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tv   The Five  FOX News  December 15, 2022 2:00pm-3:01pm PST

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good with it. i'm thankful i have a good team the gary sinise foundation keeping it going and so many wonderful sponsors, supporters, donors and people helping us to do good for others. >> neil: gary sinise, that is the biggest role of all purity has helped tens of thousands and remember those who serve our countries and those who gave the ultimate sacrifice for our country. that is untouchable. ♪ ♪ >> greg: hi, greg gutfeld with katie katie pavlich, dana dana perino, janine pyro, and "the five." america we may have finally reached peak covid hysteria. the pandemic is supposed to be over but the liberals keep climbing the mountain of covid uncertainty. put on your hiking boots and we will climb this together.
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dr. felt she was supposed to be retired by now that focus on his real passion, which is quitting more viruses in chinese labs. but now, he is warning democracy is at risk all because people stop taking every single thing he says as gospel. speak with rise of disinformation and misinformation, are we developing an antiscience? >> yeah, well -- >> in society? >> the answer is yes, the short answer to your question, andrea. but the other thing is there is so much misinformation that we are experiencing normalization of untruths. that would be a terrible blow to society and i believe towards democracy. >> greg: but wait, it gets even dumber on the way to the top your liberal cities or covid masts and d.c. and l.a. and new york told to cover up their faces and/or spirit as if it is 2020 all over again.
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nothing will prepare you for the pentacle from a new study actually published "the american journal of medicine" claims that people who refused to get their covid vaccines are more likely to get into a car accident. the experts behind it theorized people who resist public health recommendations might also neglect basic road safety guidelines here and so dana, you know i was a doctor for many years and i decided i was tired of saving lives. >> dana: it was rough. >> greg: i didn't know you could not operate out of a van. i've read thousands of studies and generally studies are done to create for a purpose or medical purpose. but this is when you think about the conclusion, there is -- is there a medical purpose to their conclusion other than to mock the people who disagree with their recommendations? >> dana: i think the latter but it also reminded me -- not
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that many people smoke anymore, but back in the day, if you were a smoker, then you had higher car insurance rates. the reason was they thought you were more risky. you were willing to take risks because even though the science might say it will kill you, that means you will drive recklessly on the road if you are smoking. that was basically one way to justify charging people more money. >> greg: you can do that with monkeypox. people who have monkeypox or more likely to get in a car accident appearance before you can definitely do that. >> greg: you can do that with anything. >> dana: with vaccines we know more than we do before. a lot of people had covid and can decide whether to have the vaccine or not. even the cdc said people who are vaccinated and unvaccinated should not be treated any differently. the last thing i would say on the mask point, i talked to some moms today and they are adamant masks should not be on their children appear they have already lost way too much and
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their kids are upset they didn't get to go to fifth grade graduation, high school prom, homecoming, whatever it was pure they have lost too much and they don't want to go back to masks. the school district same for the first two weeks of the school year when they get back from christmas break they will be messed up and do you think the teachers who want to take that away even though the science is not saying that masks were questioning >> greg: i'm with you like you said in the green room, only masks for ugly ba babies. >> greg: there's a few ugly babies. >> dana: no, jessica. >> greg: jesse, what kills me about this are the health experts seem more concerned with shaming a population than actually uncovering the origins of covid. it is that because they have monkey blood on their hands? >> jesse: well, i debauch this study over 10 minutes it took away from my acupuncture appointment. i use my bachelor's degree for
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the first time, and this is what we found. you are going to love this, greg. >> greg: thank you. >> jesse: younger people are less likely to be faxed and younger people more likely to get into car accidents. >> greg: of course! >> jesse: they drive recklessly and less expensive cars and they drink a lot. men get into more accidents than women. >> greg: right. >> jesse: and thin get taxed at a less rate, women appear in people live outside of cities are more or less likely to be faxed. okay? and they drive more since they live in rule america so they are more likely to get into car accidents. people who are most faxed, the elderly, are not doing as much driving. when they are driving, they are driving slowly and unknowingly. >> greg: with the blinkers on. >> jesse: what did they say
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they decided to do something about control? they did not control for variables and see how i debunk this entire thing. >> greg: you are amazing. >> jesse: 5 minutes waiting for acupuncture. i'm smarter than i look. >> greg: that is not hard. >> dana: especially for acupuncture. >> greg: acupuncture, you are in a good mood sticking needles and you. [laughter] jessica, you have a baby and an adorable baby, not an ugly baby. >> never mess that may be. >> greg: the cheeks must see the world. >> i saw that movie. how did that make you feel as a parent? >> jessica: concerned. she will go to a choose program next year. a bill of separation skills are something which is always terrible for me and a wonderful caregiver who loves to hang out with her. i don't want kids to be masked. it seems like we have the dull
