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tv   The Five  FOX News  May 14, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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reopening grading. up until now is that all computerized. bit by bit the beginning the day after memorial day, human beings return to help with the computers. there is that. here comes "the five." ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino along with juan williams, jesse watters, greg gutfeld and emily compagno. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." the fight over when to reopen the economy playing out in states across the country. tensions high in michigan again today. protesters gathering at the state capitol to against stay-at-home orders. governor gretchen whitmer defending her decision to keep the state mostly shut down. >> the effect of the matter is, every decision that i've made has been on the right side of the constitution and always centered by evening the elegy,
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facts, and science and to save lives. >> dana: in wisconsin, the supreme court overwriting lockdown order saying that the state's democratic governor overstepped his authority. i was after the ruling, residents flocking to bars. governor tony evers are doing the move is creating chaos. president trump visiting a medical equipment factory in pennsylvania. he has been pressuring the democratic governor to open more quickly than planned. the president also saying that schools across the country should reopen in the fall. >> anthony is a good person, very good person. i have disagreed with him. when i close the border to china, he disagreed with that then ultimately he agreed. i think we have to open our schools. young people are little affected by this. you have to get the schools open. we have to get our country open. we have to open our country. we want to do it safely but we also want to do it as quickly as
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possible. we can't keep going on like this. you've got -- you have bedlam already in the streets. he can't do this. we have to get it open. i totally disagree with him on schools. >> dana: emily, there's so many big decisions to be made across the country and all the states. governors, localities, school districts, principals and teachers and parents, everyone trying to make a good decision. where do you see, you start to some openings in places like florida and georgia ridicule before for opening up in a limited fashion but their numbers have stayed, continuing to go down a little bit. >> emily: i would love to use california as a case study because that's where i'm from. the governor there has been operating, and my mind, under a short-term crisis psychology. we are ultimately going to catch up to the long-term fundamentals that we are seeing unravel. debt, civic decay and literally
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an absolute annihilation of entire industries in our economy but aren't going to be able to bounce back the second that he flips the switch or yells green light. in that state, that's 58 counties, 70 of which have had zero covid deaths. 14 of which have had zero covid deaths. ten of which have seen less than five. only seven are allowed to be in phase two and the governor said we are using data, it's a data-backed decision to have the state be mostly closed. but my argument is that we are out of the triage element. we need to process all of the data, including data points like 36 million americans being unemployed. 40% of $40,000 a year households are unemployed right now. those data points include the fact that our economy is made up of these interdependent industries. they depend on each other. it's a rolling shock we are seeing.
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that's why retail and hospitality, it's growing to manufacture and agriculture and health care. in the state that i'm in, their hospitals of laid-off employees. you mention schools. csu in california, they go through the fall semester. a quick reminder that 80% of the recent tuition hikes because of pensions. it's to cover pensions. only talk about everything being related, we have to keep in mind that an obligation and the fact that all those things, those ratios are mind-blowing. they will lead to a collapse. that's what we are seeing right now. the collapse. >> dana: greg, when we talk about flattening the curves and everybody responding, we understand, flattening the curve, we don't want hospitals to be overwhelmed. now we have a different curve we need to flatten, the unemployment numbers. >> greg: we have to decide how far is too far before it's too late. i think the protests are
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artistically american and that it's about freedom and autonomy and individualism. at the same time, can be a little sloppy. i think when you hand your opponent of the people who disagree with you a weapon to beat you with, if you don't incorporate pandemic particles into your protest, you can win this debate by doing that. register your process with a mask and using distance. having said that, though, what is striking about all of this is it's really the first time that we are facing something like this in our lifetimes. so it's causing a lot of people to think about, certain things, first time, what's important in their lives. how important their families to them. what kind of risks would you take for your job? who can you trust out there to give you the information correctly? so i think that we all need to seriously cut some slack to a country of people who might be a lot right, might be a little right, might be a little wrong, might be a lot wrong about this.
