tv The Five FOX News May 20, 2022 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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and ironically, the big companies raising wages, now are being unionized, go figure. thank you so much. >> it's true. >> charles: appreciate it. thanks for watching this week, it's been a grueling week on the stock market side. remember, though, picking up the coverage tomorrow morning at 10:00 a.m., and you have to catch me on "making money," finish now by watching "the five." >> jeanine: hello, everyone, it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." >> i'm not -- absolutely no intention of the democrats not winning the house in nova scotia. i think that in terms of our work that this president has done has been a great president.
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i don't know about polls, but i do know about winning the races one district at a time. >> jeanine: utterly delusional nancy pelosi says everything is awesome in joe biden's america and that democrats deserve to be rewarded in the midterms. meanwhile, back in the real world, the president is setting records again for all the wrong reasons. biden's approval hitting a record low in the new a.p. poll. just 39% of the country thinks he's doing a good job. but record inflation is crushing americans' wallets and surging gas prices setting a record for 11 days in a row. and now projected to go up to $6 this summer. the biden administration does not want to talk about it. >> do you believe that gas prices are too high? >> completely understand the crunch that so many americans are under right now. i think that americans are still
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recovering from this terrible pandemic and there are a lot of other world events that are making things difficult for all of us. >> so it sounds like you are unwilling to say that gas prices are too high. >> we are doing all we can. >> and if you think they care about lowering the price of gas, kamala harris would rather boast about school busses going green. >> think about it. yellow school busses are our nation's largest form of mass transit. how about that. every day -- so, yeah, and let's applaud, it gives them where they need to go. i've spoken to a number of drivers, for example, who have recently switched to electric busses and they stressed the importance of a quiet engine. it helps the drivers hear the road. >> ok, it's important to hear the road when you are driving a school bus. but you know what, i want to start with you, katie. when nancy pelosi says i have
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absolutely no intention of losing the midterms this year, does she know something that we don't? >> it's almost like they know they are so screwed they are not trying, and throw up their hands and be in denial, nothing else they can do to turn the ship around at this point. focussed on the wrong issues, talk about things that americans are not, you know, thinking about at their dinner tables when they are looking at the budgets and so maybe she knows something that we don't, but the fact that all these democrats are retiring from congress, the fact that republicans have generic ballot numbers we have not seen in decades and democrats are losing the very demographics, they would say, like hispanics in texas, for example, they are leaving the party in droves. so not only are they wrong on the issues, but their party is bleeding voters as well. >> jeanine: you know, it's interesting, jessica, that
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kamala talked about the green school busses, finally found something to talk about. >> that is unkind, judge. >> jeanine: in charge of the border and not come up with any ideas other than, you know, i have not been to europe either. >> true. the school busses, i think it's important to have green school busses, i think bus drivers are incredibly important and they keep our kids safe and don't want them hitting a kid crossing the street. it's not about what everyone is talking about at the kitchen table, they are talking about inflation, the cost of food, their wages, all those kinds of things. nancy pelosi is the leader of the party and the house, she's not going to come out and say you know, we are hoping for 30 lost seats and not 60, when republicans lose in a wave they don't say that as well. but switching what you are talking about is something obviously people should start doing and if we look at the results from tuesday, there were some progressives who did not win the heat, but moderate
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democrats prevailed and you saw in pennsylvania, john fetterman pivoted his campaign halfway through to stop talking like bernie sanders and more like lamb and he won every county in pennsylvania. and biden is less popular among hispanics than any other demographic. the only two groups where biden is over the 50% mark is black voters at 65% and white college educated women, 58%. you cannot win an election with just those two groups and look at the enthusiasm gap and karl rove was on with jesse and had his whiteboard, you can see the uptick in republicans coming out, and the first midterm of a presidency, it's undoubtedly concerning. >> jeanine: ok. you know, lawrence, if the gas
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prices go up and i understand that the state of washington is anticipating that gas is gonna go up to $10 a gallon, yeah, that's what they actually said, you know, the democrats refuse to accept any responsibility, you know, when it's -- it's not just the energy secretary who says oh, but i had a magic wand, but it's the interior secretary we just heard from that you just saw. they are -- they are happy to not do anything and just kind of say it's putin's fault when america does not believe it's putin's fault. they could change the numbers if they wanted to. >> you know, judge, the issue, i was just in west virginia and pennsylvania. one lady told me that she is deciding between, if she was going to fill up her gas tank or is she going to pay a bill. that's a big problem for voters, it does not matter if i go to atlanta or philly or west virginia, it's the same story. but the democrats were in a
