tv The Five FOX News April 9, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
2:00 pm
there's a sense of what's going on the rules which is supposed to technically and/or at least be reconsidered at the end of this month. others are saying stretch it out a little longer. we'll find out very soon. fox continues now. ♪ >> jesse: hello everyone, i'm jesse watters along with juan williams, greg gutfeld, dana perino and emily compagno. it's 5:00 in new york city and of this is. ♪ >> jesse: a decade of job growth for nesting in less than a month. pressure mounts to reopen the economy. the covid-19 task force will brief the nation very soon. it comes as brutal new numbers show 6.6 million people filed for unemployment last week alone. and at least 10% of the
2:01 pm
workforce is unemployed and now out of a job. a new report says president trump is planning to announce the second task force to restart the economy as soon as this week. here is the president on that. >> president trump: we could do it in phases and go to some areas which you know are less affected than others, but it would be nice to be able to open with a big bang and open up our country were certainly most of our country and i think we are going to do that soon. you look at what's happening and i would say we are ahead of schedule. we will be sitting down with many different people and making a determination in those meetings will be taken place soon. >> jesse: here's something the american public doesn't need is more politics. the white house expects the current pool of money to run out very soon. dana, is it jasper's birthday? >> dana: it is.
2:02 pm
it is jasper's birthday today. he has come to "the five" every year that he had a birthday so we wanted to make sure -- oh, we are having a technical problem behind me, that's a google screen in case you were wondering. anyway, it's jasper's birthday and we wanted to make sure he had a moment. to this point, one thing about this is the democrats are just asking for more trouble because they didn't want a clean bill, they wanted all these unrelated priorities. now some of the things they were asking for for example, money for hospitals, that might be needed at some point but i think congress has shown that they are willing to spend money and willing to get together and do this. but on related priorities right now are not necessarily a good idea. >> jesse: juan, what does it take for the democrats to stop delaying things? you have these numbers that just show the american workforce has been decimated and at the same time you see more partisanship
2:03 pm
on capitol hill. how does that look? >> juan: well, i guess it depends on which way you are looking from jesse, because where i'm looking from i'm thinking, wait a second. what the democrats are proposing is more money for hospitals and the health care industry in the hospitals, they are at the front lines any more resources right now. the democrats are also saying we need to do a better job for american families in terms of, for example, food stamps. making sure we extend those benefits and increase them at a time when as you pointed out, unemployment is skyrocketing. at a time when the federal reserve is saying, we will put $2 trillion out there. more money for loans for small business. and at the democrats want more money for small business and they also want an inspector general who is not going to get fired right out of the box so he can oversee that this money is not being spent in a partisan matter but actually going to the american people. so i think those things are reasonable and i think if you
2:04 pm
are saying, at least from my perspective, jesse, others politics blocking it, it's because you see mitch mcconnell saying, just give this to the big business and big business will give this to the small business. forget about the hospitals and the working men and women in the country. that's not right. >> jesse: while i think you know it's not true to say that the republicans are saying screw you to small businesses and to the working men and women of this country. you don't really believe that, you are just saying that. greg, when you look at these numbers, if you are some guy in minnesota and they made your company shut down and there's not a lot of people with the virus in minnesota, it's kind of hard to stomach. i don't know how you get around it. >> greg: while i don't understand how the media is surprised by these job numbers. this is what happens when you shutdown any economy. so what if we didn't do this and have this historical shutdown to fight a virus? would it have been worse? i vote yes.
2:05 pm
the problem is we don't have a control earth, we can't do a side-by-side comparison of what our actions are if we hadn't done them. so we know more about this virus in the pandemic than we did before but we do not know the impact of the shutdown long-term. so my feeling is we need to prep for that unknown. just like we did for the virus, we need to prep for the outcome, the consequences of the shutdown.
