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tv   The Five  FOX News  July 15, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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>> that is wild. i apologize for the abbreviated time but, as i reminded you before they are kind of mandating this to make sure, given the characters will tell you, get the mask on order, you're out of here! anyway, here comes "the five." ♪ >> jesse: hello, everyone, i'm jesse watters along with juan williams, greg gutfeld, dana perino and judge jeanine je pirro. this is "the five." president trump calling out liberal city war zones for refusing help. as violence and crime spirals out of control. shooting surging in major cities as cops continue to come under attack. disturbing new issues show officers including new york city's top uniformed cop being beaten and bloodied. it happened during a protest on
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the brooklyn bridge today. the nypd says three cops were seriously injured and multiple people were arrested. president trump railing against democratic mayors for allowing the anarchy to happen. >> president trump: we have other cities that are out of control, they are like war zones. if the city is going to straighten it out with local politicians, let's say it's for political reasons, they are all democrats. they are liberal left-wing democrats and it's almost like they think this is going to be this way forever. we not going to put up with th that. >> jesse: trump teases a big law enforcement announcement next week. speak to you will have another announcement next week with the fbi and the attorney general and others concerning our city because the left-wing group of people that are running our city's are not doing the job that they are supposed to be doing. they are supposed to be asking for help and they don't want to ask. so maybe they are proud or maybe they think it's bad politically but we can't have happened what
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is happening. >> jesse: so a defund the police black lives matter protester, slugs and officer in a head with a two by four, right on the bridge, write down where i live in lower manhattan. this is just another peaceful protest? >> juan: no, i think that's reprehensible and is to be condemned but let's look at the overall picture. i think it's important to understand that president trump is here hoping for a backlash against the racial justice movement in the united states. i think he is appealing to racial grievances well. i think you have to understand the facts and put everything in perspective that violent crime is down sharply in this country since the early 90s. this year, even with covid and the protests, crime is down. lately, there has been a spike in some cities and gun violence. note that new york this year have the same amount of gun
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violence that had in 2015 but, as i said to you in an earlier show the violence is concentrated, and poor, black and hispanic neighborhoods. largely among the drug dealers and the gangs. so the reality is, this is a race and class issue and i think the underlying root causes bad schools, bad housing, or jobs, for paying jobs, unemployment. but trump is not dealing with those root issues and polls show, jesse i hope you know this, polls show that americans don't trust trump to deal with racial tensions, he makes things worse. quinnipiac has 65% of americans negative on trump's handling of race. abc, 60% of white people and 80% of hispanics, 90% of black people disapprove of how this president deals with race. >> jesse: all right, judge judge jeanine, he likes to
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talk about crime going down but homicides and shootings are up. i don't know the point of that, we've seen people being assaulted in the streets. we've seen things lit on fire. i don't care what the polls say about donald trump. we are talking about protecting the safety of all americans. >> judge pirro: the first obligation of governments, jesse, is the protection of its citizens. that's not happening, and a juan can talk all he wants but in the democratic led cities that's not what's happening. new york city is right behind chicago and i don't want to hear about how it's band of jobs and unemployment as the reason for the spike in crime. the reason there is a spike in crime in new york city which is one of the highest changes that we have seen, one of the most dramatic, is because these, the street crime, they used to call it the street crime unit, the anti-crime unit is gone. and it's the minority is. and by the way, minorities are the ones that hurt the most.
