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tv   The Five  FOX News  September 30, 2022 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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storm that people knew was coming but didn't know the damage that is done. we'll continue monitoring this tomorrow. our special sat show at 10:00 a.m. eastern time. fox news will continue its coverage of something that eclipses news else, arguments on capitol hill, money on yeah street. this is life and death on main street. here's "the five." >> dana: hel, dagen mcdowell, jessica jessica tarlov, judge jeanine, and this is "the five." we are awaiting an update from the florida governor ron desantis on the catastrophic damage that ian left behind. 21 lives have lost but expect the dental to rise. rescue crews working nonstop coming through the wrath the refuge. and a post-tropical cyclone after making landfall in
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south carolina as category one storm with wind speeds up to 85 miles an hour and and a life-threatening storm surge is expected up to 7 feet. we are monitoring the strike of the storm and will take you to governor desantis as soon as we start speaking but we want to switch gears. a disturbing trend of law enforcement coming under attack. outrage sweeping the nation's following the murder of 9/11 first responder in new york city, 24 year f fdny lieutenant alison russo was walking in uniform less than a block to her station when she was stabbed. over 20 times, "barbaric and completely unprovoked attack. the suspect was taken into custody after barricading himself inside of a building. he is charged with murder and criminal possession of a weapon. nypd commissioner condemning the senseless attack. >> this deadly, senseless broad daylight attack on a former fdny team member is in the soul of
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the society. it is the latest consequence of the violence and the relentlessly fight. >> jesse: hor a man has been charged after smashing a window of an nypd cruiser with a metal pipe. the police arresting him nearby. greg the emt was six months away from retirement. >> greg: it is incredible. and what you just dared to come outrage sweeping the nation, i wish that was true. i kind of feel that is wishful thinking. we are just known to it but it used to be one of these outrageous, grisly crimes could completely reverse the downward spiral into criminal anarchy. aunt a knife in a subway. but two things happening, happening with such a mundane pattern and activity that we are not used to but also the media isn't interested in it, we are doing it by in our world come i don't think -- i don't know i
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shouldn't say this but i don't think msnbc or cnn i don't watch them. but to active in racism and pronouns and when they do their story, they go on twitter to see how cluttered they could be. this is a story that should be nationwide. this woman survived 9/11 and if you can survive a trip to the bodega and this is the other thing, the crazy person aspect of this is becoming this thing with every story and it's almost like it says, there is nothing we can do to persons mentally ill or crazy. you have to put them away, put them away but what gets me, this guy is schizophrenic. great comic that means he might have been unaware what he did is horrific. then why did he run and hide? clearly he is not that insane and if he didn't stand by his work, and if he stood by his work and said what he did but he actually knew he did something wrong. we have to rethink everything, but i always feel like we do the
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stories, we are speaking to clouds. until we say something that is truly shocking and pierces through the bubble, so politicians, i almost said it, but they don't give it until a job is up here than we care about the politics of it. they don't want to be seen as mean or cruel, marginal or a drug addicted or the homeless. the people committing a lot of these crimes. they don't want -- they are cowards, complete cowards. i don't know. just words. >> dana: people will have a chance to talk about this issue and vote at the ballot box in a little more than five weeks. bill clinton the former president weighed in about crime in the selection. listen here. >> you can't go around complaining that people are violating democratic norms and the voters are rewarding them for it. either by staying home or being
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distracted by last-minute scare tactics. i mean, we lost the last two weeks of 2020 election on defund the and socialism. and that was our fault. we shouldn't have let that happen appearance before jesse, what you think of that? >> jesse: i listen to him talking about crime because he was poor and the governor of arkansas. when you are governor, you come face-to-face with these killers. it is up to you whether or not you say fry them or grant clemency. as a governor, he killed a lot of disgusting, evil people. he didn't want to do it. he said he was against the policy, but he respected the wishes of the people in arkansas. governors have a special role to play. a lot of people making these decisions were not governors. they didn't get to see these people. you get a sheet, this guy five kids and knifed this woman in the back. you look at that and of course you will go, yes, execute the
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guy. he understands crime better than most guys. then i looked into the current situation here now and eventually to coat types of crimes, the traditional prisoner and then you have your dangerously mentally ill person. i found out that in 1950, we had a half a million people institutionalized. how many do we have now? 37,000. what the hell happened? it looks like his civil rights movement where we granted all these rights to people who didn't have rights at the time comic blacks women, workers, people with disabilities. hey, let's bring the mentally ill along to give them all the rights. there is a place for that and it's called "dying with one's rights on" which means you can be mentally ill, but you could be dying on the street. you can have all your rights, but hey, you will be dead and naked and afraid and disease ridden because the country is not trying to help you. the country who is spending a lot of money on these institutions so they are willing