2:06 pm
we have to figure out how to reduce the consequences and how to help the small businesses, tax deductions for people. we need the same mentality that we had to fight the virus to deal with the shutdown because this is now part of that pandemic. this is a consequence. so we need to look ahead about that. it's a great truth. the worst person to give you advice and life is a person who only sees one variable. that's a friend who says, let's go out and get wasted tuesday night because he doesn't see the other variables, like you have a job in the morning. and you don't have a hang -- want to hang over and it's irresponsible. that's a kind of people that we need to look at the economy, the people who are able to look at the cost benefits of every decision. to realize there is going to be a risk, you can mitigate it but you can't eliminate it. you look at disease and reduction over time and the possibility that it may come back. you need to do random testing. you need to do trace -- contact tracing. and phases for people so they can start work. there's all these variables. if you just stare out one variable, like the death rate and that's it you will never understand how to get back to work. >> jesse: all right. let's go to emily compagno who was never the one to call and say, let's go out and get wasted. she would never do that.
2:07 pm
>> dana: that was me. >> jesse: yeah, right. [laughs] emily, you spoke passionately about the restaurant owners the other day but a lot of people see these as numbers. but they are real men and women who have families and don't have a job and don't have income from now i can't wait to open back up. >> emily: exactly. just like my family and my small business which has been gutted by this. and it's a social distancing mandate which remains after their doors are open. and why should the federal government be stipulating how many full-time employees and this is what's important for viewers, too. most of them are amortized over 18 months or two years.
2:08 pm
during a period of hopefully growth and if a sender that means job creation is tender. we've already seen millions of workers laid off. we have allowable funds to include cost of goods for inventory purchased on 30 day terms before foreseeable closures. using numbers, that is good food being wasted. dairy farmers are dumping milk, farmers icing crops rot and they can't afford the labor to deliver it. the final insult to injury, i will close with this, the government right now in terms of regulations, as greg said sort of creating plans or the larger picture of preventing this in
2:09 pm
the future or addressing it. for example those dairy farmers that are dumping thousands of gallons of milk, they need permits to do so. and osha in its infinite wisdom right now has been paying surprised visits to the skeleton crews in the hospital industry to make sure they comply with regulations. that's not what small businesses need, they need action. >> jesse: yes, you have to cut back on the regulatory crackdown at times like this. i think everyone would agree. white house corona task force will brief in a little bit but a head on "the five," it looks like america is turning a corner in this covid-19 crisis but you wouldn't know that from the media. ♪ ♪
2:10 pm
if you have moderate to severe psoriasis, little things can become your big moment. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated... ...with an increased risk of depression.
2:11 pm
tell your doctor if you have a history of depression... ...or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. tell your doctor about your medicines, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. otezla. show more of you.
2:12 pm
there will be parties and family gatherings. there will be parades and sporting events and concerts. to help our communities when they come back together, respond to the 2020 census now. spend a few minutes online today to impact the next 10 years of healthcare, infrastructure and education. go to 2020census.gov and respond today
2:13 pm
to make america's tomorrow brighter. it's time to shape our future. it won't wait for a convenient time. or for hospitals to get back to normal again. that's why, at cancer treatment centers of america, we aren't waiting. we're right here, still focused on the only thing we do, providing world-class cancer care, all under one roof. because cancer isn't just what we do, it's all we do. cancer treatment centers of america. call now for an appointment.
2:15 pm
coming up and there's been some encouraging news this week. one key model part forecasting far fewer deaths from coronavirus than earlier estimates but we still need to keep up the social distancing across the country to keep that trend going. the media is not making the situation any better with attacks like this on president trump. >> tens of thousands of people will die in the country or some of them have already died and more will die because of donald trump's incompetence and lack of leadership. >> here we have a president who is exploiting a national crisis to move forward his own agenda, is on the revenge and own prof profit. >> emily: and it gets worse. worse. nbc's chris hayes promoting a conspiracy theory that the trump administration inflated the death toll projections of the president could take a "victory laclap." greg, you always feel so strongly about the media and i
2:16 pm
wanted to ask you, is there anything that you think the mainstream media will have an appropriate perspective on? >> greg: i think, i completely understand the poetical politics. it's a team sport thing, and like some viruses it's incurable. the only thing that bothers me is the media so clearly on one side, i'd like to change that but it's never going to happen. acosta asking whether trump had investments in hydroxy, as if trump would risk his reelection, his legacy for a couple hundred dollars in stock, it's just. even more is, it's not even a cost original. he stole that from that don't we do well, morning joe. i think we should to contact tracing on really dumb ideas in the media. identifying someone who's been near someone infected with the dumb idea and then try to trace it back. it starts with msnbc, then moves
2:17 pm
to cnn and goes back to nbc. if we could stop it we could prevent more infections. one last point. if this pandemic is far less than what we dictate is going to create a swirl of unprovable arguments. so we might as well just get used to it. we will have one side saying it's all social distancing and another one saying that fear was oversold. the projections were ridiculous and people say that trump saved lives by shutting down travel. others will say he put the economy before people. these things are going to go on for the rest of your life. you don't want to get sucked into it because they are almost all unprovable. >> emily: dana, i wanted to play a video for you and get your thoughts on it. this is what james carville had to say, what republicans will do to stay in power. take a look and i will get your thoughts. >> what i do fear is what they had in wisconsin where they try to muck with the election, that was one of the most awful things that ever seen in my life.
