tv The Five FOX News July 27, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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>> charles: emily, don't forget about that clean -- that first clean african-american crack that joe biden made about barack obama. we will see. that's it for me, folks. neil will be back tomorrow, don't miss me on the fox business network at 2:00 p.m., "the five" starts right now. ♪ >> greg: i am greg gutfeld with juan williams, jesse watters, dana perino is back, and dagen mcdowell. "the five." ♪ there is only one thing nancy loves more than gelato, lawyers. in a year where millions of americans should unite and spike a global virus, her instinct is to protect the lawyers by vowing to block liability protections for employers in the next relief package. here it is. >> what we will not support us the following. what they are saying to essential workers, you have to
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go to work because you are essential, we place no responsibility on your employer to make that workplace safe, and if you get sick, you have no recourse, because we have given your employer protection. and if you don't go to work because you are afraid of being sick and you have that job opportunity, you don't get unemployment insurance. this is so unfair. >> greg: so wait, we place no responsibility on the employers to make the workplace safe? where the hill has she been? hiding underground with joe? the guy who read rip van winkle and made it his political playbook. unless you have been refrigerated like delicious mint chocolate chip for seven months, you have seen an amazing commitment to ensure safety. let's not assume people who want to get back to work are being irresponsible, they are making adult decisions struggling to save their livelihood. livelihood protection insists to
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allow civilization and enough time to restart before the lawyers carve up the carcass. and we. if a business does not make sure that it is safe for employees, it's not going to be safer customers. any idiot can figure that out. but nancy is not just any idiot, she is a left-wing democrat, holding left-wing law forms shoving 80% of their donations into her party's pocket. and because lawyers know that they can make billions on covid litigation, who cares if it can keep small businesses from returning to work ever. which is why she pivots to a hot shot. >> let's just get to the heart of it. the point of all of this is this president, i have a new name for him, mr. make matters worse. he has made matters worse from the start, delay, denial, the hoax, the miracle, and all the rest. and we are in the situation where you saw some of the numbers very clearly early.
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>> greg: that was painful, let's point out, nancy gave no practical advice on dealing with the pandemic. she currently laid low and then waited to armchair quarterback much later. if she had all the answers to the virus, she must have kept them to herself. that makes her the real villain here, and someone who might have more than just rum raisin on her hands. all right, dana, welcome back to the show. you were missed. >> dana: thank you. thank you. i don't like rum raisin, i think that is the worst ice cream of all ice creams. >> greg: it is. that's why assume that nancy pelosi would be eating it, because she seems like a rum raisin type. what do you make of her disk condition, she roadblocks these packages. and our obvious reply would be, of course safety is our concern.
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we are not idiots! >> dana: it's also not true. so there is that, was it about eight weeks ago, maybe even more that you did a monologue based on a "washington post" article that basically listed all of the lawsuits that have been up until then and it had only been about six weeks and we have been dealing with the pandemic. so imagine between then and now how many we have and you are about to see a lot more, talk about, i think about addictions and commercial real estate, not to mention realtors. you have so many small businesses like hair salons, for example, they have had to buy and invest, put money into getting the plexiglass organized so that they can reopen, making sure that their employees have enough masks, and they have had to limit their hours for certain employees. they don't want to be sued. they don't want as you said, they don't want the liability of something to go wrong, because their entire livelihood is wrapped up in their business. and so, this bill that
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mcconnell is putting forward does not say that a business does not have to do anything to ensure safety, it says that it does. it is specifically it about frivolous lawsuits, and one thing that nancy pelosi and the democrats did right was they organized very early. they knew that there was going to be another round of stimulus. they set some boundaries for what they were going to be for, and they are holding on like red rover, red rover, senate bill right over and they will probably reject it. and the president needs a bill. so these negotiations will not be pretty and it will be very, very expensive, but it is an investment that we need to make to make the economy come back, get people safe, and at the school's back as we try to stay healthy. and thank you for my ted talk. >> greg: there you go. i could tell that you were waiting. dagen, what do you make of this? >> dagen: if you are cynical, which i am, this is a way for
