tv The Five FOX News August 6, 2018 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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tomorrow at 2:00 p.m. eastern every day monday through friday only on fox business. we had a market that ended up 39. we will see what tomorrow brings. "the five" starts now. >> dana: i'm dana perino with tammy bruce, richard fowler, jesse watters, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five" ." president trump hitting the campaign trail in ohio over the weekend and predicting a possible red wave and the midterms. this comes ahead of a hotly contested special election in the buckeye state's 12th district tomorrow. >> they are talking about this blue wave. i don't think so. you win and you are a little complacent. that was two years ago. i said why? we have the greatest economy in the history of our country.
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we have things that have never happened. look. if the democrats get in, they are going to raise your taxes. you're going to have people pouring across the border. why would that be a blue wave? i think it could be a red wave. >> dana: the economy is a big plus for the president. 3.9% unemployment is the lowest since 1966. democrats taking a different approach. kamala harris is speaking out. >> i have a problem with that phrase, identity politics. let's be clear. when people say that, it's a pejorative. that phrase is used to divide, and it is used to distract. its purpose is to minimize and marginalize issues that impact all of us. it is used to try to shut us up.
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>> dana: greg, i will go to you because you talk a lot about identity politics and how that helps divide the country. she is saying if you say that, then you are being divisive. >> greg: that was a very powerful -- if you agree with her, she's very persuasive. she's a strong speaker. i do disagree with everything she is saying but i have to say the way she said it was pretty strong. identity politics used to be a rallying cry for the left. it was a positive thing. now when you mention it, it's an insult. the reason is because the consequences of identity politics is putting the group before the individual. what happens is everybody and their specific groups then have to feel that their group is somehow more important than the other group. what you end up having our warring factions. you are seeing it a lot of times where one group accuses the other group of cultural appropriation, and another group accuses that group of something else. ultimately it's going to turn on itself.
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this is why trump won. he was talking about one identity politics which was american. then you have the left say no, that's racist, because what you are really saying is white when you're talking about america. that's the consequence of identity politics. what they are saying is if you are white, you are part of the oppressor group. so when you say identity politics, you're obviously racist. nothing good can come from identity politics because in its heart, it's about division. >> dana: tammy, welcome to "the five." president trump is at a rally. he loves it. he's into the crowd. contrast that with kamala harris giving a speech. what do you think about the way they are both setting things up? >> tammy: her attempt to retreat from identity politics, which they have relied on for decades, tells you they've noticed it's not working. they have seen something internally that tells them we've got to stop this. and independent women's voice
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shows 85% of people don't care, as an example, about gender. they are not going to base their vote on gender and yet that's all of 2016 wise. vote for hillary. first woman president. or vote for this person. the first of this or that. americans are not carrying. it doesn't work. her position, this is not working. we have relied on it. let's retreat. the president is just being consistent. it was with the campaign was. we are all in this together. the numbers prove its growth. the unemployment numbers are extraordinary. everyone has been lifted. it's this thing he promised. it's based on all of us seeing each other as a neighbor. that's what resonates with the american people and that's why it's working. >> dana: richard, i imagine you disagree. i will give you the floor. you can tell us why. >> greg: don't give him the floor. just give him the table.
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>> richard: i think what senator harris is saying is when you fix an issue, when you properly fund public education, you help all americans. when you fix our broken immigration system can you help all americans. you make sure everyone has the right to vote without disenfranchisement, you help all americans. it's not identity politics to make sure america works for everybody, no matter their color, race, sexuality, zip code. >> dana: don't you think -- >> richard: what we have in the white house is in a presidents -- we are still fighting for lgbtq rights. you have a president and the right how who gets into fights with nfl players or fights with lebron james. >> greg: he gets in fight with everybody. >> dana: that doesn't hurt any
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particular group. >> richard: the african-american community would say when you pick on lebron james for opening a school in akron, ohio, you're picking on the entire african-american community. >> jesse: he didn't pick on him because he opened a school. he picked on lebron james because he picked on donald trump a >> greg: and it was to make fun of don lemon don lemon. >> jesse: we know trump doesn't take the high road. he gets in the dirt and fights it out. you should be used to it. it's two years, going on eight. the identity politics, they are looking for differences, as tammy said, instead of everything that unites us. the democratic party has coalitions and they group them together for victories based on their identity. what they do is they have these groups and they say these groups have grievances. we are going to correct those grievances. we are going to right those wrongs or write those injustice injustices. we are going to use the government to do that.
