tv The Five FOX News March 6, 2019 2:00pm-3:00pm PST
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♪ ♪ >> juan: hello, everyone. i am juan williams along with jedediah bila, jesse watters, dana perino and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five" ." ♪ >> i didn't do this stuff. this is not me. i am fighting for my [bleep] life. [screaming] [bleep] >> robert. >> y'all are trying to kill me. you are killing me. this is not about music. i'm trying to have a
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relationship with my kids and i can't do it. >> juan: and that wild and explosive interview, r. kelly raging against sexual abuse allegations. the embattled r&b singer vehemently denied claims he had sex with underage girls or withheld women against their will. >> it is so hard to believe that based on -- what the women said about you. >> what women said about me. so nobody is allowed to be mad at me and be scorned? >> i think the point you're making is, correct me if i'm wrong, that you have never held anybody against their will. >> i don't need to. why would i? how stupid -- with all you've been through in my way, way past, to hold somebody, let alone four, five, six, 50. how stupid would i be to do that? that is stupid. is this camera on me?
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that's stupid. use your common sense. >> juan: kelly has pleaded not guilty to ten counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse. three of the four alleged victims were minors when the suspected crimes took place. legal troubles coming after lifetimes chilling documentary "surviving r. kelly." it exposed these revelations. kelly isn't the only pop superstar facing scrutiny. michael jackson's estate announced it is suing hbo for $100 million over "leaving neverland." that film which aired earlier this week reveals disturbing details of alleged sex abuse by two accusers who claim jackson molested them as children. the jackson family has denied the allegations. dana, first of all, let's start with the explosive interview. he says "y'all trying to kill me." what do you think? >> dana: i want to compliment gayle king, as i think most
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people, amazing she got the interview and she handled herself so well. my favorite part of the interview was when she says "roberts." calm when yourself. i'm curious about the performance -- i'm going to call it a performance. i don't understand if it was planned, like they know the cameras are going to be there. he doesn't think he's going to get a fair shot in court so he's going to try gets sympathy and the court of public opinion. this afternoon he was back in court because he owes $250,000 worth of child support payments that he is late on. i think that because he's been in jail and he's looking at going back to jail. >> juan: he is in custody now. >> dana: they took him in this afternoon. he is like, let's lay it all out there and see if this something they can work to keep him out of jail. i really doubt it. >> juan: jesse, this story has been around for years about our kelly. really never gained traction.
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and then have this incredible documentary "surviving r. kelly." is it because of the documentary? >> jesse: yeah, it is the documentary. i have already convicted him. i've seen the documentary. it's atrocious. there is so damning to listen to the women testify as to what he did to them and this wasn't just he made a mistake with the 17-year-old who is turning 18 and one month. no, this was a lifestyle that he lived for two to three decades were his entourage was complicit when they would allegedly procure women. he had a bedroom and in his recording studio. executives were aware of this. women were paid. you know he has a rap sheet. when he has this emotional outburst, i question whether or not it was planned. at the same time, i see a man who is cornered, fighting for his life, fighting for his family, fighting for his
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fortune, who knows it's all over at this point for him because he has built up this fantasy world for years that he has lived in where there was no one saying no and it was outside of the realm of the law. all of that is crashing down and he was acting like a child, throwing a tantrum. and acting like he was the victim, like you are doing this to me and taking the responsibility for himself. i agree, hats off to gayle king for totally redeeming herself after the jussie smollett fiasco. >> dana: that was not gayle king. >> jesse: oh. i knew that. >> charles: >> dana: robin robee interview. >> jesse: sorry for robin roberts. i apologize. >> juan: jedediah, one of the things that i think people are fascinated by his that in the documentary, his wife says that he was abusive and a liar. then you had not only girls but you had their parents and there
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is a clip where he does 2015 interview where the question is do you like underage girls and he said what you mean by underage? hold on. even of late, with gayle king, he says when people ask do i look at younger woman, i don't look at younger. i look at you and me. whoa. these are alarming things. because i couldn't believe that what he said it. i look at legal. i he kept saying they are legal. she was saying you are living with a 21 at 823-year-old. were you with him before? were you with them when they were underage? documentaries have completely changed the landscape. so many people had made up their minds about these people ten years ago, 20 years ago. whether it's michael jackson or our kelly. watching these personal testimonies like you said of the family members, of the victims and there is a humanitarian element being brought to the
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stories. i went to make a list of all of the girls, the underage girls. it was and less, these accusations. i think it's a tribute to that format that it's not the same as reading a new story. you can read a news story and it may sound horrific. you are not moved in the same way as when you turn on the documentary and you hear from those people who live those stories. it's a very, very powerful vehicle and i think it's completely changing the dynamic of news and reporting. >> juan: greg, you know something about the music industry. i'm struck by the thought that for viewers who are as old as i am, that you could go back to someone like jerry lee lewis, married his cousin who was a teenager. >> greg: 13 or 14. >> juan: michael jackson the allegations and what we've seen in "leaving neverland." here we are with our kelly. >> greg: its horrible behavior but it's not news.