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because every person, every expert, everybody in the media has been wrong. including governor whitmer, who is extremely arrogant and saying that she was right all along. i don't want to get into that. you cannot blame a guy for saying hey, you told me asks didn't work. ventilators could solve everything. banning travel was racist. now you're telling me that i can't open my long business. screw you. you know longer have credibility in this at all. the good news is, there are 50 states, 49 beyond evan or witmer there's if the going on side-by-side. we can see data in real time that we have never seen before. the data is pretty unreliable. that's how you learn about florida and you learned about arguing about new york. the final question, how does the media frame 50 different events. will you cover the good stuff if
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it happens in a blue state? will you cover the bad stuff because it happens in a red state? will you pick and choose players and successes to embolden your narrative? we know already happened with florida early on and also with new york early on. new york was hailed as a success and florida was hailed as a failure. we have seen that this was reversed. the media is going to have a hell of a time doing this. there's going to be 50 stories going on, more than 50 stories. 50 experiments. they are going to lose their stuff. >> dana: they are going to be like a raccoon in a room full of disco balls, don't know where to look. >> greg: that reminds me of my teenage years. >> dana: juan, it does seem people are realizing, even though they might have understood this before. we flatten the curve. we are going to have to figure out how to live with this virus while we wait for a vaccine and wait for treatments.
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that realization, it seems like it's not only donning on substance but also on local officials. what do you think? >> juan: i think everybody wants to reopen. the question is how we go about it. the wisconsin court had one opinion that said that the governor there acted beyond authority. dana, today we heard another point of view from dr. rick bright, former head of biomedical research for the government, what he said is the less we maintain precautions, we are going to see more depth. that was echoed by what we heard from dr. fauci. that there will be more deaths, more suffering unless we act reasonably and sensibly. what you get from dr. bright, in fact today i thought that was pretty shocking, said unless we take the necessary precautions right now, we are in for the darkest winter, next winter, in modern times. clearly there's more on the horizon. he thinks some people are behaving like, you know, the
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worst is passed. i think we have to keep in mind we are hearing from people who study this for a living, people who are not new to this, in the case of dr. fauci and dr. bright, people who have dealt with ebola, aids, sars previously. i also just want to say keep in mind that the polling in wisconsin and the polling in michigan, in wisconsin with tony evers and in michigan with gretchen whitmer, most of their citizens, like 60% plus, support the governors in terms of limited slow opening. they are going along with the white house guidelines. why is the white house? why is the president -- >> dana: we have to get jesse in here, juan. jesse watters. i can give you the floor. i do think people are being quite responsive. people on the fringes but people are trying to figure it out in a responsible way. you can trust americans to do
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that. >> greg: right. sorry. >> jesse: yes, i will be quick because i know we went a little longer. the american people allowed the government to lock us down. he was a consent of the governed -- it was a consent of the governed. we are going to let you sit in your house, not going to go to work, close your private business but at the end the day, we are not peasants. we are not going to sit here forever during a lingering lockdown. you're starting to see little tea party movement's sprout up all across the country. those are being powerful waves. remember the tea party last time? they had a lot of impact in the election. if you say that schools aren't going to open in the fall, you're going to have a 1 million mom merge. moms or dads. this country can only take so much and we are there. >> dana: all right,
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president trump accusing democrats of wanting to get the country shutdown to stop him from getting reelected. we will show you next. you're clearly someone who takes care of yourself.