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what they do is they say everything that's wrong that is plaguing these identity groups is the fault of republicans. it's not the groups fault. it's not the economy's fault. it has -- it's all the republicans fault. they demonize the republicans and create a war. there is a war and women, minorities, muslims. republicans don't go out every day, wake up, eat breakfast and say how can i wage war on other people? they go to work. they get their money. they don't want the government to keep all of it. >> dana: can i play a couple pieces of sound. one of the senate candidates, republican senate candidate in michigan. that primary is tomorrow. the other is alexandria ocasio-cortez, who was in michigan campaigning for somebody else over the weekend. >> i don't have a black method. i don't have a white message. i have a red light blue message.
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>> we can say a muslim man can be the first governor, the first muslim governor in this country, in the midwest. we don't have to be afraid about some other that won't vote for him because we know ten years ago, they voted for a man named barack hussein obama. >> tammy: she said some other. she is casting someone else as the other. this is why it's not working and why senator harris is in troubl trouble. the harvard poll said a ten-point boost of approval for the president by his standings. rasmussen showing last year the president was at 15% approval among african-americans. today he is at 29%. you are looking at a trajectory were groups that have been protected are saying wait a minute. we are the same. the money is the same. the amount of money we are getting, the tax cuts. we have a job not delivering pizza. it's a real good job.
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>> richard: where rb being protected? we are being shot in the street with no accountability. >> greg: that's not true. there's a lot of accountability. why don't you look at the -- look at the research of who is doing the shooting. you can slip that in. >> tammy: those numbers for african-americans. we go to fear and victimhood. that's what we are rejecting. >> richard: i am fearful when i get pulled over by police. >> greg: let's say you want to have a discussion with somebody by identity politics and you say i'm willing to listen to you and i want to know, and i agree with you. what do you get? you don't get the answer because it's never enough. the idea of identity politics is that you are the oppressor and they are they'll prosper there is no end in sight. if you say will you take our help? i would like to help you with this, that will not be enough. if you see any public servants
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between -- either with antifa or activists, these are people not interested in a discussion. that's why people say, when they are talking about identity politics, they can't have a discussion because it never ends. they are never happy. identity politics is not about solutions. it's about undoing civilization. >> richard: the same argument can be made about the kkk. they are not trying to have a discussion with me about how to be less racist. >> greg: i agree with you there. antifa is like the kkk. >> richard: every day americans, every day brown folks would say investments in public schools, community, opportunities. we are still fighting for that. >> greg: everybody is fighting for it. >> tammy: we are all fighting for it. >> dana: president trump, he has a way of basically disrupting everything. your republicans across the country trying to lower expectations.
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ohio 12 tomorrow. they can hopefully meet expectations. he says forget all that. raise expectations and expect a red wave. >> jesse: they need a red wall. it shouldn't be this close in ohio. this is a district they've won, republicans for decades going back to the '30s. democrats running away from nancy pelosi. he is keeping it on kitchen table issues, education costs, health care costs. he doesn't even mention donald trump that much. the republican is a little about older. not as charismatic. he's got a little personality problem there. now the national media's coming in big time. they started going positive and touting the president's success, and now they are just smearing this democrat. they are linking him to elizabeth warren, calling her pocahontas. they are going dirty late chemist that means they're worried about it. i think the republicans are going to hang on, but if the democrat does won and it's going to give the democrats a lot of momentum. >> dana: no matter what
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happens tomorrow, they both run again against each other in november. we will be back talking about ohio 12. president trump containing two attacked media, and his new tweet is creating all kinds of controversy next. liberty mutual accident forgiveness means they won't hike your rates over one mistake. see, liberty mutual doesn't hold grudges. for drivers with accident forgiveness
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♪ >> jesse: president trump taking aim at the media with a new round of blistering attacks this weekend. >> what we've done, they even say, it really has been, as you say, amazing. it's been a miracle to a lot of people. it's been a miracle. i campaigned and i purposely didn't mention the kind of numbers we are achieving. because i didn't want to be accused of exaggeration. by the fake news media. they are so dishonest. these are among the most dishonest human beings you will ever meet. >> jesse: the president whipping up media asked hysterics with this tweet. "fake news reporting, a complete fabrication, that i am concerned about the meeting my wonderful son, donald, had in trump tower. this was a meeting to get information on an opponent, totally legal and done all the time in politics. and it went nowhere.