2:18 pm
just the extent they would go to to hold onto power. they will kill people to stay in power. literally. >> dana: you want me to react to that. so the wisconsin thing, i think that clearly there is a lot of criticism that could be thrown that way. i don't know -- why they couldn't have worked it out, i know there was a plane to be had on both sides. the republicans and the legislature, the governor being a democrat and slow to move, but i think the most ridiculous thing was you had the speaker of the house for the leader's ship of the state legislature, a republican, in full on protective gear with a mask doing an interview telling everybody in wisconsin that was perfectly safe to go outside and vote. that i think open them out to a lot of criticism. and it's not too early to start thinking about what to do in the
2:19 pm
future. there are criticisms about male in voting although you have states like utah that's all mail in and no one seems to have a problem and no one questions it. we could have that debate. the issue of voter suppression, the democrats will talk about that a lot between now and november and i think the republicans have to have a much better answer as to how they are going to try to deal with it. if i could say one thing about the question that acosta posted about the funding, it reminded me that for eight years the media would go after dick cheney over and over again for investments in halliburton. he had no investments in halliburton when he was a vice president. he would not be able to benefit and it didn't matter how many times you explain this to to them in a very logical way, the media just didn't care. they just tried to continue to pummel somebody. but if i could be as a sports analogy, this one at $450, if that's the investment, that's what you call a swing and a miss.
2:20 pm
>> emily: jesse, abc published a damaging report on president trump's reaction to this and i'm military official refuted it and refused to issue a correction. but we ever see is some type of acknowledgment of the responsibility that they had in shaping that narrative? >> jesse: probably not. you didn't see it with russia and i don't know why you would see with this. if we had today's media during world war ii, they would blame fdr or pearl harbor instead of the japanese. it would probably blame the house republicans at the time. but you see my point, this is china's deal. china lies. the w.h.o. botch this. the virus, mother earth is killing people, not the president. there's still so much we don't know about this virus. this is an invisible and comic enemy. we shut down the entire u.s. economy, that wasn't aggressive enough? they criticize the president for acting too late or not listening to the scientists. show me in february were
2:21 pm
dr. fauci and dr. birx said we all need to shelter in place. we can't find it because it does not happen. do you know how many deaths there were in this country on march 1st? one. show me one pundit that spoke to the country on the need to shelter in place. if you can find that person i will buy them a round of drinks. but it didn't happen, they were obsessed with mike bloomberg at this time. to greg's point, you can play with these models and projections however way you want. you could say trump saved the lives, you could say mitigation works, you can say the models were wrong or the models were updated when new information was put into it. look at the climate change models. all of them have been wrong and yet people are obsessed with the climate change models. i could play this game all day. i could say barack obama did nothing while the opioid epidemic cost 200,000 american lives and that's on him. i could say that but i won't
2:22 pm
because i'm a very classy guy. >> emily: [laughs] all right. juan, what are your thoughts on anything you like from whatever everyone said it? >> juan: emily, let me go back to this business about what happened in wisconsin. you know, i just thought that was a huge flaw, i think it was an embarrassment for us as american people. i don't think people should have to choose between staying healthy and participating in an election. i thought it was wrong and even when there were questions about male in voting to the president yesterday, the president said oh, no. it's terrible and you could see it all in front. and then they said, mr. president you voted by mail at the last election in florida and he said yes, that's true. to me it's about voter suppression. we will come back to that topic. for the media, i would put it in
2:23 pm
the category of not helping us to move forward, not helping us to progress and get out of the situation. this thing is so serious i would rather not get hooked up in those kind of trivial finger-pointing, backbiting at backstabbing. i will say that a nonpartisan basis, the fact is that we as a country were slow to respond is specific. the president when he was downplaying the seriousness of it, i think the administration was slow to respond. but let's leave it there and now try to pick up pace and do the things that are necessary to get us in the right place because i think -- there's no need for us to get involved in harsh conspiracy theories that don't actually lead us in a more productive place. >> greg: one point though, he did shut down travel three days after it was raised. so i mean maybe you could have done at the same day. and he got criticized. he was called racist.