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face of the studies. i'm not talking about the kid speech development by the fact that i can't watch you talk. that just seems obvious. before i had a baby and after i had a baby. there is this incredible woman who was on with sandra earlier in her school in arizona for autistic kids that won a million-dollar grant. fueled by the great work they did during the pandemic to make sure special-needs kids were able to get continued learning services because guess what, kids with special needs continue to need more help than kids who don't have special needs. that is a duh finding. we basically have all the information we need to navigate what is left of the pandemic. people who are vaccinated will continue to get boosters mostly over 65 crowd will keep doing that. i think regulating anything at this point is just going to make people angry. i do think the shift we are seeing from some people like
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governor disanto's in florida who went from july 2021 posting the vaccines, they save lives to this roundtable a couple of days ago where he is saying i need the florida supreme court to investigate these vaccines and going after pharma companies. i'm guessing that is 2024 and he can run on the anti-vaccine. i don't like that but in general people can make their decisions at this point. >> greg: you know, katie, what we are seeing is kind of like someone who has been in war and enjoyed the experience of war and the war ends and they don't know how to return to reality. a lot of people gained attention during the importance of the pandemic and obviously fauci. it is hard to go back. i've been fighting this and fighting for us. i go into a supermarket and i don't understand this. i don't get it. like the end of that movie where the guy is in the supermarket, you know? >> i don't know what you are talking about. >> greg: the guy that comes back from the war and
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overwhelmed by all the products. i don't know maybe it was "tutsi." >> katie: i'm the worst reference movie person. sorry, greg. this is an interesting now, the dr. marty makary had a great piece in "the wall street journal" talking about the covid industrial complex. there is a lot of money in the businesses, contracts and the white house is touting everybody can get more free test and guess who is paying for that? confusion of the taxpayer dollars into these private companies who can't give it out. but when dr. fauci talks about people who are anti-vaxxed, talking about one vaccine, the credibility problem is something the cdc and people like dr. fauci did to themselves whether him in an email saying masks don't work and everybody explaining the science behind that and did that fabric get thicker or the particles get smaller or bigger? why does the mask work or not work?
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they never explained any of that. and we also note that ron desantis is doing this panel is that pfizer sold the american people and therefore government mandates and mandates across the country on the side that the vaccine prevented transmission pure to covid, not other vaccines but the covid vaccine. now we find out pfizer admits that they never even tested on transmission. that is fraught, okay? that is broad. if you want the cdc to handle health crises in the future, they have to maintain credibility. the last thing i would say as they were doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. masking people can and getting posted with a vaccine that is not and does not have as much efficacy as they said appeared and not going back to the idea to tell people to lose weight. talk about the population of people in the country who are vastly affected as a result of nonhealthy habits in the country and kept going to preventable things but instead they are going back to nagging and what
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didn't work two years ago and it will not work now. >> greg: cia and telling you what to do so they don't get sued. all right, coming up next chicago mayor lori lightfoot has a solution to solve crime. don't let the media cover it. ♪ ♪ cityserve, started rescuing women, children and the elderly. and as winter approaches, they need our help more than ever. from your neighborhood to the nations, cityserve international providing food, shelter and transportation to millions through a vast network of churches. help us serve the people of ukraine this winter by donating help us serve the people of ukraine this winter by donating now, go to cityserve.us to give.
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♪ ♪ >> dana: i almost forgot this
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was me. chicago mayor lori lightfoot has made her city furious and for a good reason. she is covering up crime. an election race tammy by the decision to block the public from being able to monitor the police scanners by moving to communications to encrypted channels. multiple media outlets calling the mayor and accusing her of pushing censorship in the purest form edit add adding this, "the mayor to restrict scanner channels to keep you come with the viewers and the readers informed. and render it more difficult to hold the government and its personnel accountable. but lori lightfoot said it will make the police safer. >> but is about officer safety. it is unencrypted and access, there is no way to control criminals who are also going to get access, listening in, and their criminal behavior in response to the information that is being communicated.