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i did not know about it!" many of the press are claiming it's a stunning omission. some have pointed out trump's tweet isn't that different from what he said a year ago. >> i think from a practical standpoint, most people would have taken that meeting. it's called opposition research or even research into your opponent. i've only been in politics for two years. but i've had many people call and say we have information on this factor or this person. frankly hillary. that's standard in politics. >> jesse: dana, i was reading "the washington post" over the weekend. there was a great column. >> greg: what section of the paper? >> jesse: a2. he said what's the difference between what donald jr. did at the trump tower meeting and what hillary clinton did.
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one of the main differences, he points out, is that hillary clinton actively solicited russian dirt on an opponent by paying that cut out in britain to get it from russian sources. donald trump jr. didn't solicit anything. the russians came to him. do you see the difference? >> richard: i don't see the difference. >> jesse: how could you not? how simple can i make it? >> richard: two ships passing in the night. the facts are completely different. in the email, he was like, we have somebody connected to putin, who is a lawyer in the kremlin. she has us all this information on hillary. would you meet with her? at that point, that's where it becomes illegal. >> jesse: what is the law? >> richard: you cannot accept
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contributions of any kind from foreign entities. >> jesse: did he accept them? >> richard: in excepting the meeting, one would argue -- >> jesse: the meeting is not information. i have the law all right here. it's not about meetings. it's about a donation or contribution. what came of the meeting? zilch, richard. there's no crime there. >> richard: let me make a point. >> tammy: this is the entire argument. this does happen all the time. the big differences, obviously it's happened twice here. you have a meeting with people looking for dirt. but then you've got the dnc, as you have no date, paying for information from the russians. while her husband is getting out $500,000 paycheck for russian speech while she's making deals to get 20% of our uranium. here's what's been a very good point over the weekend.
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all of this pointing a donald trump is about really projections. that it's all the things the democrats have been doing with the russians, within that framework, to distract from that. typical tactic. you accused your opponent of what you been doing so that nobody turns around to look at you. that's what's happening. >> jesse: what you think about the latest iteration? >> dana: maybe it's exactly what the president said last year but it's not what jay sekulow said. this weekend he had to say i was given bad information. i passed along bad information. he won't elaborate. but that seems to be a recurring problem in this situation. >> tammy: he threw himself under the bus. >> greg: i am a broken record. i was going to write down "i'm a broken record." if i were home watching this to my head would explode because i would not care. especially if i were a retired executive or someone in business probably took half a dozen
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different meanings a day in your building. i said this to myself as an editor of a number of magazines, i took meetings with people i didn't know or i sent people to meetings. it wasn't a big deal. he didn't care. someone would come back and say that guy turned out to be a drug dealer. i didn't know he was a drug dealer. he said he wanted to buy advertising. people have meetings all the time. they send their lowly assistance or whoever is around to these meetings. it drives me crazy that this is somehow that some are bigger than an actual candidate. buying dirt sight unseen from the russians through a british spy. getting a 20 minute meeting that you don't give a dam about -- give a damn about. a lot of people haven't worked in business so they don't understand this. but a reporter will make a phone call to ask you about dirt about your coworker. they are doing the same exact kind of thing. every reporter that's written
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anything about the media has done this kind of thing. >> jesse: no one is calling you about dirt on me, right? >> greg: [laughs] everybody takes the call. >> tammy: you're right about people not caring. gallup did the list above the most important issue, russia didn't even -- it got an asterisk below everything else. >> greg: they care more about jesse's hair. we proved this. >> jesse: against my better judgment, i'm going to give richard the short last word. >> richard: it's a campaign. campaigns are governed by law. you can't take foreign contributions. every time a foreign entity has come to a campaign, they've usually called the fbi. the 2000, it happened to al gor al gore. >> greg: how come they didn't do it? >> richard: what don jr. should've done was call the fbi. >> greg: why do you think he didn't? he didn't know. they are not politicians, richard.