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the democrats to keep unemployment above 10% or even higher going into the november election. so here is the way plays out, you make people more dependent on the federal government, you deny any liability protection for businesses, and they cannot bring people back on the job. they can't hire new workers. you continue the $600 extra per week, which, by the way, when two-thirds of the people on unemployment according to the university of chicago are making more on unemployment than they did in their jobs. so they stay on unemployment, they don't go back to work. and then you also have no school reopening. so all of the moms out there or even dads have to stay at home and take care of their kids, they can't go back to work. you literally wipe out a generation of gains in the workforce for women, but again, it benefits the democrats, because it looks like the economy, pardon my language sucks, and by the way, if this
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is the best that the democrats have to throw bars at term, this is a rich octogenarian limousine liberal, and that's the best they've got, what are you going to do? hit trump with the pocketbook next? >> greg: you know, speaking of the president, juan, i want to play some tape, talking about the death rate that we don't hear enough about, take it away. speak of the mortality rate for patience over the age of 18 is 85% lower than it was in april, think of that. 85%. and 25% lower than europe as a whole. >> greg: so that's good news, juan, right? >> juan: i am all for it. i don't want anybody to die. so that's good news. i think at the dash the counterpoint, greg, would be that we see an increasing number of not only deaths, but you
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know, coronavirus infection. but to get back to your issue about the liability, i mean, it's not uncommon for people to have two sign waivers if they are doing voluntary activities, like if you are going skydiving, you know? or you are going to a trump rally in tulsa in the midst of a coronavirus epidemic. so we see people asked to sign those types of leaders. the difference here, i don't think that it is so much political, except, you are right. obviously democrats and republicans on capitol hill have a difference of opinion. but i don't think it is so political and a sense that you have people concerned about activities that they have to do, which is go to work or be a customer for a business, and they want to feel safe. they want to be sure that any business is making every effort to protect their well-being. and i think what you're seeing the contrary point from the democrats is you can't pass a
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liability waiver that frees business from making the customer safety, worker safety a priority. they want to make sure it. and i think that that is the heart and soul of what is going on here, the contrary idea that somehow you're just letting people run wild, i think that people want to go back to work. i think that people want to do business. i think that we are all anxious for it. but we want to be safe. that's all. >> greg: jesse, i think that we all have gone over though we want to be safe argument to a point that we are trying to get to the next step. we assess the risks and the benefits, we are all adults. nobody wants to get hurt. >> jesse: i agree with juan on one thing that skydiving is as thrilling as going to a trump rally. that was a very astute. on dagen mcdowell, i'm not as cynical as dagen. i don't think nancy pelosi would destroy the country just to get joe biden elected.
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yes, it looks like that by shutting the economy down and opening up the borders, but i think that maybe perhaps she is just more crooked, because she is stressed in the pocket of trial lawyer lobby. because that's who wins. if businesses are not protected and you test positive for covid-19, you call a lawyer, and then you just make a list of all the places you went in the last week, and then you sue your groceries going back grocery store, your pharmacy, and your boss. and then the businesses back up, they are gone, the only ones that remained open, then they are bankrupt after all of this mass litigation. and i can't believe to watch nancy, because i remember watching john boehner, the previous speaker, remember, he used to go on the sunday shows and they would throw razor blades at the guy, nancy pelosi gets up there, and she is treated like angelina jolie promoting a movie, right? it is a softball situation, and then there are questions and areas that you are not allowed
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to ask about. in the nickname deal is ironic, because she is really the leader of the do-nothing congress. they have done nothing except impeach the president which just distracted washington from the pandemic, and we had this great moment in this country where we could have had unity, where we could have fought against a common enemy, the virus and the chinese communist party, and she just threw it all away and made trump the enemy. and you know, like a dad, i am not mad, i am disappointed. [laughter] >> dana: have you heard that before, jesse? >> jesse: i've heard it way too many times, yes. >> greg: usually has manuel will text. coming up, president trump hitting the road and not worried about the polls. we will listen to what he said next. ♪ you turn 40 and everything goes. tell me about it. you know, it's made me think, i'm closer to my retirement days than i am my college days.