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>> dana: so this was impossible with previous technology, katie. it reminds me when the faa tried to prevent drones from covering the haitian migrants under the bridge and taxes. they called them out on it and they had to back down because clearly a first amendment violation. what do you think will happen here? >> the biggest picture is if you want to protect police officers, lori lightfoot would put pressure on prosecutors to keep the criminals off the streets but the cops are encountering the same people over and over again, the same neighborhoods come with committing the same crimes and yet still being let out of jail. in terms of the police traffic endemic scanners, it issued by people to listen and if there is a shooting or high speed chase,y know where it is and they can protect themselves and their families not to go in certain areas, especially people who deal with this all the time. so can i do think it is about her to control a narrative ahead of the election. she doesn't want people to know what is going on and people can go to the source when
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out-of-control things are in chicago under her leadership which she thinks is just fine. >> dana: what do you think of her trying to do this? do you think it is about policing? >> greg: no, like katie said, this is not the priority if you care about police safety. although i do kind of understand it because scanners come i never call 911. i don't want to end up on a scanner because that will be on tmz and something embarrassment, "i fell on the bathtub and i have to go to the e.r." god knows what happens there never stays they are, you know. one of those things where crime reporting is considered scab journalism. you are crossing the picket line to report on the story that other journalists strike against. and she's always reflected this that when you talk about crime, it is like you are betraying her if you do. and meanwhile, if you talk to anybody in the media generally two years ago or three years ago, every crime story is a
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local story. do you remember that? there is a person that used to say that and in d.c. it is a local story. all of those local stories added up to one national story a raging crime epidemic. and i think it is uncomfortable for people like lori lightfoot and others to approach this topic because of their culpability and never covering it, never addressing it, and also supporting such progressive policies as no cash bail and sentencing directly linked to what we are seeing right now. the journalistic scandal is bigger than the political scandal because it is not a victimless crime, especially when they devote thousands of inches to violent far right parents. there is just people dying everywhere. finally, "the washington post" is actually doing exposes on murders, which is like, now it's okay? what made it different? >> dana: the no cash bail, that will actually be a statewide policy in illinois
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starting january 1st because the governor signed that little deadly into law. >> jesse: look what happened to the rest of the country if we want to go down that road. >> dana: statewide. >> jesse: i spoke to a former cop and he said back in the day, they are better relationship between the police departments and local media. the local media would honor police request or low back information and be able to help law enforcement. or sometimes they would want people to get that out there and warned the public but he said now, it has changed. a lot of times the police will come up on the scene and try to film cops and catch them in a bad moment and make them look bad, blow up a racial scandal. they don't cooperate like they used to. and i would is sensational here they are trying to sell a product, we do too, getting ratings to get to the scene first. but -- >> greg: details, jesse. >> jesse: you would rather be right than first. >> greg: yes. >> jesse: you say that all the time although you are neither.
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there is a little more nuanced to the story. you know me, mr. nuance. there is a gray area. >> greg: very good. >> jesse: thank you. [laughter] >> jessica: i think they are adeptly great areas to the spirit it seems like other cities have done this, denver desert, louisville does it but the difference is chicago alderman brought this up, they don't run on a delay system. so you could have the encrypted software or whatever it is to read this and regular people could get those. there could be neighborhood initiative to make sure particularly bad neighborhoods a project has a system when they could listen and to what is going on because there is this crazy case where 40 shots went off and nobody knew what was going on in the area. they would have typically relied on radio transmissions and now they can't. it seems a way to find a happy medium. if you don't think to protect police officers but the media being a part of this, sometimes
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they exploit the situation to make sure they can be first with little nuance. you can get there. but i don't think a city like denver would be doing this if it was something that was all that terrible. >> dana: i'm sure there will be legal challenges, and we will follow those to see where that goes. nancy mace confronted left activists over violent rhetoric. ♪ ♪ what if there was a community of like minded people ready to support you when you need it most? christian health care ministries is an organization with over 40 years of trusted care who understands the importance of family. a group that sees you for who you are, regardless of your health history, offering values based affordable health care cost solutions. learn more today at yourchm.org about health care that puts you in control.