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they are not politicians. they are businessmen. they take meetings. >> richard: ignorance of the law is not a defense. >> greg: it is in this case. they didn't know. >> tammy: you know who did know, the fbi. >> jesse: lastly, clinton paid for russian dirt. >> dana: you said he was going to get the last word. >> jesse: deafening silence from liberals after a wave of gun violence sweeps chicago this weekend. i am all about living joyfully. the new united explorer card hooks me up. getting more for getting away. traveling lighter. getting settled. rewarded! learn more at theexplorercard.com we really pride ourselves on making it easy for you >> tech: at safelite autoglass, to get your windshield fixed. with safelite, you can see exactly when we'll be there. saving you time for what you love most. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪
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whenshe was pregnant,ter failed, 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. it was unbelievable. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. we're the baker's and we're usaa members for life. usaa. get your insurance quote today. ♪ >> tammy: a shocking level of violence this weekend in chicago. police say 11 people were killed and dozens more were shot with a three day span. democrat mayor rahm emanuel is partially blaming the number of firearms on the streets despite the city's tough i galatians. >> there are too many guns on the streets.
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too many people with criminal records on the street. and there is a shortage of values about what is right and what is wrong. >> tammy: meanwhile, the typical liberal outrage is mostly nonexistent. should we be surprised? a lot of people with that statement, heads were crashing on desks because it didn't make a lot of sense. greg. >> greg: what i noticed was earlier, giuliani made a mistake. he inverted the entries in the murders. i think he said 59 people were murdered. when i noticed from that was giuliani's mistake in his numbers got more press in in te media than the actual deaths, which were eight or nine. the mistake that giuliani made was more outrageous to the
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people that have been ignoring what's been unfolding in chicago for years. that this is actually the story giuliani screwed up. i am starting to think maybe giuliani, by screwing up, did chicago a favor, because people are actually talking about it. major flaws in the media. they need a singular spectacle. mass shooting. it keeps begetting violence because it's an unfolding event. they treated like weather. 69 and cloudy. 54 injured in one area. it's in a cordoned off area of chicago. the wealthy don't have to worry about it. the politicians don't have to worry about it. they don't care. your problems with sentencing. people are on the street. but it keeps going, it doesn't bother them, and it's okay. >> tammy: if they want to talk about, they would have to discuss a solution. they think they have supplied a
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solution, making guns virtually impossible to get. so it's getting back -- it's gg activity and gang violence. >> dana: talking about the breakdown of trust between the police and the people. rahm emanuel says it's a lack of values. that's not a government solutio solution. that's a conservative position. >> greg: this was a guy who went after chick flavor values. >> dana: i get it. this is obviously more important. i don't think they are blind to the problem. the new chief of police said they were going to be conducting, they need our help, not our condemnation. the president has offered to help chicago. i hope mayor manuel will take him up on it. one of the reasons not more people died is because trauma surgeons are really good. that's a fact. they should be able to not have to do that. >> greg: in the '70s, the
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numbers. >> tammy: we do get very upset understandably about the horror of a mass shooting. this is like a mass shooting every weekend that we do kind of avoided. maybe we've gotten used to it. is that part of the problem, why the media ignores it? >> jesse: the media needs a villain in the case like this and they can have rahm emanuel be the villain because he's a democrat and his protected. they can't have an anonymous gang member be a villain. it doesn't fit the bill. it is like the weather, like greg said. they have found their villain commended through giuliani. there is opportunity for the media to treat this like a real humanitarian crisis. like a hurricane or a school shooting. they flood the zone with tv reporters. bring an anchor to chicago. talk to local people and they can really shine a spotlight on something like that. well that will do is hold the mayor accountable. it will shame local politicians into actually doing something,
