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tv   The Five  FOX News  July 26, 2018 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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you guys and gals on my family. we love you. [applause] >> president trump: finally i would like to hear from neil, a third-generation employee who started here over 40 years ago and climbed the ranks to become a plant manager, and now he is back. how does that feel? come on up. >> on behalf of my work family here at granite city works, i think you, mr. president. it really is a family here. i see the familiar faces of people i've known for years every day. as i grew up with most of you, went to school with most of you, or your parents, as plant manager, it was difficult laying off people and giving the cause.
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hearing about the struggles, hearing about the personal live lives. hearing about the community, all of us suffering. the plant was able to come back thanks to all the hard work from everyone of you and the dedication from every one of yo you. and your support, mr. president. [applause] i look around here today, and i see the smiling faces. we owe that to you, mr. president. thank you very much. [cheers and applause] >> president trump: incredible incredible. incredible job, thank you. those stories are inspiring for
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everybody in our country, and you have a lot of people listening right now. we want every american to know, the work, the pride of a paycheck, and the satisfaction of a job well done. that is what's happening right here in granite city. made in america. it's not just a slogan. it's a way of life. [cheers and applause] i remember when i was growing up, made in the usa or made in america, it was on everything. it was on everything. a country, czechoslovakia, a long time ago, people used to take dollar bills and they would paint them and paste them onto the windshield of their car because it represented america. that is all coming back now. that's what's happening. made in the usa, made in america.
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we are proud of it again. with your help, we are lifting up workers all across our land. we are lifting up the minors who blast or from minnesota's iron range, the dockworkers in duluth who loaded onto barges 1,000 feet long. the crew members who navigate down the great lakes through michigan and onto illinois. the rail workers who haul it right here to beautiful granite city. everyone that touches the barges, the trucks, the trains that carry the work of your hands to destinations all across our country, all across the
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world, to factories and construction sites, into our stores, our homes, our driveways. we thank you. we are a nation of builders, makers, and creators. in the furnaces of our factories, we forage american prosperity, power, and prestige. remember that word, prestige. our country is becoming prestigious again. i meet with leaders. they all come to me and they congratulate me on what we have done. they respect us again. america is back. [cheers and applause] our country is back. we see the proud legacy of our steelworkers all across this magnificent landscape. in our city skylines and our
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bridges and pipelines from the empire state building to that shiny monument to america's pioneering spirit, the gateway arch, the soul of our nation lives in our people. the heart of our nation feet and our citizens, and the destiny of our nation is found in our two hands. we all share the same home. we all salute the same great american flag. and we are all made by the same almighty god. i will never stop fighting for you, because i know that you are the ones that are rebuilding our nation. you are the ones reclaiming our
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dreams, and yes, you are the ones who are making america great again. thank you. god bless you, and god bless the united states of america. thank you, everybody. >> i am juan williams with lisa boothe, jesse watters, dana perino and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york. it's a little late. this is "the five" ." ♪ as you just saw, president trump wrapping up a speech to steelworkers in illinois moments ago. he has also visited farmers in iowa. that was earlier today. >> president trump: we have his hat made up. the john deere colors. make our farmers great again. basically we opened up europe. it's going to be a great thing
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for europe and it's really going to be a great thing for us and it's going to be really great thing for our farmers. after years of shutdowns and cutbacks, today the blast furnace here in granite city is blazing bright red workers are back on the job, and we are once again pouring new american steel into the spine of our country. >> juan: some people sing one of the biggest problems for democrats in 2018 this year and 2020, the presidential election, is the party's inability to develop a cohesive message to counter president trump. an op-ed in "the new york times" today foreshadows trump winning reelection in 2020 due to the strong economy. senator elizabeth warren who is rumored to be possible opponent of the president, offered a different approach. here she is calling for higher taxes. >> there was a time in a very prosperous america, an america
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that was growing a middle-class, and america and which working families were doing better generation after generation after generation, where the top rate was above 50%. >> juan: jesse, i think the president and republicans want to talk about the economy, this document doing well -- the stock market doing well. we see that president getting out there and this may be the message he wants to deliver going into the midterms. >> jesse: first of all, i want that green hat. >> juan: weight. it would cover up -- >> lisa: you got your hair cut. what a waste of money if you do that. >> jesse: trump needs to focus on the economy and law and order and judges and keep hammering democrats as socialist freaks who nail during the national anthem. there are great headlines coming out of the economy. we are supposed to get an enormous gdp number tomorrow. maybe 3, 4, 5%. we have through had three
