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tv   The Five  FOX News  June 18, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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airport, on the plane. the back-and-forth on that because even some in the industry are saying maybe when you're on the plane you can take it off. she said don't even think about it. in atlanta, it's the law. here comes "the five." ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with jesse watters, greg gutfeld, juan williams and emily compagno. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." fallout continues to reverberate in the city of atlanta over the district attorney's decision to charge two officers involved in the death of rayshard brooks. the police union they're confirming officers walked off the job, called out sick in higher numbers than usual after the charges were announced. earlier garrett rolfe, the former atlanta police officer who shot and killed brooks turned himself in. he's facing 11 charges including felony murder which could carry the death penalty.
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and devin brosnan, the second officer involved, is out on bail after turning himself in. he is facing three charges including aggravated assault. earlier he and his lawyers spoke with the media, disputing a key thing that the district attorney said about being states witness. >> right now the d.a. is charged with a crime so he's a defendant and he's not going to answer the das questions while they bring these false charges against him. i regret that the district attorney apparently was given misinformation yesterday. officer brosnan is not going to be a quote states witness. >> dana: president trump is defending police when asked to comment on the case last night. >> i thought it was a terrible situation, but you can't resist a police officer. if you have a disagreement, you have to take it up after the fact. it was a very sad, very, very sad thing. it's going to be up to justice. i hope he gets a fair shake
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because police have not been treated fairly in our country. they have not been treated fairly. >> dana: emily, let's go to you first. i am curious about how the states district attorney got that so wrong. saying that the officer was going to be a states witness and then having his lawyer walk it back and say no, that's not true. it seems like quite an extraordinary thing. >> emily: exactly. we watched the eloi are on tv and said he's not a states witness, he's just a witness and his own -- she's his own defendant. i thought that was extraordinary. doesn't bode well at least for public opinion about the prosecutor. i would like to speak for a moment on this blue flu. what did we think was going to happen? i spoke with the seattle police officers that after he was attacked by explosive, metal, bricks, beer bottles that he had to wash his uniform three times to get the feces and urine out of it.
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he said this level of vitriol and violence as a whole different story. it turned into "kill a cop" day. the fbi was working with departments. cops were hit in the head with skateboards because wearing riot helmet is considered militarization. protesters are carrying things designed to withstand police tactics like plywood for rubber bullets. cops are getting acab scrawled. every officer i know is depleted and exhausted and deeply saddened and deeply committed to the communities they serve. in terms of positive future, this has set us back ten steps and as always the people with the most to lose are those who are quiet. >> dana: juan, what about in atlanta?
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the family was there last night. of course that was a very moving comment they made especially only saw the video about rayshard brooks being kicked as he died there after being shot. >> juan: very sad to me. i think inhumane. no matter what confrontation had taken place, the man was ailing if not dead-end there was a long. men they even sought medical attention for him. so i think that's just sad and i wish it hadn't happened but it certainly was something the poll but your heart. in terms of what's going on, in atlanta with the police, i think it's important we not overstate the case because what from -- what from i read. the police have more than enough staff staff to not only.
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police take an oath unlike me or you, they take an oath to do their job. so when they don't show up, they are breaking that oath. they are breaking their word to us that they are operating under state authority as armed people represent us all and when they don't show up they are not keeping that faith, they are breaking that trust to my mind. you think yourself gosh, they are human beings, they are upset but why? the officer they killed the man is going through total full legal process. you will have his day in court. he had the opportunity and will have the opportunity to give all the testimony and evidence and it will be considered. this was the actions of the d.a. and the grand jury and that's what every american deserves. he can be assure fully protecte. he's not going to be short all legal protections in this matt matter. so you've got to ask yourself,
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does he think he's above the law? i hope not. >> dana: he did turn himself in today, jesse, on time and he has a lawyer and he will get a chance to defend himself. there's a lot of complications here and to emily's point about police morale, that is also happening all across the count country. >> jesse: it's a tough situation. the police officer is not above the law and he's not below it. look what happened. so much fake news and smears coming from this d.a. the cop never flipped. that was a lie. he says that this guy, other officer kicked the suspect when he was on the ground. so he gets up and he shows the screen grab from surveillance video with the officers leg cocked back in the kicking motion. why didn't he just show the whole video? i wonder why they didn't show the whole video because i'm pretty sure he didn't kick the dead man.
