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tv   The Five  FOX News  October 5, 2018 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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danes from montana from his daughter's wedding. the father of the bride can stay and republicans can chock of a victory. a victory is a victory. it's not how close you win it but just that you won. "the five" is now. >> it's 5 o'clock in new york city and this is "the five." >> ♪ >> ♪ >> this is a fox news alert. breaking news rocking washington, d.c. two key senators will vote yes to confirm brett kavanaugh. susan collins and joe manchin announced their decision. a part of senator's collins speech on the senate floor. >> i do not believe that these
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charges can fairly prevent judge kavanaugh when serving on the court. to that leaker who i hope is listening now, let me say that what you did was unconscionable. so public confidence in our judiciary and our highest court is restored. mr. president, i will vote to confirm judge kavanaugh. >> the final vote is expected tomorrow in what could be mitch mcconnell's big win. the white house responded with this tweet from sarah sanders. thank you, senator collins for standing by your convictions and doing the right thing to confirm judge kavanaugh. i think we all watched collins
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speech. it was an important speech. i wonder what you thought of it. >> started talking and i started yawning. i realized i am missing something huge. i am not trained to hear it. we spent so much time with short, loud trumpian speeches. this might be the most important speech i have heard in years. she was not just defending kavanaugh. she was defending hourly system and trying to preserve the institution. she was like previously in the government. she went from the beginning to the present time and took us through the resistance and his legal background. she was a hammer of reason going through all of this stuff. she brought us from the start to the finish providing cover for everybody else. she spoke not for kavanaugh. she was speaking for us. i go to twitter because i see other media making jokes about
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her. male reporters mocking her because she is slow or boring. but they are dumber than me for doing that. they are making fun of a woman. a brave woman. she'll be harassed for the rest of her life. >> she decided to do it on merits. this was not a partisan decision for her. >> it should not be this close. the media has been complicit in spreading the disinformation. the letter from ford's boyfriend that raised credibility issues, the media ignored and the boyfriend of julie swetnick raised questions about her credibility and participating in unsaffory things that i can't say on television. her history of frivolous lawsuits. and they buried the mitchell
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report. the media buried that. they never talked about all of the witnesses alleged that could not corroborate this story from ford. there was an interesting polling question. it was under 50% public support for the kavanaugh confirmation. you were told that the alleged witnesses could not corroborate ford it sky rockets to 60%. still things are leaking. the friend of ford allegedly tried to get them to change their story. a former fbi agent. she was coached by ford on how to take a polygrah test. this woman is represented by a lawyer who left the justice department in a huff over trump's election and oversaw the hillary clinton probe. very sketchy stuff.
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grassley is alluding to more coordination between ford's team and dianne feinstein. susan collins mentioned these things. these antics. the avanati accusations didn't help. everything that these people do in the hallways is not helping. you have to look back at this thing and say the democrats over-played their hand here. >> did you think given all of your experience -- >> i can't believe i sat here and listened to that without erupting in rage or began to show my explosive passions. i am not judge kavanaugh. i don't get a chance to cry. >> only women cry? that's very sexist to make fun of a man for crying. >> i never made fun of anybody crying. i have seen a lot of men cry in my life. >> i did that once after one
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show. >> [laughing]. >> if i had a tissue i would give it to you now. i could sing and you would cry. >> up until susan collins gave her speech did you think there was a chance that the republicans might not get this confirmation done? >> when it comes to senate nominations for judicial positions, the republicans have only one speed: go ahead and get it done. we saw with garland. he didn't get a hearing. we saw with justice gorsuch, he got a hearing. they got it done. three democrats walked across the aisle to support him. look, i am not going to sit here and belittle the women who have come forward. i won't try to bring back old conversation busy their past because they are not applying for a lifetime position on the cerement. -- supreme court. judge kavanaugh should have expected that his life history
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would come up. we expect that with a candidate for president -- sorry, i touched you. >> i like being touched. i am from an italian family and we are always touching each other. >> no one expects to be accused of gang rape. >> or falsely accused. you can't anticipate that you will be falsely accused. >> but you can anticipate that your entire past will come up in the manner of not just hearings but a manner of investigations. that being said, this vote will likely happen within the next 22 hours. it appears they have the votes. we don't know. people who are still upset. people still want to weigh in. call your u.s. senators. it's not over. aban is looking into judge
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kavanaugh appearance list. >> right but not looking at avanati. is looking into judge kavanaugh appearance list. >> right but not looking at avanati. >> but avanati is not applying for a lifetime appearance. >> should he be practicing law? >> we know he has a great tanning deal. >> but you look great. >> i use makeup and i am half italian. the most powerful senator is senator joe manchin. he is not just somebody that says i am pro gun and anti-obamacare. this is the first time he has had a major vote as a so-called moderate democrat. we is wooable. >> who sis wooing him? >> if he is a democrat that will go across the aisle and vote.