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straight quarters of 3% economic growth. low unemployment, fantastic for everyone. the tax cut has delivered a $2600 cut to every family in this country. there are areas of concern. wages dipped the last quarter. they are still up 2.8%. under obama, they were flat. the trade deal is tough. some places, you have steel companies closing and you have aluminum companies opening up. what he did with the ee was very smart. i think what he did is he is saying for a short term pain, we want long term gain. he raised some tariffs and they came back begging yesterday. they have a verbal deal and they are going to drop the tariffs on nonindustrial goods and liquefied natural gas. we still have the auto tariffs and play which isn't good for michigan and south carolina all, the farm subsidies i think are good politics but bad economics. it's showing the trade partners we are going to soften the blow
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because you are not going to inflict any pain on us. in order to eventually bring down all trade barriers command that is the rule, free and open and fair trade. >> juan: jesse makes that case from the trump perspective that you want your partners, i think the president said his favorite word is reciprocal. reciprocal. here's the thing. in the papers today, it said "my little pony," jack daniel's, coca-cola, gm, the farmers, and whirlpool all say this is hurting us, hurting our profits. >> dana: that's one of the reason you saw the president be conciliatory towards the e.u. it's good for our allies, for us to work together. they didn't agree to anything. they just agreed to stop fighting in public and deal with the issues and that's great because we need to fight as allies against countries like china. i think the president's smirk to get out of town. in the early years of the bush administration, that first term, the economy was great. you couldn't get a lot of media coverage around it.
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were at war as well. the great thing for the president, if he wants good headlines, he needs to go to these places. president is going where he can help vulnerable republicans. he went to iowa today. there's two members, republican, they are in bad shape. he wanted to shore them up. he will probably return to those places. the other thing i would say is wisconsin, minnesota, and michigan, his numbers there are really bad. where these tariff issues should help should be there. they are not helping so much. we've got to figure out how to turn that around. by being conciliatory towards the e.u., he might be able to do that. >> juan: greg, how did you get back from granite city so quickly? >> greg: private plane and a tunnel. looking at liz warren and other folks like cory booker, we have so much good news and the democrats are fixated on finding bad news.
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they are like old, strange men on the beach with metal detectors who are walking too close to you hoping to find something. except they are misery detectors and they can't find any misery so they have to invent misery. liz warren wants to raise tax rates to 50% for some people and rollback the tax cuts. she is essentially a success extinguisher. she is looking at the economy like it's a fire and she wants to put it out. that's what she's doing. here's what i worry about. but i've noticed is we might be entering the second part of a political cycle that's been going on since the '60s. the republicans come in and fix things and that allows for democrats to come in and break things because there are things to be broken. then you get the republicans back into fix things because the democrats broke things and then the republicans fix things. the public says we can sustain more democrats so they come in and break things. it goes back and forth. republicans fix. democrats break. this has been going on since the
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1960s. trump has fixed a half-dozen things, and everybody is going you know what, let's give those democrats another chance to break some stuff. >> lisa: we can't let them break it. to dana's point, he's been there because of vulnerable members of congress but he is talking key constituencies right now, steel workers and farmers. there are people who felt the effects of this trade tariffs going back and forth. i think the message to them with the farmers and the steelworkers is i am with you. i was with you because you were there for forgotten men and women president obama left behind. i'm standing for you and i'm fighting for you. it's a critical time for him to be sending that message and touting the fact we've seen hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs added under president trump. the economy is good. jesse pointed out. >> juan: one quick question. the deficit. he is offering 12 billion in subsidies to the farmers. the farmers are like with the tax cuts they didn't pan out and now this command blows up the deficit. it used to be a republican thin
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thing. >> greg: it was a democrat thing. the democrats didn't care about the deficit. you invented. >> lisa: i'm not down with the bailouts but i think president trump can say i'm fighting for you in yesterday's press conference came at a critical time for him to be able to say it's having an effect. >> juan: a push to impeach rod rubinstein -- rod rosenstein. sut won't replace the full value of your new car? you'd be better off throwing your money right into the harbor. i'm gonna regret that. with liberty mutual new car replacement we'll replace the full value of your car. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty ♪ and i don't add up the years. but what i do count on is boost®. delicious boost® high protein nuritional drink
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>> jesse: republicans are planning to impeach rod rosenstein. we will see how that goes. freedom caucus leaders accusing the deputy attorney general of stonewalling their request for documents but aren't finding the support they need right now. meantime, a turn in with the president calls a russia witch hunts. examining the president's tweets and a possible obstruction case. let's start with the rosenstein situation. i think what they are asking for
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are the original documents that existed to justify the opening of this russia-trump probe. they have not been able to find those documents. they have been stonewalled, and subpoenas have not been respected. it doesn't look like this is going to go anywhere. >> dana: i don't think so. this is one of those ones, it's not going anywhere. you could have alan dershowitz say it's one of the most shortsighted and i must say stupid thing i've heard in a long time. he's saying we have democrats saying impeach, impeach, impeach. the president. that looks ridiculous. this, you have republicans saying impeach rod rosenstein over something the justice department is not necessary. i don't think it's going anywhere. >> jesse: it could have been contempt. that might've been more of a stepping stone. >> greg: i don't think i've heard a single person that's actually said this is a good idea. >> juan: i think it's a great idea. >> greg: [laughs] america, there is your proof!