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to cut the budget and they found out the drugs, i'm sure you are familiar with some, you don't need a psychiatrist watching you 24/7. you give a guy a pill and he's lobotomized. and then they give you pills and make these insane people go back and look at their parents. they put them in nursing homes. so comic that is what happened. now, qc people running around spitting at people and stabbing people so the country is to look and say, the pendulum swung too far on the left and we have to get it to a place where the compassionate response is to institutionalize people. >> dana: jessica, who grew up in the city and you have your pulse on what is happening in america, especially when crime is ongoing. where do you see the democrats and the republicans five weeks before on the issue of crime and how will it flip? >> jessica: it is obviously become an issue of important issue in race. when you see mandella barnes, ron johnson, ron johnson, that
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is purely on what is going on in terms of attack on mandella burns, the issue of crime featuring john fetterman race as well. we have been talking about that all week. democrats are afraid of it and the recall in san francisco, pushed forward by asian democrats actually sick of what was going on but the hate crimes in the inner-city perpetrated mostly by black people. so this is the number one concern, i would say on political initial level and the number one issue but actually something we see something about. bill clinton has proven he is really pressing about this and understands how to win elections in 2016 would be different if they would have listened to him. i wonder returning to what wright said in the beginning, a story like this to shut down for news. the two murdered and their car. no, during the bill de blasio years. the female, they turned their backs on the mayor of new york city.
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that felt like a crescendo moment, right? certainly for city major cities across the country where it said, "this cannot stand. we cannot have policies and attitude towards police that leaves us vulnerable to these kinds of attacks." that was one attack. i think there was obviously the conversation about what laws we have in place and people know they will not go to jail and be out in 10 minutes because of the bail laws, et cetera appear there is a brokenness in humanity right now that is truly frightening to me. when the attack on the mother of five at jfk, for instance comic that is not about i know i will be out because how come brad won't hold me there. i have no idea what the laws were going to look like. no respect for human rights. >> dana: he just wanted to destroy earth. >> jessica: to destroy her for absolutely no reason and that is not about institutionalizing people or laws, there is a culture of disrespect for the human condition. that is so fundamentally disturbing to me.
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politics doesn't fix that. that is bigger than politics. >> dana: dagen, there is a longer-term issue but the short term which is we have a lot of mentally unstable people and a lot of the cities all across the country. and they are committing random acts of violence that are sometimes leading to death, but also, running peoples lives altogether. >> dagen: i think the culture, the cultural problem is not disrespect but ignoring the seriously mentally ill, the dangerously mentally ill. the violently, psychotic. we talk about, you talk about it, you talk about it, jesse, but when the medium witnesses a crime, big media, politicians, you know, the professional clatter bags. when they see something violent that they can use to their benefit, it is a hate crime. it is an anti-asian crime. it is not a psychotic crime. a crime of psychosis. a mass shooting weeks would be
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spent picking apart somebody's political beliefs. are they mag maga racist gettig comes out of people's hands and gun restriction, gun bans, gun freedom rather than talking about the mentally ill person who committed the crime? why was that individual on the street? today, we need to talk about how seriously mentally ill can be supervised more than 97% fewer beds than there were in 1955. the number of hospital beds for the mentally ill down almost 100%. they are down to nothing but how can people be medicated and how can the public be protected from these individuals? because right now, the new mental institution is the prison where the jail. and we need to destigmatize mental illness, acknowledge that homeless people are homeless because rent too high and property is too high and because
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they are sick. rather than pretending like it is something else other than they need to be in a hospital and locked up, rather than on the street. and one more thing has proof of that, if you go through the people assaulted, michelle go pushed on the mentally-ill person. daniel rodriguez shot on the q train mentally-ill person. peter, who killed alison russo the lieutenant, he was transported to the hospital by her unit in 2018 for making anti-asian online threats. he was taken to the hospital. probably committed 72 hours but right back on the street to kill her. they need to be locked up and medicated and so the entire public essay. >> dana: indeed. russian president vladimir putin escalating his words with ukraine and the details on the latest move next.