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pickle from the very beginning. if you are going to run for office, you need a great story to tell. obama was hope and change, trump was make america great again but it was the forgotten men and women. joe biden was restore the heart of america. he didn't have to focus on the issues that much because 56% of american, according to gallup said they were better off under trump than biden. so there was not really much that he could say was going bad for the country, but the tone of the country, i mean, when you got donald trump going in there fixing all the stuff, he came in with a wrecking ball, he did not create a lot of r friends in washington. joe, you have the luxury to think about tone when everything is going well financially for you. but when mamas can't get stuff at the store for their babies, gas prices are going up, when the border is out of control, people don't feel safe in their communities, i guess he could run on promises made, promises kept. he did restore the soul of the
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country, but what do we get in exchange? we got a hot ass mess. >> jeanine: we did, i think, you know, joe biden promised that he would be the adult in the room and he would bring us together, and i think it was joe manchin said my frustration is at an all-time high and he slammed biden and the interior secretary holland for doing nothing to alleviate the pain that americans are going through. it's the inability to emphasize i think the democrats have the real problem with. >> and i am good at empathy. i am a hot ass empathizer, lawrence. someone should tell nancy that you can't preserve political power like with a shot of botox. it's not a frown line, it's a gas line. she doesn't know what she's doing. the problems are real, they are palpable, and amazing how many problems have developed under biden that were supposed to
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develop under trump. because trump was inexperienced, right, he was a bafoon, perceived bafoon and what happened, everything that was supposed to happen is now happening under biden. like you were worrying about monkeypox and get hit by a truck and that truck happens to be joe biden. we always hear from addicts you have to hit rock bottom before you change, what the heck is the rock bottom for democrats. we are just watching the gas prices go up. watching crime still spiral out of control, high illegal immigration. there's no solutions, right. they are not offering any solutions. we don't know what the new bottom is, what the new low is. we could have $20 gas if we don't think about it. the problem with joe, then i'll stop, it's a double barrelled problem. you have an empty vessel, joe, in a natural state of decline, let's be honest, that's not to be mean, just observing what we see, but to fill the void is
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wokism. so you are fitting the problems in a hole because biden was not surrounded by moderate voices, only surrounded by wokesteres, hence it's getting worse. i don't know what the bottom is, i wish i did. >> jeanine: i wish we could get to it to crawl out of this. a fox news alert. we have a federal judge's decision on title 42. the united states judge has just blocked biden's plan to lift covid border restrictions for migrants, keeping it in place. trump-era policy that let border patrol agents deport large groups of migrants over safety concerns, that comes as border apprehensions hit a new record in april with 234,000 migrant encounters. ok, you can see it right up there, 2,000 -- 234,000. what do you say about this?
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i'll start with you, katie. >> well, you know. this is a good thing according to texas d.p.s. and border patrol trying to stem the flow, but it's not going to cut down on the numbers, it was put in place to keep the issue at bay. as we know already, the border patrol and i.c.e. are already having to release a number of individuals already into the country depending on where you are from. and also until the asylum rules are changed you can say something other than i'm afraid to go home, that's what gets you your ticket to any city in the country, really, if you are not a single adult male, the flow will continue. so i think that law enforcement officers will be happy about this decision but they will say they still have major challenges. a lot of the numbers you have seen, most all the numbers have been under title 42 and it has not been a total deterrent. >> bill is live in eagle pass, texas with the latest from the
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border. hi, bill. you are on, bill. >> hey, guys, breaking news as you are right now, just hearing the federal judge has blocked the administration effort to drop this on monday. border patrol agents and d.p.s., it's well come news but all it's going to do is kick the can down the road. title 42 will have to drop at some point in the future, but not on monday. we have seen an explosion in numbers. we had more than, you know, well over 230,000 migrant apprehensions, the highest in history, and more than 1.3 million illegal crossings since the start of the fiscal year. even with title 42 in place, explosion of numbers. what this means now, for certain countries, certain demographics, the u.s. government will still be able to expell them back to mexico, meaning that you know, we have shown this video where once people come across and are
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detained by border patrol, rather than take them to the processing center and paperwork for hours, they can put them right back to a bus, drop them off at the port of entry and expell them back to mexico. it can take less than an hour. they have used it more than 1.7 million times since march of 2020, that being the trump administration and the biden administration. front line border agents will be happy to hear this news because i've been texting with them for the past several weeks, ever since news came down they were planning to get rid of this on may 23 and they were basically saying buckle up, it's going to be total anarchy and chaos at the border. d.h.s. own projections were saying upwards of 18,000 illegal crossings a day could have happened if title 42 were to drop. 540,000 crossing in one month. more than half a million. and put that in perspective, more than double what we just saw last month in april, which was the highest in u.s. history. so, probably a little bit of a