2:24 pm
>> juan: lesson. in fact, people who were still coming in -- i think more than half million people still came from china because you had americans coming back from that area and you had people coming from italy. you had people coming from germany and from britain. so let's argue about the effectiveness in another way. i'm just saying, we as a country were slow to respond. let's focus now on what we can do because right now even as we reopen businesses, what we are going to see is that people are slow to get back to the restaurants and slow to get back on an airplane, slow to get ba back. >> jesse: enough with the blame game, it's on china. >> emily: all right. we are awaiting president trump in the task force briefing. in the meantime, president trump is launching attacks on joe biden. we will play that tape for you will come up ♪
2:26 pm
insurance so you only pay for what you need. what do you think? i don't see it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ you're clearly someone who takes care of yourself. so when it comes to screening for colon cancer, don't wait. because when caught early, it's more treatable. i'm cologuard. i'm noninvasive and detect altered dna in your stool to find 92% of colon cancers... ...even in early stages. tell me more. it's for people 45 plus at average risk for colon cancer, not high risk. false positive and negative results may occur. ask your prescriber if cologuard is right for you. i'm on it. that's a step in the right direction. ♪ ♪ ♪
2:27 pm
100% online car buying. carvana's had a lot of firsts. ♪ car vending machines. and now, putting you in control of your financing. at carvana, get personalized terms, browse for cars that fit your budget, then customize your down payment and monthly payment. and these aren't made-up numbers. it's what you'll really pay, right down to the penny. whether you're shopping or just looking. it only takes a few seconds, and it won't affect your credit score. finally! a totally different way to finance your ride. only from carvana. the new way to buy a car.
2:29 pm
♪ >> juan: welcome back. we continue to monitor the start started of the coronavirus task force briefing but let's turn to some 2020 politics first. now that joe biden has become the presumptive democrat nominee, president trump is mocking the former vp for not yet picking up a key endorseme endorsement. take a look. >> president trump: i don't know why president obama hasn't supported joe biden a long time ago. that's something he feels is wrong. he will come out, and he's got to come out at some point because he certainly doesn't want to see me for four more years. amazes me that president obama hasn't supported sleepy joe. he knows something that you don't know. but i think i know. but you don't know.
2:30 pm
so it will be interesting. >> juan: and speaking of president obama, democrats are reportedly salivating for the former president to come off the sidelines to take on president trump. greg, i wanted to go to you and say, is president trump just delighting in sewing disarray and disunity among democrats at this moment? >> greg: it's weird, i hadn't seen that clip. it's kind of amazing how real trump can be and how almost straight level that kind of commentary is and that everybody knows what he's talking about and he says it so clearly. obama reminds me of when i've committed to do some kind of function that i want to get out of. he's like at the bachelor finale, right? and he's face with his final rose and it's supposed to be that person and he doesn't know how he got there and he's beginning to think, i need to get away. so the bad news is, obama hasn't
2:31 pm
endorsed joe biden. the good news is joe biden has endorsed obama. [laughter] >> juan: emily, it doesn't matter when he does it? i don't think there's any question that he's going to endorsed joe biden. >> emily: i think it does matter. and here's why i totally loved your intro song. do you remember in eddie and the cruisers, that song up that soundtrack, he was teaching eddie about the sustains and it was basically after the pause of what holds more weight? i assume that's what happening is the obama endorsement. of course it's inevitable but it will probably happen on the convention, post coronavirus, when democrats who are totally thirsty and ready for that messianic moment will laugh it up and it will dominate all the airwaves. joe biden, obviously what he has in front of him are the two
2:32 pm
biggest challenges. uniting the party but we've already seen him capitulate to burning and elizabeth warren on that. but it's finding -- and figuring out how to attack the president pulse coronavirus. >> juan: emily, we are having some technical problems there. dana, emily was making the point that right now coronavirus dominates everything. don't you think it would be smart to save a big endorsement for when it could dominate the news? that would be obama endorsing biden. >> dana: i think president trump is the number one politician that ever understood mass media in the moment and he knows how to dominate it and he's done super well. the second best is president obama and his team. so i think that if they were to do it now it would just get buried and it would be fizzled in that big punch that they would get out of it would go away. i don't know if it will happen around the convention, i would imagine so.