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and it might bring more philanthropists and charity, athletes, celebrities into chicago and see if we can fix the mess. it's really sad. >> tammy: of course we're looking at, everyone generally agrees we are dealing with gang shootings. drive by shooting to gatherings. you can shoot a lot of people at once, especially during the summer. is this why we are still dealing with that and there's no major national outrage? >> richard: i agree with dana and jesse a little bit. i think there should be a main media story. what's happening in chicago is a genocide. one of our colleagues gianno caldwell, has been there covering what's happening. to say that the liberals have been silent is a farce. people in chicago have been protesting and talking about the lack of security and the lack of opportunity. you cannot solve gangs without dealing with the root cause. the root cause of gangs is because there's no opportunity in these communities. the young men have nothing to do. the schools are not working
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properly because they are not funded by the mayor. we've got to deal with the fact that there's no opportunity, and we've also got to deal with what dana brought up, a breakdown of trust between the community and police. part of it is because of the man shot 16 times by the police. there was a cover-up with the mayor. no one saw the takes. people are doing good work and we've got to help them. >> tammy: we have touched on all the things we need to deal with. this is going to continue. up next, greg breaks down how an alleged drone attack on the venezuelan president could be a new frontier in terrorism. (burke) abstract accident. seen it. covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ and it's also a story mail aabout people and while we make more e-commerce deliveries
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looks like they spotted air force one. two points to learn, venezuela is a socialist paradise that was warm once rich, meaning if you like bernie, this could be your future. someone should page alexander and the democrats. inflation, depression, human rights violations, food shortages. you could eat your own zoo animals. your currency could be worth less than toilet paper, except you couldn't buy toilet paper. play your burning card right, and your medicine could vanish in your hospital's close. you could do it venezuelan's do: move to colombia. do you think it can't happen? venezuela was one of the most prosperous countries in south america before they traded it in for a dimestore socialist. the point of socialism: vines on good made by somebody else, take it for yourself. it is shoplifting is up local theory. you convince poor people to give up everything they have to beat the out of them if you ask for
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it back. socialism is older than bernie. it doesn't work. the attack was via drone. equipped with c4. terror married to amazon technology. you can fret about it. the experts are already there. they don't want to ban socialists. they want to ban drones. you can't ban either. any smarty-pants knows which one is worse. dana, i sat here and i said technology and terror is the next wave. >> dana: for years you have said that. >> greg: i said it since the early '70s when "the five" first started. we are almost at our 50th year. i tell you. your surgery. you look just like you did when the show started. >> dana: it's been -- yeah. >> greg: anyway. you get my point. >> dana: i do.
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the column today in "the wall street journal." she said for maduro, if you want to murder maduro, you need to get in line. there are so many people who think his leadership has been exactly how you just described it. it destroyed a country. but also she said cuba is basically controlling this country. so everyone is basically dealing with a situation where during the obama administration he tried to make the overture, tried to change everything. he didn't actually work. you can't make an overture without making recommendations or insisting on changes. you won't get any of those changes. the drone thing, i will let other people talk about it, but it's scary. >> greg: richard, we were talking about this during the break. i am prone grown. you are too. drones save lives in war. you lose fewer soldiers and the collateral damage is last but other people can have drones and use them for evil.