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♪ ♪ speak with aftermath of hurricane ian, we went down to southwest florida two days in a row. we were able to do more extensive touring of some of the damage that we saw periods you have places like fort myers beach, sanibel, some of those areas really for the front line about the storm surge and extensive damage throughout there. you also have charlotte county had damage, north naples, collier county. one of the things we are working
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on is having staged all of the power and everything is the restoration of services. right now statewide 85% of customers have power and main outages are, of course, lee, charlotte counties have the most as well as hardy. but then you have about half out of collier and you have half out at sarasota and many other parts of the state until you get to seminal, 30% outcome a 40% outcome a dilution of 40% out, flagler 40 to 50% out in much better as you get to st. john's and jacksonville and nassau county. so there was over 42,000 folks staged. they win and immediately to try to minimize those disruptions and adding more customers online every hour. i think it is what would you say, hundred thousand every hour or two? so we feel good about most of that. i would say that the biggest
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challenge with power restoration will be in those areas for the brunt of the category 4 plus almost category 5 impact where it may have uprooted the existing infrastructure. now, that will be fixed but not something fixed in 24-48 hours. there has been some damage in lee and some in charlotte counties. but there has been a lot of infrastructure able to make it through. so i think now actually, lee has 20% back power and that is more than i would have anticipated after such a major impact. we were able to go and look around. we flew, we met with some people that lost homes and businesses. you know, people that have been in the community for decades and decades. so it is sad to lose your belongings anyways, of course, but there's a lot of history in that part of the state in many parts of the state.
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so you see, it is hard to just replace that. there are things we need to do infrastructure wise, bridges and some of the other stuff down there. i was pleasantly surprised to see 48 hours after a massive impact, i saw publics reopening. i saw all of this happening in lee county. so the quicker that the broader population can get back to normal, that is going to make it easier to help those who have been displaced. we also tore over in central florida with the seminole county sheriff's office, some of the f. and i can tell you what we sow in central florida was more standing water than what we saw in southwest florida where the big storms surge came in. it was just the way the dash the sand, whatever reason, that really precipitated over the last 24-36 hours. you go when places in central, a lot of standing water.
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a lot of these places had water still up a couple of feet on some of the homes. they are bracing for more impacts as we see something st. john's and other things that happened. so, we knew there would be flooding, but more standing water, 200 plus miles away and that is saying something. we knew we would see the impacts on the community in northeast florida before. we are going to be asking -- kevin is going to be working with fema about potentially expanding systems eligibility beyond the town's already added to. right now we are at southwest florida into central florida. bit stops before you get up into st. john's. i don't think either, so you look flagler, dilution, we will be working with them on and something that will be helpful for the residents of this area. fuel by and large is done really well, even with the ports having to shut down because of the
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storms. you had fuel flowing in and it is good to see the gas stations open in southwest florida. that is something we've had storms in the past with people without fuel for weeks or a long time. that is a pain. that makes it harder for people to get back. we appreciate the attention paid on that. in terms of telecoms service, it is getting better in southwest florida. they are putting more towers and because of the towers that have been destroyed, but i would say, all of the companies i think now are allowing the other consumers and other customers to roam on their network. that makes it very helpful. if you are down there, don't try to do wi-fi calling. that is just normal calling with roaming. if you are verizon and can't get that, you may be able to get at&t and that is very important. i want kevin to come up and give an update and then we will have the administrator come up as well. kevin. >> thank you for your lead
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leadership. >> jessica: that was governor governor desantis after damage in florida. a major escalation on the war in ukraine come up vladimir putin declared 40,000 square miles as part of russia. experts say the largest land grab since world war ii. the u.s. and allies responded by slapping a new round of sanctions on russian government officials and their families. here is president biden. >> putin actions are a sign he struggling. the united states will never recognize this. quite frankly, the world is not going to recognize it either. he can't sees his neighbor's territory and get away with this. it is as simple as that. americas fully prepared to our nato allies to defend every single inch of nato territory. >> jessica: perhaps more concerning during putin 'unhinged speech he created -- nuclear weapons by palm in japan. japan. he said last week he was not loving when it comes to using