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juan is saying it's a good idea. do not do it. here's the big problem. impeachment proceedings require hearings, which will be required to carry. these are going to be really boring, stupid hearings. >> dana: it will cut into "the five" ." >> greg: there will be no monologue, no "the five," outnumbered, "fox & friends," everything is gone. no judge judy. all your other favorite shows. she still around? >> jesse: juan, what do you think, and what you think about mueller going after trump's mean tweets. >> juan: i think its potential evidence of obstruction. to me, it's a wonderful political story. forget for a second impeachment. it's petty and mean-spirited. i don't know. >> jesse: i will remember you said that. >> greg: impeachment.
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>> juan: they are in power and they can do this. what you heard from speaker paul ryan, he doesn't support it, right? >> lisa: he said he is frustrated with the doj and not providing the documents that have been subpoenaed and asked for. we look at text messages that popped up in the ig report that were never given to congress. i think it's fair for republicans conducting these investigations to be frustrated with rod rosenstein. the point is to stir some action, put pressure on leadership in the doj on rod rosenstein. you've got to have the numbers for impeachment, they don't have that in the house. you're not going to have it moving forward if anything happened in the house, to the senate. the numbers aren't there. the point is to put pressure, and congress doesn't have a lot of tools at their disposal. you look at contempt. you look at eric holder. >> juan: it's not high crimes and misdemeanors. no law has been broken. >> jesse: that's what they were trying to find out. they're looking for the documents, how did the
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investigation begin? was there probable cause? was their intelligence? >> juan: fine. >> jesse: and they are looking at, when the issue the fisa warrant, was fbi protocol followed? they are looking at what was redacted from the fisa warrant. the fact that rosenstein didn't come forward and say here you go because you have proper oversight. it makes people think why isn't this guy playing ball? >> greg: let it die. let it go away. my camera is out. i don't know where to look. >> dana: the house is out for five weeks. >> jesse: watch? a5 week vacation? i am running for congress. the super pac is over here.
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tripadvisor. visit tripadvisor.com ♪ >> dana: big problems brewing for big tech. president trump taking aim at twitter over its reported shadow banning of prominent conservatives. the social media platform under fire for allegedly restricting republicans' visibility in search results. the president vowed into looking into what he called the illegal practice. twitter officials describe it as a glitch they are trying to fix. mark zuckerberg is on the hot seat after his company loses over 100 billion, with a b, dollars in value. facebook shareholders have reportedly filed a proposal to remove him as chairman. is that too extreme? >> greg: i don't know. it's interesting. i think with social media, the
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bloom has come off the rose. >> dana: it's a great saying. i think it will catch on. >> greg: i'm going to quote, this is the greatest thing ever said about social media. walter tweeted this last night. if twitter sells you conflict, instagram sells you in. facebook civilly sells you. if you think about that, people are starting to figure it out. you get on twitter, you get angry. i'm instagram, you get jealous. on facebook come you feel like you're being manipulate it. these things have grown quickly. pull back. take a day off twitter. should you ban anonymity? would that change twitter? if everybody's name was attached. that would be a start. >> dana: the shadow banning, what you think, lisa? the liberals caught on last week to this issue and they said conservatives are being favored by facebook and they got headlines out of that. >> lisa: i thought was most
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illuminating, jonathan swan of axios who did a great job doing reporting. he said conservatives have been coming to him and saying stuff like this was going on he never believed it. what's interesting is now that it was reported on vice, a liberal publication, people might take it seriously. that was illuminating. regarding facebook, they made the biggest mistake. getting caught in president trump's orbit in this russia stuff. >> jesse: i know what facebook did wrong. they messed with diamond and diane so clear that's the problem. that's why you see the market value plunge. in all seriousness, i would buy facebook. >> dana: i know nothing about how do those things. >> jesse: buy and sell stock? call your broker. >> dana: i have something, it's like a mutual fund. it is now a good time? >> jesse: i would buy. it's way down.
