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tv   The Five  FOX News  December 19, 2018 2:00pm-3:00pm PST

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to keep hiking rates next year. maybe one less hike but still hikes. the federal reserve chairman who has essentially ignored the markets, telling him, you know what, we are panicking. will they still panic tomorrow? we'll see. "the five" is now. ♪ >> hello i'm pete hegseth with jedediah bila jedediah bila, dana perino, greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." a flurry of activity coming out of washington, d.c. senate majority leader mitch mcconnell putting together a plan to avert a government shutdown after democrats refused to budge on funding a border wall. also president trump scoring a big win over the senate overwhelmingly passes a criminal justice reform bill. he's ready to sign it into office, into law once it most of
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the house. president trump declaring victory internationally against isis and syria in a tweet. announcing the 2,000 american troops will be withdrawing very soon. all of this happening as democrats prepare an onslaught of investigations into president trump and his administration. dana, i will start with you. this feels like a muddy moment. >> dana: the end of the year getting anything done type of thing. >> pete: you have the transition of power. the president saying he wants a wall. he's going to shut it down if he doesn't get it. now we are seeing a cr into february. prison reform bill passes but overwhelmingly bipartisan. then this declaration that we defeated isis. time to leave syria. a lot of questions about where that came from and how quickly will happen. >> dana: i will take them one by one. i think there is some logic to them. >> greg: i prefer that you don't and do it all at once. >> dana: one big paragraph. no commas. i will give it a shot.
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on wall funding, i think it's a nod to reality. it was going to be difficult to do this without having to shut down. i think the president didn't want that distraction over the next two weeks. it wasn't going to be possible to get the 5 billion. think they realized that were going to have to have this fight another time. ask reality. >> pete: why do you want to have it when the democrats are in charge? >> dana: they weren't going to be able to do it now. he gave the direction to the agencies. let me know what money you have available. we might be able to reprogram it. congress is saying if you can't do that. you can argue it round or you can argue it flat. the democrats are not saying they are not for any border security. they would be for border security. they just don't want him to call at the wall. it's just semantics. >> pete: a fence is moral but a wall isn't? >> dana: on criminal justice reform, it's a big win for him. sometimes republican presidents can get things done that
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democrats can't. this is a bill that was stalled during the obama administration. it couldn't get through the republican senate, but president trump put his shoulder behind it. so did jared kushner. giving a hand to the democrats is that we want to work with him. it's that important. sometimes issues take so long to work their way through. the public has to come along. it takes a while to do that. this is a big win and it will help a lot of people. on isis, i think that one is certainly the president's prerogative. it does seem curious. i hope he's right. >> pete: i think we all hope he's right. isis has been decimated but if you were not there, iran still is. turkey still is. russia still is. >> jedidiah: don't you think it's interesting he's pulling out this libertarian muscle with the criminal justice reform. everyone was saying that reflects that the it's the libertarian wing of the republican party. you talk about syria, withdrawing troops. it was a different side of him.
