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tv   The Five  FOX News  January 18, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PST

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there are a number of republican candidates that are in similar situations that are feeling things out, trying to staff up, talking to donors, and waiting to make that decision. >> neil: yeah. and it could come soon. tom, always a pleasure. thank you very much. >> thanks, neil. >> neil: busy news hour. that will do it. "the five" right now. . >> jeanine: hello, everyone. i'm judge jeanine pirro, along with harold ford jr., dana perino, jesse watters, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city. this is "the five." america, we hope you are ready for a brand-new kamala. the veep is ready to move past numerous setbacks, a massive staff exodus and cringe-worthy speeches like this.
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>> think of this moment as a moment that is about great momentum. you need to get to go. need to be able to get were you need to go to do the work and get home. when we talk about the children of the community, they are the children of the community. >> the significance of the passage of time. so when you think about it, there's great significance to the passage of time. >> you're going to literally see the craters on the moon with your own eyes. with your own eyes. >> jeanine: a new report claims the vice president is in a better place after the midterm results and ready to hit the road to show off the new and improved version of herself. one former harris aide saying, quote, now that it looks like biden's running, she's really being treated like what i would call a normal vice president. there's just less attention, which i think actually frees her
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up to focus on excelling, and not have to worry about the relentless scrutiny. >> one white house ally claims kamala is just misunderstood. quote, one of the challenges that this administration had is i don't think that the white house writ large fully understood what it meant to have a historic vice president. you have to put her out more on some things, because it looks different, and it is different, right? kamala is already making progress by literally standing up to biden. > of[laughter] [applause] >> jeanine: okay. all right. so, umm, i'll ask you this, greg, they're saying that less attention on her now frees
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kamala up to excelling. >> greg: hmm. >> jeanine: is why is there less attention on her now because joe is running? explain that to me. >> greg: it's a marvelous coincidence. as the media and democrats are gently trying to pry the car keys from old joe, they're talking about what a great improved driver kamala is. maybe this is a slight push, pushing her back in the spotlight. she says she's in a better place. a better place than where? i don't know where she is. amelia earhart as a bigger footprint than her. they shrunk her so you can't talk about her anymore. i'm running out of things to say. she's one step above the ladies that on the briefcases on "deal or no deal." but it's not her fault. this is where i defend her, because she's a great american. it's not her fault in this hiring phase. it wasn't like they were looking for competence or stressing capabilities to that person's
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point, whoever said that, it was all about the historic first. historic first now is an obsession every time the dems are in power, because they use it a against republicans. you must be a racist, a bigot of some kind. then you look at all of the -- feels like i've this before, but that stop me -- the look of historical firsts are also historical firsts. rachel lavine, kamala, lori lightfoot, pete buttigieg. it's effective. the historical first is effective in getting the person in, but lousy at getting the right person in. does that help? i hope so. >> jeanine: no. but thank you. no. thank you. >> greg: no. thank you. >> jeanine: all right. let me ask you, harold, because
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you're a reasonable -- hannity it's good to be back. >> jeanine: she says the pressure is not on her anymore, because she doesn't have to put in the vote when the senate is tied. what else is she doing? harold: she was elected with te vice president. she needs a reset. the president and the country could use her being a more reliable and effective partner for the president. i've urged on this show many, many times, if she tackled border security, laying out elements on the shows, it would go a long way toward helping not only president biden but the country. second, she has more experience than anybody in this administration to deal with
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crime. she was a da. she was an ag of the biggest and most populace state in the country. can you imagine if she went around the country collecting best practices ideas, things that are working, police officers and acting communities, police officers being funded and das that -- >> jeanine: why isn't she? harold: whether president biden runs again in two years -- i believe he will. this isn't trying to be coy with words. if he decides to run, not elected or re-elected, she'd run in four more years. this is the time to build that body of work. if i were them, i'd stop talking and start doing. >> jeanine: you're a woman. how do you feel about her, dana? >> dana: umm, i don't think of her necessarily as a woman. i think of her as a disappointment in terms of a vice president. there was something about that historical first, okay, this is the first one, and then she basically whiffs on every policy
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she's been given, including the most important one, which was the border, and she didn't do anything for her. that's not good for her. well, not good for the country mostly. she's having a great couple of weeks. who's had a last week? pete buttigieg. she sat back and watched that. biden is on the hook for documents. watch carefully if she responds to that. does she throw him a lifeline or a brick? we'll see how that goes. they had 35 different staff changes for her to get to this point. slight exaggeration, but not much. however many people left her campaign. then on the record said why they left her campaign. the people who left the white house staff office were on the record saying why they left. because it was chaotic, she wasn't a leader, she wouldn't listen to them. maybe all of a sudden she has a great staff, and that's wonderful, but i have to wonder how is it that the media, the editors, keep writing this story.