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when you buy an eligible phone. ♪ >> juan: we have 99 days to go before november's election, president trump is in north carolina today looking to close the polling gap with the joe biden. the president says he is not worried about poll numbers, take a look. >> we get a lot of suppression polls. we get a lot of fake poles like we have fake news. it's a terrible thing when you look at it. but it was the same thing four years ago. i was losing everywhere. i have poll numbers where i was not going to win every and he states, i win every one of them. the swing states, i was not going to win any coming in i won all of them. i have the same thing this year. this year they have it even closer. >> juan: jesse, the coronavirus is the number one issue for voters right now.
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the president has disapproval rating of like 56 percent on that issue and the fox polling. how can you turn it around in less than 100 days? >> jesse: he is already turning it around. you can tell by his tone and his attitude and his aggressive schedule. joe biden is taking a page out of the clinton playbook. just don't go to any battleground states. joe only goes to delaware and pennsylvania, because it is so close. so far according to my calculations, he has only left his basement three or four times the entire month. that's not going to cut it. remember the polls, hillary was beating trump and every single battleground state and she lost every single battleground state. and remember, she was supposed to compete in georgia, texas, arizona, just like joe biden is supposed to compete there. i will believe it when i see it. if i was his advisors and i am telling joe to just look at these polls that understand sample republicans, avoid it,
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stay home, don't catch covid. i don't know if i was joe, i would want to compete a little harder. joe seems lazy. you have to really want to win. you cannot just expect the incumbent to lose. incumbents don't always lose. who beat an incumbent in the last 50 years? a rock star ronald reagan and who? a very politically gifted bill clinton. joe biden doesn't come close to the political talent of either of those people, so he has really a lot of work cut out for him. >> juan: okay. so dana, one of the key votes in this upcoming election is going to be seniors. and right now both the trump campaign and biden campaign putting money into ads, the biden focuses on the virus, the trump campaign is focusing on the defund the police movement, who do you think comes out on top with those themes? >> dana: i do think that the
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race is probably closer than it does appear on paper and will tighten much more so as we get into the last 99 bottles of beer on the wall days. i think that a couple of things on the senior's point, you have seen in some states including michigan some of the numbers were president trump has improved in the issue of the canceled culture, the historical destruction, the worries about the future of the country, those do matter and seniors are paying attention. however, joe biden's ads on coronavirus and saying that the number of elderly people who died shows that president trump did not care about them, those are starting to come out, so i think that you are seeing definitely the movement on the senior front, the president is recognizing it, and i think it is important to point out that it's just say there was not a pandemic, if at this point in the race joe biden were to fly to colorado and have an event in colorado in the suburbs, one of the things that republicans
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would definitely say is that wow, it looks like joe biden is worried about colorado, and therefore, the trump team has a chance to take colorado i make it read like it used to be, that's what the democrats are saying about the trip to north carolina today. there is -- obviously not everything is perfect and the trump campaign, and i think that they recognize it, and that's why they are going to places like carolina to shore it up. >> juan: so, greg, i want to show you a pole, and what it shows that some good news for president trump, he is winning 42%-31 percent in terms of enthusiasm expressed by his supporters. what do you make of this? >> greg: i think it to -- who is more exciting? joe biting or donald trump? there's not much debate. joe biden's rhetoric is that he is trying to be exciting. he said that the trump
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presidency was a reign of terror, and i was thinking about that phrase, like who is being terrorized? who is doing the terrorizing? these are not trump supporter's looting and burning american cities all across the country now, local problem, trump supporter's are not committing the arson, they are not trashing our cities, but joe has no guts to call that a reign of terror, then he has this old allegedly latch in charge of venting female ep's. you google and the phrase waitress sandwich comes up. having him that female vps is like having me guard your wine cellar. >> juan: dagen, let's pick up on that selection process, because the former vice president indicates that it likely by the end of this week, early next week he will make a choice, who is your pick?
