tv The Five FOX News May 22, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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mike dewine. the $1.2 million u.s. commitment to find a voice on vaccine. all that tomorrow. here is "the five." ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with greg gutfeld, geraldo rivera, dan bongino, and katie pavlich. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." joe biden walking back controversial comments he made about undecided african-american voters they came during an interview with charlemagne the god. the former vice president was touting his record when he said this. >> that's our time. >> you can't to black media.
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>> i can't do it to white media and black media. my wife has to go on at 6:00. >> you've got to come see us when you come to new york, vp biden. it's a long way until november and we've got more questions. >> if you have a problem figuring out whether you are forming your term, you ain't black. >> it has nothing to do with drum. >> take a look at my record. i extended the voting rights. >> dana: here is biden responsive to the controversy a little bit later. >> never, ever ever taken the africaafrican-american communitr granted. we have the largest african-american population in the country. it's what i've been involved with my whole career. the last thing i want to do.
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i shouldn't have been such a wise guy. i shouldn't have been so cavalier. anyway. i don't take it for granted. no one should have to vote for any party based on their race, their background. if you are african-american and you think trump is worth voting for, i don't think so. it was unfortunate. i shouldn't have been so cavalier. >> dana: let's take it around the table. geraldo, initially one of the senior advisor said the vice president made the comment ingest and then in the same news cycle the vice president saying he should have not been so cavalier. to get your take on it. >> geraldo: he reminded me of the elderly lady in "airplane." you upped the scene with two black eyes.
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the airplane is going through turbulence in the flight attendant can't communicate with them. and then the little white lady stands up and says i speak jive. i didn't know where that came from. it seems as awkward as he could sometimes be. i thought that -- >> dana: i wonder if katie, if gaffes like that, i don't even know if it's a gaffe actually. comments like that, could that be one of the reasons that democrats are not more bullish about their chances going into november despite some of the poles recently that looked good for biden. when he gets out there, you have a day like this, it's not the best media cycle they have had. >> katie: i think that's absolutely correct. the more he gets into the situations where he asked to talk about what he's for and what he plans to do, he constantly just falls back on his record rather than looking at the future and providing a
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platform for a modern era. he is still fighting that. those comments came off, as he clearly described as now, is taking for granted the african-american vote as democrats have done for years and it's really interesting to watch the cultural shift that's been happening in the past couple years under president trump where you had people at kanye west and sean diddy combs saying our votes are not for free and we haven't seen results from the people we've been voting for for decades now and we want to see some change here. so joe biden assumes based on skin color that you should vote for a certain party in a certain way. if the shoe was on the other foot and out republicans said it, it would be headline news in the front of every show, every newspaper in every republican would be asked about it. instead joe biden will apologize for it and the media will move on. >> dana: i wonder about that, greg. there are some people that think this won't matter by dinnertime.
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it does have a lot to do with how the media reacts to something like that. >> greg: i have to say for original viewers of "the five," he pulled a beckle. i thought his apology was pretty good and when i watch the segment in context, i saw two people enjoying each other's company. he got a little too comfortable. the point is, my opinion about his apology and my opinion about the take doesn't matter because the apology isn't for me. and i wouldn't be upset by what they did. but it's the black conservative that it hurts, right? it's not harmless and it's not funny to that group because this is what's being said about them. you aren't black because you voted for reagan or bush or
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trump. it's not funny to larry elder or lawrence jones or candace owens or shelby steele or burgess own, charles payne, walter williams. it's not funny to them because every single day -- >> dana: i have a statement from robert johnson, who founded bet, if i could read that. he goes to what you're talking about. he wrote "vice president biden's statement today represents the arrogance and out of touch attitude of a paternalistic white candidate who has the audacity to tell black people, the descendants of slaves, that they are not black and less they vote for him. this proves unequivocally that the democratic nominee believes that black people owe him their vote without question, even though we as black people know it's exactly the opposite. he should spend the rest of his campaign apologizing to every