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she's always on the cusp of showing us how great she is. i'll sit here and wait to see that. being in the biden administration, if you're the principal, you're never responsible. it's always the staff failed you or somebody else's fault. nobody takes personal responsibility for anything. i'll believe it when i see it. she was a terrible boss. that's what her staffers say. let's see if she can be a better vice president with new staff. >> jeanin >> jeanine: wrote jesse, she was charged with being the border czar. i've never seen a report on root causes, but yesterday no, mayor adams said, to his credit, he said, we need a national border czar. i thought to myself, her own party doesn't know what her job is. >> jesse: yeah. that's embarrassing. if i was biden, i'd be mad. the week they appoint a special
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counsel to investigate you, the next week your vp comes out with a piece that says, you know what, things are going great for the vice president. permission to make an analogy. >> jeanine: yes. >> jesse: this is like greg gutfeld nearly drowning, and the next week jesse watters placed a piece in politico that said primetime is walking on water. it would be in poor taste. i read this whole piece. it's your typical girl power psycho babble, how is kamala feeling. the first line of it is new year, new you. i'm in a better place. i don't like all the attention i'm getting. now she feels free to be normal. >> dana: oh, jeez. >> jesse: dick cheney was shot in the face. did anyone write a thousand words about what he was feeling?
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whatever. somebody shot somebody in the face. how about this? mike pence almost got hung by his president allegedly. did anybody write a thousand words about how mike was feeling, or how al gore -- [laughter] >> jesse: my point is -- >> greg: permission denied. >> jesse: no. permission was granted. he fell on his face coming out of the applicant. listen, she feels a sense of comfort, a sense of flexibility. i don't even know what that means. do you know what it means to be freed up? freed up from what? >> jeanine: right. >> jesse: they had a piece, a paragraph, after returning from holiday break, kamala harris sat her staff down and went around the table and asked everybody what their word of the year was. her word of the year was "momentum." imagine bush, vice president in the '80s for ronald reagan, sitting his staff down, "excuse
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me, what is your word of the year?" they were fighting communism. they didn't have time for staff meetings about their word of the year. come on. now she's saying she doesn't care about politics, she's not running, she's giggling at mayor pete for botching the airplanes being grounded. >> dana: exactly. >> jesse: she's done. i feel bad for joe biden. >> jeanine: okay. are you done? >> jesse: i have another ana analogy. >> jeanine: denied. coming up, what was hunter bidening to with his dad four days before documents were found in the president's house? ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> dana: brand-new twists in the biden drama. resurfaced video shows hunter biden jetting off to the president's wilmington home four days before classified files were found in the garage next to the corvette. we're also learning that the president's personal attorney who found the initial batch of classified documents was interviewed by the fbi, but the bureau skipped out on filing an official document 302 to summarize interviews, meaning the fbi may have acted more ininformally, and the doj says there's no gag order so they're not being forthcoming about that, judge.
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>> jeanine: you know, i think jonathan turley used the word "breathtaking." i've used the word "stunning." the doj has decided this is not going to go, and they won't follow the rules. normally a charade goes on that makes it appear they're following the rules. the they're saying, look, let the lawyer collect the documents. biden's lawyer said, i don't have clearance, and yet he was given the authority by the department of justice to collect the documents. tired of talking about two-tiered justice. the bigger issue today is the department of justice doesn't care what you think. they're not even going to make-believe they're being fair. they've got a guy whose son is collecting money -- i'm not going to go through it again -- and who is under federal
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investigation for money laundering with 50 transactions, noticed by the department of treasury, and they're basically telling the family, you just police yourself. everything is okay. we're not going to come in in the early morning. trump's lawyers were outside. wouldn't even let them in the room. here's the question i have, dana. apparently that penn center was not open until 2017. okay? the penn biden center. so if those documents were taken out of the white house in 2016, when joe biden left, because they're obama classified documents, where were they for that year before they were at the penn biden center? >> dana: i don't know. definitely somewhere before that office was open.
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>> jeanine: they were somewhere before the office was open. we have a doj that lied to the american people, the f fisa cou. joe is a good guy, and the doj is saying they were on site. no, you weren't. you told his lawyers to take it. it's very sad. >> dana: jesse, the white house says they can't answer how many documents were found, whether there's documents still out there, what was contain in them, and why why wasn't the public td about them. >> jesse: if you say you're cooperating, you're transparent, doesn't mean you are. this is the hillary playbook. remember her people were smashing blackberries with hammers, giving it to the feds. "here, i dropped it." having the lawyers look through it.