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i would say this about this whole thing. >> we have a chance to talk about joe manchin in a moment. hold that thought. we'll will get to john roberts. he has breaking news about him. >> that was one of the most comprehensive speeches in quite sometime. there were no bad guys. the only bad guy was the leashing. -- leaker. feinstein i know you would not do that. she is trying to re-start. she is trying to start fresh. let's say the next thing is opioids. something we can do together. i think we are staring at the cliff and nobody wants to jump. not republicans or democrats. i think the next time you have me back here in 2021, we will have a situation where people are making deals again. >> speak of joe manchin the senator from west virginia. john roberts is at the white
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house. i think you have some tidbit about what happened today? >> i do. first to brian's point, you could lay a safe bet that president trump has been campaigning heavily in west virginia and may not make any more campaign appearances there. joe manchin was a big part of this. i talked to the white house officials. after the cloture vote. do you think you can hold to on manchin? they said yes. the reason for that optimism was that this morning senator joe manchin called the white house and said that he was going to be a yes on the confirmation for brett kavanaugh. people around here were happy today thinking this would go through. the one wild card was susan collins. she didn't call the white house to say she would be a yes. white house officials assumed if she was going to be a no, that
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she would have called to inform them of that. they learned of her decision in real time just like the rest of us. they were hanging on every word she said. she laid out the judicial case for judge kavanaugh and pivoted back on the allegations and then pivoted back to the positive. with senator daines out of montana for his daughter's wedding, you have a 50-49 margin. if something were to happen, he could come back. it's a safe bet to say the vice-president will probably be around town just in case. >> jesse, a quick question? >> a comment. >> a funny one? >> [laughing]. >> it better be. >> if i were joe manchin i would have held out for more. remember obamacare and how they got through.
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the corn husker kickback? what did he get through. obama got that through with bribes and lies. this was maybe lunch? >> we could have gotten more. >> i think he did actually demand a piece of wedding cake from senator daines when he comes back from montana. this is not to say anything like this would happen. you will remember 2 years ago governor jim justice a lifelong democrat switched to the republican party. a lot of people said they would not be surprised to see joe manchin run as a republican in 2024. >> thank you very much, john roberts. donna, move on.org and priorities usa have announced they are pulling funding from
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joe manchin who might not need it anymore. and pulling it from phil grettison in tennessee in a tight race against marsha bla blackburn. >> phil still has a shot to win the u.s. senate race. i would advise them to continue to support him. >> greg, what about tone? terms of senator collins? >> i heard trump said thanks joe and he said don't mention it. >> [laughing]. >> i tried to find a joke that would make a 4-year-old laugh. i think i even failed. the thing that drives me nuts. witness tampering, it's another blackout. that's a big piece of this. >> you brought it up yesterday. >> they are more obsessed with ice cubans. -- cubes. chasing melting ice and not
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this. i am interested in grassley's letter demanding the correspondence with katz. and the bar association, i find it weird how everybody is silent now about avanati. i think that even the democrats are realizing he played a great role in destroying the democratic party. if he never entered the picture you would just have ford and not this crazy gang rape story. i think avanati is a republican plant. >> i think you are 100% right. the story was democrats were saying what is he doing? >> guys, this is not over. >> [laughing]. >> [overlapping talking].
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>> what does this mean for the mid-terms? people on the democratic side -- the republican side they were motivated when it looked like he would not get through. are they still motivated? >> are losers more motivated because they are angry? >> 32 days from now -- first, many states are voting. 9itates. oo 9 states. early voted already started -- people are turning in their ballots. this will impact the mid-terms. people will be galvanized on the left and the right. they will decide this issue is the that galvanized them to vote. >> chuck schumer this morning. talking about the kavanaugh hearings compared to the clarence thomas hearings. could we play that?