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>> richard: i am okay when we use drones and high combat situations. when our armed forces aren't risk. i'm against drones in the use of surveillance purposes. surveilling americans. the ideal of having drones in war zones where we can have people sitting in omaha, nebraska, managing our drones, it's great because we don't lose valuable american lives. >> tammy: that's going to move to robots. why keep it in the air? why not just send the robots to do the action? the end result of somebody's going to die. >> greg: the great thing about technology is that they are -- they don't sleep. they don't get distracted. you have them facing their target. >> tammy: the operator well, to some degree. the thing about venezuela, there is a concern that this is not
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something that was done from the outside. that he was doing this himself. the big surprise was that the military reacted the way they did. if you find there's military people suddenly disappearing. >> dana: you will know they are. >> greg: i can't blame them. the military, they want to defend of failing, dying system? i don't know. >> jesse: not the greatest military discipline i've seen on display. not a good look. it's going to embolden the colombians. >> greg: okay, more people, i've read this fact. i hope it's right. more people are fleeing venezuela then syria. >> dana: there is no one left to leave syria, number one. >> jesse: the people coming leg venezuela are not coming to america talking about how great socialism is. this is the scariest monologue. if you have a jihadist in the united states who straps some munition to a jerry-rigged drone
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from the internet and flies in over a football game. how are you going to prevent it? >> greg: i have been saying that. >> jesse: i don't listen to all of your monologues. the idea of a drone married to a bio agent, anthrax. fly it over a football field. you can kill thousands. >> dana: when the news broke on saturday, the first thing i did was forwarded to greg and i said here we go. we didn't know what it was. i think it could be possible maduro set this up for himself. today they had rallies of support for him. he needs that. internally, people are mad. >> tammy: no extended security zone. no extra coverage. >> jesse: you are forgetting about the jackets they were holding up. >> richard: only have -- when we have our president outcome he put them in the bulletproof cage, the inauguration. clearly they weren't prepared. >> greg: a positions flight
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american airlines passenger got kicked off a flight because of the size of her cello. the musician says she was booted after the crew claimed the plane was too small for her instrument. the airline calls it a miscommunication. greg posted an interesting tweet about his trip this weekend. flights can be delayed at times indefinitely because people flush things down the toilet that shouldn't be flush. don't be that person. >> dana: what happened? >> greg: the solution is for the woman, play the flute. you saved so much money. it's a tiny instrument. it's more enjoyable than the cello. i had a great flight. it was fantastic. i'm always against people tweeting against airlines because i think it's petty. somebody flashed something down the toilet and it delayed the flight. what delays flights? the number one thing is weather. you don't consider this a
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thousand variables. in this case, it was somebody -- never flush anything down that is larger than a cocktail weini weinie. it's a good rule. >> richard: i was on a flight to israel and they were 12 hours delayed. >> greg: it could be weather. they are trying to save your life. >> dana: across the board, you had a good flight yesterday. a lot of people, we get where we need to go. i think across the board, people are frustrated with the airline airlines. the planes, the delays, overselling, the cost. people want to get where they are going. they are extremely frustrated. i know someone who was going to milwaukee for a party but they went to richmond. they had to take a six hour
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train back. >> tammy: one of the big things that's hurting how people feel about airlines, the animal issues. so many stories about animals not making it. then there's a very basic kind of thing. i was on a flight in business class. i asked for a blanket. the flight attendant took it out of the overhead and threw it at me. i tweeted at that point about the other airline. it was so cold. everyone was complaining this one flight attendant brought literally a water bottle with hot water in it. hot water bottle. handing it to us. it was not the best customer service. you expect to have some kind of at least not frozen air. >> jesse: people need to take flying much more seriously. it's a sport, an athletic event. a lot of people trying to get on the flight quickly and you have people not paying attention.
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they're on their phones. their bags. they are kids. once that flight opens up, you have your ticket ready. you scan it. you go. find your seat. sit, buckle, overhead. don't talk to anybody. don't go to the bathroom. stop bothering other people. it's holding everything up. >> richard: we are agreeing more these days. >> tammy: you remember when a woman wasn't allowed on a plane because her children -- the girl was in leggings and they wouldn't let her on the plane. she was on a buddy system to get on a voucher. people should dress better on planes. >> richard: there used to be a time when you had to dress up to get on a plane. now it's 2018. >> greg: it's more affordable to a flight, more people are flying. it is a boss in. that's what it is.