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it's a sign he campaigned heavily on. when he was campaigning, hearing them talk about his involvement in the potential war. i have a strong libertarian streak that attracted me to him. i wonder if that part of the party, the rand pauls, mike lees put some pressure on him to not go so hawkish and get some things done they feel will appeal to them and independent voters, younger voters that he looks forward to his next run, he's going to need a lot of those people in the middle who might be attracted to policies like that. >> pete: it will be a nice thing for him to be able to say in 2020. we passed criminal justice reform. i'm the president for everybody, the forgotten men and women in prison too. they had senses that didn't fit the crime. is it a win for the president? >> juan: yeah, from what we hear, jared kushner has been the guy has put himself out there. a lot of people feel as if they've been talking, they are just dumped by the presence of jeff sessions as the attorney general who refused to
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move on, then mitch mcconnell who wouldn't call a vote. mitch mcconnell changed his mind and went along. but the president in the white house had been in favor of this all along. in that sense you could say it's a win for the president. putin for like democrats are finding a groove we talk about investigations. is that what they are going to be known for in 2019? are they going to focus on any legislation? the list of investigations. tax returns, tax organizations, business interest, ryan zinke, members of the cabinet. elijah, and sent 51 letter to the white house demanded by the middle of january there's answers to the stuff. what will define democrats? >> juan: i think will be all about trying to get something done. this will be part of it. so much of everything we talk about his president trump. right now his troubles are mounting and the closing of his foundation here. so much of it is everything trump's news. i think what you're going to see especially from nancy pelosi and
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house leadership is an emphasis on showing voters that guess what, our party is able to succeed and to reach solutions, get things done for you. for instance when we talk about this wall, president trump said mexico is going to pay for it. that's what he campaigned on. then he said the military will build it, right? and then he said no, i will find the money. obviously it was never going to get done. >> pete: i don't think that was obvious. i think you're pointing out some fair moments where it's been hedged upon. >> juan: i will say on syria, i'm stunned. it looks to me like we've flipped identities. the republicans are ones, lindsey graham and others, saying this is a huge obama-like mistake. >> dana: at least they are consistent. >> juan: but then you hear, ted lieu, the congressman from california, robert ford who was obama's first ambassador to syria saying that the u.s. has no national interest. i think it's obvious that the iranians on the russians
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continue to prop up bashar al-assad and remember trump going after the redline and all of that. we still have troops in afghanistan and elsewhere. i don't understand what he's doing. >> pete: he ran on we've been nation-building in the middle east for too long. it's time to come home. the question is, who feels that vacuum. greg, i'm going to go to you. >> greg: thank you. i was ready to go get a glass of water. >> pete: did he give into nancy pelosi? >> greg: i don't know. too soon to tell. i want to take all these issues separately. number one. >> dana: put them altogether. >> greg: number one, we think it's big news because the really big news isn't happening. which means the country is in pretty good condition. low crime, optimism. we have these little things. the reason why it's all about trump is because the media makes it all about trump. it's a self-fulfilling prophecy. if there was no trump, god help us all.
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what would be talking about? prison reform. i get the sense this is a missed congeniality award. finally something good. i have mixed feelings about it. we are into our fourth decade of decline in violent crime. this is the safest society known to mankind. can to reform something that is they successful? i read the reforms. think they are fairly moderate. i don't see anything, it's affecting 10% of the prison population. it's focusing on a portion of that. there's 2500 other prisoners that can apply for some kind of early release. it's fairly small steps. the key is the training. to get inmates to learn something. so when i get out of bridge and they don't end up back in prison. it's an important piece to this. that's the positive part. my overall observation on this,
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you got criminal justice reform. you've got actual gun control. he banned bump stocks. pulling out of syria, the deficit keeps growing. i'm pretty sure we have a progressive in office. we said he's pregnant is. you can't guess which way he's going to go. he's not not an ideologue. it's weird to the democrats not cooperating with his guy when he did prison reform. right? he's pulling out of syria. he wants the wall. what will he give you? he will give you what you want. it's about being obstructionist. that's the democrats. >> juan: are you kidding? you're going to say it's the democrats who are obstructionists? >> greg: yes. >> jedidiah: i think he proves he's willing to reach across the aisle. if you listen to him campaigning, back in the day, this is the stuff he was saying. everybody wants to paint him as
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an extremist when it comes the issue of immigration is really hard on the wall and securing the border but on other issues -- >> juan: i thought he said he was going to get rid of the deficit which has skyrocketed. >> pete: the house freedom caucus will say no deal on the wall is a bad deal for the president. >> greg: you have democrats complaining about the deficit and republicans complaining -- >> dana: they did that to george bush. whichever president is in power, the out party. >> greg: i think the old news is you run to the right, govern in the middle. went and ran on the left and govern in the middle. that's what's happening. >> pete: the syria one is a big one. keep your eyes on that. >> greg: it just may be that he was like this with iraq. he is stingy about american bloodshed. >> pete: and for good reason. >> juan: how long have we been in afghanistan? >> dana: wait for that. >> pete: faced facebook facing
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backlash after a privacy scandal. what they reportedly did with your data, coming up ahead. do . if i built a van, it would carry my entire business. i'd make it available in dozens, make that thousands of configurations. it would keep an eye on my fleet. [ beeping ] and an eye out for danger. with active brake assist. if i built a van, i'd make it available in diesel and gas. and i'd build it right here, in south carolina. introducing the all new sprinter starting at $33,790. built in the usa. mercedes-benz. vans. born to run. ♪ ♪ the united states postal service makes more holiday deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country.