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sigh of relief for border agents and texas law enforcement, but not too much. these numbers have been exploding even with title 42 in place. you don't have well over 200,000 apprehensions at the border month after month without there being a serious surge at the border and we have been showing the video all day long. we keep getting the massive groups of 150 to 200 crossing every single day. so what does this mean big picture, the administration cannot get rid of title 42 on monday as planned, they have to keep enforcing it while the litigation plays out. back to you. >> jeanine: bill, you know, when you say 1.7 million since 2020 have been sent back because of title 42, how do they make a decision that someone should be sent back based on title 42? we were not even covid testing the people. how do they make that decision? >> really it depends what country they are from and what the demographic is. it started off with the northern
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triangle countries. guatemala, honduras, el salvador. we had agreements we would put them on flights or kick them back to mexico. and do the same thing with mexicans. along the way once the administration's changed, deals changed with countries in the northern triangle. nicaraguans, they will not take the citizens back unless they have a passport. cuban, we don't have a title 42 with them, and venezuela, and one of the criticisms has been the biden administration can just, you know, put them on a bus and send them back to mexico. for some demographics, they prefer to put them on an airplane and send them back, and you know, yeah, the border patrol union says if we really want to enforce title 42 across the board, kick everybody back
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to mexico. administration has not done that. they have preferred to try to fly some people back and when the host countries don't cooperate they can't do it. >> jeanine: i understand. thank you very much, bill. the question i'm getting at lawrence is the fact that the decision to send people back to the original country has nothing to do with 42. they are saying 42. but if nicaragua won't take them back, what does it do for 42 or not. seems 42 is used in some cases but not others. >> based on the report and i've done it at the border, 42 has been used as a band aid. it's not going to fix the mass problem at the border. on another note, did the biden administration a favor here. but number two, as a result of the judge making this decision, a lot of women and children are going to be placed in danger coming across the border. a lot of the folks ask why are
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they bringing the children across the border, it's a ticket. they know they can get across and that -- this is why you don't see a lot of people running away at the border. most of the runners that you see are single adult males because they realize they can't come into the country under title 42. so this is going to put our border patrol agents yet again in a bad position but again, it's going to put these kids and these women in a bad position as well. joe biden needs to understand this. this is going to be a terrible issue for those democrats on the border areas. they are democrats at heart. what they are saying if they cannot do this, they understand the voters are putting a lot of pressure on them because of this issue, and i'll note this, i know jess is going to hop in on this. latinos as well, over 50% are minority. the texas d.p.s. doing a lot of the patrols, they are minorities. look at the districts at the
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border, they are minorities. it's not a matter of if you hate the people and want a better life, this is about law and order and the strain of resources in the area. >> jeanine: the point lawrence makes is a good one, how is it going to affect the democrats along the board running for office? >> it gives a few more months to listen to democrats, one will be challenging sinema in 2024 in arizona, and feels like a time to put together a commission, a republican retired from congress, and get them together for a bipartisan plan. we have title 42, it was a band aid and a thoughtful conversation on the show yesterday about this issue where it was acknowledged this is a health policy. title 42 came into being because of covid.
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we are moving towards a world where hopefully covid is not something that should be running the immigration policy, what is the next step. hopefully now we have a few months, the summer, very high numbers of crossings to deal with that, and we can go into november with the clear plan. >> jeanine: ok, wrap it up for us. >> it is a testament to how appealing our systemic racist country is that millions of nonwhites want to come here. as long as we care about immigration, it's like crime and inflation, the white house won't because in their view we only view these concerns because we are deplorables embracing replacement theory. when all it is, whether it's crime or inflation or immigration, it's about process. it's about rules. it's not about people. we are a big -- republicans and conservatives and libertarians, we are all about systems. we just want you to be part of the system and do it the right way, and so what's happening now, you see a lot of people painting a broad brush of the
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racism stuff and their way of doing it here like they did with crime elsewhere. >> jeanine: go ahead, katie. >> the bigger issue of the system, bill reported there was an american citizen arrested in texas for helping to smuggle illegal immigrants across the border. bigger picture, the longer this lawlessness goes on and the mission is to process people, not to enforce the border and protect the country, that corruption will breed and it will get completely out of control. it will reach public officials, law enforcement, so there is a longer term consequence to allowing this type of lawlessness to continue and once it's in those systems, we look like the mexico corruption and that's a lot of reason why it's happening as well and once you get to that point, it's difficult to go back. >> jeanine: the sad part about it is with the administration flying people into the interior of the united states, that corruption will spread quicker than we can imagine. all right, we are going to keep an eye on this breaking news.
