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

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globally. >> neil: thank you very, very much. we will be exploring as a rush for a vaccine tomorrow at 10:00 eastern time, looking at all the possibilities out there. more than just a few. >> dana: hello. i'm dana perino along with jesse waters, juan williams, gut gull and emily compagno. this is "the five" in new york city. all eyes on a key swing state today. president trump and joe biden are holding duelling event in minnesota. the president is hoping to turn the state red for the first time in decades and joe biden is trying to stop him. here's the former vice president a few minutes ago. >> in the midst of this unprecedented crisis, trump has given up on pretending to do his
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job. as the president just started a week earlier in march than he did, we would have 36,000 more people sitting at the dinner table tonight. how many people across the table? how many empty chairs? because of his negligence and selfishness. >> dana: president trump is set to respond with a great american comeback rally tonight. this comes as they step up the intensity of attack in key battleground states. take a look at this. >> if biden wins, very simple, china wins. if biden wins, the mob wins. if biden wins, the rioters, anarchists and arsoners and flag burners win. >> if the president had done his job from the beginning, all the people would still be alive. this president should step down. >> joe biden devoted his entire career to offshoring wisconsin
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jobs, outsourcing your factories, throwing open your borders. >> really do see this campaign as a campaign between scranton and park avenue. the way we were raised, a lot of hard-working people bust their neck. they ask for a shot. all trump can see from park avenue is wall street. >> dana: jesse, maybe start with you. it's fifth avenue, not park avenue for fact checking here. >> jesse: yeah. you were the only person to fact check joe biden, dana. he got away with a lot of doozies last night. i don't know. i think minnesota is in play. biden is getting spread very thin. he hasn't been to minnesota in 1,000 days. every day he has to go to a state like minnesota which democratic nominees never go to is a day he's not in a state like florida. looks like trump is doing five rallies in five battlegrounds in five days.
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not only that, the whole family is involved. trump jr. is doing five battlegrounds in five. e-- ivanka is do for. it's clear joe biden wants to talk about the coronavirus. right now, minnesota is averaging nine death as day. that's not as big of an issue as this summer. the president has pivoted to the economy and that's great. the economy is in a super v and predicting unemployment at 5% next summer. that is the fastest economic recovery in u.s. history. i know juan wants to talk about the census report that just came out. juan, you can't argue with these statistics. so just sit there and listen. in 2019, the average american household made an extra $4,400.
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it is an all-time high now, median income is $68,000. in three years, the average american family has made nearly $9,000 more under donald trump. under barack obama in eight year, they got a $1,000 raise. income and equality is now squeezing compared to obama and biden where it expanded. the poverty rate is at an all-time low. four million people have been lifted out of poverty under donald trump. that's why the president will hammer the economic message and that's why he will win. >> dana: juan, i'll give you a chance to respond. i did want to ask you a question about minnesota and republicans. is it fool's gold the way texas is for democrats? >> juan: minnesota, dana? >> dana: yes. >> juan: because i think i just saw that biden is up ten in
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minnesota. so -- >> dana: that's what i mean. let me clarify. i should clarify. >> dana: so democrats keep saying they're going to win statewide races in texas. they never do. republicans are trying to win in minnesota and it's been elusive to them. president trump has come closer than most. this time around, you think the republicans will fall short again in minnesota? >> juan: well, you know, obviously there's an opportunity there given the trouble that happened in minneapolis with george floyd, and we've gone over some of the issues like the city council going back and forth on defund or reform the police, however you want to put that together. so i think that the president must think that, you know, that message about law and order and the like has some resonance there. i don't know it's working given what i just said about the polls. but i wanted to respond to jesse as well and say jesse, i think there's a lot of americans that
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are going through real economic pain right now. a lot of that pain, that economic pain in terms of unemployment, specifically, is tied directly to the coronavirus, and we know from the president's own words that he wasn't straight with us -- >> jesse: it's because of the shut down. not tied to the virus. it's the shut down and reopening it back up. >> juan: i'm thinking that when i look at other countries, our peers in the world, they handled it bet e-- >> jesse: that's false, juan. >> juan: our death rate is much higher than other developed countries. what i'm saying, as we americans get together and crush this coronavirus, we can't expect that our economy is going to
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have a resurgence. that means we can't be involved in politicizing masks, politicizing when a vaccine is coming. we can't be putting pressure on our cdc officials and telling them oh, yeah, you're wrong about when the vaccine is coming. that has to stop. i think americans see that. >> jesse: i agree. let's not politicize it. >> dana: the politics is here. greg, listen to joe biden talking about the mask mandate. he still is talking about it. >> i'd like to see the governors enforce mask wearing, period. i can do that on federal property. as president i'll do that. we can have a fine for them not doing it. this is about saving lives. >> dana: what do you make of him not landing on one consistent message? >> greg: that's joe, you know? he will say whatever somebody wants him to say. if he realizes it wasn't the right thing, he will change it. somebody did fact check him.