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>> juan: facebook under fire again. stunning report in "the new york times" has the embattled social media giant gave other big tech companies much more access to your personal data than previously disclosed. documents reportedly show it allowed companies like netflix, spotify, to read users private messages. and search engine bing was able to see the names of almost all of user's friends without permission. facebook denying it did so without consent saying "to be clear, none of these partnerships or features gave companies access to information without people's permission nor did they violate our 202012 settlement with the federal trade commission." greg, what do you think? >> greg: facebook has been able to operate in this manner because of the permanent status as an unknown. you can't actually define what it is, so it just keeps rolling along. you know that line "it's easier to ask forgiveness than ask
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permission." that's their mission statement. you don't know what they are. they make the mistake and go whoops. of this three major social platforms, they are the least bad. google has turned your desires into a commodity. they are selling your searches to the highest bidder. they pretend to be a charity. use our product but then it's actually theft. they are stealing you and they are selling you. twitter is a message board run by seriously stupid, naive people who basically operate solely on target shaming. twitter is now designed to isolate and hurt people. of the three, i would say twitter is the worst. google a second. facebook, they are just making mistakes along the way. >> juan: dana, let's talk about the politics of it. in march, facebook got in trouble for giving data to cambridge analytical that allegedly would use to help president trump's campaign.
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they made a deal, they said we're not going to mine this data without people's permission. as you know, you go on there, nobody reads these agreements when you click agree. >> dana: the consumer is making a decision about that. part of this is that facebook is not a technology company. it started as one. how are they going to make money? they make money by selling ads. what other companies sell ads? media companies sell ads. politically that's where this is headed and it's going to come from the right and the left. this is where you might see a lot of bipartisanship. the right is concerned about censorship issues. the left is going to say they are concerned about privacy. but at this moment, the democrats are having a big fight about their list and who's going to be able to have access to it. information about people is really important. marketing. if you subscribe to a newspaper, guaranteed you are on a list somewhere so they know okay, you
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can share with others. you get phone calls or things like that. parents me a little bit of the nsa surveillance program that everyone was up in arms about. yes it's possible you could surveil everybody and everything and they could listen to all of your phone calls. they have a job to do, so they are looking for actual intel and things they can prevent threats. what do spotify a netflix and those guys need to do? they need to make money. other reading your personal messages? i'm not saying it's right. i'm saying that the article is a little overwrought. >> juan: pete, the thing is they do minor personal data in order to advertise to you. but at the same time, they know everything about pete. that's what greg was saying. they could know every odd interest you have. >> greg: every desire you search for. >> pete: two that i say what
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alternative does every other american have? >> greg: there are new companies. you pay to use them. if your information is used, you get paid. that's the future. >> pete: great thing. i'm talking about alternatives to the usage of facebook. that's why people throw their hands up and say i assume they got a lot of my data. but i really want to check on my grandchildren someone to log back on. to me, it's a censorship issue. bibi netanyahu's son just banned from facebook. if his son can give banned from facebook, these guys are cooking the books on the algorithms to go after conservatives and it's only going to get worse. that to me is the concern. >> juan: privacy is a big one. i think that's where most people are. i understand your concern if they're going after one political group and not another but we don't know for sure. privacy, i think people who do what pete was talking about, checking on the grandkids. don't think they're going to
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sell pictures of my grandkids and information about how often i contact or visit. people think that's wrong. >> jedidiah: you don't know when you sign on when you're looking at everything, you don't realize it's being share with the third party. when you check a box saying i agree, a lot of times are automatically plugged in to have your stuff shared. you have to go in and say i do not agree. people don't realize they have to opt out. facebook has been in trouble not just for targeting ads to, at one point, it was like 14-year-olds and they got in trouble for that. they used a bunch of people as test robots to see if they could been up and let your emotions. i researched this for my book because this privacy stuff drives me crazy. >> greg: you have a book? >> jedidiah: #donotdisturb. you interrupted my train of