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getting called out for living large while the people they claim to be helping were being killed in the streets. group using $90 million in donation money to purchase lavish mansions and enrich the friends and family of their co-founder. but that did not translate to saving the lives of black americans. instead, they bore the brunt of the surge in murders following the george floyd murders in 2020. the manhattan institute, the increase in violence disproportionately affected black victims. but the co-founder cullors says
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she's the victim in all of this. >> much of the funding that came in was from individual donors, that was a lot of white guilt money. some of my mistakes are being weaponized against me and also the entire movement and that is truly disappointing to see us fall into that as well. >> katie: lawrence, you are laughing at this one. >> lawrence: such a joke, they all got played and i'm enjoying every bit of this. there was the woke tax and then there was the white guilt tax. the woke tax was for the corporations, i don't believe in any of this stuff. look at the corporations, not as woke as they pretend to be. but they had to pay black lives matter in order to not be boycotted or -- that was their protection, got to pay the king his tax. as for the individual donors, they must not have any black friends. because black people weren't supporting the organization black lives matter -- black
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folks on the street were saying equal justice under the law. they never said support this organization. many of the values the organization represents are totally against how i was raised and most black people were raised in our community. we never supported -- we always thought the organization was a joke. we also didn't support defunding the police. if you look at pew research, there are more white people that support defunding the police than actual black people. so, are who are these people listening to? not black people. >> katie: a lot of civil rights leaders in the 1960s came out against black lives matter early and their voices were not amplified by the media. greg, your response to white guilt money. and white liberals sending all this money to b.l.m. thinking they were doing something good and putting a yard sign up. >> greg: she's right, it is white guilt money, and angry college chicks, and then i go to
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the suburbs and you see the list signs, they are just like -- it's like what does all this is, is -- like a massive delusional virtual signal. if i do this, i'm a good person and almost as if b.l.m. did not exist for blacks, it existed for the white liberal to feel good about themselves, the earnest wokesters in human resources, we don't just make candy bars, none of the stuff the supporters did helped anybody in terms of statistic, criminality. it's kind of sad but b.l.m. hurt more blacks than it helped. when you look at the numbers, it's stunning. >> katie: judge, what about the extortion b.l.m. was engaged in, the riots and violence would continue, that's what happened.
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>> jeanine: here is the question. the corporations that gave the money consider themselves extorted, did they do it for virtue signalling as greg just talked about, or do it because they felt they did not want to be boycotted or, you know, like, you know, it's like the mob coming in and saying you know, you want protection money, give us -- you want protection, give us the money. you know what's most interesting about this, the nation's political culture has played a role in the crime that occurred during the pandemic and right after george floyd's murder because we know that in democrat-leaning cities more african americans were killed, victims of murder, than there were in white-leaning republican cities. so, the same time the crime is going up in the black communities you have this patriss cullors, no better than a two-bit scammer that i prosecuted for years. whether she wants to call it white guilt does not matter, she
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enriched herself, her baby daddy, her brother. she gave more than five times the money for the trayvon martin foundation to her baby daddy, ok. and i think that these people have to be prosecuted. forget about the corporations. you know what, they got suckered, they get suckered all the time and i'm disgusted with them. that's not the big issue. the big issue is this woman is now complaining that it's weaponized against her? you know what, let me show you the penal code. that's being weaponized. when they bring the justice system against you for the scamming the way they just did to an activist b.l.m. leader in boston who faces fraud charges for laundering 2020 donations for personally enriching themselves. we need the hand of justice to come in and prosecute these people. it's not your piggy bank and how dare you cause division because you want to make money for yourself. >> katie: jessica, my colleague who covered the riots extensively wrote a book and
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it's interesting how he talked the damage is not temporary. so when the cameras leave and the rioters leave, the black communities have been devastated for decades and there's no one there, there's no economic influence to go in as a result of the damage that's been done, and so the question is, how did the same people who donated all this money to b.l.m., the white guilt money, now make up for the fact they were supporting a movement that has destroyed entire communities for at least a generation? >> jessica: in defense of white guilt, give me a second here. >> greg: and baby daddies. that's a better name for pregnant man is baby daddy. >> katie: okay. [laughter] >> jessica: more on the white guilt. it isn't fair to me to tarnish a group of people who were genuinely horrified by what they saw, and this is across the board, right, everyone unilaterally saw what happened to george floyd, everyone. >> jeanine: everyone.