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>> the dam broke under the weight of credibility allegations that judge kavanaugh committed a sexual assault in high school. in 2018, the republican majority conducted a hearing that made the anita hill hearings in 1991 look fair by comparison. >> what do you think of that, jesse? >> well, listen it's a huge difference in that story. the bottom line, chuck lost and mitch mcconnell won. it was a huge victory for mitch mcconnell. just as big for grassley and for donald trump. think about what happened here. you have a window. two year window. you have the white house and the senate and you have the house. the amount of stuff that this congress and this about the got done in this very small window, historic opportunity. was enormous. you think about two supreme
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court justices. isis, and north korea and tax cuts and repealing obamacare. >> new nafta. >> a sweep of the agenda for the conservative cause. i think people respect the fact that this president did not back down. that mitch mcconnell did not back down. a lot of republicans would have gotten squishy in this situation in the face of this hysterical democratic onslaught. they hung tough and based it on facts. i believe they will be rewarded for that in the mid-terms. >> senator lindsey graham said nothing brought the republicans together like this has. he is not partisan. you never know where lindsey graham is coming from. he is up set at the president being nice to the north korea leader and golfing with him on the weekends. that's why he is so valuable now
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overall. a couple of things happened. in the beginning "me too" and harvey weinstein. sexual assault is serious. but it changed did he do it back in high school? what happened? all of a sudden people said women should get their rights and be heard, they have sons, brothers, husbands and wonder what if women also have a male counterpart who find themselves in trouble? the third thing was in my unofficial poll, a lot of people drank in high school and college. especially when the age was 18. >> did they throw ice? >> that's what i am saying. they went from sexual assault dead serious to i had a few beers in high school. people say now you can't have a
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beer in high school or college. if someone in the hallway doesn't like you, they become a star. >> it doesn't matter what age sexual assault occurs. >> it matters if it occurred. >> it matters that people are able to describe their trauma and speak their truth. >> treat it seriously. >> it ruins lives and not just in terms of public reputation but in terms of people's ability to live their truth. sexual assault and sexual harassment are both crimes. they were not recognized as a crime 5 decades ago? >> sexual assault? >> sexual harassment. >> okay, separate them. >> two different things as you know. one year ago after the "me too" movement came about, nine members of congress had to resign because of allegations of
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sexual assault. then there has been 2 white house aides who had to step down as a result of spousol abuse and three congressional candidates lost. we can't make light of it. >> i don't think anyone is making light of it. of those people, they did it. they should resign. they should get out. brett kavanaugh said i never met her. i think that said had to be listened to. >> [overlapping talking]. >> no one is treating this lightly. what you are doing, you are generalizing behavior to an entire group. you went through specific examples. you are generalizing to somebody who is innocent. just because someone else did something, doesn't mean this person did it.
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that's called prejudice. taking away the rights of the individual is prejudice. that's why this mid-term is so important. we need to teach the democratic party a lesson they will never forget. you don't f with our system or with our due process and you don't lynch somebody based on some accusations. >> when anita hill had to be heard, it was six democratic women who marched on democratic senators. it's not about partisanship. to make this a partisan battle. >> i am talking about an individual. >> [overlapping talking]. >> because a republican president wanted to see a fair investigation. that was george herbert walker bush and a democratic chair said
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investigate these allegations. that's the point i am making. i am not generalizing. someone who has known discrimination do not like discrimination. >> neither do i. >> [overlapping talking]. >> dianne feinstein could have had a fire investigation if she took care of this in august. >> actually july. >> [overlapping talking]. >> that's why you do an fbi background . they respect confidentiality? >> was the fbi's hand tied? >> they talked to 11 alleged witnesses and no one said anything different. >> how do we know? >> how dare you question the fbi? >> [overlapping talking]. >> some democrats said we have not seen the whole story. we should aside americans and taxpayers, we pay their salary.