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black person he meets." dan bongino, let's get your take on this. there's been some comments. there was a video put out echoing the comment that robert johnson just put out. >> dan: i am tired of having to take this fictitious high road. if we as conservatives, libertarians, if we come out and say we know joe biden is not a racist and that's not a racist comment and it was just a gaffe, that that somehow the woke left is going to extend the same courtesy to us. they won't. the liberals really hate you. not everyone. they think conservatives are awful people. i am done with that. joe biden has a history of stepping on his own tongue. he was the "put you back in chains" guy. you can't go into a 7-eleven without a slight indian accent guy. he was astonished that barack obama took a shower, that he was clean. i don't know why that shocked
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him. the first clean african-american kid? what did that even mean? that was cringeworthy. all of us were like, we don't know what he meant. you don't think like joe biden. the democrat party in general has gotten a pass for 50 years from the media. they have been on the wrong side of right with the black unity forever and the media has told them otherwise. school choice, jobs, baltimore, cleveland, geraldo, you have a relationship. cleveland, st. louis. they have driven these places into the ground and i'm wondering why we are supposed to take this fictitious high road, because they are not going to extend those same courtesies to us ever. >> geraldo: and yet -- >> dana: go ahead. >> geraldo: 80-plus percent of black voters have indicated a preference for joe biden, so the fact that he may be too relaxed or too cool for school, these guys, he's got the data to back him. i think it is the president's challenge, president trump's
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challenge to erode the 80-plus percent. he can easily double the turnout but he's got to work at it. >> dan: but geraldo, but listen, the reason it's 80-20 is because for 50 years, the media through these big megaphones and gallons of ink and newspaper have been telling every black motor in america that the republican party are racist. it's hard to overcome that. we are dealing with a big megaphones with the media. >> dana: all right, good talk. coming up, millions of americans are queuing up for memorial day but should they fear a second wave of covid-19? president trump waiting on that. we'll show you that next.
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♪ >> geraldo: millions of americans will be out and about this memorial day weekend, if it ever stops raining in the northeast. all 50 states have lifted some of the restrictions. alaska is the only one that's lifted all of them, so hopefully people are planning to socially distance when they hit the beaches in the lower 48. with these grand reopening, should we be concerned about a second wave of covid-19 hitting the nation? here's president trump. >> and we are going to put out the fires. were not going to close the country. were going to put out the fires. whether it's an ember or a flame, widow going to put it out. we're not closing our country. >> geraldo: that was the president at the ford plant in my neighboring state of michigan. i wonder, dana, do you think the president is sorry that he closed the country, that he advocated closing the country? he seems now to want very little
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to do with it. >> dana: i don't think so, because i believe that he felt like it was the right thing to do at the time. i think if he does recredit a little bit, he probably shouldn't dwell on it because i think all leaders, and i put presidents in that category but business leaders, you make the best decision based on the information that you have at the time and the information at the time i think showed it worked and also if you look at how america came together and did what the public officials asked us to do and we socially distance and we did flatten those curves, then i have to think that he would say that it was successful. then when he talks about going forward, would we have to shut the whole country down again, i think we know so much more now about figuring out a way to isolate, contact trace, and deal with these things. you deal with it like a hot spot, like a wildfire fighter instead of dealing with it like where you shut everything down.
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i feel like we know a lot more and i think if he has any regrets, i wouldn't dwell on them because decisions are made with the information that you have at the time. >> geraldo: the president seems to believe that democratic governors are reluctant to reopen totally or have been dragging their heels because of politics. because they want the president to look bad. are you so cynical that you believe that elected officials would do something to hurt their own people just to score a political one up? >> greg: yes, politicians do that a lot. we have heard people say they are hoping for a recession. not necessarily politicians but liberals in the media. here's the problem, if i can get through this. the problem comes when you start handcuffing people, right? there is nothing worse for a society than regulatory laws that demand enforcement by the police who really don't want to enforce them. eric garner for example, died
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because he was selling loose cigarettes which was against the law and the cops had to enforce the law. if there wasn't a law against selling loose cigarettes, he might still be alive. this is the same thing that could happen again and again. let's say arresting people at the gym, the cops would rather work out at the gym then cough u2 offense for working out of the gym. making normal behavior criminal creates more opportunity for chaos, violence and tragedy especially as more and more people come out. adjustability is the answer for everything. the stick shift, windshield wiper, the burner on your stove. we don't live in a world that is on or off. things aren't working, you can change it quickly and corrected. that's what we need to do. it ain't my way or the highway. or you stay inside or get handcuffs, it's working together as humans.