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and by the way that wasn't a protest today, you know what that was today? i peaceful march by the african-american clergy along with hispanic clergy. i just had a source tell me on the phone before the show that there was a black suv handing out baseball bats before this march on the brooklyn bridge and they were able to take some of those bats back. this is about anarchy. this is about taking america down and i don't care what you blame it on but there has never been the spike in crime that we have seen. the dramatic changes. you tie the police his hands behind her back and they tell them that they can't touch the defendant. the defendants are emboldened and they are taking down the cops. they are beating them with baths and we don't understand it, and that bozo de blasio comes out and says, he got to take back our streets. what how are you going to take back the streets, you bozo? he says we have to all come together. well, you know the only way to
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come together in a violent society or against those who want to take us down is law enforcement and that's all you have to say. >> jesse: on the site is up in new york city, dana, 25%. i don't know if de blasio is scared of using the police more aggressively, or he just doesn't want to. >> dana: you know, worst mayor in the history of -- you talk about the fact that crime is down everywhere. that doesn't just happen by the flip of the switch. that takes time. it takes time to create something, it takes time to build something. to establish law and order and then hold it, then allow a city to thrive, like new york city has. but it takes just a moment to destroy it. and we are seeing that. in the history books, like when the history of all this was written, he will be able to see everything going great and then boom. when i see those officers bleeding from their head, it
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breaks my heart. and it also scares me. and i think that is the other thing that's happening. we have the right to peacefully protest, absolutely. but we also have a right to be protected and our several liberties also include the ability to be protected by police officers, of which we are paying taxes for and we expect for them to be allowed to do their job and is to be supported. i wish that mayor de blasio would come out and support the police but i feel like that is just not going to happen. >> jesse: it's like dana said, it's just sad. i don't know what the president has for this big announcement but it better be something because the liberal mayors aren't doing anything. just before it's actually -- i think we are and a hopeless position here. i've never felt this bad for a city. and we keep using the word anarchy, it's not anarchy at all, it's systemic crime born from systemic disrespect for the
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police. systemic disinformation from the media and systemic leftism that runs the cities. we kept hearing week after week about systemic racism stomach racism. well, who is in charge of these cities? and where are these geniuses now? what do they have to replace our law and order system? like, what is tomorrow supposed to look like? is it supposed to look like this? because they have offered us no alternatives. it's got to be weird to be in a group that dismisses all violence, as a rare or an anomaly even though it increases. burning buildings, that happens once a decade. fluting? they are trying to seize economic justice. then black on black crime, just in poor neighborhoods guys. it's been around. they've also got the systemic problems but that's not really the issue. the issue here is republicans and conservatives and the people
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who live in new york who are scared acropolis are going to pounce on this issue. they will turn it into a racial issue and they will use it to go after black lives matter. we are not using it to go after anybody, we are scared to death of what is happening to our neighborhood. i've got people in my staff that can't walk to work anymore because the problem is, they are women. they can't walk six freaking blocks from their apartment to fox because they are scared. and they are rightfully scared to. if you see the strike streets in new york, it will blow your mind. this is 70 a.d. the savagery is unbelievable. here's the thing. the problem with violence and trashing the city and ruining a country, it's incredibly persuasive visual evidence. i will never forget june 2020 and neither should trump. this has to be really, really
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practical. a friend of mine once said to me, you can tell if something is meaningful when it causes you to act. and i don't mean going on tv with a monologue, i mean doing something to protect my family. for the first time in my life i acted and i went and bought a firearm, like millions of other americans because we saw visual evidence that we weren't going to be protected anymore. that the calorie wasn't going to come. that when we called 911 the car wasn't going to make it. so now it's up to us as american citizens to practice are right at the second amendment and i'm sorry if that looks like pouncing on social justice warriors. no, it's to protect our family. it's a offensive to marginalize people concerns over violence. it makes me sick to my stomach. >> jesse: it should make everyone sick to their stomach. coming up, trump hammers biden as the race heats up. ♪
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5g is now included with all new data options. switch and save hundreds. xfinity mobile. ♪ >> judge pirro: president trump taking on joe biden in spectacular fashion during a speech in the rose garden. trump hitting the former vp on nearly every major campaign issue. at take look. >> president trump: there has probably never been a time when candidates are so different. we want "law & order," they don't want "law & order." biden has gone radical left. biden sides with china over america time and time again. america lost nearly 10,000 factories while joe biden was vice president. if we had listened to joe biden hundreds of thousands of additional lives would have been lost. and if you look at the job he
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did on swine flu -- >> judge pirro: okay. i will start with you jesse. i mean, there is no question that there is a difference between donald trump and joe biden but donald trump's advisors have pretty much said to him, stop talking about yourself and go after biden and his weaknesses. what are his weaknesses, jesse? >> jesse: i think what donald trump is doing is, he is turning biden into bernie. larry david will have to play both of those guys on "snl" because if you look at now, it's going back to what it was three months ago. capitalism versus socialism, and america versus venezuela and jobs versus mobs. the biden only got the nomination because it was a little less crazy than bernie and that still not a great platform. then his advisor would realize, there's really no energy for joe so they lurched to the left and plagiarize up bernie's socialist platform which is kind of like
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doing a deal with the devil. it will be the kiss of death come november. now joe biden is for reparation and taxpayer-funded abortion, open borders, gun grabs, green new deal, everything. not only that but now donald trump is making him out to be like chairman mao. joe it kind of is in that forum by the way he led china into the wto, most favored nation, trading status. they stole all our secrets and jobs while his son got paid off. right now i think things are getting back to normal for this match up in the president's numbers are starting to rise. >> judge pirro: in line with that, dana, the president brought up the impeachment issue but appears to use the impeachment as the vehicle to talk about hunter biden and joe biden and the crime family. we talk about his daughter, his niece, his daughters, lots of
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conviction and a lot of unusual arrests that have been disposed of in unusual ways. but does not help him become the hunter biden thing or does that hurt vis-a-vis the impeachment? >> dana: i think if they could stick on something for more than an hour then maybe something would have some penetration. i think when they finally start to draw distinctions from each other it's really interesting. president trump said there has never been to candidates more opposite from each other and that might be a rare point of agreement between the two candidates. they both want to be the opposite of each other. but i think it strange for biden's he doesn't seem to ever try to win the persuadable middle, if there is any that's left. he continues to try to win that primary over and over again, especially when it comes to the left which might indicate that there could be a softening in their polls when they look at the lack of enthusiasm amongst democrats to vote for biden.