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♪ >> juan: the coronavirus continues to pummel the american economy, nearly 3 million workers apply for unemployment benefits last week. that brings the total out of work to 36 million since the pandemic struck. president trump says his critics want to keep the economy closed to hurt him and his reelection chances in november. take a look. >> i think it's a political thing. >> putting money, business ahead
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of lives? >> no, no. i think the people that want to see the right thing happen, they agree with me. we have to get our country open. it was after some people, let's keep it closed for a long time. a long time. watch the united states go down the tubes. not going to happen. >> juan: greg, the president says he thinks there are people who want to hurt him politically. i was thinking i wonder who he's talking about, because former vice president biden says he wants the country to reopen but safely. who do you think the president is talking about? who is saying this? >> greg: biden is brilliant because nobody wants to open and safely but him. nobody. trump really doesn't want to open it safely. he wants everybody to die, because that's the narrative. even though he actually shut down the strongest economy in
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history. but now he just wants people to die. do you know what's great about biden? he's the one who's actually using this pandemic politically. literally politically because he's using it so that he can hide. you know what, he's using it to justify himself staying out of sight in order to reduce his embarrassing gaffes. the upside for the democrats that joe biden is your anemone, you can literally get in on the ground floor. isn't that great. trump can say, turnabout is fair play. all yesterday republicans were accused of using the russian hopes and playing politics by people who make their living playing politics. in case you missed it, everybody plays politics since the 1960s when the hard left decided that the political is personal that affected entertainment, sports, relationships. i think we are past that point.
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that's it. >> juan: okay. jesse, let's look from the other side. saying that the president wants to get the economy going. he's not paying attention to the medical experts but in a hurry to get the economy open. then the president says anybody who is not in a hurry is actually trying to hurt his reelection chances. what do you say? >> jesse: well, i think before this pandemic hit, he was going to frame this election as capitalism versus socialism. that went out the window. now it's going to be framed as freedom versus lockdown. for some reason, the democrats fell into this trap. i know it's not their fault. a lot of the pandemic hit the blue states. but all the people on their side and the media and in washington are still scaring people to stay inside. we had our peak with this pandemic april 21. the deadliest day.
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that was three weeks ago. you either want to hurt the president politically. they themselves are scared to go outside. they think every state is new york which is not. or they are just not looking at the new data that has come in and doing things county by county, like every smart person would do. or they just don't understand the wreckage that's going to happen if you linger in this lockdown. you have major states. wisconsin, pennsylvania, michigan. those are the states trump won in 2016 and now they are governed by democrats. these three democratic governors, they are getting protested. their massive shutdown orders, all is breaking loose. trump has now tapped into the american attitude saying we are not going to take it anymore in these three states critical to reelection. he is on the people's side and all he has to do now is just ride this wave of freedom into
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november against these moms grounding their citizens. so i know democrats love to smother small business. i know that they are anticapitalists. i know they hate freedom. if they can resist those natural urges and just let the american people work, i think we can all be happy again. >> juan: dana, the other big news today was those unemployment numbers. people filing unemployment claims. yesterday you and i were talking about jerome powell, the fed chief, saying it looks like the economy is in for a very rough time. he was advocating for more federal stimulus spending. what do you think right now? the democrats have a plan but the republicans. what are you hearing about republican plans for a possible next step? >> dana: we don't really have time to go over all the things
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that are in the democrats's bill that they are going to vote on tomorrow. the president said that it's dead on arrival and it should be. i think they're going to look and see what happened. on the governor's thing, i don't think it's in anyone's political interest republican or democrat to have the economy down. everyone does better when the economy does well. i think there are public servants that would want that as well. i would point out governor polis of colorado had a great meeting with president trump yesterday. progressive democrat. he goes on cnn last night and gets criticized for reopening his state, it's data-driven. in a way i do think it's a media split, much more so than the governors being split. >> juan: i saw a surprise poll yesterday saying most americans support phased reopening that the white house has re-advocated. i really surprised to see people
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unemployment, people who had even been fired, they also support steady phase reopening. i thought that they would state reopen right away. what do you make of it? >> emily: i think a real human is not approaching this as a black or white that the media is making it out to be. taking that wisconsin supreme court case as a case study, that was an overreach of power issue that the governor extending a stay-at-home order needs legislation approval. yet the media has said republicans want the economy back up and running. the democratic governor is listening to the cdc. i am an attorney. if you came to me and said emily, how do i commit this crime, i would tell you not to do it. if i was telling you as a friend, i would tell you how to do it not get away with it. of course the cdc is going to offer in that avenue and most of humans support a holistic assessment of the problem which
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now is beyond triage and so should include all the data points including the economy. >> juan: makes sense to me. coming up next, president trump demands former president barack obama testify after the release of the flynn unmasking document. that is coming straight ahead for you on "the five." it's best we stay apart for a bit, but that doesn't mean you're in this alone. we're automatically refunding our customers a portion of their personal auto premiums. we're also offering flexible payment options for those who've been financially affected by the crisis. we look forward to returning to something that feels a little closer to life as we knew it, but until then you can see how we're here to help at libertymutual.com/covid-19. [ piano playing ] ...little things... ...can become your big moment.