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we should see the report. that's all i am saying. >> then you talk about privacy issues. >> they can redact that. >> [overlapping talking]. >> a lot more to talk about when "the five" returns. this is stonington, maine, a town where almost half the population is self-employed. lobster fisherman is the lifeblood of this town. by 2030, half of america may take after stonington, self-employed and without employer benefits. we haven't had any sort of benefit plans and we're trying to figure that out now. if i had had a little advice back then, i'd be in a different boat today, for sure. plan your financial life with prudential. bring your challenges.
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are you in good hands? >> [protestors shouting]. look at us! look at us! look at us. look at us! >> emotions are running high on capitol hill. protestors swarmed senator joe manchin after the democrat announced he will vote yes for brett kavanaugh. the ambushing of lawmakers has been going on for days. senator orin hatch another example. >> won't wave your hand the me. i wave my hand at you! >> [protestors shouting]. >> [bleep]. >> i can't even hear. >> that's the sound of democracy. >> it's the sound of a mob. >> here's what i think.
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wouldn't their energy be better spent on voter mobilization and turning people out and getting people to the polls instead of just screaming at senators? >> well, you can 2 things. they are doing both. this is a people's filibuster. they are commanding the stage. they are speaking truth. >> okay. i don't know about truth, but they are loud. this is an organic movement? >> this was asked by a protestor at another network. listen. >> are you a paid professional? >> i work for a community organization. a network of community organizations. >> they received funding from liberal donators. they mentioned you. you are the co-executive director. >> if the president wants to know if i work for a social
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justice organization, the answer is yes. i have worked for them since i was 23. >> perhaps not every person flooding the capital is a paid protestor but high-profile ones are. >> donna, the democrats and republicans are upset, but the democrats cornered the market on rudeness and anger. >> oh, where are you been? >> i don't remember the last time chuck schumer was cornered by a group of angry republicans. >> i lived through the obama and bush years. the anti-war protestors in the clinton years. 20 years ago i remember that. maybe i am showing my age. i hope that. let me just say this. this is democracy. people who are turning their rage and their anger and
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passion. >> but decorum matters. >> yes, civility matters. >> [overlapping talking]. >> let me ask greg a question. >> there are two audiences. the senators getting attacked and people on television watching it. how do you think that plays? >> can i roll some piece of tape? >> sure. >> this is my favorite part of the protest. roll this. >> in 30 minutes. meet to the left. if you would like to go to an office to spend time with your senator -- >> [inaudible]. >> reciting oath.
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>> [laughing]. >> okay. that's one of the funniest things i have ever seen but it's chilly to see a mob. that's not democracy. that's robotics. >> yes. >> what i see, i don't see a political divide. right versus left. what i see is a fear of the general population in facing a small mob of intimidating activists who seek to subvert our institutions. people don't want to be why would at. they see a group coming at them, they freak out. this is an intimidating machine. then you see the media coverage of this. they go, let's look at these activists. young and old and men and women. no, they are not. they are elitist and over-educated, white majority
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leftists who only think one thought: to destroy the system. >> they are organized. >> that's true. >> that's scary. >> it comes from the heart. >> that's called civil education. >> that's a zombi apocalypse. where this it start? >> this is organizing in history. >> i have never seen it. >> you inform people. you go here and there to do this. >> why do they have to repeat it like robots? >> giving people instructions. >> flake got confronted by the woman in the elevator. a lot of people on the left believed that was very productive. i don't think if you do that to any other republicans senator they will flip at all. >> however, as mad as some
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republicans were at flake last friday, this friday you could argue that what flake did by insisting on an fbi investigation led to the moment when susan collins and manchin and flake could say yes. hindsight. >> it was a respectful thing to do. >> [overlapping talking]. >> listen, we have to run. the media's latest attack on brett kavanaugh. more attacks next. i don't know what's going on. i've done all sorts of research, read earnings reports, looked at chart patterns. i've even built my own historic trading model. and you're still not sure if you want to make the trade? exactly. sounds like a case of analysis paralysis. is there a cure? td ameritrade's trade desk. they can help gut check your strategies and answer all your toughest questions. sounds perfect. see, your stress level was here and i got you down to here, i've done my job. call for a strategy gut check with td ameritrade.