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>> jessica: and they did what they thought was right, there was a prominent organization that was saying that they -- >> lawrence: prominent among who, white people. >> jessica: but if you are just an average person putting food on the table and you saw the footage, you know, the 8 and 3-quarters minutes of what happened to george floyd and see someone on the television saying i run an organization that is trying to fix this problem. p there is systemic racism and criminal justice reform issues need to be pushed forward and if you donate to me i will help. that it's their fault for not doing the research on who cullors is? >> lawrence: they got -- and it is -- such a typical white liberal response and if we just throw money on it, if we go -- >> jessica: everything can't be white liberal fault. it's not possible that everything is. >> lawrence: it's impacting black america and all the policies you guys have implemented in our communities are white liberal responsibilities. we don't endorse them in our community. all i'm saying, it was lazy, it
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was petty, i was -- >> jessica: it was not malicious. >> lawrence: jessica, i was at the rallies with all white people there, they told them to stop burning the places and they continued to do it, and weaponmized the police against us. i was there, and they did, and they divide the country, again, it's their fault for being suckered. >> jessica: i'm the first person to say the fact that latinx exists as a term is a white person problem, latinos do not like that term, it's the same thing that black people were not supporting b.l.m. but were supporting the movement and it's unfair to say that cities and communities and the small mom and pop shops have been decimated just because of that. we have an education problem, we have a media problem that people are not publicizing these stories necessarily from the beginning to say this is who those people are. and also that people were not thinking widely enough. what the black lives matter movement was actually about was
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systemic racism in all corners of the country so people could donate to free speech organizations. >> lawrence: i'm -- >> jeanine: systemic racism in the country, if you said white lives matter you got canceled. don't talk to me across the board systemic. >> jessica: the reason that white lives or blue lives matter or -- >> jeanine: whoever heard of them. it's not an organization just in defense of lawrence, that was around for ten years as a charity. >> lawrence: they got suckered. >> katie: i've been writing about black lives matter since 2014 and who they are. >> greg: i founded it in the 1980s. >> katie: now we know the truth about them. ♪♪♪ your spirit is stronger than your highs and lows. your creativity can outshine any bad day. because you are greater than your bipolar i,
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♪♪♪ >> lawrence: yeah, that's some hip-hop, greg. so first up, liberal npr reportedly has a system that people can snitch on the people not wearing the masks, repeat offenders can be fired. >> greg: the left always had an obsession for authority, draconian, there is a company that sends employees home for five days and even if you don't have covid and wear a mask ten days even if you test negative and the rules are arbitrary. but the employees have to do it, it's like a new lockdown. we are all either -- oh, wait, it's our company. oh, yes, we are actually held
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captive by some anonymous legal executive that is like terrified of some like, i don't know, is it -- is it new york? we have to stop this. we cannot crapping on npr or anyone else as if we are the same, we are sending people home who are healthy. we have people at home testing negative, nobody even had symptoms this. is madness and it has to stop. >> jeanine: i went home because i was sick but didn't have covid. >> greg: you know -- >> jeanine: what does that mean? you did not miss me, you were not here. >> greg: i sent you flowers. >> jeanine: you did not send me flowers. >> lawrence: i still need my job. >> greg: i would rather be sent home for saying the truth than a negative covid test. >> jeanine: you could be a carrier. >> greg: i am a carrier of many
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things. >> lawrence: move on -- all right. up next, a prank, a texas high school gone haywire and causes thousands in damage and forcing the school to cancel classes for the remainder of the year. the fire extinguisher filling the cafeteria, the students responsible will have to pay for the mess they created and may face criminal charges. jessica, did you do this in high school? >> jessica: i did not, and chevy chase went to the high school and he walked a cow up to the roof because they cannot go backwards, and this is total real, and very chevy chase. >> katie: i love the story, i helped plan the senior prank and flawless and white boards and maps and radios, and we had outfits, looked like ninjas. the key is you don't cause damage. you do something annoying but
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don't vandalize anything. we filled 10,000 dixie cups up with water and filled the school and zip tied all the doors together. and we did not get caught -- >> greg: our senior prank, we pranked seniors, like senior citizens. [laughter] break into their homes and move everything around so they would wake up in the morning and walk into furniture, it's a terrible thing. i think it's bad. the school janitor gets to go to each student's house to do the same thing to their bedroom with a fire extinguisher. you know, the janitor will have to deal with the stuff, do the same thing to the students' bedrooms, or maybe the whole house. that will be fun. >> jeanine: i skipped my senior year of high school. >> too smart for that. >> jeanine: i was done, i went to college after junior year. >> lawrence: i'm not mad at you.