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nukes to defend his territory, dana. i want to come to you on this. it feels like more than just an escalation. we use that term all the time. it is really a departure. >> dana: you call it a step change i believe. i was able to talk to some folks that i trust on this. they think this is the most dangerous part of the situation that we have been in because one, putin has painted himself into the corner. he has very few friends. his country is unhappy. the people are unhappy with the call up and i think we've had up to -- perhaps as many as 3,000 men trying to leave russia. some of the russian men have broken their own bones in order to avoid having to go and fight. they are reporting from ukraine that they have been ordered to kill civilians. they don't want to do it, and their heart is not in it. the ukrainians heart is in it. we don't know who would take over if there was to be somebody
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else. sometimes it is better than when you know than the one you don't. but i believe president biden, he is being as strong as he possibly can, i suppose. but i have long thought that you have to ask is europe going to save itself? is europe willing to save itself? we can be there as well and biden can say that, but who is the face of this fight for the europeans? and who will step up and who will that be? they have a lot of economic problems that they were dealing with peer they have a huge energy crisis this year. they also are timid. some of them are timid to get the commitments of the weapons to the ukrainians. to germany in particular. i think one of the things that biden can do behind the scenes is you needs to press the europeans to be more willing to step up and be the face of this so that putin doesn't think this is a war with the united states. this is a war that he chose and that the ukrainians decided to
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fight back. they have a choice, too and in that situation because the ukrainians have been well. at this moment, probably a more dangerous sound that we have ever been since february. >> jessica: jesse, what do you think about that and this morning lenski signed the paperwork to fast track application to nato? >> jesse: that will get rejected but i spoke to people on this at the same thing that dana's sources are saying. putin is speaking to six people i'm told and he demands that they lie to him so he's not getting an accurate picture what is happening on the battlefield. and, there is no way that we are going to settle on vladimir putin's terms. he has killed a quarter of a million civilians and has kidnapped about a million ukrainians. and you think he's going to say all right, let's negotiate. we will just use ukraine as a buffer. u.s. policy and european policies toward russia right now
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is a complete and total destruction of russia. they are coping with ukrainians and they are going to expel all russian forces from ukraine. they will demand repayment to build everything in ukraine. there will be a warm crimes tribunal to hold all of these people accountable for the massive civilians that they have slaughtered. you are not just going to invade this country, commit atrocities and walk away after destroying the entire international supply chain. destroying the energy markets in europe. you've got to be kidding me. so the guy, he is going to lose this, and it is not looking g good. >> jessica: will he use nukes? >> dagen: a possibility or potential of an escalation and at the very least tactical nuclear strike. to dana's point, week, i see the west but we the europe and the
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united states, we have not starved putin of money or manpower. europe can help out by opening up the countries to all of the russians and russian trying to get away from vladimir putin and take them draft dodgers and make them refugees, open the doors in a lot of countries are refusing to do that or dragging their feet on that. but also, we haven't done anything to bankrupt putin's regime. but we are not willing, the politicians aren't willing to risk a recession for a nuclear conflict somehow is a risk worth taking a question mark that is where we are. we need to drive down the price of natural gas. that does mean more supply, but it also means crushing and crippling demand like it happened during covid. we have not done that. we are actually doing the exact opposite to drive up demand for fuel. california is getting ready to send checks to half the people
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in the state. oh, because of the high gas prices, you need more money. no, that doesn't hurt demand and over in europe just to name one, britain is capping household energy bills? so you can use as much energy as you want, anything in excess of the cap, we will send money to vladimir putin. that is irretrievably wrongful. >> jessica: greg. >> greg: i was confused when president biden said it was nato territory. >> dana: they think putin is threatening nato countries with the word of. >> greg: that doesn't make sense to me. it is a sham annexation and no one is taking it seriously. i never heard of these places ten months ago. i do know in our country right now, we are going through some very, very serious times. we just talked about the crime. we have inflation in our economy is. it is like all that is changing with this is that we keep
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sending billions and billions and billions of dollars there. all we are doing is not affecting the outcome but we are affecting the duration. and so all we are doing is making it longer but we have a sense we know how it will end appear there was no way putin will get there. he doesn't care about is people. speaking people, there is a generation gap and half of the people, more than half of the people putin, older generations like him because he's been around. they can brainwash the younger people. they are leaving. so, i don't think he has any reason to worry. so we are at this point where i think the republicans and the democrats are in agreement and terms of war but not in terms of peace. this is where my crazy idea is that it would be really nice to see somebody like trump and obama together doing something like together and trying to help negotiate some kind of peace.