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therefore people are addressing like slobs everywhere. sweatpants are replacing khakis. >> jesse: i have to admit something. i have transition from dressing nice on flights to sweatpants and sneakers. stylish sweatpants. >> richard: and a hoodie. >> tammy: if you want some comfort, you have to it for yourself. >> richard: you like them that would make it better is have a kids section in the plane. >> dana: i am excited about my "one more thing." let's go. >> richard: "one more thing" is next.
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i thought i married an italian. my lineage was the vecchios and zuccolis. through ancestry, through dna i found out that i was only 16% italian. he was 34% eastern european. so i went onto ancestry, soon learned that one of our ancestors we thought was italian was eastern european. this is my ancestor who i didn't know about. he looks a little bit like me, yes. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com i'm begging you... take gas-x.ed beneath the duvet your tossing and turning isn't restlessness, it's gas! gas-x relieves pressure, bloating and discomfort... fast! so we can all sleep easier tonight.
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>> it's time now for one more thing. i'm excited because every summer there is a rodeo, and a county fair in weston county. i sponsor the girls settle for whatever young girl instituting a rodeo for the girls, i get them a saddle. this is jocelyn, and her horse is houdini. she won, she's only eight years old but get this, it turns out she is my little cousin. take a look at this video to see if you can tell that we are related. >> high dana, this is me jocelyn and my horse, houdini.
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i want to thank you so much for sponsoring the girls jr. all around a saddle, we are super, super excited. >> congratulations to jocelyn, and hopefully we can get there next year. >> she's a natural talker. >> all all right greg. >> she's like -- i hope she comes and visits me in new york. >> that's really nice, dana. >> all right. i want to thank everybody with barnes & noble and fort worth and dallas to woodland this weekend. i met so many awesome people, and they make you stuff, they make paintings and give you things. it's crazy, i think i must have met at least 3,000 people. and lots of families. everybody asking -- that's
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darrell evans from the san francisco giants. if you were a giants fan in the 70s, you will remember him. and i ran into my buddy riley from power trip. this is for any metal lands that love "the five," and i'm talking to dusty hill from zz top, that's his wife. are these great pictures? i've got like 600 of them. >> guess what, i'm going to be at huntington book review. huntington new york book review tomorrow night. >> you better go to that. >> all right. it's time for jessie's "eyebrow news." we don't have the animation. >> we don't need one. i browbeat down a brooklyn salon. someone didn't like how there eyebrows were done, and it got violent in the beauty salon. but everyone is okay.
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because eyebrows are my feet, dana. if there is eyebrow news in the media, i will cover it. [laughter] >> we have one minute left. >> this story, you can also check out on my instagram page. this is a really cool story about a woman who was rejected from a nail salon because she had cerebral palsy. they will mark saw it, ran into the store, bought nail polish and did them. you can see the whole entire story on my instagram page. you can catch a video and hear the story. >> i will follow you right now. >> more good news from the cancer research community, there is a new drug that is 93% effective with kids cancer. and 75% effective with some rare adult cancers. the drug has been approved by the fda and it is a breakthrough therapy drug. it's remarkable. i put this on social media and it goes viral because you don't hear about the stuff these days.
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and anything you hear may be attached to trump. the new drug will be helping kids do this kind of stuff which is what kids should be doing. >> thanks for being here. set your dvr and never miss an episode. she likes her coffee with sugar and cream, it's shannon bream. >> loved it dana, thank you so much. >> this is a fox news alert. the prosecution's star witness in the case against the former campaign chairman has taken the stand. peter doocy is in alexandria tonight again with the very latest on the trial. good evening, peter. >> one of the first things that rick gates, paul manafort's former deputy and business partners told the jury this afternoon was that he did break the law. one of the mueller prosecutors asked rick gates, were you involved in criminal activity when you work for paul manafort, and he said yes. he testified he d
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