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♪ >> jesse: president trump unloading on obama administration officials after newly declassified documents identified them in the unmasking of michael flynn. the big name on the list: sleepy joe biden. his campaign is denying any wrongdoing but trump says they all got caught. >> it's was the greatest political crime in the history of our country.
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if i was a democrat instead of a republican, i think everybody would have been in jail along time ago. i am talking with 50 year sentences. it's a disgrace what's happened. this is the greatest political scam, hoax in the history of our country. >> jesse: so trump also saying he wants barack obama himself to testify. i don't think that's going to happen because that's not how we do things in this country. but juan, don't you think people like clapper and powers and rice should come in and answer the question. if you knew there was no evidence of collusion because you said it under oath, why were you out there on national tv telling the american people for years there was collusion? >> juan: i don't think anybody is reluctant to testify in this situation because it would be good to clear it up. let me give you a point of
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reference, jesse. there are thousands of unmaskings that take place every year under all administrations, and that includes the trump administration. what it says is in 2019, last year, the trump administration had 10000-plus unmaskings. the year before, 16000-plus unmaskings. the senior administration officials saying that they need that for context understand the degree to which our country is being threatened by hostile actors, as the case here would be russian interference in the 2016 campaign. >> jesse: let me ask you a hypothetical question, juan. so if george bush's team, after eight years, started unmasking all of these incoming obama national security officials and then sent them in two fbi agents to interview them and then locked them up, do you think
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that would be okay for a perfectly legal conversation? >> juan: again, i think you're ignoring the context. we had a threat to our democratic process. >> jesse: that's the exact context. >> juan: that everybody says was done by a hostile state, the russians. that's what we were dealing with. they had to take a look. one last point. >> jesse: we've got to move it along. we've got to move it along. >> juan: oh, okay. >> jesse: let's move it along. dana, how do you see these things now moving forward after we know about the unmasking? >> dana: one thing that i would say to juan is that all unmaskings are not created equal. so yes, you could have 10,000 happen plus unmaskings in the year, but you don't necessarily have the unmaskings happening in the middle of a presidential transition from one administration to the next after the political opponent had just won.
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so there is that. i don't know why i have beeping in my ear but i do. maybe i should pass it along to somebody else. i don't think anyone is going to testify -- it is like someone is trying to call me but i don't have a phone on. [laughter] >> jesse: emily, let's go to you. juan says you're not allowed to talk to a hostile power or else you're going to get unmasked and then prosecuted for crimes. but we don't know what the crimes are. i thought democrats liked talking to our enemies. they talk to the iranians. i don't see why we shouldn't be able to talk to the russians, the chinese, anybody. this judge, this judge sullivan who is dealing with flynn has appointed another judge to recommend to him why he should lock up like flint even though prosecutors say he's innocent. what kind of sense does that make? >> emily: right, and i will be fast. there's just the general overview. he can stretch this process out. he can bring in some type of
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neutral voice to look at everything. can't even hold hearings on factual discrepancies in the record going back. the bottom line is he has to uphold this motion to dismiss. it's absolutely ridiculous for him to think he can do anything other than come to that conclusion. everything else in the interim is wasting taxpayer dollars on the fact that it's likening to some sort of cronyism. that's what we should see in chicago. that has nothing to do with with the doj concluded here which was what they identified that corruption and that this motion to dismiss is the result of that investigation. this is wasting our time and money. >> jesse: greg, looks like sullivan is way out of line, even may be trying to force the president to pardon flynn. >> greg: imagine if you won the world series and the baseball commissioner announced we are going to add a post world series tournament to really find out who the winner is. nobody wants this to go forward. is it a terrible thing he did, even if it is legal?