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it is impossible. it is absurd, it is a crazy idea but not as crazy thinking man can get pregnant. [laughter] if you want to laugh at the idea of two presidents to i am in to i am in a diametrically opposed coming together and tromped calling in, obama, that is not a good sign but look, maybe i could talk to putin and you can talk to zelenskyy. you think that is crazy, then what ideas do you have? >> jesse: forget about what i said about your birth certificate. [laughter] i will apologize for spying on your campaign. we will fly to your. >> greg: exactly! ever single cup buddy film they always win in the end. >> lethal weapon, 48 hours, rush hour. the point is nobody is talking about negotiation. nobody is talking about off ramps. and i think there might be an off-ramp with the oligarchs to
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see their money, truly frightening. they are getting killed, the oligarchs are getting killed. there might be an exit strategy they create for putin and guaranteed to keep all your money, we will not kill your secretary. we will not kill anybody but you get to go -- and they would have to make it look like you won something, don bass, you know. maybe that's what they give them. >> jesse: but they are not giving them anything. >> greg: i know, i know. we will give them billions and the outcome will be, destroy a country, ukraine. >> jessica: that is interesting because zelenskyy is the one harden to negotiation. he said i will never do it with him. before he was for negotiation... >> jessica: right, but a lot of people died since then. >> greg: we solved nothing, we solved nothing. >> jessica: it's was good. more of "the five" next. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> dagen: the nfl concussion protocol under scrutiny after frightening scene last night's game here the second quarter of dalton's quarterback, his arms appeared to seize up almost immediately. a motion associated with head trauma. he was taken off of the field on a stretcher and with what the team classified head and neck injuries. you can see it there. he was later released from the hospital, but here is what is gaining controversy. this was not his first hit this week. four days prior on sunday, he underwent concussion evaluation after this tackle against the bills, but both the team and he
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himself said he was cleared by doctors to play thursday. on sunday, he actually reentered the game and went on to beat the bills. jesse, what do you make of all of this? >> jesse: the shot where he stumbles and can't walk, that is demonstrating a clear gross motor instability. it is like red coming from the bar 2:00 in the morning. you can't stand, you can't function, and that automatically enters you into concussion protocol. not only what they do is put them back in the game to second half, they have a game on thursday. that is a pretty tight turnaround, sunday to thursday, that is four days. you already know you can have another concussion easier if you just sustained one a couple of days before. he is at risk. monday, the players union initiated an investigation into the dalton's for putting this guy on the field. they put him back out on the field max and he takes a brutal hit, smashes his head against the turf and now he has to go to
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the hospital on a stretcher. they are talking about a criminal investigation. there are people that should be fired within the organization, the team medical unit. i don't how the guy 'agent didn't say, "you know what, we will not play him this week." you are risking a huge, huge asset and not like the playoffs. it is a shame what happened. >> dagen: i have the complete opposite opinion, but jessica, what do you say before i go off? >> jesse: why would you think that is good? >> dagen: this is twitter hysteria, uninformed hysteria and lunatics going off in the blue check world. >> jesse: it is not anything about twitter. everybody in the nfl and espn, former players and agents are saying, this is horrible." >> dagen: have to tell you what, you have to believe on sunday, he lied, the team lied, the league lied. >> jesse: it doesn't matter