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john carney. i think over at breitbart. that question that joe thinks is so clever. scranton versus park avenue. he's right. but park avenue supports biden by a factor of 8 to 1 margin. right? and trump gets more money from scranton than park avenue. so that's a good fact check. i have to credit john carney. you know, the thing that he says, if we started a week earlier, we would have saved 30,000 weeks. why doesn't he say a week, two weeks, three weeks? do those lives not matter? or are we starting to get into deeper into the impeachment territory where we knew that we had completely missed this thing because the democrats are obsessed with impeachment? it's funny. he says that trump is responsible for all the deaths.
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he says that data backs him up. that's not true. joe has to be super careful because he's going to run out of room for future demonization. if he keeps making it bigger and bigger and bigger, maybe donald trump next week will be responsible for not all past deaths but future deaths. maybe he can take the responsibility for killing jesus or mlk. the dems have hit a limit on how evil they can portray trump. they stopped comparing trump to hitler not because it was unfair to trump, they thought it was unfair to hitler. they think he's worse than hitler. this have -- it's getting to a point -- it's always been hilarious, watching them create these evil fantasies. i just want to wonder where they're going next, dana. where. tell me. >> dana: once you've gone there, there's no where to go.
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emily? >> greg, there's no limit. i'd like to address the clips that we played in the beginning of this segment. we know that biden plays the union angle. that's why throughout his career, he set up the events. so he relied on them as his comfort zone. while he's palling around with the union bosses, he should be more concerned with the union workers. we know that trump carried more union workers in minnesota in 2016 than any republican since reagan. he's delivered on the promises that he made to them. this administration expedited mining contracts, which is critical in minnesota. he renegotiated nafta. many union members are upset and concerned about the direction that the democratic party is going with gun control and obviously energy. quick final point. remember in july when biden held that virtual event with minnesota union bosses. a few days after he released his environmental plan. the union bosses cheered the plan. a few days later, the workers were polled. they said what was most important to them is steady
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good-paying jobs. what is good paying jobs to them? they associate it with traditional energy and infrastructure jobs. the renewable energy is not the source of it. that's where biden should be concerned. >> dana: there was an exchange on the green new deal last night which we'll talk about possibly coming up. cnn is taking heat after critics laughed at the network for throwing softball questions at joe biden last night. ♪ this is terrorism. the days of entebbe are long over. what do you want? i came here to plea for his life. don't let them take me. we're getting out of here. infidel. rated r. with one protein feels like. what getting fueled with three energy packed proteins feels like. meat! cheese! and nuts!
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♪ >> jesse: basement biden getting the softball town hall of a lifetime last night. cnn getting ripped for going
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easy on the former vp, which stands in stark contrast to how. trump was treated earlier this week during his own town hall with abc. take a look. >> if you were president, could you see a scenario where you down played critical information so as to not cause panic? >> if you believe it's the president's responsibility to protect america, why would you down play a pandemic? >> how will you handle russia's involvement with trump? how will we know he has comprised the united states? >> how do you stop police killing blacks at three times the rate of killing whites? >> what is your plan to build a bridge with voters from the opposing party. >> why did you throw vulnerable people like me under the bus? >> jesse: wow! you look at the montage like that, dana, it's a pretty stark contrast. >> dana: yeah, so, if i were a presidential candidate -- i'm looking down here because i have
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something to read you. it's going to make everyone laugh -- i'd rather be trump than biden in this scenario. the debate is ten days away. you have to practice like you play. and president trump takes tough questions all the time. he bats them around. sometimes he answers fantastically, sometimes it's oh, my gosh, what is he saying? he's used to tough questions. joe biden is not. remember one of the things about joe biden is he does have a temper. if president trump can provoke that temper, that will come off badly. i did want to point this out. the fact checker at cnn said this about joe biden. biden makes some false and misleading claims, but his assertions of fact have been largely factual. so basically letting him off the hook completely. >> jesse: largely factual. greg, what did you think about last night? >> greg: i didn't watch it. it was my sister's birthday. we went out to dinner, went
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downtown to a friend's restaurant call bistro leo. i'm basically playing catch up. i want to the cnn's website. you know how soft cnn was on biden. when they can't deny it on their web suit, al stewart admits joe got away with stuff at the town hall that he wouldn't have gotten away with at a debate. nobody held his feet to the fire. you need a big fire for that. also, not just how they treated trump but also -- i go back to that insidious town hall meeting on gun violence where they propped up that idiot sheriff. they made him seem like a hero and went off and did a witch trial on dana lash. it's like they don't hide their biases very well unlike me. >> jesse: injury the best.