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there is enthusiasm amongst democrats to vote against trump but not for biden. so that could be where a little bit of this is coming from. the other thing i would point out is every day in this campaign really matters. yesterday, there were so many different messages that came from the white house. you have -- the president had signaled he was going to a big press conference it was going to be about china and everybody is geared up for it, but that was going to be at 5:00. do an intew with "cbs news" in which he makes news on confederate flags on all this other things. i feel like they are trying to do too much all at once and it's diluting the message a lot.
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>> judge pirro: and you know, greg, in terms of that i think you could almost understand if you know the president, i mean he moves like a thousand miles on it at so he's covered all that in his mind. but how is this campaign going to work out? does joe biden go out there and, he looks to the left and he looks to the right as he reads his statement and every once in a while looks to the center. then the president comes out all fired up and already to go with his response. is that how this campaign is going to play out? >> greg: i don't know. i don't know that they will ever be on the same stage because i fire were biden i would find a way to not make the debate. in my opinion he seemed pretty tired, he didn't seem his normal self but i think the real question is will joe biden stand up to the mob or is he in the mobs pocket? because right now he's basically aoc with hair plugs. jesse went through all of his up easements to the left and we have to remember that the radical left doesn't take no, or yes, for an answer. you could see mayor de blasio in new york city right now, everybody hates him including
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the left because he is not left-wing enough. so truck needs to create a contrast between him being the "law & order" president and the odd location to chaos that joe biden will become. he has to make it clear that if joe biden wins, our country is finished. we are just going to be a microcosm of new york city. >> judge pirro: of new york city, absolutely. there is an interesting poll, quinnipiac has come out and said that there are a lot of silent americans who are going to be voting for trump, 57% in pennsylvania believe that they are neighbors support president trump. but that's not being shown in the big polls that -- where people are apparently more open. what do you think of that? >> juan: that could be left-wing propaganda, judge. i think people are worried about complacency because the polls are so consistently in favor of
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biden. they don't want democrats to take it easy and think they got it in the bag. but i think the big problem for the president is that, after 40 years most americans know joe biden. basically trump is trying to convince people that vanilla ice cream is something they don't like. well guess what? most people like vanilla ice cream and that's what joe biden is at the moment. it doesn't matter if vanilla ice cream is not your favorite flavor, most people still like vanilla ice cream. so yesterday you see trump go out there in the rose garden and he is offering you know, a flavor that is basically all made up of incoherent rambling. as greg said, he looked tired. i don't know what was going on, he keeps changing the topic and it's about china into this and that and people say this is a political performance in the rose garden? that didn't sit well with lots of folks. the key is or is he is digging himself a hole because he has no vision.
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he has no answers to any problems. not coronavirus, not health care, not the economy. it's just a rant and rave and play to emotions and grievance. people are not going to buy it and at some point they will say, i've seen this act for four years and i'm tired of it, i'd like some vanilla ice cream. >> judge pirro: the problem is, the vanilla ice cream has already melted. but anyway, i had to come up more people are standing up to o the anti-free-speech mob after a top "new york times" editorial resigns. that's next with your vanilla ice cream. musical musical
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that disagreed with her. and now she is getting support from human rights activists ion hershey ally. because there are so many of us would see what social media is doing and it is harmful, we are being led down a path to, to institutions like twitter. but there is also a lack of leadership. but the leaders, the people who are supposed to -- they are not doing their jobs. >> juan: judge, i noticed that ms. weiss attacked the times and said it's out of touch with the country. the writers are living in a bubble and it's not good journalism but i noticed that financially the times is doing very well. it's not the failing "new york times." so does it success undermine her argument? >> judge pirro: you know that's an argument that someone from "the new york times" made today.