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it's a great company. zuckerberg is a genius. he aced the capitol hill hearin hearing. >> greg: you are looking for a job, aren't you? >> dana: juan, is it too extreme zuckerberg should be out of a job? >> juan: it's crazy. he created this. i think jesse said this a moment ago, he said the only way you can justify losing that much money is you made even more money. he's made a lot of money for a lot of people. i don't think facebook is going away, but i think it's going to change. i think one of the things i would like to see. this pretense they are neutral platform. they are not neutral. they have to make decisions. they should censor some of the hate speech. people from sandy hook. >> dana: they are trying to use a mix of people and algorithms. >> juan: the algorithms are what got them in trouble yesterday because people said some of these republican -- they drop when you click, it's not working.
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they said it was the algorithm. >> jesse: the problem is that people who create the algorithms are usually politically correct whiz kids. there is buys baked into that cake. if you are designing algorithm that says conservative speech is more akin to hate speech than liberal speech, automatically it's going to be a bias against conservatives. >> juan: you have to watch it carefully. i side with you. i want free speech but hate speech, bullying, harassment, it should not be -- >> jesse: they will have to get rid of "the new york times"" >> lisa: ben sasse asked mark zuckerberg to define hate speech and he stumbles. my favorite tweet. a reporter tweeted said mark zuckerberg has every millennials worst fear, trying to explain technology to the elderly. >> greg: hate speech, sorry to say, is in the eye of the beholder. it depends on who is in charge.
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you are going to say you're being mean to me. the problem with hate speech is that it's subjective. >> jesse: it's like it. >> greg: it is. i don't think people understand algorithms. just because someone is using an algorithm on you isn't wrong. everybody does testing with companies. let's say mcdonald's. they will try make ribs in one place but not another place. that is testing. when they test algorithms, oftentimes they test them on some people and see how it works. dating sites do this. they test a dating algorithm. people go i want the other thing. this could be better. it's not wrong to use an algorithm. >> dana: i have an idea. you should create a character named al gore rhythm. harvard takes the sisterhood out
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of sorority and greg explains the controversy next.
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>> greg: they cut that song out early. a harvard sorority announced they are gender neutral. kappa alpha theta, if that is the real name, will be changing its name, delinking from its national chapter. harvard penalizes its members by withholding student leadership positions. still charging them 60 grand a year. it's hard to care about a harvard sorority. talk about a rough life. it's a slow news day. clubs, by nature, are clubby. people join based on shared traits. hobbies and so on. if you like stamps, you join a stamp club. if you like motorcycles, you join the hells angels. in high school, i couldn't join the boys chorus because i couldn't sing. i couldn't join the girls chorus
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because i went to an all boys school. i could only sing in the shower. i managed. the irony of forcing inclusivity on clubs is that inevitably clubs go away. it is not worth the trouble. society is now in a gender panic where it is scandalous to say boys and girls are different. i've yet to run into a single male who likes maroon 5. ♪ i think you see my point. social circles will likely fold to pressure from college administrators. maybe that's why everyone preserves to live on social media, for maybe it more closely resembles real life with friends, enemies, insults, jokes, insights, and genius. and it is 60 grand a year cheaper.
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is it true, dana? >> dana: you make a good point. that people like to be in a club. if you are on social media, it was just last week that an actor got in trouble because his friends and his club, he said maybe if you want to follow somebody that might not totally agree with you, try ben shapiro. that his club wanted to -- 's before close him down. >> dana: a huge concern now for people is the destruction of civil society. part of that is that people don't belong to clubs anymore. rotary club, things like this. people would get together and do things. put on. come help an event, help immigrants, things like that. >> greg: there are black fraternities. people would go crazy if you tried to say black fraternities have to accept white people. or gay fraternities have to accept straight people.