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everything else, payback is a pregnant dog. everything the democrats accused trump of doing, it turns out they are guilty of it. they are literally -- literally, i am sounding like emily. engineering a scheme to spy on a candidate. it's important that all those idiots that foisted three years of on us get their licks. they've got to be punished. it's like a movie where the villain has a gun. the hero grabs the gun and points it at the villain. that's what happened. the guys with the guns have the guns on them. let's make it work. they deserve punishment. they made our lives hell. >> jesse: making people's lives hell, that's what we do. greg is up next on the medias credibility crisis.
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♪ >> greg: a new poll on the reliability of journalists comes from pugh which makes sense because it stinks for the press. less than half of americans have a great deal of confidence in them. i wonder why. speak at the beginning of the end of the trump presidency. >> he's got to know that his future looks like it's behind bars. >> it's clear that mueller is connecting the dots between a massive obstruction intended to hide the truth. >> this cloud will hang over him. >> the president sees the walls closing in. >> the president c is effectively a russian op. >> greg: that is a montage. americans ranked the press behind lawyers and about elected officials, it's like saying that
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you are worse than vermin but not as bad as lice. sorry, emily. but the numbers would've been worse were not for fox news. the reason, we are awesome which is why the other guys hate us so much. it seems like other cable networks exist just to watch f fox. >> fox news. >> fox news. >> this is what fox is about. >> fox news. >> figures on fox news. >> fox news. >> watching fox. >> fox news. >> greg: my god, what if we stop working? cnn would have to cover news. who could they blame everything on, right, chris? >> everyone around them has a man's gone. he doesn't because he wants to keep up the fox farce, this b.s. that covid-19 is overrated. i guess the antielitists over there are okay with 10,000 more deaths. >> greg: what a child. this guy has the gall to blame us for future deaths.
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what about death that already happened? the actual thousands in restrooms he failed to ask hasbro about because he had other things on his mind. >> do you think you are an attractive personnel because you are single and ready to mingle? do you really think you're some desirable single person? at this isn't just people's pain coming out of them? >> i think beauty is in the eye of the beholder. >> greg: and 5200 people died in rest homes. the polls suggest the media doesn't act on behalf of the public probably because they hate the public. the prez is overeducated, cloistered, far removed from people who actually make things, the idea of slumming it is nonorganic quinoa. i wonder if the media became truly diverse especially in perspective, with they have gotten so much wrong? with a list trump's victory or seen through the occlusion and obstruction hosts, the
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impeachment travesty, with a have seen the coronavirus coming instead of drooling over adam schiff's allies? where they've seen michael flynn for what he was, a hero getting screwed. the fact is we know the media is broken. the only entity not reporting it is the media. we need a 12-step program for the press. the first one would be to buy them a mirror. emily, what's your take on the poll? emily? >> emily: sorry. i'm sorry, i didn't hear that. someone was in my ear. what was the question? >> greg: nothing. i just wanted to say hi. they told me to be fast but apparently they screwed it up. >> emily: i'm really sorry. i think everyone underestimates the power of the autonomy of every individuals make their own decision and that's why i am so proud and honored to work here. we convey everything so that the viewer can make their own decisions. a couple is ago -- decades ago i
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would commute on a fairy and i would read the paper and it was so one-sided. it disgusted me. i stopped reading it and i sort of had a suspicion about them. it was i who made that decision, the rest of the media isn't given their viewers or listeners of choice. >> greg: jesse, one thing i like about you is your ability for self reflection. why is it missing in other parts of the media? >> jesse: i don't know. if i knew, i would tell you. i don't have that type of ability. did emily just saying she reads a periodical on a theory to a metropolis? >> emily: i set a couple decades ago. >> jesse: okay. also greg before i say something, what would happen if you met cuomo at a bar or something. how do you think that would go between you? >> greg: i don't know. i have a feeling we don't go to the same bars. see 60 yeah.