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the coward from broward. emily, take a look at footage here. they made this big announcement at the top that they were going to be socially distant, six feet. when they thought they were going to commercial break, they got up close and personal anderson an joe. >> when we come back, we'll have more questions from the audience from former vice president joe biden. thanks. [applause] >> jesse: oh! do we care about that or is that something that everybody does? >> emily: everybody probably does it. what this indicates, joe forgot that he had to socially distance. we keep talking about this being a softball town hall. it was whiffle ball, guys. friends and family. all of his comments were just accepted. i actually want to focus on one that i found the most galling for maybe a different ran than most. the ivy league comment that he
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made about president trump. we know it was false, of course. many presidents have been presidents without having to ivy league degree. the point to me is that it was an elitist privileged comment and it represents to me the joe biden that is in reality what everyone continues to ignore of his party. it is exactly what the progressives, which are his handlers, are seeking to dismantle with their movement, which is the old white privileged male who furthers the notion that to succeed in this country or have value in this country, you have to have participated in and subscribed to this elitist structure that already exists. i found it pretty telling and like everything else, it went unchecked. >> jesse: yeah. juan, one of the things i noticed with joe and it's not just in this town hall, his trouble answering these questions a lot. he's weakest part is when he talks about climate and energy. fracking and the green new deal. he seems very unsure of himself. he's constantly changing his
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positions with regards to those issues because of his crazy left wing base. do you see that as a problem going forward for him? he's having difficulty there. >> juan: i am interested. i'll listen, jesse. i haven't seen that. i don't see it. what i saw -- first of all, obviously trump didn't have to do the abc town hall with undecided voters asking questions. he chose to do it. he walked in there. i think he's a big boy. he knows what's going on. the big difference to me is not the questions because obviously at the abc hall and also with joe biden, many of the questions came from the audience. it wasn't the journalists that you like to say are so biassed. the big difference here is empathy. it's the two men. joe biden clearly has empathy and donald trump clearly doesn't have empathy. a lot of voters vote on feelings even before they get to climate change and policy.
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what they saw is a demonstration of someone who, you know, when he's asked about pre-existing conditions, doesn't have an answer, someone starts talking to him about someone dying of cancer, he goes off on covid. you know, joe biden gets interrupted by a republican, a republican who says joe, i'm not finished. biden says i'm sorry. go ahead. finishes. that's a big show about who they are as human beings. that was the message and it was not a good message for president trump. >> greg: i've got to say, it's these kind of criticisms -- it's great to say this person doesn't have any empathy. maybe he should provide actual facts to back that up. the guy is sending tons and tons of money that are suffering. he made and incredible economy before covid. ushering in peace deals. but you have this incredible evidence that he lacks empathy. you never tell us what are the actions that are coming from
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that lack of empathy, when his actions are exactly the opposite of that. maybe we should -- if this is the kind of achievements that you're getting from having no empathy, we should all not have empathy. >> jesse: juan? >> juan: yeah, i think what happened in -- we learned with the woodward book that he wasn't straight with the american people and put our health, our families at risk. that's lack of empathy. >> greg: no, it's not. that's a misdiagnosis on your part. >> jesse: some people would say empathy is donald trump's great equality. >> greg: he would say that. >> jesse: being donald trump. up next, only took three months. nancy pelosi finally is getting around to condemning violence. why she's doing it now though? we'll tell you. ♪ hi, i'm dorothy hamill.