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♪ [ telephone ringing ] -whoa. [ indistinct talking ] -deductible? -definitely speaking insurance. -additional interest on umbrella policy? -can you translate? -damage minimization of civil commotion. -when insurance needs translating, get answers in plain english at progressiveanswers.com. ♪ -he wants you to sign karen's birthday card. it's a high honor. >> i am scared. the media attacks on brett kavanaugh get more desperate with the latest defeat from the "new yorker." it chastising the supreme court
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nominee for crying: "if he would get to don his black robe, he would weep: >> because he cried, he is less of a man and being mocked. >> we were told that it's sexist to say boys don't cry. it implies that only women cry. that's an example of misogyny. knocking a dude, saying it it was a girl it would be okay. i would love to see now that writer will share public shaming before his family. how that writer would endure that. everybody gets a pass. most people don't go through that kind of hell. >> his emotions were due -- not about the ford accusations but what was happening afterwards. what was raining down on him
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with the gang rape stuff and watching this happy before his family's eyes. he had every right toremoti be emotional. i don't know how he didn't punch people. >> that would have gotten him on trouble. >> you should not don way black robe. >> i have one at home. >> don't start. muskie when he cryed in 1972, people said it set him back. >> well, he lost his candidacy. >> and pat schroeder cried. they said girls should not cry in public because it shows you are weak. reagan cried wherever he saw the american flag and people thought that was a sign of strength. >> i don't think crying for women or men should be seen as any sign of some kind of instability. we treated women differently when it comes to the range of
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emotions we are able to use in public. i raise my voice, because you do. the truth is that when the justice, he did appear. he was very indignant. he was very angry. now, i think what people are questioning was his temperament. is this the judge kavanaugh we saw before? >> that's one thing. they were talking about crying. dana, they said hemmingway and ford were tough men and would never cry. that shows how america changed. >> how did that turnout for hemmingway in the long run? >> telling men it's okay to cry so you would not get in a terrible situation later in life with depression and repressed anger. it's rich for the "new yorker" to write this. remember back to his testimony.
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when his voice broke and started to cry is when he said because of all of this, i may never be able to teach or coach again. they were taking away from him all of the things he carried about in his life. he is a son and a husband. when he is on the court, i think everybody should rest assured he will have a soft spot for people to the court and say they were falls falsely accused. >> they talked about how you cry makes a difference. he seemed to cry in an awkward way. does it matter how you cry? >> it does. banner cried in a humiliating way so the democrats thought that was funny because they mocked him for it. these were real tears. these were not crocodile tears.
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the democrats don't like the fact he cried because that propelled him through that testimony and rallied waiving senators to his side. they saw a man indignant about being accused of something he swore we did not do. how about crying chuck? "new yorker" write anything about crying chuck? hillary clinton cried and new hampshire and won that primary. >> president trump doesn't like when a man cries and was not pleased with the crying. >> really? >> [overlapping talking]. >> well, he bared his soul. >> right. he looks like he is in. >> donna referred to him as a justice. >> thank you. shut up and get to fan mail.
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>> the calming chant there.
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>> did you request that? >> yes. >> time to confess. >> fan mail friday. we answer your question. the first from joe. a great question: what is your best scar story? dana, you grew up on a farm so you must have scars. >> no, actually. the scar that i have is from when i fell off the 3-wheeler. >> [laughing]. >> troy was the boy you had a crush on? >> no, that's not how it worked. i happened to ride a 3 wheeler. he said hold on and i didn't want him to thank i liked him so i fell off and it broke my ankle. >> brian, a scar? >> i had an exploding vein in my cast and they took it out through my groin. i have two scars. >> oh, stop. >> my grandmother made my dress for easter sunday. it had a long ribbon.
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i was playing sitting on an escalator. i forgot to tuck it under it and guess what? >> wow! >> whoa. i told this story before after drinking on thanksgiving, i shooed up from the toilet and smashed my head on the mirror on the medicine cabinent and told everybody i got in a fight, fighting for a tv on black friday. >> i got hit by a lunch pail from bobby in the second grade. he threw it on the fly. so i have to give him credit. bobby kennel, i have not forgotten. >> you never forget your first scar. >> all right. jamie asks. if you could write a book for another co-host, what would be the title of the book and what
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would it be about? how, brian? >> well, thanks for the lead time. >> a co-host. >> ghost write? >> even nicer than you think. >> greg. >> baby don't cry. >> jesse, doesn't everybody ghost write their books here at fox. >> [laughing]. >> you are looking at the wrong guy. >> [laughing]. >> something about the pirates or a monologue. i don't know. >> you are not bothering to come up with the title. >> i would write one for jesse, called the 10 best books i ever read. >> it will be a short book. >> born to be wild. the life and times of lou dobbs. >> you don't know. >> oh. >> all right. this is a good question.