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there's a long line of performers whose behavior is as bad as their options will allow them. so if they have the option and the advantages, they will take advantage of it. there's a whole history of this in the 1970s, especially with rock bands. they used to be called baby groupies. these were girls that were 13 t. there are books and movies about them. there are songs written by famous bands about girls. it was just part of this lifestyle where if you wanted -- it was almost transaction. even parents were aware of it. parents were aware that there girls were going to check out these guys. he is a fiend but you are missing the history of human behavior, how status, power, and fame can create a twisted universe of options. the victims at the time aren't even aware that they are victims. if you watch the michael jackson documentary, they don't even see themselves as victims until afterwards as adults when they
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find themselves with the psychological issues. then you look at the parents. the parents in these cases are victims of this confirmation bias. michael jackson is a huge superstar. why can't i leave my child with him? no superstars going to molest my child. so he can sleep in the same bed as my child. that's confirmation bias at its worst. it's like conspiracy theorists will believe anything. you must believe. you cannot not believe this and then when it comes crashing down, you cannot forgive yourself for what happened. we are to talk about that tomorrow with the "abducted in plain sight" thing. they are in heavy denial because their bias won't let them see the truth. >> juan: in the short term, you have a lot of radio stations in new zealand, canada pulling michael jackson off the radio. even here, tom joyner, leading morning dj saying that he's not going to play r. kelly. the department of homeland security issue a new warning about the southern border. details had on "the five" ." maria ramirez?
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importance. i always do my best. let me tell you, either you are lying to this committee or you don't know what's happening at the border. >> jesse: in a dramatic moment, nielsen describes how danger it is for children crossing the border. >> as you know, sir, very unfortunately because of the increase in violence, at i.c.e., only have families with children, we have to give every girl a pregnancy test over 10. this is not a safe journey. >> jesse: against my better judgment, i'm going to go to juan first. "new york times" lead story "border at breaking point." they talk about the broken records of families coming across. it's a real crisis, don't you agree? >> juan: i think what you have is what we have been calling humanitarian crisis, if that's what you're talking about. it's not about an invading army. what we have is over half the 76,000 in last few, 40 40,000
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families. two-thirds of this is families and they are largely not from mexico but el salvador, guatemala, honduras. when they come, they are not running in and running somewhere and joining a gang. they are specifically saying we are seeking asylum because we are fleeing violence, poverty, and hunger. that's a different dynamic than the one described of course in the middle of the midterms were even now. >> jesse: you admit there's a humanitarian crisis at the border. >> juan: yeah. >> jesse: okay, good. we have juan admitting on the record that there's a crisis. >> jesse: dana, these numbers are astronomical. >> dana: in five months, they broke records. what i don't like about this hearing is that you have the democratic congress people ascribing terrible intentions to the secretary. suggesting she has no idea what's going on at the border, that's extremely insulting. it's what she does all day long.