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>> geraldo: katie, what did you think of michigan and governor whitmer, the obvious tension, the contempt almost between the president and the governor? it seemed so -- in many ways, tacky and unnecessary in the midst of this crisis. >> katie: i think governor whitmer has used it to her advantage to try and become vice president joe biden as vp nominee but i think that the attorney general of michigan has been ridiculous in her response to president trump visiting the ford factory there yesterday, saying that she's going to have a discussion with ford because the president wasn't wearing his mask. the president of the united states and why did they enforce it -- why didn't they enforce it? he was saying he was wearing a mask when the cameras weren't on. i think they completely overreacted and their enforcement of it and as dana said, this is about the information we have the time and evolving and we get two, three
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months down the road and people start looking down the road and say why is it that the liquor store is open but i can't go to church? why is it that my small business can't be open but walmart can be open? why is it that politicians are allowed to go to their second homes that they have that they want to keep people who are the constituents away from going to their second homes for the sake of safety or social distancing. when you don't move and adapt as many of these democrats have done in the states, while you have scandals like governor cuomo sending thousands of elderly people back into nursing homes who then spread the disease to other people, people get pretty irritated with the government trying to throw them in jail, especially at the beginning of this when they were releasing violent people from prison. now they are threatening people with arrests or criminal records for not wearing a mask? these discrepancies are really obvious and people are tired of it. >> geraldo: certainly the closing of churches is something that was a real sore spot with
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the president with many, many people, here's what the president had to say about churches being deemed essential services. >> the governors need to do the right thing and allow these very important essential places of faith to open right now. this weekend. if they don't do it, i will override the governors. >> geraldo: what do you think of that, dan? >> dandon't you think the presit didn't wear his mask just to say screw you to the press. >> dan: you know what he should say about the mask. here's what i would say. i will wear their mass when i'm ready to wear the mask. i got tested and it was negative. you media folks, maybe you should try journalism once in a while before you start lecturing me about a mask. i think america would get up and cheer. i'm glad he came out on the church thing. geraldo, the constitution, did
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it go on vacation? if the constitution only matters in times of no stress and it doesn't matter during a crisis, then it doesn't matter at all. these lockdowns are ending and people finding their god-given rights in the constitution because we say they are ending. government has completely lost consent of the governed on this issue, even in liberal cities. we ended these lockdowns because people said we have had enough. the constitution doesn't take a break. it's not a suggestion. they have done it completely wrong. why i understand that i think panel generally agrees, in the beginning it doing it while we had some uncertainty, these prolonged lockdowns now have no science behind them at all. it's pure politics. no other explanation. >> geraldo: talking about the science behind it. what about the policy dissent covid-19 patients back into nursing homes? new york governor andrew cuomo coming under fire for that policy that proved tragic in new york state. we will share more details after
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with humira, remission is possible. if you can't afford your medicine, abbvie may be able to help. ♪ >> dan: nursing home patience making up more than a third of all coronavirus patience in the united states. the virus has killed more than 35,000 patience. new york governor andrew cuomo taking heat over the state's disastrous response, requiring those homes to admit patience who tested positive for the virus. one of those people who lost loved ones was our own janice dean. she lost both of her in-laws and spoke about it last night. >> this should be one of the biggest worries of this pandemic of 2020. 20% of our lost loved ones are from nursing homes. it's because governor cuomo and several other governors, by the
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way, in different states, forced covid recovering patience into nursing homes. they called sean to tell him they were moving him to another floor. and i believe that floor was used for recovering covid patience. he got a call on a saturday morning that his dad was not feeling well and three hours later, he was dead. >> dan: even more outraged today after a video surfaced of an elderly man being brutally attacked in a detroit nursing home. video so disturbing we decided not to show it in full. the attacker, a fellow resident of the facility who has been charged. greg, i'm going to go to your first. your thoughts on on andrew cuomo and this disastrous decision in new york. i watched janice dean last night and it was really disturbing to watch. >> greg: basically there's three points. i think cuomo got a free ride thanks to the dog and pony show he was doing on cnn with his brother. everyone thought it was so funny and hilarious, they chose to go after the florida governor