2:33 pm
also we already know that president obama has been working the phones behind the scenes. he was on the phone with bernie sanders in fact right before he dropped out. i do want to say one thing about joe biden, he announced a couple of things that might -- people might have missed. he has gone bernie sanders away on a couple things. he announced to policy proposals and he said he would lower the medicare age to 60 which would blow up that program even faster. that's not medicare for all but it's still not going to the right with longer life span and people healthy and able to work. the second thing he said was he would do a huge massive amount of student loan debt. he qualified that by staying low and middle income borrowers but again that just shows how far bernie sanders was able to pull him to the left. >> juan: it's of jesse, picking up on dana's point chemically see the president trying to separate the bernie bros from joe biden and say, come over here.
2:34 pm
now you see him today and all of these comments saying, obama didn't endorse. we don't know about whether or not bernie is really on the train with joe biden. you see this is just politics. greg said he saw it as just brutal direct politics. >> jesse: i used to pull those kind of stunts and high school. i went up to friends of mine at the lunch table and say, you know what? and he has been talking a lot of trash. and then i go to john and say, and he's talking trash about you. then later in the lunch room they would fight and i would sit back and watch the brawl. that's what trump does, he makes people go after each other. about the endorsement, you don't endorse during a pandemic. so he's got to wait but every day he waits gives the president an opportunity to stoke that fire. in an ideal world they do some big announcement in a swing state in front of a huge crowd
2:35 pm
this summer. but i don't know if that's possible during this time of social medication. so you don't know when it's going to be a bit if they try to produce something on television is just going to look stilted. the bottom line is, barack obama knows that joe can't cut it. he doesn't have what it takes, never dated and never will. if you read any book about the obama administration, everybody says the same thing. >> juan: all right. the daily white house coronavirus task force breathing is coming up. directly ahead, president trump weighing in on the insane documentary tiger came. stay tuned, that's next on "the five." ♪ no matter what.
2:36 pm
2:40 pm
♪ >> jesse: the white house coronavirus task force is about to come out and give another briefing. while we wait, let's do this. president trump was asked about a potential pardon for joe exotic, the start of the netflix hit documentary "tiger king." he's currently serving a life sentence for a murder-for-hire plot. >> president trump: i know nothing about his, 22 years for what? >> allegedly he hired someone to murder and animal rights activists but he says he didn't do it. >> president trump: are you on his side, are you recommending a pardon? as a reporter you're not allowed to do that. would you recommend a pardon? i don't think your wedding. go ahead, do you have a questi question? >> greg: so juan come up with
2:41 pm
that appropriate to ask during a pandemic? >> juan: i think it's a waste of time but it's not inappropriate. you can ask the president whatever you want to ask. i mean that's the chair and you are in the press. but this is an important serious issue in the country, the pandemic, and i do think you should focus on that. i will say i've been watching that show, and you have gave polygamy, you got animal abuse, it's unbelievable. murder for hire plots and then of course there's a whole issue of whether or not one of the characters killed her husband, o.j. simpson tweeting that she may have fed her husband to the tigers, tiger sushi me, he said. >> greg: just a typical weekend at my house. it was a silly question but unlike a cost, it intentionally silly. >> jesse: i mean, i was entertained by it.