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they said look. our subscriptions are up and we are making a lot of money. but when you have the person -- i believe it was the editor of the opinion page. when he was fired for part of an article in from the united states senator on an issue that was relevant at the time just last month or two months ago, then you have this writer who says she has to leave because she is being bullied and because she always felt like, a reporter should be reporting the facts and not editorializing but even on the opinion pages they are saying that, you know, we are not interested in what people on the right think or what conservatives think. we only care about what this minute percentage of the country thinks and with the power of the press and of the print media, they can lead a lot of people. and so i think that "the new york times" has to be respected and this is really a bullying situation that she talks about.
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i mean it's very, very uncomfortable. when she said, you have to be brave to go to work, you had to be courageous to walk into that room at "the new york times," that's not good stuff. you would agree with that, wouldn't you? >> juan: yes. in fact just picking up on what the judge says, bari weiss that it was hostile for her, a hostile working environment. but she had the opportunity to write at one of the major newspapers in the country and she just had to stand up to her critics in-house. i mean, i do that with you guys every day so why couldn't she stand the heat? >> dana: i think that, number one, we don't know what it was like for her inside and number two, we all talk here openly. but she was dealing with is that pernicious kind of bullying that happens when somebody tries to destroy you from the inside. and that is what is really
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disgusting about it. i know "the new york times" editorial board, they know it's wrong. they know she's right. and we will pay for it. when you have someone like her, who is putting up the warning flags saying, we are dealing with censorship terrorists, she uses language like that to get our attention. you have to try to protect freedom of speech. the founding fathers put the first amendment first for a reason and we have an obligation to try to protect it. i'm sorry for what mary went through and i hope she continues to write and if it's not at "the new york times," i'm sure she will find a place that will accept her viewpoints, which weren't even that radical. if you read her stuff, she's just smart. she wasn't saying anything that was out-of-bounds in any way. >> juan: hey greg, i noticed something from ricky gervais', the actor that i don't like you
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had to tell me who he was. he said if you are on twitter and coming from the left you are called a trotskyite and if you are coming from the left, your called something like hitler. but if you look at both arguments then you are called a coward and are subject to a lot of hate online. what do you think? >> greg: twitter is a land of hot takes and if you have any kind of reasonable opinion, no one wants to listen to you. it could take any idea and you added twitter and it makes the idea works. but i want to touch on bari weiss' letter. i thought she was right in everything she said. however, the reasons for quitting the times are kind of like quitting the panel of the view because you found out it was all women. i mean, how could you be surprised by "the new york times" business
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model? it's pretty obvious that they are not providing actual news anymore, they are providing validation for the customer base and i don't even think they hide that anymore and that is to your point, juan, why they make a lot of money. it's upper-class white liberals with a lot of money and they feel less guilty about the fact that they are white and rich. it's one big virtually signal that is becoming less and less readable. but she did make a good point about how the media takes its cue from twitter, but twitter takes its cue from medial people on twitter. so it's a recursive machine that feeds itself. >> juan: that's interesting. jesse, i wanted to ask you if you think this is more of our generational battle than anything. you get more women, more minorities, more gay people and more people from around the world participating in the upper ranks of a newspaper and on twitter and they have a voice.
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and some people don't like it. >> jesse: i just want to tell my mom who i am sure is watching, it's not true that fox is more tolerant than "the new york times." how does that taste, mom? seriously this woman who resigned from the times, she was a centrist. fox, we give centrists their own shows. like i have my own show. also you can tell how real the mob is getting so i took greg's advice and i know but cancel culture offsets. i donated to black lives matter and also to the aclu so the next time i make an inappropriate comment, i should be good. right? isn't that how it works? i'll leave you with one serious point, the rest you can totally disregard. the left has now reentered its militant phase. you know when you will go and
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join the army and everyone and shakes her head and they teach you to operate as a cohesive unit and if you get out of line, you get hazed out of there? that's what's happening now. this is a militant movement and if you don't march in perfect lockstep with the left of the hazy right out of there. so that's why they can't be trusted with power because it will just attack you and prove their power. >> juan: we got to catch your show saturday, sound like something new is coming up there. greg is up next on how the media has covered andrew cuomo's handling of the virus pandemic. that's coming up next on "the five." ♪ yes it is. jim, could you uh kick the tires? oh yes. can you change the color inside the car? oh sure. how about blue? that's more cyan but. jump in the back seat, jim. act like my kids. how much longer? -exactly how they sound. it's got massaging seats too, right? oh yeahhhhh. -oh yeahhhhh.