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instead. about this attack, it happened in michigan. who is the attorney general in michigan? the same one who freaked out about the masks. has she made a comment about this at all. she felt she could arrest the people at the ford motor company over a mask, has said nothing about this horrendous thing. my last point is a bigger point. we are doing a terrible job in general in dealing with our elderly population. we need to upgrade and revamp the nursing home structures and facilities. think about new ways to house people. we always talk about, children are our future. who gave them their future? it is the 80 and 90-year-old who fought in wars and raise these people, some of them don't know where they are. they need care. we have so much compassion for the children. oh, the teachers are underpaid. the kids. no, no, no. we are taking people who are
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basically containers of wisdom and we are shoving them in closets because they are in the way. it's not just -- the pandemic did a lot of things. stress tests different parts of our lives. we are learning about family and medicine, government, and we are seeing we just don't treat our elderly correctly. the fact that they were able to die like that was because we weren't on the watch. >> dan: dana, i will go to you next. i find it quite disgraceful that governor cuomo while he is messing around on cnn with his brother is trying to pass the blame for this nursing home tragic disaster in new york off to the president. he knows darn well governors are giving discussions to nursing homes and took a completely different tack. >> dana: one of them was the governor of washington, jay inslee, a fellow democrat of andrew cuomo. they had the terrible outbreak in that one nursing home and we all watched it as it started to
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unfold and that's when we really started to understand that this virus was going to be a killer. i also noted that there was a story in "the new york times" this week that if cuomo had agreed to shut down new york sooner, like the same week washington did, he could've stopped 80% of deaths in the state. geraldo asked me about president trump, did he regret the lockdown? i think that this question should be posed to andrew cuomo. he has said we didn't have the information, we didn't know. but jay inslee had the same information. i don't think it's good enough and i think the accountability has to be there. the other thing i would say, to greg's point and for janice dean. i'm starting to have -- i am at the age where i have friends who are having to make decisions about what they can do to care for their parents. they've got kids in college and they got their parents. to be having to go to a retired living facility or assisted care or even a nursing home.
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the stress of thinking that your loved one is not going to be taken care of, it's a lot. i also agree with greg on that, that a rethinking of how to approach this, and i don't think it's a government solution. there has to be more accountability and possibly even, dare i say, more regulation or at least some the system. >> dan: katie, i find it interesting that governor cuomo was saying that we didn't have all the information that's why we made bad decisions but you notice the same courtesies have not been extended to president trump at all. >> katie: noel and i think it's important to point out that nursing homes in new york were begging andrew cuomo not to have this executive order. they push back as hard as they could in most cases to say we do not have the ability to bring people infected with covid back into our facilities without putting others in harm's way. cuomo went through with it. he can say he didn't have the
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information but you had the javits center being built and the mercy ship from the navy sent up and have the ability to take patients, the secretary of defense that we will take covid patients if we need to, those were not used. at the same time that those places sat empty, andrew cuomo was still enforcing this executive order to send these patients back into nursing hom homes. they did what they could to push back but the hand of government was doing this. i'm very curious about whether people will vote with their feet and leave places like new york as a result of bad leadership which not just results in bad livelihoods but also in this case has been very fatal for a number of families. >> dan: geraldo, your thoughts. >> geraldo: i have three quick points. my heart goes out to janice dean and her husband, it's a horrible loss. greg is right, nursing homes are overcrowded.
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they have two shrink in size. they are horrible. they are breeding grounds for infection. one elderly person gets sick, they all do. the other point is we have to look at andrew cuomo in the context of those briefings that he's been doing every slow day and compare those to president trump, love him, but his white house briefings have been combative. they have been -- he has been punching down at reporters. you look at it and say what is the president doing slugging it out with a reporter just trying to get face time? compare it with cuomo's, which was orderly, well done graphically. the piper will come calling for andrew cuomo eventually. the press is already on his case. what about putting infected people in the nursing homes? the shine will dull over time but i think in terms of communicating during the crisis, i think governor cuomo did an excellent job.
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>> katie: reported were acting very differently in the white house press corps than the reporters questioning andrew cuomo. andrew cuomo talking about hydroxychloroquine and not get pushback. trump would tout it and the white house press corps would ask questions about why he's calling it the chinese virus. the reporters were acting differently. >> greg: what geraldo is pointing out is the eternal challenge with trump. that is, are you willing to take an arrogant kind of guy who gets the stuff done or would you prefer something that appears to be calm and sophisticated but ends up killing or creating disaster? this is always going to be the argument with trump. it's a package deal. >> geraldo: i wonder if democrats could choose if they could swap out biden for andrew cuomo, i bet the majority of democrats would say yes. >> dan: we've got to go. cuomo was all hacked, no cattle. he was good at graphs, not much with results.