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i'm pretty sure he was either stepping over him or running towards him to give him aid. he didn't just stand there whistling in the wind. in less than a minute he was back to the body administering cpr, trying to save the guy's life. the other thing you keep hearing, he is shot in the back. yeah, technically he was shot in the back because usually when suspects punch officers in the face and flee and shoot them with tasers, you're not running backwards. your running forwards in your turning and shooting. that's why the bullets were discharged from the officers firearm in the back. the other thing the d.a. comes out and says this guy was jovial? when are jovial people punching officers in the face and shooting tasers at their head? i don't think he knows what jovial means and other georgia law a taser is a lethal weapon and you're allowed to use deadly force. i saw a video literally 10 minutes ago of another dashcam video of a guy who gets pop for dui about to get cuffed.
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he wrestles with the cops, steals a the cop with the taser, while the cop is flabbergasted, he reaches into the car and then he pulls out a firearm, shoots the cop in the chest and drives off. i mean, i understand why brooks probably was running because of the gets pop with a dui companies going back on a probation violation for the child abuse that he was convicted of, so desperate men do desperate things. that i understand. but this did not need to happen. feel terrible for his family. fofeel terrible for everyone involved but if you say you could just blow over the limit and the cops could just let you walk, you know how much i watched "live pd" and "cops." i've never seen that happen. this country takes duis extremely seriously. one person per hour in america dies as a result of a dui and i'm not going to drag other people's names into this. but we know how many famous politicians athletes and celebrities have been involved
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with fetal duis. sadly if they change the racial dynamic of this case, i'm not even sure charges are brought on the officer. the fact that you have a doubt about it shows you how messed up the system of justice has become in this country. >> dana: it is. greg gutfeld, final thoughts from you. >> greg: what's interesting to me is this isn't like the floyd case. there are really stark differences of opinion about this video. i don't know if you've seen the ongoing debate between dan bongino and geraldo. they both saw video and they disagree completely on itthey a. they are both friends. this is a microcosm of a nation that is arguing back and forth over its specific video, a video with incomplete information. jesse is right. jesse is adding information.
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juan adds information. somebody else takes informational way. it's not like you're talking about the war probe malfunction at a super bowl or we can chat about it. this video is incomplete information which incorporates malfeasance, intoxication. you have this element of race. it's not like a fun, harmless discussion. this video, the one that the media just pumps out on floods the airwaves with so that we keep talking about it, it creates strife. it creates conflict. that's why dan bongino and geraldo are a microcosm of wants to come because we keep pumping out a video that incomplete and information. i've been noticing these patterns that the media does and it's driving me crazy so they pick up on this pattern which is the police interactions that end tragically but there are other
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patterns that they are overlooking. i just noticed that almost every suspect that has been arrested for arson in these protests are white leftist women. what about that? should we start pieces about that trend? how about the last three examples that we talked about of elder abuse in the rest home when the young man beat that elderly man or the two elderly, the couple that were murdered in the cemetery or the 92-year-old who was punched in the face. i believe it was in the bronx or brooklyn. we were going to do that story and it got bumped. those are three examples. we are all pattern recognition machine so you see that newco okay, that's elder abuse but we don't do that story. we have white leftist setting fire to things, arsonists. we don't do that story. we only do with the media programs us to do and now that you see that, you cannot on see it.