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♪ >> emily: welcome back. what took her so long? nancy pelosi is finally condemning the looting and riots after almost four months. here's the house speaker. >> we support peaceful demonstration. we participate in them. they are part of the essence of our democracy. that does not include looting, starting fires or rioting. those are -- they should be prosecuted. that is lawlessness. >> emily: some in the media continue to laugh off the increase in violence. >> you listen to conservative media, you think entire cities are in fights and fire.
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we went out to dinner in new york city. people said thank you, i watch you every night. they did a double take. new york still was not a hell scape, was it? >> the one guy had a machete. no, of course it isn't. >> emily: greg, the laughing over violence is revolting in my opinion. will anyone on the left care? >> greg: i love it when the media admits to their impeccable research. even though there was a 50% speak in murders in new york city from august 2020 to -- don lemon went out to dinner and he wasn't killed. he wasn't murdered. so therefore the whole crime wave never happened. this is the state of journalism. that if it doesn't get close to you, if it doesn't affect your life, it didn't happen. he never went downtown during the looting.
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apparently that didn't happen either, right? i'm going to stop. but it just goes back to the point that they judge their suffering by how it affects them, which is why nancy is involved. it will affect her politically. >> emily: juan, in some cities, including ones by me here on the west coast, the looting and rioting is continuing. it's still going. why did it take this long for speaker pelosi to condemn it? >> juan: i think -- i can't think of one democrat that condones rioting, looting and fires. obviously joe biden condemned it. i think that nancy pelosi -- you know, she should have done it sooner if that's the point, emily. i would have embraced it. she's done it. no matter how slow she's been, she's faster than donald trump has been in condemning what the fbi director said just yesterday is the number 1 source of a
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threat to the homeland, which is white supremacist violence. he's never condemned that young man that -- >> greg: that's not true. he condemned white supremacy. i'll e-mail it to you, juan. >> juan: fine. i appreciate it. he's never condemned that guy that killed a security guard in oakland. so i mean, this is -- to me it's like a double standard. >> emily: jesse, i'll let you respond to that and how that might help the president during this election season. >> jesse: he was asked to condemn whatever happened in oakland, i'm sure he would condemn it. cuomo is on cnn saying where in the constitution does it say that protests have to be peaceful? jerry nadler said, oh, antifa, that is a myth. you have governors and mayors refusing to call in the national guard and letting their cities burn. come on, juan. you saw what happened all
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summer. it's crazy. >> juan: yeah, yeah. >> jesse: you've seen the footage, juan. you're on the show. >> juan: what city burned down? come on. >> jesse: minneapolis. >> jesse: kenosha. >> greg: did you see the insurance damage? it's a big joke. >> juan: you guys make it out like cities burned down. this is total exaggeration. >> jesse: where did $2 billion in insurance costs come from? you think that is insurance fraud? >> emily: if your livelihood was on one of those blocks -- sorry. dana, what are your thoughts? >> dana: look, i think that nancy pelosi probably is looking at some polling and realizing that it's hurting democrats. however, the law and order message is not helping president
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trump in battleground states as much as the economic message. that's why you see the pivot. >> emily: okay. ahead college campuses going to extreme to stop covid. how they're cracking down next. ♪ st 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.
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>> juan: a major covid crackdown on some of america's top college campuses. they're going to the extreme after outbreaks all over the country. new york university reportedly suspended an online-only student that lives off campus, but they suspended him indefinitely for atenneding a rooftop party. the student was caught on video and the video was reported to school administrators. in order to return to class, he has to write a reflection paper.