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>> dagen: i don't really have a pick, i don't really care, i know that joe biden does because he has a campaign built on quicksand, you show the enthusiasm for trump supporter's, but biden supporters, a study a short while ago that more than two-thirds of biden supporters back him because they hate trump. health care, premiums going up 4% a year ago that helped president trump when the white house, this year it could be vexing in. you will see regulatory approval for coronavirus vaccines may be several of them coming in october. that is totally possible, that could be a huge turnaround, because this is something that they planned well where they are going to have hundreds of millions of vaccines ready for the american people, because they have thought ahead and already started manufacturing it. he is going to be hitting this hard, in the meantime, what is biden doing?
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♪ >> jesse: more crime and chaos rocking liberal cities this weekend, protesters clashing with police in seattle injuring 59 officers after the stand up turn into a riot. cops in portland discovering ammunition molotov cocktails while investigating a shooting during the 60th night of unrest in that city. the anarchy in america streak, much more than clashes with the cops that we just showed you,
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while property crime is down, violent crime is skyrocketing in a number of cities. murderers are up 95 percent in minneapolis, over 50 percent in chicago, and over 40 percent in new orleans. as you see the list, it goes on and on. greg gutfeld, you know, we have been talking about this, it seems like the entire summer, i think may be two ago maybe when the thing happened it was frivolous, but with portland that heated up again, and now seattle, i don't see the end in sight unless something happens more hard core do you? >> greg: you look at portland, seattle, richmond, now new york city, this is not a local problem, this is now a pandemic. so i have a theory, it is an amazing theory on why the left pretense this is not happening. i called us the game over theory, in early video games that were shorter in length, no plot development, there is no
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need to save the game, you just started over every day you started over a period is how the left deals with issues. we are 60 days into civil unrest, but the left acts like oh, each night it ends and you start over with the same day one argument, which is coming you know, people have a right to peacefully protest even though for 60 days there has been violence, vandalism, and arson, meanwhile, sensible people like you and me we look at it like a game with the developed story line, meaning we autosave all the information, every day we see the accumulation of damage, injury, we keep a leaderboard. we don't pretend nothing happened. we are watching it. we are downloading it. >> jesse: i think right now we are watching new pictures come in as former vice president joe biden is at the capital visiting former congressman john lewis.
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former vice president with his hand at his heart, his wife jill, paying their final respects to the congressman. juan williams, congressman john lewis, civil rights leader, one of the biggest, and now we have joe biden there, kind of the backdrop of the campaign, but also the backdrop of the civil unrest that began from the murder of george floyd in minneapolis, what are your thoughts? >> juan: i think that clearly biden is making an effort to signal that he has at one, not only what john lewis, but with many of those people who are very concerned about black lives matter and the whole notion of the police brutality involved with the george floyd death, jesse, so, this is both i think since earache, because he knew john lewis and they had a relationship. there is no fudging around with that. i think obviously given that we
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are in the midst of a presidential race, there is no avoiding the political aspect, one other quick thoughts which i think if you were watching fox news today, you saw that the casket was taken not only to -- not only to dr. king's memorial here in washington, but to the lincoln memorial and then onto black lives matter plaza right beside lafayette square, and it reminds me in so many ways watching all of the people who came out, all of the people who have understood with the joe biden that we are losing a generation of civil rights leaders at this time, lewis was one of the big six, one of the people who spoke at the march on washington. there is nobody else in that crowd left now, they are all gone. and last week, i guess it was the same day that john lewis, ct vivian died, and he was a voting
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activist who had his bloodshed in selma before he had his school cracked. so i think that in a moment like this, we are celebrating john lewis, but i think it is a moment where we can take a step back to say a generation that made a difference that really changed america, that made voting rights possible is passing on and it is time to praise heroic americans who sacrifice to make us a better country. >> jesse: absolutely, dana, you know, john lewis did so much for the cause of civil rights as juan mentioned. even today, there is still more to be done. on that as we have seen from the outrage over the killing of george floyd, and you see presents again with what looks like speaker nancy pelosi and his wife jill, and your thoughts on joe biden standing there today at the congressman's casket as he weighs in state?