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thought. >> greg: everyone read the chapter about kyle. it's a great book. read the chapter about kyle. >> juan: anyway. >> jedidiah: they manipulate people's emotions. they show you pictures of happy stuff and they say is it going to make people respond by wanting to go vacation in bermuda or whatever? are we going to be able to manically the way they feel by showing them certain content? >> dana: i don't see how that's different from what advertisers have done forever. >> greg: you should be paid. >> dana: i'm okay with that. >> greg: they are targeting you. you should have a choice. >> juan: i think it's more personal than ever, the kind of information they have that they know about you, pete, and me and jedediah. >> greg: think about me, juan. think about the stuff i am hiding. >> juan: no. >> jedidiah: we don't want to think about it. >> juan: you are mr. transparent. could a new poll about political correctness cause trouble for
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♪ >> i think the big problem this country has is being politically correct. and i don't frankly have time for total political correctness. to be honest with you, this country doesn't have time eithe either. >> jedidiah: a majority of americans are now agreeing with president trump that political correctness has gone too far. 52% now saying they are against the country becoming more pc and are upset that there are too many things that people can't say anymore. should 2020 democrats pay attention to this warning sign? greg, i say all the time i think this is one of the reasons he got elected. people are so tired of not been able to speak their minds, having to bite their tongues.
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it's the most dangerous time in the world to be a comedian. what do you think? >> greg: i am alarmed. 52% is not a lot. it's not enough. i thought it said 37 or 38 in favor. there was some other middle ground there. here's the danger with the concept of political correctnes correctness. it morphs. the whole point of it is that it's costly changing and progressing over time. it expands like a blob. so what happens is something that was except about two years ago is not acceptable now, so they dredge up things you said two years ago throw it in your face. positioned as a safety blanket but it's been spread over the culture and it is suffocating real speech. the only solution to this, and also the one scary thing about pc, if you forgive somebody for doing something that's considered a violation of a pc thing, you are an accessory to the racism or sexism or homophobia or trans phobia that's occurred. you can even -- pc thinking
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eliminates the concept of forgiveness, which is how our civilization is built. people making mistakes. the solution here, and i've said it before, people have to share the risk. comedians, writers, artists, talk shows. when they see somebody like mika or whoever do something stupid, you don't take out the pitchforks and the torches. you forgive their apology, and you move on. that's the only way that you're going to reduce the hysterical histrionics, yes, that we are paralyzed by. companies in fear. companies in fear because somebody's going to come after you. it's terrible. >> jedidiah: the challenge is it's not just fear what you might say now. it's fear of what you may have ever said ever that now you have on twitter and all that stuff. i actually thought -- i was impressed with the numbers just because when you look, it's republican men, women, democratic men and women, all for coming out saying they feel they can't speak their minds
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when they use to which means it's registering. i have to walk on eggshells. >> dana: i wonder what the age breakdown is. i imagine if people like maybe us and older. >> jedidiah: it's over 30. >> greg: there is a lot of young kids who don't believe in freedom of speech. it's scary. >> dana: they don't like it. >> pete: democrats, adults under 30, african-americans in favor of more pc. >> dana: you're talking about reelection, should democrats think about it? yeah, maybe this term. but in 2024, millennials are the largest voting group. they are surpassing baby boomers. generation x is pretty small. you can't tell a joke to a millennial. it's pretty funny that they think that "the office" is hilarious. that's not pc. >> jedidiah: isn't there a difference between cultural
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sensitivity and cultural hypersensitivity? you can be sensitive without being going so far. >> pete: watching episodes "the office." they would never air that today. trump has served as a shield for people who felt stifled. he can stand up and say pocahontas. he can say it. i can say it. culture introduces it. we should be okay with it. speeches on the surface of the problem. it's institutions institutionalizing it. k-12 public schools and colleges in media and churches in movies and social media. the christmas and the flag, and you wonder how did i get here? 55% of those identified as democrats favor more political correctness. your party is saying we want more of this. >> juan: think about it. what you see is the strongest proponent of being too politically correct our older white men. it's unbelievable. it's two-thirds of them say this political correctness is
