tv The Five FOX News April 28, 2020 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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the economy consistent with the phase 1 recommendations of the white house. the coronavirus task force. >> neil: we shall see, all right, mitch mcconnell, thank you very much. that will do it for us. here comes "the five." ♪ >> greg: i'm greg -- greg gutfeld along with jesse watters, dana perino, juan williams, and emily compagno. "the five." and today's new york post, the new york city e.r. doctor calls the coronavirus wow virus the worse health care is he has ever seen. yet he says it is time to open up. his reasons, he believes that the wave has crusted, which is good news. the second point, out of fear, people are avoiding hospitals for treatment of other stuff. ers have seen a big drop-off, people have canceled test. 911 calls have declined. if people are avoiding hospitals, how many others have
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died of heart attack or stroke? the fact that we can talk about this now is actually a good thing. at the start of this we were ready to lock down and throw away the key. but remember that this debate will be forever. it's the two ideas. was it the distancing and shutdown network? or was the disease not as bad as we thought? it might be both, or we flatten the curve and crusted the wave. this is where math is your body. disease can have a lower kill rate then does he use b. and still kill more people if it infects vastly more people. meaning 1% of 100 is 1, but half a percent of 1,000 is 50. dana, check my numbers. we have already had 58,000 dead, and if it keeps going over like this during time, you can get close to the predictions, a disease worse than the flu on top of the flu. but maybe it is time for people, meaning the young and the healthy return to work so that we can protect the elderly and
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infirmed. and people need to go back to their jobs and be careful and see doctors for their heart, liver, and lung ailments. if they don't, the coronavirus will kill many more people without even trying. you know, juan, the author daniel murphy was chairman of the department of emergency medicine at saint barnabas in the bronx, so he is on the front line, he has seen it all. and yet he was emphatically saying that we have to rapidly get back to work. so, i mean, that's hard to ignore, right? >> juan: yeah, i mean, i thought the information he presented, especially about people who were suffering strokes, heart attacks, and then not going to the hospital because they are afraid, that is very real. you have to take that into account. but i must say, i wanted to underline something that you said about, you presented it as the prism of two ideas, but i think if distancing has helped
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to lower what we have seen in terms, not only infection, but there are four deaths, so it's like two interlocking ideas as i was listening to you. and i think you have to realize, i think as of today, we have 1 million people in this country who have tested positive for coronavirus. but that's, greg, only with i think it is about 1.6% of the nation having been tested. so we in order to really protect ourselves, we have to have more robust testing that would allow us to identify hot spots, to engage in contact tracing and to try to halt widespread, you know, sort of exponential spread of this disease. dr. fauci said in an interview yesterday that to the disease is not going away with the summer weather. he thinks it may stick around, and he thinks only by being cautious are we protecting ourselves from even a more devastating outbreak.
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>> greg: dana, when i was talking about the prism of two ideas, i was talking about the mistakes that people make when they look at this, whether it is this or this when it is a combination. i think that there are going to be people, this might be a safe prediction, see, i told you this was no big deal after they choose to ignore the fact that our social distancing helped flatten the curve. >> dana: and actually they could go back the other way too, you are going to see a lot of, and you are right, we could debate it forever, or we could also celebrate the fact that americans did what we were ask asked. we were able to prevent the hospitals from being overwhelmed. and governor cuomo said that today. he said the hospitals did not get overwhelmed. people are mistaken, when you say, you want to reopen america, that is not a synonym for ignoring the virus. so you can reopen america,
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recognizing that we have accomplished something that the government asked for us which was a huge sacrifice, not just the stay at home, but people who have lost their jobs, their businesses, that is a huge sacrifice. in the hospitals did not get overwhelmed, so if you trust people, they can be responsible to try to get back and do the things that they need to do in order to keep the economy going so that we can take care of the people, because "the new york post" piece, he also said that he was worried about the people in the neighborhood who were standing in food lines for the first time. the poverty that is being basically imposed on them. so they are all of these concerns. when you say that you want to reopen america, it's not just because you want to help president trump win the election. that's a huge problem and people should not fall into that. >> greg: i would like to read a quote from the doctor and get your response. would you like to play along with me? >> jesse: please do. >> greg: do you have the