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it is a sorority a sorority anymore if it's gender neutral? >> juan: its roots as a female organization. so much of this is reactionary. you are talking about black fraternities and sororities. they were created because black people were not allowed into the white ones. with the women's thing, it's interesting. they mail fraternities are the ones, especially places like harvard, princeton, yale. they're the ones that have the tradition and the power and the secret societies. women, for the longest time, were saying how come we can't get -- radcliffe, the girls school. all of that has shifted. we've seen changes. for the most part, i think it's good, greg. i think you should be able to go. the worry would be, and i think you hear this from a lot of women who argue you need women's schools, women's colleges. because that's where women get to be -- >> lisa: it is so stupid, so dumb. if everyone's to start a club,
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why not? do your thing. why can't iv part of a sorority? it's so stupid. it underscores and demonstrates the totality of terry and is in -- totalitarianism of the left. i think it's a big problem. i think it's so stupid. i don't even have the words. and i liked being in a sorority in college. >> juan: they are not shutting it down. >> lisa: they are penalizing you to a point where it makes it difficult for you to be part of one. >> juan: if you remain closed. >> lisa: exactly. so you can no longer be of sorority or fraternity. if you do, it's a single gender organization and you get punished by the administration through things like borrowing people from holding leadership positions, things of that nature. how is that fair? >> juan: you can still be in a
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sorority. >> lisa: join another club. you can all be what you want to be. >> greg: we keep hearing about safe spaces. couldn't you argue that a sorority is a safe space for women? it's kind of strange. >> jesse: men wouldn't mind living with women but women wouldn't want to live with men. we are obnoxious. they need their space to be girls. guys don't need that. we spread out and do our thing. this is why i didn't go to harvard. [laughter] i don't know why everyone is laughing. i would like to apologize on behalf of the "the five" to adam levine. i think he's a good singer and i like maroon 5. >> lisa: he raised his hand. >> greg: i think it is about busybodies. it is like the straws. >> jesse: there was no one
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complaining. >> dana: so much good news. they have nothing to complain about. >> greg: call after sororities. i think we all learned a lesson here. jesse has terrible taste in music. you do. come on, maroon 5. do you listen to it? >> jesse: you had/metal in the bump in. >> greg: iron age is music. maroon 5. >> jesse: iron age was not very good. in the iron age. >> greg: very funny. next, we reveal the secrets to an absolutely perfect day. that includes watching me. don't go anywhere. in-laws were coming, a little bit of water, it really- it rocked our world. i had no idea the amount of damage that water could do. we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they were on it.
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♪ >> lisa: we all know watching "the five" makes your day perfect. now there may be scientific proof to back it up. a new study says the average person has only 15 perfect days a year. the ideal day recipe includes waking up at 8:15 in the morning, sunny skies with 74 degrees temperatures and three hours outdoors, spending several hours with family and friends and winding down in front of the tv and going to bed
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around 10:50 at night. what is a perfect day look like? my perfect day is the beach, hanging out, activities, may be a glass of wine, family, friends, and me time. i was with a stingray. i don't know if there's other photos. jesse. >> greg: so you like to be with stingrays. that's a perfect day? >> lisa: all right, whatever. what does your perfect day look like that is acceptable for national television? >> jesse: i sit next to dana so every day is a perfect day. >> dana: you are so charming. >> jesse: i like the pool, the beach. that's a perfect day. a unicorn, catching some sun, not a care in the world. >> lisa: dana, petting a dog was part of -- >> dana: number one. i have to have a schedule. i liked an early morning wake up and i like to read the papers.
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i like a long walk on the beach or wherever i am with peter and jasper, the dog. a chance to read my books. a tennis lesson. i like to have a walk in the afternoon and i like to go to dinner. again, like game night, and i like to go to bed early. >> lisa: that is like four perfect days in one. greg. >> greg: first i throw up from hearing everyone else's perfect day. you have to be an idiot to believe in perfect days. wisdom comes from understanding the imperfections of life and appreciating with certain things come together, that's a good day. never a perfect day. here's the secret to a perfect day or a good day. you are two different people. i am today greg. there is tomorrow greg. if i want to be mean to tomorrow greg, i could drink a lot tonight and not do any work for tomorrow's show. tomorrow's greg will have a hangover and be behind in work. the key to a happy life is today
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greg always has to be nice to tomorrow greg. that is the secret to everything. >> jesse: not drinking. >> dana: that's why i like to go to bed early. >> greg: you are to people. you are today and tomorrow. the only way you're going to have a perfect day or a good deist work for tomorrow. >> dana: i love it. >> lisa: that's a good stretch. if you have a perfect day, maybe you push it. juan, what is your perfect day look like? baseball? >> juan: good idea. one of the thing that strikes me as family. on this list is kindness. i have sunday night dinner with my family. i think this is great. you catch up with everybody. say hello. everybody's there. heaven is surrounded by people you love. hopefully that's family or friends or i don't know. to me, that's pretty good. i notice also on this list, the things that entertaining.