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no one would ever know. once again, jim held auntie's feet to the fire hammering him on the preventable deaths that occurred in new york's west homes after he filled them with covid patients. no, just kidding. >> what phase of dating are you currently in? >> zero. i met phase zero on dating. there is no duration on phase zero, there is no automatic time that you go to phase one. you could stay at phase zero for months. i think new york city will be fully reopened before i get out of stage zero. >> i think you so much for your leadership. you were there when we need to do and you still are there. >> greg: i feel as bad as jimmy fallon's hair. i got it. i'm told fallon hosts a comedy show but has there ever been
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politician they got more preride from the press than cuomo? he had his own public relations arm over at cn. >> this was the actual swab that was being used to fit up that double barrel shotgun that you have mounted on the front of your pretty face. do you think that you are an attractive person now because you are single and ready to mingle? do you really think you are some desirable single person? >> i think beauty is in the eye of the beholder. >> greg: wow. that that really killed. literally people died during that act. but someone over at cnn has stones. >> andrew cuomo seems to be on something of a victory tour congratulating the state and himself were defeating the virus even selling this poster showing his state getting over the
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mountain. it includes references to his daughters and a boyfriend, little inside jokes. there are no illustrations however of the more than 32,000 dead new yorkers, the highest death toll by far of any state. >> greg: that will make things tense at the cnn cafeteria. cuomo also said this. >> we are worried the infection will come from the other states now back to new york which would be a real tragedy. >> greg: it's already a tragedy at least for america given that 65% of the cases that spread throughout the country originated from new york. he also bragged about the state's declining infection rate but that's what happens when you run out of victims. still the media have prefers to focus on florida even though new york has eight times as many deaths and nearly twice as many infections in florida is roughly the same population as new york. but the governor loves to smear
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florida and oddly, so do cnn. look at those headlines? again florida is run by a republican that chris cuomo's brother, the governor, doesn't like. seems like the perfect show for a media watchdog sources. i'm too busy watching fox kick their networks but, however but unlike cuomo i don't condone violence. all right jesse, let's get to the important points. fallon's hair. you're in shut down, i mean shut down, our hair looks great. what's going on with fallon? >> that looks like bed head. but sometimes if you are hollywood, that head is a look. i don't know, but i just want to know what kind of condition or he's using because that looks like some nice flow. i know we are a little tight on time but the only thing i would say is trump gave him a star,
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gave him everything he wanted, and it was like the trump and andrew cuomo show. the only great thing that he did was lock the city down china style. that was a very vigilant lockdown even though he was late a little bit and then he infected everyone in the nursing home so it's a mixed record. as a politician, politicians don't take ownership. they pass blame. that's what makes politicians good politicians. >> greg: dana, isn't there anybody that watches this stuff, this lovefest and go, this is bad television? it's disgusting, at least two human beings. >> dana: and it's not like there hasn't been reporting about the nursing homes, it's out there. people can read about it if they choose to but it wasn't just fallon. i watch cbs monda sunday mornind
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of the main anchor did an interview with cuomo about a month ago. this was when the deaths from the nursing home or much more raw for the families that were grieving. not a single question, but a lot of questions about his dating life and his future for a possible presidential run. it's extremely widespread and it's in a remarkable p.r. queue with governor cuomo and i don't know if anyone could ever repeat it. >> greg: judge, can't you just run for governor so we can fix this? >> known. the most disgusting part of this was what the government did do was seek out a bill passed that he signed into law which pretty much gave immunity to all the health care officials and everyone else for civil and criminal cases as a result of what happened in the nursing
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homes. outrageous. he was warned. he was told not to send infected patients in. all of those people died when they didn't have to die and he infected people in nursing homes. and he's on a publicity tour about the size of his nasal swab or whatever that was that his brother was talking about, it's horrible. >> greg: yes. juan, i have to give jay credit for doing that and as ron greenwald said, you can speak truth to power if you are not the governor. >> juan: that's right. it's not as if cuomo is without flaws but you do have to say that this daily briefing that he held proves to be very popular because it was informative. i think he filled a people weren't getting from the president and the second thing to say was, remember. you have a big city and a big state and he did pull down the curve and that's a success.