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terrible. it stinks. with any ask about people who been denigrated in the past, like blacks, they say oh, no. we don't like it. not only that, it's so interesting to me. 70% in this poll said things are worse in terms of civility under president trump. that trump has now embolden people to say whatever they want about whoever they want. >> jedidiah: african-americans, black americans should have the ability to be offensive and politically incorrect too. >> greg: that is the way forward. everyone should have the right to be offensive. everyone should have the right to be insulted and to insult. if you take the opposite tack and say my feelings need to be protected, that's an impossibility across the board. not everybody can be protected. you will have these issues and the divisiveness. if everybody said you can offend me as much as you want and i can offend you, we are equals. we are brothers. >> dana: we should take dan crenshaw's example. dan crenshaw goes on
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"saturday night live." i guess they are friends, him and pete davidson. everyone said that's the model we should follow. so let's do that. >> jedidiah: everyone says that does the opposite. you defend your team but when it someone on the other side. >> juan: i think it's progress and we need to stop bullying and name-calling, demonizing other people. >> greg: the left never does that. >> juan: i don't think it's good that back in the '50s you could say this about a woman. >> greg: i am talking about language. i am talking about silencing language on campus. i'm talking about how it's spreading into a dangerous place. you wrote a book on this. >> juan: yeah, i don't like political correctness. i'm a big free speech advocate. but you and i talking about gay people is different than in 2018. >> jedidiah: the sparkle a surprise that has porch pirates
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retreating.
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♪ >> greg: what's christmas without some vigilante justice? around this time, the media floods the airwaves with sentimental dreck. designed to ease the guilt of self obsessed hosts who for one moment take 30 seconds to cool about giving back before they go home and scream at the maid. described everyone. which is why i go out of my way to find christmas stories they do the opposite. like this one. it stars former nasa engineer mark rober who decided to punish people who stole packages from his front porch. using his extensive background devising unusual machines, he booby trapped some fake packages and then left them outside for thieves to take.
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these harmless but highly devious packages contain exploding packets of very fine glitter as well as a stink bomb that goes off after the glitter explodes. also inside, he has camera phones that will capture the mayhem. like clockwork, after putting the packages out on a few porches, they were stolen. this is what happened. >> [bleep] >> what the [bleep] what's that smell? [bleep]
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>> in my car, dude. everything. >> greg: that's a christmas gift that keeps on giving. i could watch that forever. more important, it's a gift with a lesson. a risk of punishment can reduce crime. especially if you think the packages to might blow up in your face. that's my christmas -- that makes my christmas a little bit brighter. sometimes a lump of coal can bring a little light and joy to our holidays. >> jedidiah: genius. >> dana: i love it. >> greg: you think he could be sued for that? >> dana: no, i hope not. maybe in california. >> greg: yeah. i love it. people will think twice about opening a package. >> pete: the credible threat of being glittered. >> dana: that guy's is destroyed. >> greg: you can't get glitter
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out. once it's there, it's there. even a vacuum, you can't get it out. >> jedidiah: why do you have so much experience with glitter? >> greg: back in the "redeye days. >> juan: don't mention me and connection. i happen to be watching when you started. i left the party at that point. >> greg: you know how people have alarm systems, stickers on their windows or nra logo or beware of dog. this is kind of a way to dissuade crime. i like what this guy is trying to do. >> juan: i love it. the real disincentive would be your neighbors. what i am seeing is that lots of older people who are home during the day are now the anti-porch pirates. they have cameras on their cell phones and they will watch for you. my wife, for example, she is home a lot. the kids tell her to come over because they are having a