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she's got incredible amount of response abilities. part of it was preparing for the hearing to go up there so that she could be berated by them. on the republican side, they say you agree with this, you agree with this. yes. we should all be able to agree that it's a humanitarian crisis that needs to be dealt with. so the democrats don't like the wall idea. they think it's bad. okay, what else are you suggesting to help stop the flow? i don't see any of that. i don't see any thing they are suggesting that would actually stop it. >> juan: i think there are suggestions about increasing space for detentions, judges to get this done. even arguments about whether or not we change the law. >> jesse: that's a great start, changing some of the asylum laws, greg, that have these loopholes where if you're from central america and you step foot in there with a minor, stay in this country home free. >> greg: your suggesting that it's a lower barrier to entry.
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you are not getting asylum-seekers. you're getting people who think it's going to be easier. they get raped, duct taped. they are given pills in case they are raped. the media drives me crazy. it's a crisis. that it's not a crisis. then it's a crisis. the issue is driven by conflict. if you point to evidence that say you enhance border security, they will call you a bigot because they need the conflict to get the clickbait to make the money. if somebody new takes over and says what trump is saying, they will be behind it but until then there breaking news at cnn will be "parents deported without children." the crisis will be mentioned about the rapes and the caravans. >> jesse: one of the things in the near times that i found buried was that cartels on smugglers sent many caravans across the border one way and
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then while border patrol et distracted, they send drugs the other way. >> jedediah: you have to disincentive eyes people who are coming here illegally. this is separate from the asylum issue. they can't feel that they have access, that they can easily come over. the second thing is to modify the asylum laws. whether we expand the deportation centers or processing centers or expand. it's fine and good but it's not doing anything about the influx of the people coming over and the issue with the language for asylum is that credible fear, people are concerned it is too broad. that essentially a lot of these people coming from these countries, what defines a credible fear of persecution. are they talking about something coming from a position of authority or leader? are they talking about something happening in their own home? is the language so broad that the you have people using the asylum clause that shouldn't fall under the asylum close. the bottom line is, you have to be able to manage this. you cannot have an influx of this many people coming across
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the border. we can't sustain it. we can't vent it. it's not workable. the situation is not sustainable. >> jesse: you right, it's a credible fear of persecution but then you have instances where people are recycling children to use as props to bring across. >> greg: that's good for the environment. >> jesse: it's good. aoc supported. a revered economist warning about what will happen to america if democrats pass their socialist policies. up next. if you have moderate to severe psoriasis
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♪ >> greg: you know and you should be worried, when the smartest guy in the world tells you to be worried. here is legendary economist thomas soul lamenting the romance of socialism. >> socialism is a wonderful sounding idea. it is only as a reality that it's disastrous. so many people today, including
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in that leading universities, don't pay much attention to evidence. when you see people starving in venezuela and fleeing in neighboring countries and realizing this is a country that once had the world's largest oil reserves. you realize they have ruined a very good prospect with ideas that sounded good but didn't turn out well. i do have a great fear that in the long run, we may not make it. hate to say that. >> greg: i hate to hear it. socialism succeeds because we ignore history always waking up to another homicidal groundhog day. thanks to bitter academics who couldn't find real work, a lazy, poorly educated media confused by economics and a naive populace, it keeps coming back. it's the freddy krueger of political theories. every decade, new nightmare. they key to stopping it is all of us. we must resist resist those who don't see the scan behind socialism. that offers the fantasy of free everything, hoping you never
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asked but how. the only winners in the social estate are those who run the state. every leftist dreams of standing up on the platform and reviewing the parade of workers and tanks. that's how you prevent a venezuela. you just describe it, a fat tyrant and lunch from garbage trucks. from zimbabwe to albania, one socialism fails, we should always does, the whole thing goes. and that triggers the survival instinct of those in power who ultimately rely on force. of course people can cite social programs as socialism but safety nets and charity can only thrive the other free market. today's left is prefers all net and no market. that's disastrous. no wonder when you look in the eyes of a true believing socialist, you see something off. it is fervent belief untethered to reality and in that fervor is an acceptance that if it doesn't work out we will just send in the army. juan, i have a theory. this is a time when libertarians