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you look at the statistics and you realize we are being fed lies. >> dana: all right, good discussion. i'm cannot look up that geraldo-dan bongino discussion. haven't seen it. the media in a frenzy over john bolton's new book but plus president trump's reaction. will have it for you. since my dvt blood clot... i wasn't sure... was another around the corner? i wanted to help protect myself. my doctor recommended eliquis. eliquis is proven to treat and help prevent another dvt or pe blood clot. almost 98 percent of patients on eliquis didn't experience another. -and eliquis has significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. eliquis is fda-approved and has both. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away
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♪ hawley media is that a frenzy over john bolton's book. the same press that once despised the former national security advisor is now lapping up every detail because it plays into everything they hate about
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the president. >> i don't think he's fit for office. i don't think he has the competence to carry out the job. there isn't any guiding principle i was able to discern other than what's good for donald trump's reelection. i think putin thinks he can play him like a fiddle. i putin is smart, tough. i think he sees that he's not faced with a serious adversary here. >> jesse: the president firing back, calling bolton washed up and a wacko on twitter and he pulled no punches on hannity last night either. >> he broke the law. he was a washed up guy and i give him a chance. he couldn't get senate confirmed so i gave him an nonsenate confirmed position where i could just put in there and see how he worked. >> jesse: okay, juan, we had chris wallace on yesterday. he said he didn't think this was going to have that big of an impact on the political environment. would you agree with that assessment? >> juan: not quite.
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i think as as chris said, people are locked in pro and con on the president and the polls are not good for the president. the question is whether it would shake his base. i agree with chris, unlikely to shake people locked into the president there are some swing voters, some people are still watching and learning. i think for them to hear directly from the former national security advisor and of course trump only hires the best and brightest, right? and now to hear first-hand reports that say he's not competent, he's doing business with the chinese. he's, you know, an easy mark for vladimir putin. making excuses in terms of dictators and lawbreakers in order to help himself get reelected. i think that has to count for something but it goes beyond that, jesse because at this point it's like a mountain of evidence, right? you could listen to what bolton has written in his book.
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what about what mathis said. what about what tillerson said? what about what john kelly, former chief of staff, said? and then i think next week, mary trump, his niece, is coming out with a book in one of the subtitles is "how are family created the world's most dangerous man." i think at some point something has to break through. >> jesse: may be the president didn't write her a big enough check on her birthday. greg gutfeld, how do you see the book? >> greg: i am booked out. they all become one big book. i don't call this evidence. basically it's all about comments and words mixed with mind-reading. you know, pollutant is playing him. you know, you don't know that. part of that whole idea is that trump is a salesman and he believes inreciprocity which men talks to world powers differently than bolton would. we know what bolton is like. he is the complete opposite of
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trump. he probably shouldn't have hired him and this is how it ends up. i do find it funny that a lot of these bombshells, they are always bombshells, are like trump asking a question or not knowing something. that is the story of everybody's life. we all are smart people who don't know something specific and it's embarrassing. i have a great example. sitting in the green room. my i.q. i would say is probably in the high 20%. i'm not going to brag. but in the green room i'm sitting there and i was talking to jesse about eating veal and i'll admit i thought veal was its own animal. i didn't know it was part of a cow. i didn't know it was a cow. i don't care. the difference between me and trump is that trump doesn't have the embarrassment jean. he was say, do we know if they have nukes? finland, what's up with finland,
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are they part of russia? he lacks the gene that makes you keep that question in but every single one of us, it's why i won't go on jeopardy. i refuse to. >> jesse: oh, man. i can't believe you didn't know what veal was. emily. what do you think about greg's point that maybe this is about a difference in style as opposed to disagreeing with the president on policy. >> emily: that's an interesting argument. i will break down really quickly for viewers what's happening legally here because honestly i don't think that it's going to turn out the way that the white house wants it to. there is a powerful presumption in the courts against prior restraint under the fourth amendment meaning there are attempts right now to have the book not be sold, that will likely fail. if information is properly classified than the standard is whether you can reasonably be expected that it would cause damage to national security.
