm chris wallace info bret baier, who is traveling back from here right now and will have an interview tomorrow with president trump aboard air force one. both the president and kim jong un have been gone from this island nation for several hours but the

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