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meanwhile, ohio state joining other colleges in officially cancelling spring break because of covid-19. greg, i think if i was that young man's dad, i'd be upset. i wouldn't like it. on the other hand, i come to you because i want to hear your thoughts. nyu is a private school. there's no rules about this. there's no guidance. so why shouldn't they set their own rules to protect students and professors? >> greg: i guess you're right. they can do it if it's a private school. but i'm very, very -- i'm heart broken over no spring break. so many casualties. think of the industries that are going to suffer with no spring break. okay? the companies that sell crash diets. millions try to fit into that bikini like two weeks before spring break. and then there's the jell-o shot industry. this is said to be their christmas season. what about the creepy dudes that
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do the sleazy contests like wet t-shirt? they'll be lonely. what about the badly translated tattoos that you only get on spring break? without spring break, no college romances ever break up. right? you come back and there's a picture or a text and then it's over. you'll be stuck with the same person for four years. >> juan: oh, my gosh. jesse, what about the absence of national guidelines for these colleges? >> jesse: like you said, it's a private deal. as someone who has written a few reflection papers, that's punishment, juan. the last thing this kid wants to do. this is not an illegal act. he didn't commit a crime. if you take this out even further, you can say if someone is having unsafe sex off campus,
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then they can be suspended because there's a chance that they can catch a disease and spread the disease all over campus endangering the health of the entire quad. you can't do that. so i don't think this guy will write a reflection paper. i think he's going to write a letter and his lawyer will sign it and he's going to get out of this. trust me. >> juan: oh, okay. dana, i wanted to shift a little bit to nashville. apparently some of the city officials there withheld data about low infection rates, and people are upset. they say you're not being transparent. >> dana: well, i don't know a ton about this story. i know there's a lot of interest in it. i have a lot of friends in nashville sending this around. local officials will have to answer any questions that there are about these things. i don't think there should be national guidelines. i think decisions are best made at the local level whenever
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possible. in some cases you have universities, these huge spikes. i know this is happening in utah. you also have this really confusing messages. the university of georgia, for example, announced that they would be having football. they would have fans in the stands but they would not be able to host in-person voting. that got turned around. that doesn't make any sense. i think that a national mandate for any of these decisions is not a good one. local decisions are best even if they're tough and complex. >> juan: yeah. i agree. emily, attorney general barr, one of your fellow lawyers, he said that these restrictions on having people locked down, moving, all that, he says incredibly to me, this is an intrusion, invasion of your civil rights. it's akin to the worst invasion of almost equal to slavery. isn't that a bit much? >> emily: well, the point he's
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trying to make is one that is really valuable here, which is that if our constitutional rights are being infringed, the law doing it needs to be narrowly tailored to further that legitimate goal that application should be happening all over the country. i want to make a quick point about that poor nyu student. he was following new york city public law. nyu didn't have a more restrictive policy at that point. literally he was following the rules and still got publicly shamed. the saddest part about it, he will probably lose his scholarship because he was suspended. even if the reflection paper works. he can't afford that tuition. he already has a job offer. that job offer is contingent of him getting the diploma that he can likely no longer afford what we're watching play out is real-word consequences for these hair on fire, knee jerk decisions being made just to
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make a point. >> juan: let's hope jesse's later comes through for him. fan mail friday up next. ♪ our retirement plan with voya gives us confidence... ...so we can spend a bit today, knowing we're prepared for tomorrow. wow, do you think you overdid it maybe? overdid what? well planned, well invested, well protected. voya. be confident to and through retirement. to deliver your packages. and the peace of mind of knowing that important things like your prescriptions, and ballots, are on their way. every day, all across america, we'll keep delivering for you. every day, all across america, 20 associate cart pusher.urly the different positions i've had taught me how to be there for others. ♪
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♪ >> greg: yeah. fan mail friday. we're answering your questions. all right, from frenchy, haven't heard from her in awhile. who is your most interesting friend? jesse? >> jesse: i think i'm the most interesting friend of my friends. besides me -- [laughter] >> greg: you should have said your wife. >> jesse: my wife. she's so interesting. i'm so interested in her. >> greg: there you go. you're disgusting. emily? >> emily: i have a million interesting friends. i will choose one, however, right now. she was born on an island to a navy father. sort of a weekend mother. so she had this half hippy, half military existence.
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she's incredibly intelligence. majored in philosophy and dance. has had this amazing career doing all of these things. now she's an emt firefighter here in washington state. she's incredible and everything out of her mouth is interesting and refreshing and unique. she's beautiful inside and out. >> greg: sounds like a real bore. what does that have to do with twilight? that sounds literally like twilight. juan? >> emily: her name is bella. >> greg: one, who is your most interesting friend. it's okay to say me. >> juan: it's okay? okay. greg is my most interesting, compelling and intellectual friend. i'd say so, yeah. >> greg: do you have an authentic one? >> juan: you're doubting my
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capacity? my empathy? you know, i know -- what is interesting, i know a lot of people in politics, greg. boy, i tell you, they go up and down and all around. i don't know. sometimes i think are we really friends? yeah, we hang out, i guess. i don't know. it's difficult. >> greg: dana, how about you? don't say jasper. >> dana: a lot of thoughts. jasper is up there. i'm going to say president george bush. >> jesse: oh, name drop, why don't you? >> juan: a great one. >> dana: comfortably smug, too. >> greg: i have so many interesting friends. i'm going to take one that is not interesting. brian kilmeade. >> juan: whoa! what about to lou? >> greg: lou is the most interesting man in the world. apparently he sold a lot of t-shirts yesterday. he owes me a cut.