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activists during house hearing on frederick. and all they had to do was check twitter. >> only a few weeks after attempted attack on supreme court justice on june 25th 1 of the witnesses tweeted out the following response on abortion. the six justices who overturned roe should never know peace again. it is our specific duty to accost them every time they are in public. they are pariahs. since women don't have their rights, the justices should never have a peaceful moment in public again. do you believe rhetoric is a threat to democracy? >> i don't think it is a pair characteristic. >> did you not tweet that that you thought the supreme court justice should be accosted? >> what i am saying is that it is not a characterization of my statement. speed to dean i do have good advice them i advice about twitter. >> dana: i have advice for staffers who work for a democratic congress people
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putting together hearings. check the twitter feeds of witnesses that you are going to have peer that is one of the first things i thought, what genius on the committee that it would be a good idea to have her there? the reason they don't check is because they don't think they will get called out on it. the left is being harmed by twitter not because of elon musk but because they think it is a safe harbor for them that nobody is going to go after them and like the safe place for them. i think that nancy mace's team all she had to do was have her team -- did you see this, check this out? little poster boards blow up and i think it is interesting that the witness, she is saying, that is not the correct characterization. so when you ask overall twitter advice, which is, if your tweet has nuance or needs context, don't tweet it. rule number one. >> katie: she was certainly caught off guard and nancy mace
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talks about that context, listen. >> there really are no words and she wanted context. there is no context i read your word for word and you are being a hypocrite coming in here talking about hate speech and violent rhetoric. you were the very person using hate speech and violent rhetoric to put people's lives and danger. >> katie: the obvious. >> greg: she really showed "they." you know, i love moments like these. it is great when you were a kid and watched happy days and fonzie would beat up the bully. or bigfoot, great tv moment where the person who deserves it as it coming. they are like terrible people at these hearings. she has not even the worst. they are the people they are saying parent should not be told their kids are seeking transition. this is a colt. it is a cult and also, i think
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so, right? anyway she makes a great point. attempting to censor anybody by language of incitement, it can be used on anybody and on anybody because so open to interpretation of the way this information/disinformation and especially hate speech as we have seen this broaden, broaden, broaden and this actress might learn from this, no, she blocked nancy mace. she walked her on twitter. that was the lesson -- she didn't want to hear from her again. she also blocked me. i think she blocked everybody from fox. it just shows she prefers to live in her own bubble. she prefers to live her cognitive bias. she commits the crime of saying income i hope katie pavlich gets attacked, she doesn't see that the same way somebody would say, you should get attacked because she is in her bubble. she can't see -- she only sees the crime of the person she hates is doing. >> katie: we hear the threats to democracy or a very serious
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and what goes on on twitter needs to be taken serious. elon musk is allowing plethora of hate speech to thrive on the platform and yet, people like this do it, they think it is okay and there was no recourse for them. >> jessica: we will see if there is some recourse. this has gone viral and speaks to the importance of having representatives on both sides like nancy mace who republicans and democrats respect. this is not a flame throwing person or someone who uses her language fastly loose. this is a person who takes her job seriously. that is why that was so effective. and she was on her network and went on a liberal network and giving interviews. thinkers of the other party. that is important here that is how you make your message heard showing up in people where people wouldn't expect you to be there. that is something that took away from it. i think it is interesting because i think it mirrors twitter files installment 3 or r it was, donald trump's tweet was
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inciting violence and in hinged on who are the american patriots? who is he talking to? is he talking the guys who storms a capital or just talking to american patriots at large and people who voted for him sitting at home in kentucky minding their own business? we have to spend more time thinking about what really incites violence? is at all flat out on the page? is it how someone interprets it and go into them based on it? what kind of intent push mark that woman testifying, does she want them to show up at all of their houses? >> katie: people did show up. and wanted to kill supreme court justice brett kavanaugh. jessie, do you not tweet because you're worried about getting cold in front of the congress to test about something someday? >> jesse: johnny tweets. i don't know what he says, but i haven't got in trouble so far so he is doing a great job. this is the liberal logic. if i call a transsexual, he, they will say, "oh, you're
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causing violence." but if the transsexual says "a mob needs to go loose on a justice's house. that is free speech and that is b.s. that argument doesn't get a fair shake in the media. so, if you say anything, the media will say, you're causing violence and not only are you causing violence, they are causing violence to the most vulnerable, to those most oppressed. nobody wants to cause violence to anybody. you can't even remember what you said at that point! so just another way to censor you. i will not stand for it! >> greg: way to stand up for free speech, jesse! >> jesse: i will stand up! [laughter] >> katie: you are in a mood today. >> jessica: a liberal federal judge whose son was gunned down and her husband was shot as well. so there is real violence. >> jesse: you guys defund the
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police! same thing. >> katie: got to go. the secretary of vacations caught neglecting yet another national crisis when on vacation. ♪ ♪ homegrown tomatoes...nice. i want to feel in control of my health, so i do what i can. what about screening for colon cancer? when caught in early stages it's more treatable. i'm cologuard. i'm noninvasive and i detect altered dna in your stool to find 92% of colon cancers, even in early stages. early stages? yep, it's for people 45 plus at average risk for colon cancer, not high risk. false positive and negative results may occur. ask your provider if cologuard is right for you. consider it done. ho ho ho! not again... oh no...