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quote, producer? put it up there. i've worked for coronavirus frontline, and i say that it is time to open up. standing up to the virus can't be the job of a stomach essential workers only. we have been strong, but we are tired, and we need the rest of you to help us by getting back to work. so essentially, what i get him saying is that we should share the risk especially if you are young and healthy to get out there and be part of their herd immunity that he mentioned. >> jesse: you have made this point before, that the country has a pain threshold. i feel like we are reaching the pain threshold in certain parts of the country. going back to your other conversation, any person can make an argument that proves that they were right even though they were wrong. i do that all the time. you can play the super bowl, and then the next day you can have
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all of these analysts on espn. why did they throw the ball? they should ground and pound, and anybody can do that and look good. but you talk about the prism of two ideas, i think what we are seeing is the prism of 50 ideas. because there are 50 governors in 50 states doing 50 different things. it's dynamic, flexible, and tailored. it's brilliant. and there are even mayors doing things different than governors with the governor's full consent. we are talking about restaurants, parks, elective surgeries, they are all being done differently based on the local county or states health or economic landscape. and the one-size-fits-all policy would have been a catastrophe. could you imagine treating new york like you treat arkansas? or treating arkansas like you treat new york? that's what obama wanted to do. this big national central policy. you would heard talks of
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secession if that would have happened. also why it is so brilliant that they did this is because you are going to see in real time what's working and what is not. if you see a hot spot in a certain state, maybe they opened the gyms to early, right? you can see the mistakes being made in real-time. there will be so much fresh data to chew on, that dr. birx's silk scarf will pop off of her neck. >> greg: that is quite a visual, jesse. emily, what do you think? >> emily: just to echo the op-eds, i think just like all of america helping flatten the curve, now it is up to us to get americans back to work and thrive. and that's why it is so crucial for state and local government leaders to send messages with her decision-making that they are prioritizing saving jobs while acknowledging that it is a different normal that we are going back to you. so jesse mentioned restaurants, and the reason that i have been
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continuing to talk about the restaurant industry is not only because of its volume, it is a $900 billion industry as of last year, but also because it touches so many other industries, like manufacturing and shipping and agriculture, and such a broad supply chain that touches millions of americans. so we can't just flip the switch and have these businesses go back to normal wear all of a sudden they can think that they have the ability to get back on their feet. i want to take l.a. for example, a lot of times we bash on the show, but right now it is a really interesting case study, because the local government from the beginning has been resisting and sending headwinds to the restaurant industry as they are trying to cope with this and implement new policies, but the mayor, mayor garcetti has been open to big, bold ideas. so for this time, i think it is incumbent upon all of us to support the creation of new policy, right, that acknowledges that saves jobs. things like tip credit and suspend the policies that are in existence that are hampering
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these businesses from staying open, like certain class action litigation and things like that, in that example in l.a., the city and local government has been resisting because they are failing to see the forest for the trees. but it is a new normal. and things like retailing alcohol, things that have been put in place during this time, we need to consider moving forward with this web that faces millions of americans, we should look at all of these individual junctures and try to acknowledge the give and carry these policies moving forward, because it is about saving these jobs so that we don't have an economic death too. >> greg: and also, alfresco, that is the solution right now. move everything outdoors. close the streets down, let the restaurants put their tables outside. coming up next, the media tries to pin the covid-19 death toll on donald trump. to stay with us on "the five." ♪
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♪ >> jesse: the liberal media scorn for the president is on full display, competing with hostile reporters during the press briefings, for good reason. check out this ridiculous got you a question. >> would an american president losing more americans in six weeks over the integrity of the vietnam war, does he deserve to be reelected? >> we have lost a lot of people, but if you look at what original projections were, 2.2 million, we are probably heading to 60,000, 70,000, one person is far too many for this.
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>> jesse: plus "the view has a new target, dr. deborah brooks, defending the expert forward defending trump. >> at this point she is less of a doctor and more like an elderly care nurse to this guy. >> do you think that dr. birx is part of the problem? >> i do, i do think she is part of the problem. it gives me no pleasure to say that. you can't be complicit in a time like this, dr. birx. so i think she has become part of the problem. >> jesse: wow. well, i don't think -- i'm not even going to address the domestic "the view" ladies. i have seen my fair number of gotcha questions, she played it pretty well with the president. i just don't know if i could ever bring myself to ask a gotcha question like that to the president of the united states. have you ever seen anything like that before?