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we know times are hard and we're here for you. find support at trelegy.com. ♪ >> katie: welcome back. it's time for the fastest seven. first up, the social distancing fever is designed to go off if you get within 6 feet of someone. he better keep your distance. where has this beeper been? >> greg: we are all going to turn into trucks. only go in reverse we are going to beep. we are going to have side view mirrors in case anyone approaches. we can have a horn. we thought the future was going to be about outer space. it's about personal space. all the innovation is about what's around us, not out there. >> katie: dana. >> dana: this is the worst possible thing for me because i
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hate all noises. a noise on a phone or notifications. i think this gave me the most worries for today about all the things we had to talk about. >> katie: more beeping noises. geraldo. >> geraldo: you know how annoyed you are when someone's cell phone goes off in a theater or a movie, assuming we get to go to movies again. it's going to be very, very annoying. i have a 10-year-old daughter. i want to get her a beeper when a boy comes around. >> greg: oh! now that you are a granddad. you were the exact person they were worried about. >> katie: let's move on to dan. i don't want to get into that. dan, when do you think about the beeper? >> dan: there could be some horrible side effects. i think about this thing in college, the kid with the white bunny and he rang a bell and he learned to fear everything white, not just the white bunny. i am terrified where this could
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go. this could get really ugly. >> katie: all right. onto the next topic since nobody likes the beeper but me. it's no wonder that americans are clamoring for gyms to reopen. the average person put on 5 pounds during quarantine lockdowns but not dana because she has been exercising. >> dana: greg has lost 30 pounds since the quarantine! he wins on this one. greg did a monologue on wednesday when he talked about this poll that came out they didn't get a lot of media attention and it was about how people are so much happier. maybe it's also because they were eating what they wanted. having more fun. >> katie: may be. i think we need greg's diet tips. >> greg: my wife started cooking, so that helped. [laughs] i shouldn't say that. she might be watching. you know what, you always need an out when you're in. if you can't go to the gym, you have to have a backup plan. whether it's an exercise bike or it's an app.
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there's a lot of stuff you can do, even in a small space that i won't get into here because this is a family channel. you could do a lot of stuff with just a mirror and an app. peloton has apps. there is no excuse. >> katie: dan bongino, i know you are a gym guy. >> dan: i have never been more jacked in my life. i have a home gym. i have nothing to do. i am squatting at midnight, curls in the morning, bench press in the afternoon, i've never been more jacked in my life. >> greg: i am often squatting at midnight but for other reasons. >> geraldo: erica has emptied the house of all snacks, all junk food. erica is the reason that i am
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5 pounds underweight now. rather than 5 pounds overweight. the best diet is when your wife is on one. there is nothing to eat. >> katie: wives have a good influence. restaurants and bars continue to innovate. check out beer carts, the robotic barman serving up contact free beers in spain. how's he going to know when to cut you off? greg. >> greg: the best bartender should be a robot bartender because they treat everyone the same. they don't skip me because there is a hot girl at the end of the bar. they don't get lost in conversation with regular. they don't overlook the height challenge. they eliminate the rational perspectives that humans posse possess. >> katie: dana, do you have to leave a tip for a robot? >> greg: no! >> dana: no but i think the robot could cut you off if you gained 5 pounds in quarantine.
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>> dan: the tipping thing. dana nailed it. throw a tip, you get a little extra patron in your margarita. >> katie: fan mail friday is up next. as a doctor, i agree with cdc guidance. i recommend topical pain relievers first... like salonpas patch large. it's powerful, fda-approved to relieve moderate pain, yet non-addictive and gentle on the body. salonpas. it's good medicine. hisamitsu. ♪[ siren ] & doug give me your hand!
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♪ >> greg: it is fan mail friday. we are asking your questions. from john, what is something you really resent paying for? dana. keep it clean. >> dana: [laughs] oh, my gosh, i am pretty good customer. >> greg: come on. >> dana: i don't know. well, i have to say it is a little bit absurd that you have to pay for cable and then netflix and then apple tv. it's too much. it's too much. i resent that a little bit. >> greg: i would too. geraldo, we know you pay for a lot of things.
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$0.10. it's like you go to supermarke supermarkets. >> geraldo: tissues. >> greg: toilet paper. dan. >> dan: nothing! i am a hard-core capitalist. if you produce something, we should pay for it. >> greg: even bottled water? >> dan: yes. >> katie: i was going to say plastic bags. i was going to say plastic bags. mandated by the government. also parking. we pay taxes already. parking should be covered in your taxes. >> greg: interesting. >> katie: unless it's a private garage. >> greg: i hate generic things called fees. fees are something they didn't tell you about when you bought it. you refinance and there's fees. mystery charges that you don't even, that's the service charge.