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♪ ♪ >> jessica: transportation secretary pete buttigieg facing criticism for vacationing overseas while america was facing potential crises. the former mayor in portugal while america prepared for a railroad strike that could have shut down the supply chains and travel. making things worse posting this video making it seem like he was in the u.s. >> over 200 flights have been delayed or canceled so today the d.o.t. launching airline customer service dashboard.
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for the first time you go to our website and prepare airline practices all in one place. if you are traveling this weekend were in a time, no error department has your back. >> jessica: a spokesperson said the trip was long planned and people to budge traveling on his own time on urgent issues all the way. dana come i want to come to you. this sounds like a enforcer with a squeaky clean reputation. >> dana: so the trappings of his office have ruined his whole brand. his brand small town mayor, problems of her, folk hero, good guy and now on private jets. and the secretary of transportation and you have a possible rail strike in the white house think this is a major crisis and you have to deal with it and you are phoning it in from home from europe? think about this, also, nancy has allowed these proxy rules to go on so long, do you remember what the congress moment was
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saying? jones, remember him? the wedding in france? and voting by proxy because he had covid problems question like this is ridiculous. now interesting people deserve time off but when you are the secretary, you have to tell your loved ones come i know this is not plant and i promised him and this is done we will go on vacation and i will spend all my time focused on you and not try to phone it in on a zoom call to this cabinet in order to deal with a rail strike. but i think the worst thing for him has been that he has ruined his brand. now, if kamala harris can go against him and say, "you are not that small town folk hero anymore." >> katie: she would laugh. >> jessica: jesse, do you think pete has ruined his reputation? >> jesse: i'm going to defend pete here. >> katie: oh, wow! >> jesse: because this was a preplanned vacation.
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everybody deserves time off in august. everybody else is off in august, you are off, we are up, i am. >> katie: i'm not the secretary of transportation. >> jesse: okay, he didn't know the strike was coming. it was preplanned and the strike never went down. didn't go down. so, he did bring a coat with his little pen. so you can tell he was trying to get one over on us. so you can tell he felt guilty about it. but what was he supposed to wear? was he supposed to wear an open collar shirt looking out on his brunch? >> jessica: this is not good. >> jesse: with the wind blowing through his hair? he did the best under those circumstances. he has a young they become a remember, paternity. >> jessica: twins. >> jesse: paternity for the twins, so he needed a break. you need to recharge your batteries sometimes to come back fully geared up and ready to go. >> katie: jesse tried that. greg, you tried it and i thought it was good to. >> greg: but jesse only takes
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vacation after something happens. >> dana: preplanned. [laughter] >> greg: did they go to portugal? >> jessica: yeah, portugal. >> greg: underrated. i've met my wife there and i met my girlfriend there. and her girlfriend. i will be home in an hour. make the stew. he puts the gull in portugal. you don't get recognized and i go to mexico, i vacation in tijuana and nobody recognizes me like in the '80s. he doesn't get bothered but he definitely has got to be the man who kind of advertises why you should vacation in america, right? you should be going -- we have wonderful -- he has the transportation secretary, the rhodes scholar. so as people, come to the small town pure to come to our great park spirit but you can't just say, get the hell out of this
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place. i'm going to portugal because people, whatever. >> jesse: so you can only vacation domestically if you work for the government? >> greg: if you work for the department of transportation, yes. >> jesse: is that the real? >> greg: that is actually in the constitution. [laughter] look it up. >> katie: jesse is not allowed to do acupuncture ever again because i don't know what they did to him but wow, well, jesse. during october 21 when cargo ships sitting up at the shores not getting unloaded, pete buttigieg takes mature gnomic maternity leave. he didn't give birth and he is the secretary of transportation. if you were a republican, like if you are a republican -- >> greg: i don't know. it is changing rapidly. >> jessica: not that fast. >> katie: if a republican he would have been hounded out of office like tom price and hated as a secretary for doing this during a crisis. pete buttigieg tried to argue
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even though he went on the portugal vacation ahead of the railroad strike, he was able to get a deal to have her at the strike which is not true. the biden administration said they got a deal they did not get a deal. it was rejected by the railroads and congress had to bail him out. that is also not true. so if you're going to be the secretary of transportation or something else, that is the job you are doing and you don't get to leave twice in the middle of a crisis. >> jesse: i'm sorry but it always happens during vacation. >> jessica: it must be said his twins were in the nicu. so let's be clear about what was going on then. >> jesse: oak my really, that is why he took a long term? >> jessica: he didn't take that long paternity but there was a crisis. >> katie: but he is a deputy, the whole point. >> je>> dana: you can't get cald into the office. >> greg: shall be check his luggage?