2:42 pm
i don't care. i don't see how people have time to watch tiger king while these task force briefings are on. these go on to 8:00. after them i go to bed, i'm exhausted. polygamy, check. dirtbags, check. i mean this is right up my alley but i just haven't had time with everything going on. and dana has made me read all these books, i'm reading demille and connolly and -- what's so funny? >> emily: we are going to recognize you on the other side [laughs] >> greg: that's quite the literature canon. >> jesse: it's no greg gutfeld monologue. >> greg: that's true. it's available in paperback. emily. could this question have been a signal that maybe things might be getting better so you could
2:43 pm
have a little bit of levity? because it feels like we are seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. >> emily: i think that's a good way of looking at it, greg. but i will say that what's so funny to me is unlike the entire country, i've never watched "tiger king an, and i never even saw the trailer for it so in my own head i thought it was like a guy that had all these rescue tigers and did all this cool stuff, and this big farm refuge area. so when juan was talking about it i was like, oh, my god. then i heard the question to president trump about him being incarcerated. so now my daydream has been shattered. >> jesse: so dana, i put it to you. should president trump pardon tiger king and became the head of the u.s. fish and wildlife service? >> dana: that is an excellent question but i think we better wait until after the election to see if i could actually pass
2:44 pm
muster. one thing about that question though, it kind of shows that the president is just like us. maybe he hasn't watched it or hasn't heard about it but we are dealing with a very serious time. if i was in the room i wouldn't have asked the question that i did think it was pretty funny, the president and the way he handled it. they gave a moment of levity for the country which is not a bad thing. i would also say, that show is so boring and stupid and i watched one episode and i'm not watching anymore. >> greg: that's what alina said it, she didn't like it either. i was interested in all the polygamy and she's like, not having it greg. anyway, could the pandemic be the end of the handshake? i hope so. hear what dr. fauci said about that, next. musica♪ hour, thats where i feel normal. having an annuity tells me my retirement is protected. protected lifetime income from an annuity can help your
2:45 pm
retirement plan ride out turbulent times. learn more at protectedincome.org. hold on one second... sure. okay... okay! safe drivers save 40%!!! guys! guys! check it out. safe drivers save 40%!!! safe drivers save 40%! safe drivers save 40%!!! that's safe drivers save 40%. it is, that's safe drivers save 40%. - he's right there. - it's him! he's here. he's right here. - hi! - hi. hey! - that's totally him. - it's him! that's totally the guy. safe drivers do save 40%. click or call for a quote today. safe drivers do save 40%. all rightyeah.'s do it.
2:48 pm
2:49 pm
>> i don't think in reality that we are all of a sudden not going to shake hands but i threw that out there to get people to start thinking much more about personal hygiene, and the way that impacts the spread of a really deadly infection, like we are going through right now. >> dana: now i have to say, me myself, i have an excellent handshake and my mom and dad taught me that early on. but not everybody does. it does give you a major of a person if there handshake is weak. >> jesse: yeah, i size people up like a politician when i shake their hands. you get a measure of a man that way and you could maybe grab them by the shoulder or the bicep and do that. i like that, i'm a politician like that. someone like greg that freaks them out, greg is looking forward to this new nonhandshake world. he doesn't like to be touched and doesn't like to have to
2:50 pm
extend his arm. this will create a lot of awkward moments. if the handshake all of a sudden becomes optional, you will have a lot of this out there. obviously the fist bump, he can't pull that off, it's too athletic. there's just a lot of room for error when the handshake becomes optional. >> dana: greg, what would you like to see replaced the handshake? >> this is just another industry that's going to die. what happens to the joy buzzer industry? anyway, i'm completely for this. jesse is right, answer basically filthy oven admits that you can never take off and you can keep washing them and washing them like lady macbeth and never get the bacteria off. was it lady macbeth early hamlet? or was it the lady down the block? anyway. you are covered in viruses and
2:51 pm
fecal matter, and i think that's inappropriate. any ideas on what that could be. >> greg: i was thinking about that, never again can i be in a soulcycle class with sweat flying into every orifice and me being okay with it. it takes me a long time to be comfortable with a lot of things like that. it's amazing that we've persevered as a human species for this long anyway. >> dana: what about an air kiss? >> juan: air kiss. i don't know. i guess hugs and air kisses, that's too close, within the 6 feet lament. i think back to some of the famous people in history like howard hughes and nikola tesla,
2:52 pm
2:53 pm
and i don't count the wrinkles. but what i do count on is boost high protein. and now, introducing new boost women... with key nutrients to help support thyroid, bone, hair and skin health. all with great taste. new, boost women. designed just for you. new, boost women. and you may know us from your very first sandwich,esh, your mammoth masterpiece, and whatever this was. oscar mayer is found in more fridges than anyone else, because it's the taste you count on. make every sandwich count.