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and conservatives can look at the promises of socialism and say we can achieve that without socialism. you know, free markets deliver on goods. tv cost $20,000 and is now $200, the big screens. you look at the space program, it's now on a phone. socialism didn't bring us the iphone. capitalism did so actually the free markets are what makes things free or freer. how's that for theory? >> juan: i am a big fan of capitalism but i do think that you have to moderate some excesses. we moderate something like child labor or monopolies were my favorite of recent vintage, too big to fail, which hasn't angered a lot of people on the left and the right. i think you have to look at it in those terms. tom sowell is a friend. i am a great admirer of thomas sowell, brilliant man. when you look at it, the response from the right is to say, much like donald trump, so let's have trade wars because
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that will cut it down. let's impose tariffs and the like. we are going to play against this because there's income inequality and income inequality is most driving calls for the bigger social safety net that people are calling socialism. what do we see today? deficits the biggest ever. trade deficits with china the biggest ever. i'm thinking maybe instead of screaming about socialism, we should stream about some these economic policies now in place that are delivering to the very people who voted for donald trump. >> greg: there are people doing better under trump. >> jedediah: that's true. i appreciate his pessimism, he says i don't know if were going to make it or -- because i think it says something about human nature. unfortunately i think we as a people sometimes, it doesn't matter how many times we read about venezuela or we look to the history of other countries. it's like we have to suffer through it ourselves. i think he is saying i don't know if you can avoid the fact that these sound bites sound really good. it sounds amazing. it sounds fantastic.
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it doesn't work like that. it doesn't show up like that. logic would tell you to be most look at the histories of other countries or the present-day of other countries and be able to deduce it's not going to be an answer but it's almost like we are compelled to live through the suffering ourselves. that's what i took from what he was saying. unfortunately i think in this culture and dated with technology being what it is on twitter, the sound bite wins. so they are running. they they are running with thate stuff and it's harder to explain capitalism. >> greg: we need better sound bites, jesse. like saying socialism is like a santa making all of us the elves. >> jesse: i like build the wall and make america great again better than that. i liked the freddy krueger and the groundhog day reference. i would disagree with juan. juan says we need to moderate the excesses of capitalism. i don't think $100 trillion in the green new deal is moderate. i think that's pretty extreme. the only thing they can defeat
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america is if we defeat ourselves and were not guaranteed to only be the world's superpower forever. there's been plenty of empires in the past that have crashed and crumbled because they overextend. when they are confronted, the implode. what's going on now is we have a choice. we can either be the world's superpower, confront china, dominates basins. peace and prosperity. or we can curl up inwardly and redistribute the wealth here. so we can't win with socialism. socialism will destroy our national security. you can't spend trillions on national defense and trillions here at home. it's either one or the other. so if you want to live not under the thumb of that chinese nuclear threat, i would say stick with capitalism. >> greg: dino, you are a fan of capitalism. or so i have read in your book "how much i love capitalism" by dana perino. >> dana: thank you for that blog. i think -- we don't want to be
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like venezuela. the democrats are suggesting -- we are not suggesting venezuela. we think we can be more like sweden where they have 10 million people. they are taxed at x amount and they have a pretty low standard of living but they do -- they have socialized medicine, yes. is that what we want? what would that look like? what i would suggest for the republicans and conservatives is think about innovation for the safety net. >> greg: yes. >> dana: for example, let's take free college. maybe it's not exactly free but are there ways to use technology and innovation and ideas -- -- >> greg: online universities. online medicine or ai medicine. >> dana: we were talking about criminal justice reform. all these people in jail are going to get out and they don't have skills. because we forbid computers and wi-fi. is there an innovative way to deal with it so they could have
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access to education so when they get out they have skills they can use to get a job? there are other ways to think about improving the social safety net rather than becoming socialist. >> greg: the swedish currency is swedish fish. >> dana: i love swedish fish. >> jesse: meatballs. >> greg: if you go to ikea. a new chick-fil-a campus controversy that's eating up. you get it, because it's chicken. details ahead ing for my best, ing for my best, even though i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib not caused by a heart valve problem. so if there's a better treatment than warfarin... i want that too. eliquis. eliquis is proven to reduce stroke risk better than warfarin. plus has significantly less major bleeding than warfarin. eliquis is fda-approved and has both. what's next? reeling in a nice one. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke.