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>> greg: did you go away and return with a child? [laughter] remember that, they used to do that. >> lawrence: my turn. and finally, just a number, nearly half of americans don't feel like they are an adult until they reach 30. i'm 29, so i am not an adult yet. jessica. >> jessica: i stayed in school for a very long time, so -- i agree with this. and i didn't think that responsibility started until 30 plus. >> jeanine: especially today, i don't think kids mature until they are 30. >> lawrence: katie might be able to say otherwise. >> katie: feel like an adult but still figuring out, like the survey, i'm curious how old the people were who took the survey. at every stage of life, am i doing this the right way, i don't know. >> lawrence: what about a senior citizen like you, greg. >> greg: it's disgusting you would say that, we are going to h.r., you are coming with me.
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here is the thing. self-selects for weird people. who fills out a survey from a mattress company? somebody with a lot of free time. >> jessica: they pay you. i worked in polling. >> jeanine: you work in polling? i didn't know you work in polling. >> lawrence: fan mail friday is up next. hi, i'm debra. i'm from colorado. i've been married to my high school sweetheart for 35 years. i'm a mother of four-- always busy. i was starting to feel a little foggy. just didn't feel like things were as sharp as i knew they once were. i heard about prevagen and then i started taking it about two years now. started noticing things a little sharper, a little clearer. i feel like it's kept me on my game. i'm able to remember things. i'd say give it a try. prevagen. healthier brain. better life.
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(johnny cash) ♪ i've traveled every road in this here land! ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ crossed the desert's bare, man. ♪ ♪ i've breathed the mountain air, man. ♪ ♪ of travel i've had my share, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere. ♪ ♪ i've been to: pittsburgh, parkersburg, ♪ ♪ gravelbourg, colorado, ♪ ♪ ellensburg, cedar city, dodge city, what a pity. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere. ♪
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♪♪♪ >> the great thing about fridays, none of the executives watch the show. i'm ok. >> for 12 more minutes. >> greg: first question from janet, oh, oops -- what old person things do you do? first, assumes that old people do specifically old things, which i resent, jessica. but what old person things do you do? >> jessica: i don't want to offend anyone, weird things that i think older people do, like i save food in the refrigerator forever. >> greg: my mom would do that.
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>> jessica: and like i love like cold chinese food and eat an dumpling a day. [laughter] it's not just -- that was good enough, i'm not going with the second one. >> greg: lawrence. >> lawrence: i need too eat or i get very angry. >> greg: cranky, yeah, i was old when i was born. you know. cranky. i make a mess everywhere, oh, that's what a lot of old people do. katie. >> katie: puzzles. right? it's good for your brain. >> jessica: i feel it's also hipster. >> katie: printing things out, i don't have a printer. reading real books, buying real books. i think that's normal behavior, though. >> greg: judge, what about you? >> jeanine: two things schizophrenic, i like -- stop laughing, lawrence. >> lawrence: just two? [laughter] >> jeanine: i save paper towels.
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ok, but i am -- i'm talking, ok. and then second thing i do that old people do, you figure you don't have much time left, you go out and buy jewelry. >> greg: i, like all the stuff i get from delivery like a big thing of napkins and plastic forks, and like a nuclear war is coming. >> jeanine: it is, not nuclear, but -- >> greg: in my neighborhood, i pay people to do chores, like i -- >> jeanine: so do i. why is that an old person thing? >> greg: you are not doing it yourself. >> jeanine: nothing to do with old, honey, i was doing that when i was in my 20s. >> greg: we are going to move on. this is from fred. what's the earliest news story from your childhood that impacted you. all right, katie. and don't say -- >> katie: the bill clinton scandal? >> greg: that's good. that affected a lot of people. infected and affected, sorry about that. that's pretty good.