2:54 pm
than rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis. when considering another treatment, ask about xeljanz xr, a once-daily pill for adults with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis or active psoriatic arthritis for whom methotrexate did not work well enough. it can reduce pain, swelling, and significantly improve physical function. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections like tb; don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra can increase risk of death. serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened. as have tears in the stomach or intestines,
2:55 pm
2:56 pm
i need all the breaks, without that i can get.tor about at liberty butchumal- cut. liberty biberty- cut. we'll dub it. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ♪ >> jesse: time now for "one more thing. ." greg? >> greg: once again, it's time for -- greg, there's a wombat in my dryer news. in these tough times everyone could use like good snuggle to get warm and cozy. check out this little fella. that's actually a wombat in a nice warm dryer. enjoying -- you know, you
2:57 pm
probably can't get a better feeling than being inside a dryer of warm clothes? look at that. and then you get to spin. this is the sleepy burroughs wombat sanctuary. which is actually right across the street from fox. no social distancing there. and that's my wombat news. >> dana: is that their pet? >> greg: it's a sanctuary. >> dana: oh, okay. so senior and high-risk shoppers all across atlanta and louisiana got a wonderful surprise when they got to the register when they had all their stuff. they got ready to check out and they were told that tyler perry had paid their grocery tab in full. yes. the tv and movie mogul picked up the grocery tabs at 44 kroger stores across atlanta and all 29
2:58 pm
when dixie locations in louisiana. the grocery chain show shared photos of a few of their customers that were learning their groceries were going to be free and there were grateful tears that were sent. if you like stories like that go to foxnews.com/america together and you can see all kinds of great and wonderful acts of kindness happening around us. i personally can't get enough of them. >> jesse: that's fantastic. all right, juan, you are up. >> juan: let's have some fun. let's have a teddy bear hunt. if you go on a walk, you will see teddy bears everywhere. they've been put there during this coronavirus to create a game for kids as they take up bike ride or walk or get in the car with their parents, thus a stuffed animal safari comes from a book called we are going on a bear hunt. it's very big in my washington, d.c., neighborhood, even across the city.
2:59 pm
i've seen everything from paddington bear to minnie mouse and a stuffed tiger's. so this is a great moment of people coming together to create a moment of fun in the midst of our social crisis. way to go. >> jesse: very nice. all right, we've got jesse's work out news. i know a lot of you guys can't go to the gym, so you have to work out at home. so my wife emma waters does a workout video that everyone can participate in. if you go to her instagram page she goes live every day at 4:00. emma waters underscore underscore, and you can follow along. i think emily compagno actually gets involved. she's feeling the burn. i can't do it, it's way too much for me. if you want to check out her past workouts she's got a youtube page. there you go, stay fit together or apart. >> emily: just say, your wife
3:00 pm
has been amazing and i've been working out with her every day. and i do have a bear in my front window. while you guys are at home in quarantine watching everything come watch my fox nation show crimes that changed america. it's been an honor to host it. >> jesse: also, watch "special report" with bret baier, and he's coming up right now. >> good evening and welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. breaking tonight we are waiting on the start of the daily coronavirus task force meeting at the white house. we are told it may start at 6:30, we will take you there when it begins. the latest fox news poll has president trump at 49% approval, his best showing ever in this poll. in the meantime the latest u.s. figures for the pandemic, more than 16,000 dead and almost 455,000 infected. 25,000 recovered in the
364 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on