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♪ >> jedediah: welcome back. a college dean resigning over schools chick-fil-a band. the dean calling writer universities opposition to the fast food chain "a punch in the stomach" and adding that it clashes with her christian values. administrators causing the controversy when they blocked chick-fil-a despite students saying they wanted it.
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what struck me about this was the university gave out talking points and essentially said we're not going to have chick-fil-a. this is what we want you to say it misses the point in which she said i'm not going to do this. she resigned. it's a very brave move to me for someone working at a university. >> greg: it's amazing that people are resigning over chicken. we know this. wherever politics seeps in, it poisons it, whether it is sports, entertainment, and no food. it creates two sides where there should only be one side which is enjoyment. if you are watching football, you should enjoy it. but you have two sides about the flag. and if you want to be a comedian, you can't be because you are so woke that you can't make jokes about certain things because you have to prove you are woke and you can't eat that chicken because of the religious belief. wherever you allow politics to wander in, it takes a big crap
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on all the fun. >> jedediah: most kids on a college campus are not thinking about the political ideology. >> dana: i think they are now. i think it's become fashionable. >> jedediah: may be first on but i think a lot of people reading the story, kids on college campuses, they just want to eat chicken in peace. they are not thinking -- the administrators, yes. i don't think the students think about it as much of the administrators who want to push a certain agenda. >> juan: i think if you were a school administrator, your primary worry would be that you bring chick-fil-a in campus and there are demonstrations and efforts to show chick-fil-a is not open to gay people are not supportive of people who aren't religious or trying to impose or indoctrinate with their values. of course the people who run chick-fil-a say that's not the case. that in fact that they are selling chicken. they have religious beliefs.
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that's why they close their stores on sunday. i think it would drive me, if i was a college administrator, to have some concern. so now were going to become the platform for demonstrations against chick-fil-a? we just want the kids to have some food. >> jedediah: if you do that, then i think you're acting out of fear. you are acting based on oh, this might trigger this person or this might upset this person and you wind up, jesse, with this concept that everyone at that school should feel the same. this is what is safe. this won't upset anyone. it is supposed to be a university. it is supposed to be where diversity of thought goes to thrive. >> jesse: i don't understand. if pelosi had wine from the vineyards, i'm guzzling the wine. i wear nikes because i like how they look. if peter strzok owned a steak house and i was hungry, i would go right into that steak house. medium rare. i might stick him on the tip. nothing would stop me from fulfilling my immediate
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appetite, barring a few things. not many. i know gay people that love chick-fil-a. i think that's probably more straight college students that are protesting chick-fil-a then there are gay students. they want to be seen as to pathetic to the cause and they have every right to do that but it doesn't hurt chick-fil-a's bottom line. they are taking over. >> jedediah: one of the questions i get asked by college students who are conservative and see stuff like this and feel like their values are always pushed into a minority, like this woman felt like her christianity was being attacked. like somehow chick-fil-a which represented her ideology was somehow synonymous with something bad. they don't know what to do. college students in the minority, they don't know what to do. they say what do i do, i don't have good advice for them. it's hard and there's a fear that they will be punished or ostracized. is there anyway to advise them in a good way? >> greg: tell them to call me. >> dana: one of the things,
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the courage of your convictions, with the dean did, she decided to resign. >> greg: she didn't play chicken. >> dana: exactly. the other thing i would say is what greg was saying, if you're conservative. one thing you can do is try to exercise politics from it. actually practice it and you will have a happier life. >> greg: , and to what juan was saying, the demonstrations only work on one side. i don't think there's any campus or company that worries about christians demonstrating. like we are going to pick it because we don't like abc had other nighttime programming. people in their boardrooms are like, who cares about the christians. if you have an environmental group or a gay rights group, those demonstrations are effective and they scare the hell out of people. even if it's a small group, it feels large.