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>> katie: also i remember the first rock. >> lawrence: 9/11. third grade. >> greg: wow, wow. i was only five. >> jeanine: what did she say? >> greg: thank you for the help, judge. >> jeanine: you are looking at me. >> greg: i was afraid you were going to get violent. >> jessica: i was going to say the clinton election and then obviously the scandal was a big one. but that was the first political story, the election. >> greg: see if judge picks the same one i pick. >> jeanine: i remember being in grammar school and i think that kennedy was shot. like -- yeah. >> greg: i went with watergate. >> jeanine: i was in law school during watergate. >> greg: i was at the hotel.
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♪ well, the stock is bubbling in the pot ♪ ♪ just till they taste what we've got ♪ [ tires squeal, crash ] when owning a small business gets real, progressive gets you right back to living the dream. now, where were we? [ cheering ] ♪ >> judge jeanine: it's time now for one more thing and i go first. now, there is -- okay. stop, greg. stop. all right. saint jude this is serious stuff. the saint jude patient draw as monster truck surprised with a real life full size version featuring artwork. there is real monster truck. his name is calvin. is he a cancer patient when he drew his own version of monster jam toy truck. what's significant is the added emoji to reflect his feelings throughout his 18 months of chemo and radiation. he was enterprised when his toy
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truck became a reality with a life-sized version for monster jam emojis included. calvin, you are so strong and we are so proud of you. keep on drawing and keep on fighting. god bless him. >> greg: keep on trucking. >> judge jeanine: greg, you are next the. >> greg: i love that i saw that earlier on "fox & friends." >> judge jeanine: did you? thanks. i have seen all yours, too. [laughter] >> greg: tonight great show tom hill slew, catty pavlich. kat timpf and tomorrow in salt lake city. there might be tickets left at the theater tom shillue and also tyrus is going to be doing an q&a. it will be hilarious. let's do this greg's scaredy-cat news with ryan bow flavin. here is a cat afraid of his own shadow shocked by our own shadow this is how brian kilmeade gets to work.
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shots himself to work. >> judge jeanine: chicken. >> greg: everything looks like chicken to you. >> dana: tastes like chicken, too. >> judge jeanine: jessica, you are next. >> jessica: big news for equality fifa three women referees first time greg i see you bobbing your head like this doesn't matter. it does matter. three women refer years and three women assistant referees will be in qatar for the first time in competition history there. the chairman of the community decision they deserved to be the fifa world cup they constantly perform high level. >> greg: this is soccer. >> jessica: fifa. >> judge jeanine: keep going, jessica. >> judge jeanine: i think that was very important. that's really a big deal. ignore him. >> jessica: especially in cut tar. >> greg: shoot me. >> jessica: i'm on "fox news sunday." you should watch. thank you.
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>> greg: that i applaud. >> judge jeanine: bravo. lawrence, hit it. >> lawrence: better applaud. take to the next level where they litthemselves on fire before walking themselves down the aisle. intentionally set themselves ablaze. fire put out by fire extinguisher. they are professional stunt performers and do not try this at home. >> judge jeanine: okay, lawrence, why do they do that? >> lawrence: stunt performers. they are crazy. on the show. >> greg: flamers. >> judge jeanine: pyromain yacks. >> lawrence: hosting "fox & friends" in the morning. >> judge jeanine: katie, hit it. >> katie: if you have seen the movie jaw's, you know about this scene. >> made me do it. >> katie: that little kid is in the water with his actual
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brother jonathan. now 47 years later he is the police chief in the town where jaw's was oak bluff fretty cool he was in the movie. >> judge jeanine: very cool. i think it is greg nobody asked you. that's it for us. have a great weekend. we love you. bye. ♪ >> bret: good evening. i'm bret baier breaking tonight we are following two major stories. a federal judge rules title 42, the pandemic related asylum rule allowing expedited migrant deportations must stay in place. plus, bombshell testimony in the trial against former clinton campaign lawyer michael sussmann. we we'll get to that in a moment. first, the title 42 decision comes just days before the policy was set to expire and amid a flurry of bipartisan backlash over what would happen if the rule was rescinded. basically a massive surge of migrants to the border. we have
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