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listening to rain. i like listening to rainfall. i don't know if that makes for a perfect day. on the hole, i would say it's easier to be perfectly happy if you live in san diego. i look at this list. beach, sunshine, outdoors. >> greg: i wouldn't mind being in jail. >> dana: house arrest. a >> greg: you have no options. you have meals, you read. i could do that. >> dana: wouldn't you be bored? >> lisa: jesse, your perfect day, jail? >> jesse: know. maybe for someone else. >> lisa: never mind. we will save it for later. "one more thing" is coming up next. stay tuned. ce. get them started right with carnation breakfast essentials. it has protein plus vitamins and minerals to help kids be their best.
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♪ ♪ ♪ >> time now for one more thing. big fun, gregory. >> let's go to this first. everybody knows i'm a huge lot s out there like that jordan woods character. [laughs] anyway, claws of mcgough is my favorite golfer, you might have seen him at the pga, he scored a hole-in-one and then started doing a -- what do you call that, a pole dance. there are a lot of children out
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there, so be looking at this. this went on for quite a while and that's basically all i have to say about this video except that i found it on twitter. so there are good things you can find on twitter. >> i'm joining that's what our club >> dana? >> there was a contest about dogs on capitol hill and an independent journal review has named its cutest dog. there was a vote and the winner is hank. this is a boxer originally from rock springs, wyoming, and his owner is cara ahearn. she is chief of staff to congresswoman liz cheney. when he isn't busy clowning around he makes friends with the capitol police, he helps all sorts of people and he even knows vice president dick cheney. he's a very cute dog and i think you very much deserve to win. congratulations to cara. >> does he win barking rights? get it? bragging rights. >> it took me a minute. you may have heard the saying,
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don't go chasing waterfalls but if you are in china this summer you have to stop and see this one. that's the biggest man-made waterfall in the world and it's screaming off the side of a 22 2 story skyscraper. it plunges from the top floor of the building and it cost more than a hundred bucks per hour to provide electricity for the four pumps that push the water. >> i think this is totally unnecessary. >> people call the cops and say they think there is a plumbing leak and the cops have to come up regularly for this amazing waterfall. >> you would probably have to use the restroom a lot. >> i do love the sound of rain. >> it's hard to run away from the cops when you are on top of the cop car. take a look at this, a man in the back of a texas police cruiser kicked out a window and climbed onto the roof as it sped along the highway. he sat on the top of the car for miles until backup came finally.
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he was charged with evading arrest. >> they could have just hit the brakes really fast. >> did they know he was there? >> i think they probably had an idea. >> that's how you get jesse's hair. [laughter] >> it's called windswept. >> i think you had one more thing where a guy in florida was hanging on the back or the front of a car. >> yes, he had that, too. >> that's my beef. >> we need to look at these things before you get them. >> all right. lisa. >> take a look at this. i think there is an image and no, it's not me. don't look at me. so at first look that may look like a zebra but if you notice that years are floppy instead of the router here is that you have of the zebra. so guess what, this is actually a donkey and there is a zoo in egypt that tried to pass a
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donkey off as a zebra. the photo has gone viral and now the zoo is trying to deny it. and i didn't know about this but this is not the first time of the zoo has tried to do something like that. there was an incident in 2009. a chinese zoo tried to pass off a tibetan mastiff dog as i lie in. >> you know, you can say he self identifies as a zebra. [laughter] all the clubs will let him in. he's a zebra. [laughter] >> it's a donkey. >> i don't know what you would do though, because it's fraud against children. >> while it was the children that caught it. >> we will be right back. >> so yesterday, jesse said that we should stop telling you to
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set your dvr. why was that? >> do they have that anymore? >> i think they still have a machine that will allow you to tape the the show. >> the television do it themselves. >> never miss an episode of "the five." mike emanuel is in for bret baier. >> president trump takes a victory lap on his european trade deal in the heartland where he talks economy, jobs and tariffs. and republicans go after twitter for what they say is discriminatory and illegal censorship. and optimism in the search for a treatment for alzheimer's disease. this is a "special report. >> mike: a good evening and welcome to washington. i mike emanuel in for bret baier. president trump is on his way back to washington after two midwestern stops conveniently timed after he reached a major agreement over trade and tariffs. whil

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