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package delivered or they have the package delivered to our house so they don't put anything out there for porch pirates. >> greg: of this is the downside of amazon delivery. i want to show you some tape, jedediah bila this is a man trying to steal. this is pretty brazen. a flatscreen tv. he falls. you know what, through a lot of effort, he still tries and has a hard time getting it up bend over into the car. i believe his name is kyle. he's trying to get it in there. it's not working out. is that a flatscreen? >> juan: yeah, flatscreen tv. >> jedidiah: you've got to have some nerve. middle of the day. that is somebody. >> greg: trying to get it in there. >> jedidiah: like he picks it up from the home depot like nothing happened. >> greg: what is he going to do? there's nobody they are paid >> dana: probably everybody
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works and goes to school. >> pete: you have to slow down or make it look like you are the homeowner. >> greg: he is working so hard. imagine if you worked that hard on a job. >> juan: i don't know. i think a lot of people just don't have any ethics and think that they can take advantage. he ends up driving with the door open. the doors open. >> greg: >> juan: san francisco, seattle, minneapolis, never one for porch pirates. >> greg: there are other things on porches in san francisco. did i already ask you, jedediah? >> jedidiah: it's all right. you're talking about kyle. >> greg: everyone should talk rd jedediah's book. read about kyle. stay right there. wild card wednesday is next. (music throughout)
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♪ >> dana: a brand-new edition. [laughter] we chose a topic and put them in the hat. no one knows the stories each other picked. i'm going to pull one out.
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okay. man sentenced after video showed him entering a convenience store with a live alligator. take a look at this video of this guy. he takes an alligator through. >> greg: i remember when this video came out. >> dana: he got sentence. pleaded no contest to one count of animal cruelty and two counts of fish and wildlife conservation violations. >> greg: what did you call him? >> dana: i think we have some video of that. >> here he is chasing people around with a reptile, even going into. >> dana: what a [bleep] were you here for that, pete? he got some punishment. >> jedidiah: that poor alligator. >> greg: don't say pure alligator! >> jedidiah: being mistreated. >> greg: he would eat you first. >> dana: he pleaded no contest to one count of animal cruelty. that was mine. let's choose another one.
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fresh prince star sues over the alleged use of the carlton dance. >> juan: mind. you can see this is fresh prince . >> greg: carlton is stolen from courteney cox from the bruce springsteen. >> juan: he was dancing. he did it both places. he thinks it's his dance. >> pete: is it copyrighted? >> juan: it's identified with him and they are not paying him anything. >> dana: how do you think it's going to go? do you want to try one? >> pete: i can't do the carlton thing. i can do the floss. i've got kids. >> dana: you can do the floss? do it. >> greg: this is going to be replayed. >> juan: there you go. this isn't "fox & friends." we don't try to do activities.
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>> dana: this is how long you have to make a good first impression. you have 27 seconds. 70% of people forming a first impression of someone before they even speak. >> jedidiah: that's mine. 27 seconds is too long. five seconds i would have you all figured out. you've got to have that eye contact. you've got a smell good. there's a lot of pressure. 27 seconds, by that time i would be bored. >> greg: to me, it's always going to be about breath. it's the first thing that hates you. doesn't matter how attractive someone is or anything, if there is a breath issue, you have to walk away. >> juan: smell wasn't on that list but you said it, jedediah. most people don't have bad breath. >> greg: you would be surprised. >> dana: if you are our height, you notice it a lot. >> pete: i give people the benefit of the doubt too much. >> greg: that can be a problem
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for you, pete. >> dana: inside the top secret cia dossier. dosing unsuspected people -- it's about otters. i >> greg: i picked this so that we could show tape of otters. they are amazing animals. they were testing them for spying because they can move. they can swim, get on the ground. the only problem is they don't like to be held captive but they're incredibly lovable. they could be domesticated if they could stay in one place. they are very friendly. >> dana: time for one more pair popeyes launches emotional support chicken carrier at philadelphia airport for a limited time. oh, my gosh. when you purchase a three piece chicken tender combo. you love this, pete. >> pete: i think the
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proliferation of emotional support animals that are not just dogs, it's out of control. emotional support alligators and guinea pigs and rabbits. everyone's got something on the plane now. you can eat -- you can take dad fried chicken. >> jedidiah: you are debbie downers. >> greg: there are people who really needed but there are people who get scammed. my friend orders chicken omelette so he can enjoy two generations. >> greg: >> dana: i get that. i think we better go. "one more thing" is up next. that's why i switched to liberty mutual. they customized my insurance, so i only pay for what i need. i insured my car, and my bike.