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>> dana: have i ever seen anything like that before? i worked through a president during a time of war, torturers, memos, yeah. i've seen it before. and a little bit of that, you get into a chance where you have the cameras on, and she is a reporter that has written some pretty great things. she has broken a lot of stories. and she is writing a book about the 2020 election, so the question about does a president like you deserved to be reelected was geared towards where she is thinking and where she is spending her time. but remember, the president answered it so well. so sometimes it doesn't matter if the question is hostile, if you hit a home run, then who cares? it actually makes you look better. and i will speak to the doctor birx thing for a second, way to stand up for women, ladies. okay, joy behar, trying to look like dr. birx with the scarf. it's a look i cannot pull off,
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but i would try at some point. but here is a woman who is having a responsibility not to coddle anybody. she is supposed to try to manage a pandemic. and she is doing that with the commander in chief. so why don't i just let her do her job for as long as she needs to do it, and to do it to the best of her ability and do it professionally. which is what she has been doi doing. >> jesse: she has been doing a very good job. greg, i'm going to play some sound of another exchange, again, just crazy, crazy commentary from the press corps. the president and dr. birx were asked something, you can react to all of it. >> are you going to apologize? >> are you going to apologize? >> go ahead. that's why nobody knows who you are including me. go ahead. you want to get your facts right. >> we have facts. >> well, your facts are wrong.
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>> jesse: he asked the question and said, we are behind south korea, actually, no, we are ahead of south korea. these are things that happen a lot. >> greg: this is the gotcha question game show. i want to tie what olivia newsy and the birx thing have in common. her question is the perfect example of media narcissism, it is guaranteeing attention back to the person asking the question prayed i'm sure she got dmed from acosta and the bald guy saying wow, that was amazing what you did to her. but the question is absurd. who do you deserved to be reelected? well, that's what the election will determine, you. and you can put it like, let's put it this way, given the tornado hit your town and killed 30 people, do you deserve to be dogcatcher? that's exactly how stupid her question was. now when you focus on birx, it's
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called the contamination effect. the media loves to just soil her reputation, because by -- if you are hanging around somebody we hate, trump, then you are contaminated. they transfer they hate to her. so what about the people that birx knows? right, are they contaminated by now knowing her? you see how this thing works? they should do trace -- whatever they call it, contact tracing on everybody's friendships. so lastly, why do they have something in common? the media is hypocritically evil. when they move stomach interview unsavory people, they are imparting their good moral fiber on them. so when they question trump, they are actually the moral high ground, which is why she had her absurd question, but when you will, like birx is among trump, then you are the recipient of the unsavory nests of trump.
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now you are now immoral by a being around him. so, you see the trick. to the media gets to decide who gets to impart moral value, and it is always them, but it is never you. >> jesse: that's a good point. juan, what do you think? >> juan: i think the press is supposed to hold powerful people accountable and ask questions. now, i think president trump is never shy, never shy about saying, hey, that's a crazy question, or that it is an unfair question, or that it is a fake news question, but he did not do that. treated it seriously, and as dana pointed out, he gave what i think was a pretty good answer from his perspective. he said the numbers are less than what had been projected, and then try to take credit for it. and by the way, it was not a gotcha question, it was a real question. i think that they are real questions to come like today about banks and even some of the borrowers upset about the fda screw up with the computers,
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people cannot get the loans. people are upset about these big companies, some of these auto companies, the l.a. lakers getting loans in that small businesses. people have legitimate questions to ask. and i don't think it is illegitimate for the president to ask them. when they are gotcha questions like who is the leader of blues pakistan or something, dana would know about that kind of silly question. >> jesse: does dana know? >> juan: but a legitimate question -- >> dana: i do not know the leader. before gotcha. >> jesse: all right, emily. >> emily: i think that this underscores the hypocrisy, because respectfully, juan, if her question was truly designed to provoke conversation, then why when she was called out that her question was just designed to provoke, she responded "shut the f up." and for joy behar, that's just
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an example of someone who uses the media platform to attack those who attack women, and she is a hillary champion, she calls herself a feminist. and yet, this opportunity, she calls dr. birx was a u.s. army colonel and literally lead the hiv vaccine global movement. and has received tons of commendation awards under democratic administrations. and to manage $1.5 billion of budget, literally lead and joy behar reduces her to an elderly care nurse. i could compare and contrast joy behar's resume, but i will not. i don't think i need to. >> jesse: and you brought up hillary clinton, she just endorsed joe biden. despite growing questions over sexual assault allegations. ♪ it's best we stay apart for a bit,
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♪ >> emily: welcome back. joe biden picking up a big endorsement during an women's town hall despite growing questions about a sexual assault allegation. hillary clinton being accused of hypocrisy after throwing her support behind the former vp. >> i am thrilled to be part of your campaign to not only endorse you, but to help highlight a lot of the issues that are at stake in this presidential election. i wish you were president right now to end the kind of disregard of not only american values, but american institutions, the rule of law, and so much else that is at stake because of the current occupant.