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danny: what do you miss the most about your hometowns where you grew up? assuming we moved away? >> i love new orleans and miss a good gum bo. >> i miss the cheese steaks in philly. >> i miss the smell. >> sadly i live moo my hometown so i don't miss anything. >> you never moved? >> a lack of personal growth. steaks. you grew up in the 40s? >> i was in my prime in the '70s and the '80s when upended my career. now i am in the zenith of my
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life but in the same town. >> this is a wonderful story. >> i miss malls. i drew up in the '70s. shopping malls were where you went. eastridge in san jose. all of the great malls. that's where you got the gag gifts. i won't get into the ice cubans. "one more thing" up next. this place isn't for me. that last place was pretty nice. i don't like this whole thing. i think we can do better. change is hard. try to keep an open mind. come on, dad. this is for me, son? [2.
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learn more at retireyourrisk.org >> ♪ >> ♪ >> time for "one more thing." jesse? >> some of the protestors were so interesting i added to the conversation. one radical left winger. listen to this one. >> [screeching]. >> i don't know -- is this a mating call in the wild kingdom? that's what they do, right, donna. >> i know people asking rhina to make more music. >> it's my turn. i have a treat. it's called whitney's magical treats. these are cookies.
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you won't believe these. it's out of texas. this is the daughter-in-law of [inaudible]. there you go. see how cute they are. you can check out all of the creagazes. -- creation. it's a great idea for a gift. karl rove is very proud of his daughter-in-law. >> do you want one? >> yes, i will take it home with me. >> tomorrow i will be on tv. with bill hammer from 12 to 3 with special coverage all day long. >> you never promote anything ever. >> it's not easy on fridays. greg will do that next. >> all right. saturday, live 10 o'clock, what a great show. we have emily and tom and we will talk about everything! every single thing in the
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universe. a live 24 show. >> no it's only an hour. time for this. >> greg's last day on the beach knews. do what i did last week. check me out here in new jersey on the shore. nothing like getting buried alive. look at this dog. look how happy this dog. >> boston terrier. >> good job. >> happiest dog in the world doesn't mind being buried. >> it's nice and warm. >> oh, come on. >> we have seen enough of the dog. >> i have to salute somebody, tom brady. he is 41 years old. in 3 day's rest he not only led the patriots to victory. he threw his 500th touchdown pass to the 71st different wide receiver. it's hard for me as a giants fan to say ever. here's tom brady. >> wow! >> in the end zone!
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caught in the end zone. that's 500 in the regular season career of tom brady. >> josh gordon brought his team back. they are back and playing well. >> you are a new york fan? >> i have to respect him. >> i never seen anything like it. >> drew breric spoelstra -- broke the record. >> my great friend came out this week. it's a journey of four women who have worked in politics for 40 years. we talk about our work at the democratic national committee.
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my friend worked in both clinton campaigns. just remember, this is a book that is a page turner. >> is it salacious? >> [laughing]. >> not like the last one. >> one more question? >> if you were on a billboard, what would it be for? >> not nike. probably "watters world." >> yeah. >> that would be it. >> i would be have dana's book club coming to you soon on fox nation. >> tuesday november 6th is election day day. go vote. >> wait. that's it for us.
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"special report with bret baier" is up next. >> this is a fox news alert. welcome to washington. i am chris walls in for bret baier. it appears certain tonight that brett kavanaugh will be the next supreme court justice. 3 of the 4 unddecided senators announced they will support his nomination to the court. the countdown is on to a vote on saturday. we have fox team coverage. john roberts on the sense of relief from the president's team. jillian turner with the protests against kavanaugh. we begin with chief congressional correspondent mike emanuel with all of the drama

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