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makes more holiday deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. ♪ with one notable exception. ♪ ♪ >> welcome back, it is time for one more thing. speak to one of my favorite things at the end of the year is to look at poynter's list of the best corrections, the best newspaper corrections. i have three for you here. a correction for the ages by brazilian newsmagazine, the candidate was reading tolstoy and not watching toy story. [laughs] here's another one, "the wall street journal" ," an earlier version of this article incorrectly stated he said moses brought water from iraq. he said the water was brought
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from a rock. [laughter] the morningstar correction come in yesterday's paper, we incorrectly refer to don randel as a terrorist when it clearly should have been, ten arrest. we apologize. those are fun. >> corrections are fun. >> it is time for, greg's plugs. those aren't my hair, it is a funny thing. we've a smart person, at fox nation. the evolutionary of behavioral sciences, we discussed all sorts of stuff from evolutionary theory to political correctness. you will love it! also, i'm so excited. chris elliott has a new movie out. it is called, "claro's ghost." rises important? it starts an entire family and is filmed inside their house and the plot is, his wife only sees a ghost that they can't see.
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it is actually brilliant. he decided he wanted to make a movie but he didn't want to leave his house or get out of bed and have to go somewhere. he filmed the whole thing. it premieres this month. it does on demand and in theaters. chris elliott, a legend. his wife is the start of it. >> juan: this is for greg. you know about rudolph the red nose reindeer and his fellow reindeer clambering on your rooftop, what about yogi bear showing up for christmas at your front door? yup! take a look at this video. that is exactly what happens in naples, florida, . >> that is naples, florida, ? is that alec baldwin? [laughs] the curious spirit knocks on the christmas decoration, she was off the head and rings the doorbell with his nose. as you heard the homeowner saw the bear from the front door
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security camera and he told the bear to go away. thankfully the bear did. the bear was not bothered. he didn't take anything, he didn't get glitter or a bomb. >> no glitter for that bear. >> it was just hungry. >> stop it, he will tear you to pieces. >> alerts come up all day and you are looking at it, i should be working but i am watching the fedex guy. [laughter] >> i have a video of a child that reminds me a lot of myself when i was a child. i had a bad reputation, but check this out and we will talk about it. ♪ all right, this little kid decides he doesn't want to take part and the christmas performance, he doesn't do it. he lays down on the floor. maybe he is shy, i did that all the time. i got a lot of heat for it.
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i wasn't big into hanging out with other kids, i wanted to observe and watch. look how cute he is. >> that was a terrible video. [laughter] >> river gave that to you, nothing happened in that video. there is no action, no animals, no nothing. >> the kid is cute and it is christmas. >> i didn't think it was cute at all! the christmas programs reveal little kid's natural state very well. >> i like the video come i thought it was interesting to watch. >> this is amazing. >> oh, no! >> wait, that is terrifying. >> a high-speed chase and a main, this driver stops because this guy is speeding. they put down a strip of nails. they shouldn't have done this. they shouldn't have done a strip in a crowded street. >> where you lining the street with cars? >> you are always showing ones
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for people are getting hurt. >> i watched it on a loop, everyone was okay. >> okay, go to. set your dvrs, never miss an episode of "the five." >> bret: thank you. president trump says he wants to pull all u.s. troops out of syria, he is getting considerable resistance. senate republicans push a spending bill to avoid a partial government shutdown and two days without funding for a wall. facebook admits it did share more of your data about you than previously announced with big companies like microsoft and netflix. this is "special report." ♪ good evening and welcome to washington, i am bret baier. the commander in chief cut his generals at the pentagon, u.s. allies overseas and leaders on capitol hill off guard.

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