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that's the fee. oh, i have to pay it? anyway. charlene asks, what is something you tried once and immediately said i'm never doing this again. geraldo, the story of your life. you have tried everything once. >> geraldo: sobriety. i think life is a question of balance. one of the key ingredients in balance is you've got to be able to loosen up once in a while. >> greg: katie, what did you try once inside immediately never again. >> katie: business school. >> greg: nice. dan. >> dan: the hoverboard thing, remember those? i got on that and nearly lost my left leg. not getting on that again.
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>> greg: dana. >> dana: a 45 minute ride on peloton. so hard. >> greg: you are with me when i did something i never did again. remember? at facebook. they put the virtual reality thing on my head and they didn't tell me that i was going to be on the top of a building and it is real and i have a fear of heights. i have a fear of everything. i took off the oculus realm and heaved it across the cafe and started yelling at the facebook people and i go what kind of -- i went crazy. they could've been arrested for what they did. "one more thing" is up next. ♪
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(vo) love. it's what we've always said makes subaru, subaru. and right now, love is more important than ever. in response to covid-19, subaru and our retailers are donating fifty million meals to feeding america, to help feed those who now need our help. its all part of our commitment to our communities through subaru loves to help. love, it's what makes subaru, subaru.
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however, there is one thing you can be certain of. the men and women of the united states postal service. we're here to deliver cards and packages from loved ones and also deliver 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: it is time for "one more thing." what do you have greg? >> greg: tomorrow night, we have all brand-new saturday, ma. it will be a barn burner. not literally we are not burning bonds. let's do this quickly. ♪ >> we are dying to break out of house arrest. this little fellow, is this a superhero cat? look at that beautiful style, spring and its feet or its paws or whatever you want to call it. i think that is called a cat, although i'm not sure. >> i can watch that forever and some say i have.
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>> greg: you don't ask before, array, done. >> dana: wow that doesn't even look real. i have something i will post on foxnews.com for everybody, the last two months i've been doing story time for kids 3:30 p.m. every day. fox news is amazing. i got it everywhere and i had over 11 million views if you can believe that. online, kim strassel and her three children put together this amazing guide for all sorts of different books for different age groups for kids. it is an awesome resource for parents and kids. they were inspired by story time but kim strassel was amazing for that. you can check it out foxnews.com. thank you for watching. story time, katie. >> i love your story time, dana so thank you for doing that. graduations not hold this year, a lot of 2020 class of graduates are getting creative. take a look at alexandria lynn
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teske a member of the 2020 class of brooklyn law school. she held her own little mini graduation ceremony in her backyard, her fellow graduates put them in the lawn and she made sure all of them were honored by having their bios, their photos. so a mini graduation but major accomplishment for the class of 2020 and we hope the economy can get out and into the world. congratulations to the 2020 gratz. >> dana: congratulations and super creative and awesome to do. geraldo. >> geraldo: i am a graduate of brooklyn law school in fact. you know i have been 50 years in the news. labor day would be my 50th anniversary and fox news producing hour-long specials on fox nation recognizing "i am geraldo 50 years" and willowbrook and the expose about develop me disabled and part 2 rebel with a cause when i
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was arousing the junkies on the low side, hanging out with the rich and famous studio 54 days as eliza and priyanka jager of studio 54. that period in my life with the big splash as a reporter where i became a celebrity with you hefner, the playboy mansion, the footage of me actually thethere in"playboy"." >> greg: we don't want to see it. >> dana: awesome. dan bongino. >> dan: geraldo, that was great. the bee gees come i love that, terrific. so we've all had to get a little creative. we have all had to get creative during the quarantine but check out this grandfather and i wish my grandfather would have built that for me as a kid. that is terrific. nice job, grandpa, good job keeping your grandson entertained.
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nice work, you made it big time. >> dana: that is super cool, oh, my gosh. everybody is being creative and nice to each other. let's do it all we can. please catch memorial day planned a special monday 5:00 p.m. eastern. we wish you all a really great weekend. take care. ♪ >> bret: good evening, i am bret baier. breaking tonight two major stories, president trump ordering governors around the country to allow houses of worship to reopen right now. details on that shortly. first up former vice president joe biden taking heavy criticism tonight over a comment about the african-american vote. the presumptive democratic nominee told a radio host this morning if someone does not support him, "then you ain't black." the critics immediately said the comet proves the democrats take african-american vote for granted. joe biden apologized this afternoon saying he was too
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