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corporations will often fold rather than deal with it. >> jesse: it used to be actual physical people with pickets come outside. now it someone on twitter. >> jedediah: i think it's brave. she is bold to put that out there. wild card wednesday is coming up next. i switched to liberty mutual because they let me customize my insurance, and as a fitness junkie, i customize everything. like my bike and my calves. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ jushis local miracle ear t at helped andrew hear more of the joy in her voice. just one hearing test is all it took for him
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♪ >> dana: it's wild card wednesday. that means i get to give this a whirl. we have 5 minutes. twitter users reveal what their mothers 2020 campaign slogans would be. one twitter user asked a question. reactions were all over the place. i'm not mad. just disappointed. or vote for me. don't make me ask you again. >> jesse: this is me. i think my mom's slogan, because i texted her what it would be, it was "let us pray" is her slogan. >> greg: prey come as a liberal preying upon our government. >> dana: my moms would be 2020. you can count on me. it doesn't rhyme but it's still
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nice. >> greg: my moms would be 2020. pour me a vodka. she's dead. but she would say that. >> jedediah: i don't know. it would be blunt, like don't be an idiot. vote for me. it would be blunt and simple and direct. >> juan: vamos. >> dana: over the course -- >> greg: read it. >> dana: italian artist discovering most people cannot draw a bicycle from memory. only 25% good. we have things. we are supposed to drop. >> greg:'s amazing pictures. no one can draw a bike. nobody. >> dana: we are drawing bikes. we have to keep talking. >> greg: i am done. that's me. >> dana: oh, man. >> greg: that looks like a bike. come on, people with the cameras. where did you go?
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[laughs] that looks like a picnic table, jedediah. >> dana: mine is good. >> greg: what is going on? >> dana: that is a seat and somebody is sitting on it. >> jesse: i wrote something else. [laughter] >> greg: i am sorry were, i'm sorry, robin. >> dana: below back after kylie jenner named the youngest self made billionaire. blowback because of the so-called "self-made." now she is the youngest. >> greg: she is amazing. >> dana: do you have this problem? >> jedediah: "self-made" bothers me. she is talented. she's successful. she's a hard worker but she is not self-made. because she came into this world with a big name with a lot of money. that's not self-made. if she wasn't on the
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kardashians, i don't know if she would've launched a career like this. >> greg: people argue that the sex scandal from her sister was the entire thing. >> juan: here is the self-made argument. her mother is a genius. her mother has pushed all the girls into very successful live lives. >> greg: i love them all. >> jedediah: i like her stuff but she's not self-made. >> dana: new study finds snack sales surge in states where recreational marijuana becomes legal. ten years worth. colorado, washington, oregon studied retail habits and have seen a 5.3% increase in sales for potato chips, cookies, ice cream. >> greg: why are you doing this? >> dana: i thought it would be fun. when i said i wanted a story and i wanted props, they thought i
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wanted weed. >> greg: that is your code word when you text me, do you have any props? >> greg: then i have to drive u. >> juan: what flavor? >> greg: cookies and cream. >> dana: instagram couple facing backlash for a dangerous photo shoot outside a moving train. >> juan: this couple from portugal and they are on a train in sri lanka and she got one hand holding the train and then holding onto him and he's taking the picture. they said oh, it's a slow moving train. instead, people seeing this come up by the way, 40,000 likes for this. people are saying it's insanely stupid. you risk your life or picture. >> jesse: that is called dying for the gram. >> greg: i have died for a gram. >> dana: i thought it was a prop. >> greg: they have two come up with a statistic, instagram death rate.