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yeah. may be but if you did, i have a feeling it might not go so well for you. the only serious point i have for you is this. the same people that brought us russia collusion are now telling us obamagate is a conspiracy. the media, they don't care. they get it all wrong. everything they say is usually the opposite. if they say that the obama spygate thing was down by the books, you know it was dirty as sin. that's all i have to say. >> greg: dana, i have a theory that division is the hamburger helper of cnn. they take a story, figure out how to divide and that makes the story bigger. it is their hamburger helper. >> dana: i loved a hamburger helper. 48% of people have a great deal or fair amount of trust in the media. maybe that is something to look at in terms of the polarization that we have, not exactly sure but i do think it's quite rich
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that somebody who is recovering from coronavirus went on ferris bueller's day off and then pretended that he didn't and then staged his reemergence from the basement after he recovered from coronavirus. >> greg: that is a classic that will live forever. juan, last word. >> juan: how can i argue with you? i was taken by what you said because you said as dana points about half of the american people do have some or a high degree of confidence in the media. but fewer have confidence in our politicians and i think that polls show even on the coronavirus again, about 50% of americans trust the media but only 35% trust the president. so you could play it either way. you wish we could have confidence in all because i want emily to be able to read her journal on her fairy. i know that it's the truth.
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>> emily: welcome back. quarantine fashion is all about comfort. online sales of pajamas are skyrocketing, increasing 143% in april. dana, are you wearing pajama bottoms? >> greg: right now? >> dana: i find pajama bottoms uncomfortable to wear during the day. i think it feels very sloppy. but i do love, love, love wearing jeans. i have some on now. >> emily: jesse, i know on the bottom of that suit our shorts usually. havhas your pajama bottom wearig increased? >> jesse: i rotate between lululemon sweatpants. that's it. i own two peers on the rotate. i'm wearing shorts now because it's a little hot in here. dana is wearing jeans? jeans aren't comfortable, dana. >> dana: yeah, they are. what are you talking about? >> jesse: jeans compared to sweatpants or pajama bottoms? you really are from wyoming.
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>> dana: you put a little -- you feel a little more put together if you're wearing jeans. >> emily: greg, i'm terrified to ask you but what are your thoughts? >> greg: in general i've never understood pajamas. seems like an unnecessary step before slumber and then you have to undo that step when you awaken. i have not owned a pair of pajama since third grade basically because i could still fit into them. why buy new ones? >> dana: the ones with the feet, you look cute in those. >> greg: exactly. >> juan: i'm sorry emily. >> emily: next up, talk about pandemic priorities. face masks that come with a straw hole for sipping cocktails. we weren't allowed to have straws and now we can have straws as long as they are through a mask. what are your thoughts? >> juan: this seems kind of self-defeating. if you have the mask on, it is to prevent you from spreading the virus. why would you put a hole in it?
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it defeats the purpose, doesn't it? >> emily: wright, greg, when you are in the same bar as cuomo, are you going to enjoy your cocktails withdraws in your mask? >> greg: the bars that i go to, everyone wears masks anyway. haven't you seen "eyes wide shut"? this era is going to be a boon for innovation and invention. as bad as this is, it's going to be like the space program. it's going to create all sorts of interesting stuff. it's going to test everything in your life. things that you aren't going to do when things you will start doing. indoor exercise saved my life. i've never done it my life but now it's every day. >> emily: jesse, what are your thoughts? >> jesse: you look great, greg. is that what you wanted to hear? you look really thin and we are really happy for you. >> greg: 30 pounds! 30 pounds. >> emily: wow.