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>> dana: i think one thing we can all learn about john lewis is that over the course of his congressional career, he made friends on both sides of the aisle, and he kept them close to his heart. he was strategic when it came to politics. and he was a great leader for the democratic party, but also, he did not hold any bitterness or resentment against people who had treated him poorly or even physically hurt him, and i think that that is a great lesson. of those peaceful protesters that are out there are following in his lead. the people who are throwing molotov cocktails and setting the fires and basically destroying private property, that was not the example that they set, and there you see joe biden with his hand on the casket saying goodbye to his friend and somebody that we can all learn a lot from. there is a lot to be said for
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great -- grace and forgiveness so that you can all come together and work on things. and i certainly hope that that is possible. until you get to this violence under control in the cities, i agree with greg. it will continue to spread. so local leaders have to figure out a way to step forward, because this is not what the federal government wants to do or should do, but there are people that are in real danger, and john lewis showed the way of how you can deal with really difficult issues, and i know that we have more to do in america, but we have come a long way, and his example and his leadership gave us an opportunity to go from a segregated america to aid you segregated america. again, more to do, but the celebration of his life today has been really something wonderful to see. >> jesse: dagen mcdowell, go ahead.
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>> dagen: this will sound strange and off-base, but john lewis like so many americans left us too soon, because as imation, we have not made enough advancement in cancer research and detection. i remember when he put out the statement that he had been diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer during a routine exam by doctors, and at that time i thought, we just as a nation, whether it is blessed noma with john mccain, pancreatic cancer, lung cancer in people that have not smoked which killed my mother, we have not gone far enough to find them before they are stage 4, and then to treat them. john lewis from diagnosis to his death, he did not get seven months on this earth. and that is a shame. it's something as a nation we need to work together with research and funding and our medical community to change. and change quickly.
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>> jesse: yeah, and greg, i believe joe biden, one of his big campaign promises was that i think he said something about defeating cancer. probably not going to happen in a bill biden administration, but that is a moon shot. if he can put as much as he can into that, that could go a long way into fighting things like pancreatic consular, breast cancer, everything. because as was said, we are losing a lot of people way too soon. >> greg: yeah, i think that everybody, every person you know has been affected by cancer. both my parents, so, i know it pretty well. it's an interesting thing, because a lot of these cancers, they happen to you when you are really old, so it oftentimes because you outlasted other illnesses that you end up with something that finally gets you in her ninth decade, so i always look at the bright side that if somebody can be on this planet
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for 80 plus years, you didn't into just win it, won pretty damn big. i always think that i'm lucky to make it to 50, because it's such an interesting thing to do to be alive. so to make it to 80, to make it to 90, you know, my mom died when she was 89. and i was very sad, but i thought, wow, that's pretty damn good. i hope i get to that point. >> jesse: later in the show we will talk about regis philbin who made it to 88 years old, great career, great long run, and as you said, being alive especially in the united states of america is a gift and a blessing, and we are very grateful for every moment that we have on earth. coming up, more of "the five," stay with us. at's my calling-- to give back to younger people. i think most adults will start realizing that they don't recall things as quickly as they used to