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>> emily: hillary previously said that women have a right to be believed, but she still went forward with the endorsement. former biden staffer tara reade says that he sexually assaulted her in 1993, and re-told fox news that hillary clinton is "enabling a predator by backing biden." dave -- dana, i would like to start with you, is this his way of responding to the allegation? >> dana: in some ways, i don't understand the things that he has done this week. he has floated the conspiracy theory that president trump is going to postpone the election. of the president pushed back that he was not going to do that, the election will be held in november. he rolled out this hillary endorsement, which i think was scheduled for a long time ago, because what a day to roll it out. i mentioned yesterday that henry rogers of "the daily caller" called every single democratic office on the senate side and asked what you think about the
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allegations from tara reade, nobody responded. and several of those people like kamala harris, for example who might be in the vice president sites for joe biden who are also remaining silent. they are in a terrible position because of what they had done in the past. so i think joe biden was probably better off if he just did nothing for a while, just let the president be out there and have to handle the crisis and see how he does, because joe biden's poll numbers have been fine without him even being out there. with all of this that he has done, i actually think that it makes things worse. >> emily: greg, what are your thoughts on the endorsement or the response to the allegations. >> greg: the entire town hall felt designed to create a suit of armor around to joe against the sexual assault. of course, who does he have come in? the effeminate's who dragged all of her victims through the mud. and of course, we learned that some sexual assaults matter less
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than others. the other thing that bugs me was that biden was repeating the platitudes over and over again. he does not even know what he is saying at that time, but it was all about gender and inequality, of course women are caregivers, we understand that. but every study that i have seen, more men are dying from the coronavirus than women. but somehow i believe that was left out, but he had to make it about gender. he had to insert the politics of identity into this horrible thing that he is actually uniting a country. but to get it, it is politics. you have to split people, men versus women, that's what they are doing. i felt that she was kind of looking at him like a vulture over a body. like, waiting for him to go so that she could step right in. she was just going, make me vp. make me vp, and in a month, i will be p. >> emily: okay, jesse, what do you think about that?
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>> jesse: i read chris stirewalt today, and he made that point, that joe does not have a firm grasp on this nomination. it's a grasp, i would not call it firm. remember what happened with al franken. they jump to that guy over so fast, because they thought it created vulnerability with the roy moore situation, and i don't see that happening here, but this guy is not invincible. and to think that hillary batted an eyelash endorsing biden under a cloud of sexual assault, one, she has done it before, and two, i don't believe hillary even knows. and has not even covered this. they have covered it here and there, it has been in "the new york times" once or twice, it has been in cnn.com once, and every time it appears in the mainstream media, it's to poke holes through the story or
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to characterize it as republicans pounce on allegations about joe. if you were to use their standard on them, you know, this would be very troubling. this is a concerning pattern with joe. the mere allegation, and it may make him have to withdraw. this is what they do all the time. remember what they did with kavanaugh, he had to agree to an fbi investigation. and if he didn't, he was guilty. so joe biden, why don't you agree to an fbi investigation, because if you don't, you are obviously guilty. >> emily: juan, jesse makes a great point, what about the vulnerability of joe, or his silence, or opening them up to an fbi investigation that might bolster any credibility he has left. >> juan: i think that this is way, way off the target here. we are in the weeds. and i think that it is like people asking the press, people
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asking now the fbi to do their dirty work for the trump campaign. that's not it. this woman deserves to be heard. i think that's a problem for democrats, that's why they are in an awkward position, jesse was right. in the kavanaugh trial, democrats were saying every woman has a right to be believed. you have to apply the same standard or be accused of hypocrisy. but to me, the larger story here is that he has spoken out and is very clearly denying it. so most of those people who have been called including hillary -- >> jesse: so did kavanaugh. >> juan: hang on, they don't know any more than any of us know about who is to be believed in a he said/she said situation. so to me, that's the hard one. you cannot delay the election, it's in federal law. the constitution says. and i think going down that hole is useless. >> emily: all right, next up,
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a jam-packed claim creating a social distancing nightmare. plus why you could see a lot of masks on your next flight. to stay with us. ♪ for many of our members, being prepared... won't be a new thing. and it won't be their first experience with social distancing. overcoming challenges is what defines the military community. usaa has been standing with them, for nearly a hundred years. and we'll be here to serve for a hundred more.