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>> greg: okay. more of "the five," next. ♪ ar insurance so you only pay for what you need. almost done. what do you think? i don't see it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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♪ >> dana: welcome back. a futuristic hazmat suits for air travel are apparently selling like crazy for $250, you can be the owner of one complete with antifogging windows and a built in the hospital grade air purifying device. now that judge jeanine, would you ever wear one of these things travel? >> judge pirro: [laughs] you know, it depends. i'm about to travel myself and i got one of those hats with the shield on it and i will wear the mask, but, i don't know. if it came in the right color i might but i will tell you, it's a step up. most people come in their pajamas and i'd rather see them in that then their pajamas. [laughter] >> dana: greg, is this something you might actually like because it could protect you from talking to people and stuff? and >> greg: there are two problems here. a, it makes everyone look like
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their giant big toe. i would just see that as a giant big toe. and also, how do you drink? flying is designed specifically for you to have three or four drinks and privacy. i don't know how you do that with that thing on. and what if you get sick, or you throw up, motion sickness? you are trapped with your own puke. >> dana: i feel like it would be hard to, how can you maneuver? i feel like you would knock your neighbor in the head. >> juan: yeah, you look like big boy, don't you? it looks like something from a alien. like we are bound for outer space. >> dana: i think i'm going to stay home. jesse, i'll give you the last word. do you want one of these things? >> jesse: remember when they have the body? that's what it looks like right there. very safe.
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[laughter] >> dana: indeed. i think we better go. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ [ engines revving ] ♪ ♪ it's amazing to see them in the wild like th-- shhh. for those who were born to ride, there's progressive. metastatic breast cancer is relentless, but i'm relentless too. because every day matters. and having more of them is possible with verzenio, the only one of its kind proven to help you live significantly longer when taken with fulvestrant, regardless of menopausal status. and it's the only one of its kind you can take every day. verzenio + fulvestrant is approved for women with hr+,
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♪ >> jesse: time now for "one more thing." juan? >> juan: dese, remember grumpy cat from the internet memes? well he has some new competition come meet roku. >> why are you not doing this by the book? roku? [laughter] >> juan: as you see, his tail interrupted as a zoom meeting at parliament john nicholson was speaking to colleagues about children's tv shows. apparently he has better things to do. >> jesse: that's a good one,
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juan. they not? >> dana: all right, it's a bird, it's a plane, it's a cattail. i want to talk about theo, he's a 7-year-old that has spina bifida and he wanted nothing more to see dogs on his birthday but due to the pandemic it didn't seem possible. theo's mom, melody, posted online to ask people to walk their dogs by his house on his big day but they thought they would get a feel. over 400 canine visitors came by. they did tricks and he also got to meet a chihuahua named pinky and the chihuahua has spina bifida just like he does. i think americans are pretty great, and animals are great to help out this little boy and his birthday. >> jesse: animals are great, aren't they greg? >> greg: they are. i ♪ you laugh at me now, that's going to be its own show one
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day. check out, if only we could be as calm and serene as a sleepy puppy. check out this fella. look at that. is that basically the greatest moment of existence right there? yeah. i heard it later, he was delicious. i kid. >> dana: that looks like of the slab. >> greg: i have no idea. >> jesse: and no one has any idea. off the coast of florida before taking some video of some stingrays that were getting pretty close to beachgoers but someone noticed something that caught everyone's attention. see that guy there? that is the most sunburned human being that you've ever seen. that's right. we found boy, boy is swimming up the coast of florida.
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guys, when you spray the lotion, you have to rub it in. and if there is no woman there, have a guy do it. and if there i, it's fine. judge, sorry. we ran out of time. "special report" is next with bret baier. >> breaking tonight, the streets of some american cities becoming combat zones and what has transitioned from protest against police treatment to violence against police. new york a demonstration supporting police turning violent this morning as counter protesters provoke physical altercations with officers. in portland the democratic mayor telling personal to stay out of disputes between protesters and local law enforcement's even as those disputes are increasing in numbers.

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