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from case law we know that yes it's a big standard but it's also a high bar to cross especially by tuesday. note that the white house has argued for a trust to be created and all proceeds from the book to go to the government rather than bolton. they have sued him for breach of contract. if that information is confirmed to be classified under this new nsc, then they can use the doj criminal arm and prosecute him and my final point is for the salacious content aspect, if he thought that the president was unfit to serve, why is he waiting now in a book? anonymous and the op-eds and everything else. >> jesse: dana, does this remind you of scott mcclellan? he worked for bush and wrote the bad book and then he was a man without a party. is that going to be john bolton? >> dana: it's slightly different. scott mcclellan's book came out in the second term, so the
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reelection had already happened. second, scott mcclellan was quite a young man. bolton is 70 or 70 at the time when he took the job. in some ways he didn't need to worry about his future career prospects. i think bolton is basically a guy who said nobody has ever liked me in washington, and he doesn't care. so he's written this book. he's got a lot of questions that are going to come towards him. i'm not surprised -- i don't think the media is embracing him. they are taking this information and running with it but the democrats are not going to embrace them. they are furious, thinking you could have set all of this. instead you're asking everybody to pay $32.50 to get this information when if you think it was that bad you should've done it back in january. my last point is even if john bolton had said all of this in january during the impeachment, i truly believe
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there still would have been only one republican senator that voted for impeachment. i think that's something that democrats have to realize. this book is not going to make a difference in this particular election and i think the white house, on the lawsuit thing, it's just giving it more attention and it's going to turn out the way emily said. >> jesse: yeah, and i think the big take away from that segment is that greg had no idea what veal was. [laughter] some political leaders who bashed the protests are now singing a different tune after demonstrators show up at their homes. effortless is the lincoln way.
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they're going to be paying for this for a long time. they will, but with accident forgiveness allstate won't raise your rates just because of an accident, even if it's your fault. cut! sonny. was that good? line! the desert never lies. isn't that what i said? no you were talking about allstate and insurance. i just... when i... let's try again. everybody back to one. accident forgiveness from allstate. click or call for a quote today. ♪ >> greg: so when the protests first erupted, the mayor of olympia, washington, was worried there with supportive and
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throwing her own city under the bus. cheryl selby said her predominately white town was not as welcoming and nurturing to minorities and the light switched on by mr. floyd's murder now shines glaringly on olympia. when that light focuses on your actual house, the tune changes. after woke vandals damaged her home, are predominantly white town was suddenly victimized by what she called domestic terrorism. the rioters had covered her front door and porch with spray-painted messages. it's unfair, she whined. it's like the story we cited after this all kicked off. a former espn writer deemed the violent masses as animals and call the cops on them as they neared his house. that happened just after he urged them to burn it all down while retreating a building in flames. low-income housing in minneapolis. someplace far away. but then the fire got closer and palmer felt the heat of his own wokeness. i'm not going to say it will do so because of your listening, you already know that.
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i'm just telling the truth it's easy, very easy to admire and even encouraged instruction when you are far from it or well protected. whether it's defending riots or defunding cops, the loudest voices don't fret about the consequences. if celebs didn't have private security, they would be better people. because we know that if you defund the police's minority communities that will be hurt most. but if you are rich and powerful, it's not going to touch you until it does. just ask the mayor of olympia who analyses terror in her front yard. maybe she can call the seattle cops. they've got free time. jesse, now it's domestic terror. how convenient. >> jesse: yeah, well, i had victor davis hanson on "watters world" over the past weekend. he is very smart, near the i.q. range of you, greg. top 20, may be 10%. he said historically when you have moments like this
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throughout the world, usually what puts a stop to them is when they start eating their own, and right now you're kind of getting close to the circular firing squad situation. they went after cnn headquarters. they even vandalized the afl-cio headquarters. now they are going to the homes of democratic politicians. if they start really targeting the media elite and the political elite, that's when they are going to shut this down. it's like when the me too movement, everybody was all in and then they went after joe biden and now you don't believe all women anymore. that got shot down pretty quickly. the one thing i would tell these democrats, if you don't want people analyzing rows, build a wall. very effective. >> greg: emily, this is your neck of the woods. ouare all of these leaders in washington cowardly and callow and naive and silly? >> emily: they are.