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who is your favorite tv mom? dana? >> dana: oh, gosh. marge simpson. >> greg: that's a good one. a great one. >> juan: i like her. >> greg: juan, would you agree or pick a different one? >> juan: i'm old. i like samantha. remember bewitched? i like her a lot. >> greg: elizabeth montgomery. i wonder what tabatha is up to? >> juan: great memory, she was easy on the eyes, emily. your favorite tv mom. >> emily: okay.i'm like losing my mind freaking out. i'll have a ton come to my head later. this moment, i'm thinking of do downton abby or maybe that character in revenge, the mom. she was the ultimate villain. know who i'm talking about? >> greg: no.
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>> dana: no. >> jesse: no. >> emily: really? the executive producer does. i'll go with her. >> greg: all right, jesse. >> jesse: was aunt becky a mom? >> greg: aunt becky? >> jesse: "full house". >> dana: she was an aunt. >> greg: is she going to jail? >> jesse: yeah. she's in jail right now. i liked her. >> greg: here's an idea. prison mom. maybe that's a bad idea. my favorite tv mom, marge simpson is the best but i'm going with the mom that i grew up with, mrs. cleaver from "leave it to beaver." barbara billingsley, who -- i wasn't she in airplane? didn't she speak jive on the plane? >> dana: yes. >> greg: wow. huh? >> juan: i didn't know that. >> greg: yeah, yeah. that just came to me. hugh beaumont, i love hugh
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♪ >> dana: that there. before we get to one more thing, we have a big surprise in store this monday. we would love to tell you what it is, but it's a secret. you'll have to join us on monday to find out. can't wait. it's time for "one more thing." i'll go first. look at north dakota for a moment. there's a community there that did the most amazing thing for a man named lance unjum. he had a heart attack while tending to his crops. his combine caught fire. more than 60 foarmers put their crops on hold to help out.
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they had a seven-hour harvest.they didn't want to let the crop to go unharvested. would have been major for the family. helping out was common sense. lance was hospitalized and in stable condition and feels good about his neighbors. >> emily: love that. >> dana: greg? >> greg: the greg gutfeld show tomorrow at 10:00 p.m. i have what's her name. kat timpf and hopefully emily and joel pollak and tyrus. ♪ literally great. day six of my nfl boycott. i'm watching different sports like this ball game with my friends. check out these cats. they're joining me. like how interested they are in this game. very interesting. cute. they are adorable except that
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mustache looks a little fascist on the right. could be, you know, just a chance. can't control that spot there >> dana: excellent. >> greg: thank you. >> dana: very good. greg? >> jesse: i'll see your cats and raise you some dogs. does jasper ever do is this? drinking raindrops. he's thirsty. that's what happens when you don't put water out for him. >> greg: poor puppy. >> jesse: beautiful. speaking of drinking, "water's world" 8:00. you ever have a show where you feel drunk but you're not? this is one of those shows. you feel good, felt loose, felt drunk. in is a show like that. >> greg: it's not live? >> jesse: greg, i hate you. [laughter]
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>> dana: okay. juan? >> juan: okay. so wild fires have been burning through the west in the last month, as you know, leaving thousands homeless. 30 dead. but the heroism of the people fighting the fires caught the attention of a 5-year-old carver that lifts in northwestern oregon. yes, that's baby yoda, the plush doll and little carver sent the dahlia -- doll. now pictures of baby yoda being held by firefighters have their honey facebook page and attracted thousands of followers. way to go. >> dana: that is awesome. >> emily: i'm a ford girl but ram is doing something awesome. they have a built to serve series. in honor of the united states
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air force's 73th birthday, they have the built to serve pickup trucks. they're built by veterans. all of these are honoring the five branches of the military. >> dana: that's it for us, everybody. don't miss our big surprise monday. >> good evening. welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. early voting gets underway in four states. big lines in virginia. voters going to the polls in minnesota. both presidential candidates are spending time in that battleground state today. joe biden was in duluth. president trump will have a rally in about an hour. the president said he's sending billions to puerto rico to help with the economy there. we go to john roberts on

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