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>> jesse: welcome back. it is time for "the fastest" appear the first step a lot of men feel insecure about turtlenecks. the cut elite garments are constricting, pretentious and artsy. but a new article argues that maybe this will help guys feel better. greg has been rocking a turtle for decades. you really love that turtle. >> greg: you know, i don't know. it puts me back in time like robert in "i spy" or robert wegner by the yacht throwing natalie wood into the water. you know, i don't know. it is a weird '70s vibe to it. >> jesse: does it come with a pipe? >> greg: ? >> greg: no. >> jesse: must you wear under a blazer? >> greg: i'm a big fan of the turtleneck. >> jesse: do you like when men wear turtlenecks que?
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>> dana: yeah, i do. >> jesse: in a blizzard? >> dana: sure. they turn on that? yeah, of course. i married a british guy. >> jesse: you sure did, not a portuguese guy. what about you? have you ever seen a guy trouncing down manhattan with a turtleneck and piercing jaw and felt good in your loins? >> greg: loins? [laughter] i don't think so. [laughter] >> jessica: if everyone understood what you meant. [laughter] a lot of handsome dudes and turtlenecks out there. it is very fashionable. >> jesse: is it too sophisticated? >> katie: no, it is actually pretty practical and you don't have to bring a scarf. >> jessica: exactly. [overlapping voices] >> jesse: so tomorrow i'm wearing a turtleneck, a mock
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turtleneck. up next when you are not watching fox news, do you feel it is hard to find something good on television? some things because it is too many shows available and according to the data in february, there were more than 800,000 unique appropriate titles across traditional tv. 800,000, kd, that is too many. >> katie: you can watch "the five" across america on fox nation, but it is true when you go down to sit down to try to find a show and you spend more time trying to find the show than watching the show and sometimes you give up. >> jesse: so they should cancel 90% of what is out there? >> jessica: if you think about what is good content, 90% could go. i love real estate shows because suggest we comply beverly hills. because i bought "voc" the night before and i miss out on a lot of great -- >> katie: med jim fox global, fox nation. >> jesse: but what are the
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actors and actresses going to do? >> dana: here is what i do i have my notes app for my phone. if they hear you, they know about tv shows than i do but i have a notes list in my phone. so i don't go searching around there. a search on my list and say, this is what we should watch. peter will say, what channels i don't? and then i have to google it and that is how you find the good tv shows. >> jesse: strategic. you probably watched out of the hundred thousand, 999,000. >> greg: i actually stick to the classics like "colombo" and the rockford files. but you know what is crazy, i wonder if this happens at home. you have two remotes. >> jessica: four, so annoying. >> greg: the possibilities are endless that might turn something on your tv you have to work backward to find out what the combination is? you find out one has to aim at this thing and at that thing. what is the difference between power and system? i don't know. do you know what i'm talking
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about? systems, but then you called the dude and the dude comes in oh, yeah, here is what you do. the tb goes on and you feel like an idiot. you can't turn it off and then it starts all over again. it is like -- we have flat screens for $200. right? the world is awesome, but the technology has made it impossible to enjoy the actual technology! imagine if you were trying to feed yourself, but you had these buttons you would die. >> jesse: they should bring back the knob, turn it, turn the damn knob. "one more thing" is up next.ed ♪ ♪ p like that for dad?” and she was like “you know what i think that would be actually really cool.” ♪ i figured this is a great holiday present since i won't be with him for christmas. ♪ it was the best gift that i ever received,
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in my entire life. because it opened up my life. unwrap your family story, with ancestrydna. . . and our fallen first responder families. those who die for us and leave young families behind. i'm with 21 of these families tonight.