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unresponsive and delusional and ridiculous and worthless. mayor wheeler in portland, he is a joke. remember when he let portland's i.c.e. building be occupied for five weeks, after which the human excrement and beetles were so thick they had to have a hazmat team come in. pretty sure it was the city's residents whose taxes paid for the cleanup and the seattle mayor, the olympia mayor, they are all the same. they are performative allies, songbirds and they are in the same category as the hollywood hills activists where they see these delusional sound bites from the safety of their snowflake homes. but when it really hits the fan, then they walk it back and as always like i keep saying, the biggest losers are the residents and i was actually the difference between these mayors and the hollywood hills activists is the fact that these mayors are having their salaries paid by the citizens that they keep letting down.
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>> greg: yeah. dana, i am impressed that emily has mentioned excrement twice in the show. i don't know if you can beat that. >> dana: i did notice it and i was thinking about how you used to use a word. greg used to used to like a word that started with the p and meant the same as excrement and maybe you wouldn't have gotten in so much trouble with the producers had you used thesaur thesaurus. >> greg: you just beat emily. >> dana: them mob giveth and the mob taketh away. and now you have local leaders that are realizing that i absolutely believe that local government is the toughest government. he didn't get them less attention.
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probably didn't deserve to but not too far here in the jersey shore, there is a mayor and he had a situation which is trash to the beach one saturday night. his response that he gave on facebook was so much different than these other mayors that we are talking about in washington state. there are some good local elected leaders out there. we need people who want to be in local government. if you're trying to find a role model in local government, do not look to washington state. look to somebody like paul kinetra. >> greg: juan, take us home. >> juan: my take is different than the rest of the game because to me it comes down to one point, americans have the right to peaceful protest, to peaceful assembly. debasing somebody's house, that's not peaceful assembly but the point is that everybody has a right to go out and protest,
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air their grievances. they are protesting in front of the white house on a regular basis throughout american history. that's the right of americans. it's in the first amendment for anybody who has a doubt, go check it out. it goes down to the local level. you can protest. i hope you're all for that. that's what's going on. i think by saying you're going to demonize the protesters because the mayor was supportive and then they did something wrong. they were wrong with the protest isn't wrong and give me a moment here because what is wrong is when you see for example these white supremacists who infiltrate a peaceful protest in oakland and kill a security officer in a federal building. or when you have the white supremacists, again, interrupt a protest in albuquerque and kill a protester. that's what's going on. that's the pattern. we should call attention to it but the media doesn't call as much attention to it as it
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deserves. >> greg: yeah. different segment for a different time. coming up, trump ready for a big comeback? hear what he's planning for his tulsa rally. that's next. i wanted more from my copd medicine, that's why i've got the power of 1,2,3 medicines with trelegy. the only fda-approved, once-daily 3 in 1 copd treatment. ♪ with trelegy and the power of 1, 2, 3, i'm breathing better. trelegy works 3 ways to open airways, keep them open, and reduce inflammation for 24 hours of better breathing. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. trelegy is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis.
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>> juan: president trump eyeing a big political comeback with the return of his rallies beginning this saturday in tulsa, oklahoma. supporters were gathering outside. axios is reporting it will be a very different type of rally than what we've seen before. there will be indoor and outdoor stages, musical accent a film crew. critics say it's a huge health risk but it may be used as a test run ahead of the republican national convention. greg, let me start with you.