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what tua says. if you... if you see him not able to stand, you automatically sent sent him here in >> dagen: you have to believe there is conspiracy, including independent concussion protocol and the reason he was wobbly to let him back in the g. he's had his back was injured, his back. he said my back is entered. >> jesse: players will say whatever they we'll to get back on the field. you have to understand that appearance before they absolutely won't. week three of an incredible season, he will not risk his entire career, and neither will the team. >> jesse: risk his entire career? >> dagen: the nfl, in the past with $1 billion concussion settlement. this is uninformed hysteria by espn. >> jesse: you are wrong. it is not uninformed. people are upset with what happened. >> dagen: he got hurt last night. that is not what happens on happened sunday. >> jesse: people are talking
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about this on sunday and monday. the legs players union opened up an investigation. >> dagen: he was wobbly, and they put him back in. >> jesse: gross motor instability, they can. right there you automatically said him here in >> dagen: you have to believe the conspiracy everybody involved in this hit. >> jesse: no, just a reckless medical staff to put this guy at risk. it has nothing to do with the nfl actually. >> dagen: it does appear that dr., the team and the player. [overlapping voices] >> dagen: i'm sorry, go ahead. >> greg: chime in. >> dagen: they are tell me to shut up. >> greg: i think they went to the bar. i think this is why the nfl got so much into social justice, right? it is like they needed to hide behind something. this is what all corporations do appear they wave the woke flag so you might ignore the ugly truth that they really don't care about their players. that is kind of what it is, but
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having said that, if you told any young man that there may be a risk of brain damage and permanent personality change from a sport that you played, they are still going to play. they are still going to play. people make their own risk cost-benefit analysis and they are okay. every sport, every activity. >> dana: the cost-benefit analysis might be true, however, the cost-benefit analysis of the team and i'm in jesse's camp on this. that was a terrible decision because they lost their best asset. and now he might be primly damaged, hopefully not, maybe he will be fine. i hope he's fine. but the team because at that decision not to play him again for, basically they don't have their star guy. and why can't we just play sundays? why does it have to be mondays and thursdays? i don't understand that. >> jesse: amen.
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>> dagen: that is the problem that fuels the complex at the because people say they are so t about xyz but they don't stop p. the endorsements keep pouring in. this is also part of the conversation on guaranteed money. like jackson and the baltimore ravens with guaranteed money because of football. there is a high chance you will end up hurt. you want to make sure if you put your life on the line, you get generational wealth out of it. if you end up being someone who has no control over your body and may end up killing yourself and we saw instances with a.c.t. over and over again you change the course of history for your family. and i'm not saying -- i don't want to get involved with this and it's a hot seat to be sitting in, but that is why tua would go back out there, right? >> jesse: he has $19 million so i don't think he struggling for money. >> jessica: that doesn't compare... be when you want to protect him. >> dagen: i don't believe in the conspiracy that everybody allied between the team at the
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player and the league and the doctor and the independent doctor appearance before that is the first time i've ever been accused of being in a conspiracy theory. i will embrace it. >> jesse: speaking of someone who loves conspiracies. that when i don't buy. >> dagen: two separate incidents, just saying. fan mail friday next. ♪ ♪ the new subway series menu. the greatest sandwich roster ever assembled. for more on the new boss, here's patrick mahomes.
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♪ ♪ >> greg: not having made any money. "fan mail friday," a teenager, this is a great question and i can't say the name, who cares? what character from a movie could you play perfectly? jesse. >> jesse: who is the guy on "breakfast club" and he was always in detention? >> dagen: john bender. >> jesse: that guy. i kind of look like him and i was in detention all appeared >> greg: there you go, so naturally. not a stretch, interesting, dane appearance before election? >> jessica: that was mine, too. [laughter] >> jesse: might as well.