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news for baseball days after the start of the coronavirus shortened season, and will be postponing two games tonight after more than a dozen players and coaches for the miami marlins tested positive for covid-19. is this outbreak an outlier or a sign that america is not ready for pro sports to return? i actually saw, juan, one of the benefits from the team testing early and having a system is that they could catch it early and not have it spread to any other team and therefore you're figuring out a way, how can we get back to work, is it as bad as some people might think? >> juan: this is really a flashing big red light for so many sports, because it is not only that you have some players in baseball come down with a virus, dana, but they can't play in toronto, for example. canada won't let them in. so what baseball is a sport that was going to go city to city inside, and try to exercise
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precautions, no fans in the stands, the like. but it is breaking down. and i think that the biggest warning is to pro football, because, you know, baseball players are at some social distance generally, but you can't do that if i am facing off against you on a front line. i am right in your face. and there is a lot of snorting and spitting and sweating going on. so i just think that this is a huge problem, because i know that so many of us are hoping that we can have a football season, but it does not look rational at this moment. >> dana: and sports is so important to the economy as well, dagen, you tell me, how important our sports to the economy? >> dagen: the baseball season is a phony season, and i hate baseball, but i am worried about football, so to juan's point face-to-face, snorting, spitting, sweating, i am all in. people make fun of mass car, oh, making the right-hand turn, no,
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they can still operate in this environment unlike baseball. >> dana: greg, what about the giants, that is your team, rig right? >> greg: is that some kind of dig about my height? >> dana: it can be if you wanted to be. [laughter] i thought you love to the giants. >> greg: i know, i'm kidding, jeez. where my going to get all of my kneeling? i need to get my kneeling in. >> dana: yeah, you have to say, that was something to see over the weekend. jesse, i will give you the floor for anything you want to talk about, because i know that you are really wanting the football season to get underway. >> jesse: i am so desperate to watch sports, dana, i watched an hour and a half of america ninja warrior. those guys are great athletes.
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i'm also so desperate to gamble, i have not gambled on anything and like the last couple of months. we are now placing bets on when the 5-year-old cousin is going to lose her tooth. i had thursday, and the tooth was lost on monday, so now i o everybody ice cream. that's how bad things have gotten. >> dana: i think that's fair. >> juan: does that include me? [laughter] i'll take the rum raisin. >> dana: he will send you some rum raisin, maybe. we pay tribute to the tv legend regis philbin. ♪ they get that no two people are alike and customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. almost done. what do you think?
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>> we never talked before the show, we did not have elements. we did not have elements and our business. he would hold up the newspaper, and we were off to the races. or i would say, cody threw up and we were off to the races. we never planned it. >> dagen: longtime cohost kathie lee gifford sharing what makes it regis philbin so special. regis passed away this weekend at the age of 88. jesse, there is a lot to talk about in his career, but it was his dynamic personality.
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>> jesse: yeah, it was self-deprecating, it was he never planned anything, so it was all great spit fire off the cuff stuff. he made his cohost looked great, kind of like greg does. but the opposite of greg in a way, because greg scripts everything and regis came out as you heard and flew by the seat of his pants. that's why it was such great television. and i did not even know that he set the record for most live hours on television. i thought that that was brian kilmeade, but i guess regis philbin has been on air more than anybody. you know, it takes a lot to do that. i was always a big fan of "who wants to be a millionaire" that had 30 million viewers in prime time. for those of you who don't understand, that's like eight times the size of "hannity" each night. it shows you how massive of an audience that was. he will be missed. a political too, great guy.