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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. ♪ >> juan: welcome back. so much for social distancing. a passenger says she panicked aboard a packed flight from new york to charlotte. she was seated next to people who were not wearing masks. so maybe this announcement comes just in time. jetblue says they will become the first u.s. airline to require passengers to wear face covering starting on may 4th. jesse, are you willing to fly? >> jesse: depends where i'm going, juan. it depends, you have to fly at
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your own risk until there is a vaccine. i think airline should require people to wear masks. they should suspend food and beverage, and they should test for anybody in for the virus, maybe not in first class, greg. but you know how that thing is transmitted, and they should test for anybody for the stewardesses. because i hate to make this point, but there will be rough air ahead in the industry. if they have to eliminate middle seats, they are going to start flying flights at a loss. so maybe, take the train, do a road trip, there are other options. >> juan: you are yelping over there, you think they should require masks? >> greg: there are so many things that bother me, number one, how are you going to drink? i am for the masks, but there needs to be a straw/mask combination so that you can still have your vodka-soda. and i do not fly first class, jesse. dana and i and our contracts only private. so this won't be a problem for
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us, dana. i have an idea, i've always had this idea called knockout error, where you fly, right, they come and pick you up at your house, they knock you unconscious with something, and then you wake up at the hotel, your destination. so you don't even experience anything. you just slip in a little coffin and put you in a plane. >> jesse: i am in. >> juan: dana, at the moment tsa says that their screenings are down 95 percent at airports, so very few flights. i've not even seen an airplane in the sky recently, how are you feeling about flying? >> dana: i don't really have anywhere to go, but i would like to see my mom and dad and sister in denver at some point, but the good news for greg and eye is that today are going to eliminate the middle seat, but we can sit in the overhead compartment and then you probably don't need to wear a mask, because we are protected.
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i think he and i are going to be all right. >> juan: i will put handles on the two of you, i will carry you. emily, the planes that i have seen recently where the blue angels and the thunderbirds over in new york city in philadelphia today. i think that you have flown on them, did they give you a mask? >> emily: no, that was actually supposed to take place next month, so i think with the whole covid, that has been pushed back. by first of all, jesse, it is not stewardesses, it is flight attendants, you have to get into 2020. and i feel like in terms of -- >> jesse: oh, sorry. >> emily: if you have an optional policy, not everyone will comply, so shaming, and big brother and not working, that's because everyone is feeling out of control and they just want to have some type of control over something, and that argument always ends with, well, it is life or death. so the airlines either need to make that policy something and have everyone wear a mask, or
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not and know that you might be the only one wearing a mask if it is important. >> juan: a protester confronts bill de blasio accusing the new york mayor of breaking stay at home rules. that video up next on "the five." ♪ ♪ ♪ to deliver your mail and packages and the peace of mind of knowing that essentials like prescriptions are on their way. every day, all across america, we deliver for you. and we always will.
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♪ >> dana: new york city mayor bill de blasio has briefed to the importance of staying at home, even telling residents to report each other for not social distancing, but now getting called out after taking a leisurely stroll through a park about 11 miles from his house. >> seriously, you have a park. you live in the middle of the park, not essentially traveling to brooklyn. this is so terribly selfish. you call yourself a progressive, but you show up in brooklyn. >> dana: all right, greg. i want to hear take. you have to love it. >> greg: this is so hard. don't make me defend de blasio. this is the worst mayor in history, he screwed new york telling people to go out into
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this mess and putting everybody at risk, you put everybody at risk, he told people to narc on the people he put at risk, shoveling millions of dollars to his wife, we still don't know where the $800 million went to the help the homeless and mentally ill, he is a ghastly creature, but screaming at him just makes him look sympathetic and you look like a jerk. >> dana: it does. but juan, what about the merits? he is basically telling all of us, a new yorker to not do what he just did. >> juan: it pains me to disagree with greg. but greg, this guy, this guy said he is the mayor, and he tells the people to stay home, shelter in place, and then he goes and takes i guess a chauffeur driven car 11 miles to brooklyn, that's just poor
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leadership. you are supposed to lead by example, where is the example they are? i mean, i am told -- >> dana: hey, jesse, at least he was wearing a mask. >> greg: so juan is right, and i am wrong. juan is right, i was wrong. >> dana: he was wearing a mas mask. >> jesse: i'm going to have to disagree with... juan. i agree with greg on this, and here is why. you're supposed to go outside and get exercise, number one. if so what he went to brooklyn? he is the mayor of every borough, and he needs to check out what is going on in his city. he asked to see who is out and who is not, what the deal is. and i take issue with the quality of that ambush. you never let the target get in front of you and just follow him, then you get his back. you have to stay in front. >> greg: leave it to jesse.