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>> greg: that is a great movie. such a good movie. >> jessica: or "under watc watched." >> greg: dakin? >> dagen: jack torrance in "the shining." >> greg: i was going to go with "blue velvet." >> dagen: can i do it? >> greg: sorry. if you haven't seen that movie, watch it with the kids. >> jesse: what? >> greg: what famous person dead or alive are you related to? this is a great question. some people have like famous ancestry. >> dana: i've got nothing, famous? i don't know. >> greg: dakin? >> dagen: trish and neil. >> greg: she had her voice like this. >> dagen: she looked just like my grandmother. >> greg: she was always in cop movies. >> dagen: and [indistinct]
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>> greg: what looked to be right? not a fan of that team. jessica? this is easy for you. >> jessica: yeah, i mean, my sister. >> greg: your sister is an actress. >> jessica: she has been on the show x or seven seasons. >> greg: what was the show? >> jessica: it was cold "awkward." i have it all over. >> greg: see, we are nothing. just a question mark >> jesse: we did "23andme" and i went all the way back. >> g[laughter] >> greg: you know he is jewish, jesus is jewish. i'm more related to jesus then you are. you don't have a single jewish... be when are you fact-checking? >> greg: yes! dana question marks before i
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honestly have no one. that is as good as they are going to get right now. >> greg: my siblings, always answering questions about me because they never expected t that. they are just like leave me alone. somebody asked my sister if i was a letter a hole and she said "yes." yes, that is what she said. what is the best $20 you have ever spent? i already have my answer. >> jesse: crystal pepsi? >> greg: ribs from king wall, $17, give him a $20 and he keeps the change. the next ribs. >> dana: $20? >> greg: you know what, it was probably a bus ticket appearance before you know whatcom is probably garth brooks tape. >> greg: i wish i had said something else. van halen's first album. boy, that was amazing. i stole... >> dana: thriller. >> dagen: how much was it back
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then, $3 question marks before $16. >> greg: $4.99 for an album. >> dagen: i can only remember the last seven days i bought a vaped's and gave a $5 tip and it kept me awake while i was drivi. it was a good $20. >> greg: saved your life. jessica? >> jessica: no, it is not one thing but whatever snack i get at a live event like a game or concert feels like the best investment i've ever made like $18 burger. which is disgusting but still taste good or whatever. >> greg: jesse, $20? >> jesse: $20 cheesesteak in philadelphia with a shaved ribeye and drizzled with -- what is that really fancy -- >> dana: cheez whiz? >> greg: catch up, the sweat of a trucker? >> jesse: cheese, truffled cheese. >> greg: truffle is overrated because it changes the smell of everything. the truffle.
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>> dagen: it smells like armpit. >> greg: it smells like a pig's armpit. "one more thing" is up next. you can go now. [laughter] ♪ ♪ only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. . .
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♪ ♪ luxury exemplified. innovation electrified.
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with apple music seamlessly integrated. the all-new, all-electric eqs suv from mercedes-benz. ♪ >> dana: time now for one more thing, greg? >> tonight, another great show. it's a disgusting one because we have julie banderas. babylon bee jimmy fail i can't. tie outside of new york there is an outdoor strip club and i went there after work fluffy mcnutter. what a fox news alert. they have a private v.i.p. room right over there in the corner. don't go. because he will just eat you
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alive. i'm not talking about the cost. >> that was very, very good. i have been conducting a very, very important scientific experiment over the last 24 hours, yesterday, we introduced the because straw, that is a paper straw that doesn't disintegrate. doesn't change color or taste. it's been in this cup of water for 24 hours and now is the test to see if the boss straw is really boss. this is the best paper straw of all time. boss straw where paper straws are sold. finer straws tonight on "jesse watters primetime" how fauci became the new wolf of washington tonight at 7:00. >> dana: water rescue train dog saved a boat pulled off course strong current in choppy waters in a beltville pennsylvania lake. the dock is oakley. impressive rescue just before the storm rolled. in she trains for this. she rescues people off boats
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various water rescuing tomorrow night, i don't know how i got roped into, this i'm going to introduce joe machi and joe devito two of the great people that are part of the gutfeld exclamation point. i'm going to introduce them. i'm going to be i but i'm embarrassed. >> fox whiz with jamie lissow. please, also, go see us, tickets still available. uncle vinny's comedy club.com. >> jesse: are you getting paid for that? >> i'm going to donate it if i do. all i'm doing is introducing people. but i actually have a few jokes. some of them are take. >> jesse: dana doing comedy? >> dana: we will see. >> jesse: now i want to go. >> dana: we will see. >> jessica: my saturday looks really boring for sure. a lot of heart breaking stories out of hurricane ian and moments of unity and positivity should be shared, too. a group of flamingos who rode
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out this storm in a bathroom together. liv live in sunken gardens park in st. petersburg, florida. move into the shelter safely indoors. plenty of food and water and dagen i want to. george morrow from cape coral. hurricane bears down. see you back here on monday. >> bret: good evening. welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. breaking tonight, we are following two major stories. first hurricane ian moving through south carolina right now. we will have live team coverage from there and from the devastation left behind in florida from molly line and steve harrigan. but, we begin tonight with ukraine. as russian president vladimir putin annexes four occupied territories. the largest land grap grab grab since the end of world war ii while issuing a bold threat to the west in a heated speech to the kremlin. insisting he will use al

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