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>> jedediah: those people falling into art, it has destroyed property. >> dana: there is photoshop. when you do that? it is safer. >> jesse: i bet instagram has killed more people than global warming. >> greg: interesting. you might be right. >> dana: "one more thing" up next. i don't keep track of regrets.
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>> time for one more thing. dana. >> right after we went to air major news made about television icon from one we all love and no, alex trebek has announced come of course a longtime host of jeopardy. he announced today that he has been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer. he wrote in a statement, the prognosis for this is not very encouraging, but i am going to fight this and keep working. i plan to be the low survival
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rate statistics for the disease because under the term of my contract, i have to host jeopardy for three more years. so help me keep the faith and we will win, get it done, thank you. boy, i have watched him forever. i watched him even on dvr. jeopardy, we will of course continue to and we wish you the best and pull for you as well. >> alex. what do you do if you are a kid and it's cold, rainy outside, well you could always play dress up like a police fireman or hang your head off of the site of a chair so the blood rushes all the way down your nose. or if your parents let you play monster by sticking plastic eyeballs on your face, you make a video. take a look at my grandkids having a little fun. that is my grandson, eli, on the left as a zombie. and the girls putting a twin monster show of their own on the right side. >> slo mo. >> so these kids are not even teenagers and already they are my little monsters.
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>> gregory. >> you've got to go to foxnewspodcast.com. i've mentioned yesterday my guests today is jan broberg. she was the store, i wouldn't say star of the netflix abducted in plain sight and the young girl kidnapped twice at the age of 12 and 14 by a trusted family best friend. we talked for quite a while. it is a powerful insight on what it's like to be manipulated by a predator. now, it is time for -- >> animals are great, what a transition. ♪ >> transition is great. okay, we are in my? let's go to this cat, cats with nl. i don't know how this started, but the owl and the pussycat, but you know what, get off of my couch. can't we share? the owl realizing something up
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his sleeve. there you go. >> owls are like little furry people. >> ♪ >> animals are great, animals are great. >> jesse is great. [laughter] >> are you calling me an animal? >> two people in this world, people scared of the gators and people that scare gators, check out this footage. >> cody, you know what, smiley. >> that was 2017 arnold palmer invitational. i don't know if i would be that brave to do that. check out this 2019 invitational presented by mastercard, this weekend hopefully no gators down there. >> win >> martha maccallum and i will be on at 7:00. she will be on a lot longer than i will. [laughter] >> offer of jedediah.
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>> you ever noticed there's never a shortage of deer stories? >> the master gator. if you ever lose these people come i will introduce you to an amazing high school student, tanner wilson a student in arkansas saved his money for over two years to buy his friend brandon a new electric wheelchair. brandon was having a hard time using his manual wheelchair around school so his friend, tanner, decided to save his money and cash for two years to make that happen. when he was asked what inspired him to buy it, tanner simply said to come i feel like life is little too short to be and you should think about others than just yourself. it is amazing you can have a kid like this out they are, so giving, so whenever you lose faith in humanity, gets out there like this. >> i love it because it was a surprise. brandon responded every single day any time he helps a friend, it's an amazing day. not everybody is a brat these
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days. >> i just think it is a wonderful story of friendship. >> we need more of that in this world. crazy news. >> we do. i'm just being a jerk. set your dvr and never miss a episode of my special report up next, >> bret: the a national emergency declaration, new illegal immigration number says proves the crisis is getting much worse. house democrats struggle with anti-semitism legislation has controversial muslim lawmaker stands defiant. one major european common a program to guarantee basic income for the people work or not. we will bring you they are, this "special report." ♪ good evening comeau i'm bret baier, and national wednesday by the way as several republican senators abandoned the president over national emergency declaration of the border. the administration is
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