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james lankford, the senator from oklahoma, a trump fan, said people who are elderly and with pre-existing conditions, he thinks maybe they should avoid the rally. what do you think? >> greg: i have always been consistent on the health risks. so i'm not totally on board with the rally but i understand why it's happening. there is a pathetic hypocrisy of the media who condemn these now but were gung ho cheering the protest. it shows the true colors of the medium and these rallies in a way are also protest. winning think about it it's a protest the media hates because they are protesting the media. these rallies were directed at the press for decades of manipulations and lies so i think that's why the media always has a personal animus towards these things but i do hope they do enforce masks. there is social distancing. because if somebody sneezes or if there is one illness and is bound to be one, cnn is going to
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put it on their front page on "usa today"'s is going to run with it so they have to be super careful to take care of the people there first and foremost. i just hope they do. >> juan: dana, the president said, told sean hannity last night of the virus is fading but from what i see in the news reports, the state and the city of tulsa have hit record highs in terms of cases with the last week. what do you think? >> dana: well, obviously the curve has been flattened, especially in new york where the hot spot was. i think we are probably still in the first wave of this virus, and we know a lot more than we did back in january about washing your hands, keeping a social distance, masks if you're in a public place. so we'll see what happens on saturday night. i do think that the buildup to this rally is just over and beyond. you would think it's the super bowl. i have a feeling that one of the
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things driving this is that people really want to start talking and covering the election. we have a huge election in front of us. 2020 election. it's a big deal so in some ways a kind of really kicks off on saturday night. >> juan: yeah, that's right. emily, what about this business it's getting a lot of attention about consent forms? you're a lawyer. what do you mean when you have a consent form to attend the rally? >> emily: we have seen that all over the national legal landscape essentially disclosure forms. all types of protection for things. this is elective. people can choose whether or not to attend the rally, unlike the national guard which didn't have a choice when they attended the riots and so many were infected. i saw a cartoon that kind of equitable greg said and it sums up how i feel. it's a donkey with the mainstream media button and he has his arm around a covid mike rowe him. "thanks for staying out of the riots but we need you to come to the trump rally." that's what the mainstream media
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wants you to think. >> juan: , do you think the president is being shamed by the media that says why doesn't he protect his own fans, his supporters, why doesn't he keep them safe? >> jesse: covid shaming? do you i think the president feel shame? i'm not sure about that. i don't know if that tactic is going to work. the rally is going to punctuate the campaign come back. 20,000 in the arena. 50,000 outside. joe biden in his wildest dreams couldn't get crowds like that. they will have hand sanitizer and masks. they will take temperatures before you go into the gates just to make sure there's no super-spreader's. because you know mainstream media is going to become contact tracers for everyone that attended and they will just blame a second wave on the president. i am looking forward to it. i think it's going to be hot. the president is going to settle some scores. there could be some vulgarity. i think he's got a lot to get
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off his chest. "watters world" will be covering it live on saturday night. >> juan: way to go, jesse. more of "the five" headed your way next. stay with us don't bring that mess around here, evan! whoo! don't do it. don't you dare. i don't think so! [ sighs ] it's okay, big fella. we're gonna get through this together. [ baseball bat cracks ] nice rip, robbie. ♪ raaah! when you bundle home and auto insurance through progressive, you get more than just a big discount. i'm gonna need you to leave. you get relentless protection. [ baseball bat cracks ]
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♪ >> emily: welcome back. after being stuck inside for months, new research finds that a majority of american families are in desperate need of digital detox and parents plan to cut back on screen time. jesse, have you made any plans about this? >> jesse: i am more worried o think i've drank this much since college. you know how embarrassing it is for me to bring out the recycling bin? i make sure the neighbors aren't watching. the size of this bin, i feel like a maintenance man at a vineyard. >> emily: juan, what about you? you are a grandfather and a father. what's going on with your family and kids? >> juan: my daughter is really tough. she is a drill sergeant about limiting screen time. emily, people are out of work. people at home, out of school, they are going to drive up screen time for adults as well
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as kids. i would also note that today it said 1.5 million more americans filed for unemployment. that's not a good piece of news. >> emily: greg, i picture you as the cranky neighbor who screams at your neighbor's kids. >> greg: do you want to hear something pathetic that i did today? i went for a bike ride to the liquor store. because i didn't have a car, so i rode a bicycle to the liquor store and i didn't realize how hilly it was. izehe hills i was going down i would have to go back up. how would i carry the b bike? i was about a mile into it and i turned around and went home. [laughter] >> emily: dana, what do you think about that? >> dana: well, one, i would've liked to have seen that with greg and maybe palatine can figure out a way to do more realistic rides, like if you have to ride your bike to the liquor store, what kind of
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cadence and resistance do you need. i think peter and i have become very proficient with our technology. last night we were watching a show -- i was watching a show "sweet magnolias," very good. we were on our phones the entire time. i can get a lot done. i'm really good at it now. i think i'm going to keep driving on the screen time. >> emily: all right, "one more thing" is up next. stay with us. needles. essential for sewing, but maybe not for people with certain inflammatory conditions. because there are options. like an "unjection™". xeljanz. the first and only pill of its kind that treats moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, or moderate to severe ulcerative colitis when other medicines have not helped enough. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections. before and during treatment, your doctor should check for infections, like tb and do blood tests. tell your doctor if you've had hepatitis b or c, have flu-like symptoms, or are prone to infections.