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>> jesse: i would only use a paper straw. >> emily: dana, last word. >> dana: i think americans are ingenious and they will figure it out. i'm excited to see what the tang of this era is going to be. i don't know what it will be. >> emily: best drink ever. "one more thing" is up next. stay with us. challenging it is right now.
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whether you're facing unemployment.
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have bills to pay. or just trying to keep your family healthy. it's hard. but when it comes to your pfizer medicines, we want to make things a little simpler. we know you may have new questions. about affording your medicine. we want to help you find the right answers. if you make under $100,000 for a family of four, or $50,000 as an individual. and have prescription coverage for your pfizer medicine but can't afford your insurance copay. or you have no prescription coverage at all, pfizer may provide your medicines for free or at a discount. just another way we're here to support you. learn more by visiting www.pfizerrxpathways.com today ♪[ siren ] & doug give me your hand!
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i can save you... lots of money with liberty mutual! we customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ♪ >> dana: it's time for "one more thing." juan. >> juan: dana, this time of year, high school and college seniors are usually getting ready to walk across the big stage for their graduation. but of course we have coronavirus, so for many, those plans are on hold. i want you to take a look at what we at "the five" did for our production assistant, maria lucas. [applause]
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maria would have been one of the millions of seniors who would've been graduating this year, so he wanted to show her our appreciation. the kind of appreciation all graduates deserve. maria is graduating from new york university with a bachelor's degree in business and media. maria started off as an intern here on "the five" and spent two semesters on the team before getting a job officially joining the "the five" family. congratulations, maria. >> dana: indeed, big congratulations. jesse. >> jesse: all right, we have jesse's boxing news. do we have anything? there we go. that is actually my body. seriously it's my body. not kidding. i have really been working that hard and i've been working out so hard, i'm going to participate in a celebrity boxing match. you guys are not going to believe who i'm going to get
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into the ring with. mike tyson very just kidding. mike tyson put out of training video. he says he's back. look at him, great shape. look at the speed on the power. he is still got it. i am ready for a holyfield rematch. i don't know about you guys but i am ready to get sports back on. >> dana: indeed. on sunday you will get to watch nascar. you remember canine companions for independence, a great group. we had spike. it's a nonprofit and it trained service dogs for those in need. we able -- they can't get puppies where they need to beat. these wonderful private pilots have decided that they are going to take up the cause. they have 29 puppies there will be flown to seattle, boise, portland, great falls, montana, to get to their trainer so they can become canine companions for people who really need them. cci.org. great people. greg.
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>> greg: let's do this. or not. ♪ animals are great! ♪ animals are great! ♪ animals are great! during the pandemic, we know social distancing is very important. unfortunately there are few people who don't want to play along, like this little fella. this towel wants to be, you know, on her own. this owl, this parrot getting in her business. you don't do this. you don't do it on the subway, you don't do it on a bus, you don't do it on a perch. what kind of parrot are you? clearly has not heard of the me too movement. get away from that owl! >> dana: emily, 25 seconds. >> emily: we celebrated the 75th anniversary of victory in europe day. i wanted to tell you about the
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indiana spirit of '45, a nonprofit all volunteer organization with the goal to honor the greatest generation, all who have served. they launched stories of service. my great-great-aunt. >> dana: sorry, emily. bret baier, special report up next. >> bret: thanks, dana. breaking tonight, president trump is turning his administration's reaction to the coronavirus tonight, lauding workers at a pennsylvania equipment plant and marking what he says is the 10 millionth virus test in this country. it's another number in the millions that's troubled many americans tonight. the almost 3 million workers applying for help after losing their jobs. in a few minutes, i'll ask senate majority leader mitch mcconnell about the future of a possible new round of funds coming from congress. we start off with chief white house correspondent john roberts on the north lawn. good evening. spewed go good evening. it's

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