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>> dana: what about the idea of having neighbors tell on each other? i don't like that. >> emily: i hate that. i hate a neighborhood narc so much. it's like every cell in my body screams with fury at that. and so to me, this is amazing. because de blasio is the worst of all time, and this is just him getting exactly what he told everyone else to do, which is narc on each other. and to juan's point, a real leader leads by example, so he is basically being a rat by example, so go ahead, break the rules that you set and then get embarrassed or a shoddy ambush. we won't resist that. >> dana: i have to tell you, that was the best segment you will see on fox all day, indeed. i loved it. all right, "one more thing" "one more thing" is up next. ♪ for what you need! [squawks] only pay for what you need.
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♪ >> time for it "one more thing." jesse? us before a big congratulations to our very own ed henry was writing a book, saving colleen. the memoir of the unbreakable bond between a brother and sister. as you know, ada gave his liver to his sister and everyone thought that was a beautiful thing except greg gutfeld. people keep asking how colleen is doing during the covid-19 pandemic. she's doing great. that was her getting her blood tests and she's doing much better. and ed is doing better, too. he's back to drinking after donating his liver to his sister. her liver is healthy, ed's probably less healthy now that he's drinking, then his sisters. so on the 15th you can get this book or you can preorder it. there it is. >> what a gratuitous way to get a book, donating her liver. what are you going to do follow
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up with a kidney, kilmeade? sorry. dana, your app. >> that's okay. many of you know i started a thing ten years ago called minute mentoring. it's like speed dating but mentoring for young women. i'm going to host at 7:00 p.m. tonight a live mentoring session, and she is the mentoring director at christie's which of course is the big auctioneer. she wrote a book called the most powerful woman in the world as you. so we have questions that we are taking from young women who submitted them on social media. not just young women, if you are a guy, send it our way. we will talk about navigating your career. watch us on instagram at minute mentoring. check us out there at 7:00 p.m. excellent. >> okay folks, i want you to drop down and give me five
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push-ups. that's what melinda would tell her gym class in binghamton, new york, but with students out of school due to the coronavirus of course she has come up with a new way for her high school students to stay in shape. take a look. yes, she is using broomsticks, she is using milk cartons for 1-2 minute daily fitness challenges. these bite-size videos haven't proven to not only be a hit with the students but with the families. that's one terrific teacher, she has not with the virus keep her from keeping her young students engaged and active. thank you, that's great teachi teaching. >> you know it's me now, and it's not often, it's not ever a fact that i'm wrong. today i mistake the my math calculations and in fact i said that a half a percent of a thousand is 50 when in fact it's
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five. but the fact is that it still stands because five times five is one. i will not say the producer should have caught this but i have to take responsibility for that. it wasn't the producer's fault that they had this monologue all day and failed to do any back checking on the map, but it's not their fault. it's the responsibility lies with me and not the producer mike lamarck. >> you said i had your back. let's roll. i'm ♪ [laughs] oh gosh, that was fun. let's take a look at this little guy. a very curious little cat. check them out, he's being tricked by some bushy headed thing. what could that be? look at that. isn't that adorable? he doesn't know what to do.
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this -- this video actually goes on for 13 hours, something that i like to watch when i am cramped up at home. weeping quietly. so emily, i think it's your turn. try to say something at normal human speed. >> i love the producers, i think they are all in there. i have a really special home promissory for you guys. you know i love the u.s. veterans corps and the constant champion for comic works for the veteran of combat community. they have a hero home endeavor and their hero home 20 recipient was a u.s. army gold star winner called amy dozier. she moved into the house in november after losing her husband, staff sergeant jonathan dozier in iraq in 2008. she decided to host a problem for her two nieces. she said my nieces taylor and parker had these gorgeous prom dresses but no prompt to go to, so i had them come over and i
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ended up bj i thinning in the street with my sister. the whole neighborhood came out and all the kids danced 6 feet apart and it was a wonderful night, perfect prom for those two well deserving girls. >> all right, set your dvrs, "special report" is up next. >> bret: greg, you are not infallible, i learned that. this is the first date since mid-march that there was no coronavirus briefing. instead, president trump made comments as cases in the u.s. no eclipse 1 million. almost 60,000 of those have resulted in deaths. 115,000 patience have recovered from covid-19. the president is celebrating another southern state, texas, suspending much of its economic. the congress will reopen tomorrow with several others set to relax restrictions to the end t
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