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>> dagen: only a couple of more minutes, you could take shots at everybody who works with us. but what about regis? >> greg: i think that hannity will be calling jesse tonight after the show. regis was successful and kathy lee because they were both authentic and had chemistry. a tv producer once said to me for a show to really work, the host have to hate each other, and then he says, except for regis and kathie lee, and both of them, i have met them, i know kathie lee well, they are exactly who they are. and that's who you should be. be yourself on tv, that should be your real self off tv. >> dagen: juan? >> juan: the key for him was he was friendly, handsome, well mannered, he was just easy to take. it was into that he was a hipster or somehow that he was the youngest guy or the most
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political guy, he was a nice guy. in some ways he is from another time. today i don't know if that would work so well, i put him in with like ed sullivan, mike douglas, haddock, people who you say, that's a nice guy. >> dagen: dana, like you, there is always room for nice people on television. >> dana: i will elbow my way in. younger people won't understand what it is like for dvr when you were not able to watch any show any time that you wanted. if i ever cut school, and i'm not saying that i did, but this is the show that i would watch. i loved it. i love how open they were about talking about their family. you felt like you are a part of their family, and of course our condolences to his wife. >> dagen: i loved regis because he treated all of his time on tv like every moment was a gift. and life on tv, blessings to his
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family. "one more thing" is next. ♪ you're clearly someone who takes care of yourself. so when it comes to screening for colon cancer, don't wait. because when caught early, it's more treatable. i'm cologuard. i'm noninvasive and detect altered dna in your stool to find 92% of colon cancers even in early stages. tell me more. it's for people 45 plus at average risk for colon cancer, not high risk. false positive and negative results may occur. ask your prescriber if cologuard is right for you. i'm on it. that's a step in the right direction.
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that selling carsarvana, 100% online wouldn't work. i'm on it. but we went to work. building an experience that lets you shop over 17,000 cars from home. creating a coast to coast network to deliver your car as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible. and putting you in control of the whole thing with powerful technology. that's why we've become the nation's fastest growing retailer. because our customers love it.
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♪ >> juan: time for "one more thing," let's do this america. all right. you know, what's better than a slop reading of a book? yeah, you know it's better than a slop reading of the book? how about a slop reading of my book because you know and reading my book and you didn't see that one coming, did you? today, it's coming out and midnight tonight and i'll be on tucker tonight whenever to talk about my book. it will save your life because it's the only book that house se
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had to cancel cancel culture. pick it up, barnes & noble, amazon, all right, dana. >> dana: i'm sure somebody out there has a slop and will read it for you. if not i get you a picture of jasper and your book and i'll get that by tomorrow. i have a quick thing and i have a visit you might remember spike and this is a canine companion dog in training and he has some hip dysplasia so unable to do that. he's on the left and there on the bottom right, there is tyrant, named after the tyrant that you see on fox news on the gg show. they came to visit and the cross-country winnebago tribbett and tyrant will be great. that's all. >> juan: all right, jessie, do you have a dog? >> jesse: yeah, unlike dana, not every "one more thing" is about my dog.
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fox nation, baseball in the white house just dropping there and go to fox nation to check it out about the special relationship between two great icons in baseball, joe dimaggio, ted williams, and president george bush. go there now, excellent documentary, i highly highly recommended and not as much is your book, greg, but i highly recommend it. >> greg: excellent. dagan, do you want to say nice things about my book? >> dagen: why didn't i not get a copy of it? where's my copy? >> greg: i left it on your desk. it >> dagen: no you didn't. okay, okay, totally fine. really, quickly, check out that jet ski in the east river, not the first time that this guy has done this. all around new york city but this is another day in the river you don't have to step over all the garbage in the street.
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>> greg: if he is in the east river, the joke is on him because it's disgusting. [laughter] it's true. all right, that's it for us, "special report" is up next with the john roberts. >> john: did you like the jet ski? did you think by makeup looks a good? thanks, greg. good evening, welcome to washington i'm john roberts in her bret baier in breaking tonight president trump sending the question the coronavirus vaccine is a colossal industrial mobilization anything seen since world war ii in the largest vaccine underway tonight with the first of 30000 volunteers. we'll talk live with one of the president's top advisors dr. anthony fauci and senate republicans going to the next financial relief bills in the
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