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they came as our guests. so, who here things that they deserve a mortgage free home? this morning we paid off their mortgages. they never have to worry about their mortgages again. give them a round of applause. i was not expecting to go out on stage with a huge picture of my husband behind me and find out that i was getting my mortgage paid off. my husband, will, he would be just so happy. my kids will have a forever home by supporting tunnel to towers, it's an opportunity to turn those words thank you for your service into tangible, meaningful action. tunnel to towers is an amazing organization. i can't believe what they've done for me tonight and what they've done for countless others. whether it's fallen first responders, catastrophically injured veterans, or gold star families. tunnel to towers is here to help them.
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if you haven't given yet, please do go to t2t.org to give as little as $11 a month. thank you. get refunds.com powered by innovation refunds can help your business get a payroll tax refund, even if you got ppp and it only takes eight minutes to qualify. i went on their website, uploaded everything, and i was blown away by what they could do. getrefunds.com has helped businesses get over a billion dollars and we can help your business too. qualify your business for a big refund in eight minutes. go to getrefunds.com to get started. powered by innovation refunds. it was the night before christmas when there on the couch you sat on your tuchus, and vegged like a slouch you watched and you ate with a heart full of gloom when suddenly washington came in the room a christmas miracle, could it be true? he changed the channel to prageru it's on your tv and your smartphone too a gift to your braincells to save your iq
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and just how high could your iq go? if you never try, you'll never know make a tax-deductible donation at prageru.com so how many vaccines have you given to people? me? about 1000. walgreens...millions. no way can i miss her big debut. with your booster, i think you'll be there. for every twirl. i got a shot so my sister won't get sick. way to go, big bro! so while we're here... ...flu shot, as well? let's do it. when you need to talk vaccinations, our pharmacists are here. ♪ ♪ >> greg: time now for "one more" i will go fuss and just plug the show. it's gutfeld tonight i have matt schlapp, dagen mcdowell cat
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and tyrus. all right. who is next? it's jesse. >> jesse: season fin mali. [cough] [laughter] >> jesse: survivor season 43. too many seasons last night and the winner 52-year-old mike g gabbler surprised the cast how he was going to spend the money. >> people need that money more i will donate the entire prize my father's name green beret veterans in need. save lives do something good. season 4 #, all of us did this a million dollars is going to them. >> jesse: would have you done that? >> greg: i bet all of those other contestants are like what a jerk. >> jesse: what a good guy tonight "jesse watters primetime" secret epstein tapes update. update. >> greg: which epstein? the one from "welcome back kotter"? >> jesse: larry epstein.
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>> jessica: pediatric survivor brilgd shoot. diagnosed with stage 4 neuroblastoma 8 weeks old. wagner spent much of her childhood there and says the center was her home and healthcare workers were her family. a special way for reilly to pay tribute to the hospital enabled her to trade hospital gown to a wedding gown. congratulations reilly. >> greg: does the wedding down have a little rope in the back? could you imagine that? that would be very funny. >> jessica: they do have crazy backs. >> jesse: never know if it's the front or the back. >> greg: they always have to tell you. >> jessica: when you go to an ob. >> greg: talk about the women stuff after the show. katie. >> katie: sometimes when you are in a building and the fire alarm goes off you want to know who it was. at this doggy day care the fire alarm went off and they weren't sure who did it but there was a 3-year-old golden retriever caught on camera sending
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everybody outside the building because birdie accidently pulled the fire alarm with energy just pawing away and after the incident issued an apology to her furry friends and i'm sorry. i pulled the fire alarm today. sincerely birdie. >> greg: i think it was done on purpose. i'm a tw conspiratorialist. >> new on fox nation dog holingsz pull alarm part 7. >> katie: great idea. >> greg: that's it for us. special is up next. hey, bret. >> bret: did you want to talk more about the ob. >> greg: no. i'm good. >> bret: house republicans want to know did chinese biological research lead to the coronavirus that killed more than 6.5 million people worldwide? the clock, may be ticking on the tiktok social media app. as congress starts to get involved. and the battle of privacy vs. security. apple and the fbi get after each other over encryptio

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