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serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened. taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra may increase risk of death. tears in the stomach or intestines and serious allergic reactions have happened. needles. fine for some. but for you, there's a pill that may provide symptom relief. ask your doctor about the pill first prescribed for ra more than seven years ago. xeljanz. an "unjection™". [shouting] [clapping and shouting] [cymbals clanging] [knocking] room for seven. and much, much more. the first-ever glb. get 0% apr financing up to 36 months on most models, and 90-day first-payment deferral on any model.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> dana: it's time for "one more thing." greg, kick us off. >> greg: let's do this. ♪ animals are great! ♪ animals are great! ♪ animals are great! you're going to love this. it's a triple treat. three videos. number one, prepare for bark
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off. your pilot, captain fluff. getting high the legal way. let's go to number two. speaking of number two, this kids poop is going to be naughty. check out what he's eating. last one, here are some barrie s on a playground. bearers on the playground. when i clicked on this video i thought it was going to be something different. those are my videos. let's vote. >> dana: clear your history, greg. >> greg: shout out your favor one. >> dana: bears. >> greg: bears wins.
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the other two animals will be put to sleep. thanks, everybody. >> emily: oh, my god. >> greg: i'm kidding. i'm joking. >> dana: i am going to tell you about a young woman that i really admire. i got to know her and her parents. elizabeth, there she is. it's a mask made with her own two hands. she has got -- she was in a skiing accident in early march and with coronavirus, her event planning career got put on hold so she was home and she saw that these nurses needed more masks. she used an old sewing machine to sew masks out of designer fabric scraps. she donated 100% of the proceeds to her local hospital. but then after raising thousands of dollars for them, these masks are in such high demand because they are so cute, she's now found a business. if you go to elizabeth-taylor.com, you can
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check her out. the great thing is they are small enough for little faces, emily and greg. [laughter] they are super cute. jesse. >> jesse: all right, dana, who in this country loves fox news the most? dads. everyone's father loves fox news and father's day is coming up on sunday so go to the fox news shop and get your dad a mug. it says #foxdad." youcantrickit you can drink it like the president with two hands. >> dana: juan. >> juan: everybody knows that i admire tough guys and i have a tough guy for you.
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take a look at this young man. he is a 5-year-old. he has a brain condition that limits his ability to walk but with love and encouragement from his mom, he took four steps this week walking across his family's living room. the georgia kid is now also able to ride horses and he's now, with the help of therapy, able to speak in full sentences. camden, i just want to say you are an inspiration. you are a tough guy. one of the toughest guys eyes ie ever seen. god bless you. >> dana: and his parents who have done an amazing job. >> emily: a u.s. veteran named russell was diagnosed with ptsd, started a nonprofit to raise awareness for the value and how crucial service dogs are for veterans. he's running across the country with a service dog. the gofundme is veterans for good.
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stormy's instagrams stormy runs across america. go to my story to learn more. >> dana: that's great and that's it for us. thanks, everybody. "special report" is up next. hey, bret, did you see those bears? >> bret: a date, bears on the playground. i loved it. thank you. breaking tonight, joe biden is increasing his lead over president trump in brand-new fox poll releasing right now. the presumptive democratic nominee holding a 50-38 advantage over registered voters. it's a four-point gain from last month. the president's job approval numbers holding steady at 44% positive, 55% negative. the latest figures, as the president and his former national security advisor go after each other over the contents of a new book. john bolton since president trump is unfit for office. the president calls bolton

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