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the rest is personal and fell in bleach. or they interview hillary, and forget to hit the record button. our fbi guys are busy framing trump. i'm going to stand in the drive way, smoke cigarettes, while you lawyers look for the stuff. i don't want to interfere with the big guy's office. what did you find? uh-huh, uh-huh. don't worry, i'm not writing it down. i'll make it up later. this is how these documents are different than the trump documents. okay? here's what i love about washington. you can have the chinese spend the night at the trump hotel, ring up room service, a couple thousands, and the democrats went to impeach trump on that. biden can come in, and the chinese can poor a hundred millions on penn biden center, go soft on china, and the democrats are eating cookies running away from reporters.
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>> dana: harold, what are you and the judge whispering about over there? >> harold: the judge was making points about the dates in this matter, which i find to be to be the most interesting thing. november 2nd and november 14th. from november 14th when the u.s. attorney in illinois, a republican, appointed u.s. attorney by president trump, was assigned to look into the november 2nd finding. something happened. between attorney general garland said we need a special counsel for this matter. was it only optics and you wanted insure you wanted to be fair in that regard or was there a legal matter? the lawyers at the doj sent to the vice president's home in wilmington to watch him do this. they didn't have security clearance. if there was something found,
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those doj lawyers could not interact. >> jeanine: the people at the penn center who found it also didn't have security clearance. >> harold: i think the transparency thing here is problematic. i think democrats who don't believe this is serious, you're not being serious. for republicans who immediately try to compare this to president trump's matter, you're not being totally honest about this. i hope that hur, the special counsel here, and most important thing in your intro, when you said the doj said there's no gag order on the white house. if that's indeed the case, i think there's questions that warrant answers. i feel sorry for ms. jean-pierre, because she doesn't either know the answers and or -- >> dana: no one is throwing her a lifeline, not even the doj. >> harold: jackie says is it safe to say there's a national security aanalysis or assessment going on about whether the documents pose a threat to the country, and ms. jean-pierre
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couldn't answer. we deserve these answers. >> dana: a point brought up today, we are awaiting a national security analysis that the dni is supposed to do about the trump documents. that's never been revealed. byron york brought that up today. and there's a report that hunter was -- they said they can't talk about it. >> greg: you don't want to talk about the president's family. how dare you? what happened to you? he's in the garage. it all makes sense. now the paintings make sense. hunter goes to the garage, gets the classified documents, slips it between the frame and the painting, sells it to the anonymous donors for half a million dollars. who are they? chinese. but we don't know that. hemmer told me this in the bathroom. [laughter] take it for what it's worth, but he's been right on all of this
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stuff. harold, you say you don't compare it to trump because it's not totally honest. how dare you come back from a splendid long weekend and say something like that? joe was at the height of self-righteousness, so he deserves the wrath. he wasn't just talking about the documents. he blew it up. there was fascism, a threat to democracy, about trump supporters. remember that dark speech as well? he was talking about the shroud of darkness, you know, the possibility of nuclear codes, the damage to society. so i believe in self-righteous reciprocity. everybody gets a free punch, right? joe biden deserves a punch for this. >> jesse: right in the kisser. >> greg: by the way, that's a metaphor for you, people. the fact is all the people wrongly accused or smeared, they have a free punch. you may think there's nothing to this.
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i don't care, harold. put that in your tie. >> harold: i said it's serious. i'm not disagreeing with you. >> greg: i've had it with you, harold. had it with you. you're so decisive. >> dana: but good to have you back at the table. ahead, a democratic city reducing penalties for things like carjackings. ♪ ♪
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>> jesse: the washington, d.c. council moving to reduce the penalties for carjacking and other violent crimes after overriding a vote from the progressive mayor, muriel bo bowser. she's furious. >> i don't think it does anything for safety, which is
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the argument i've made for many, many months. and why i voted the legislation. >> jesse: the new rules include reduced maximum sentences, the elimination of nearly all mandatory minimum sentences, and expanded rights to jury trials. even the liberal "washington post" thinks it's a step too far. quote, d.c.'s crime bill could make the city more dangerous. judge, when "the washington post" says you've gone too far, you've probably gone a little too far. >> jeanine: what's amazing, jesse, this is a progressive mayor, who wrote on the street "black lives matter." she wrote on the street, "black lives matter." >> harold: black lives do matter. >> jeanine: that's all i'm going to say about that. yep, yep. committing a violent crime with a gun, the maximum penalty is four years. that means i can shoot you with a gun four times, you'll never walk again. maybe shoot you in the head.
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>> jesse: why does it have to be me? >> jeanine: because you asked the question. the truth is, four years -- this is what the left does. they talk about taking guns away from law-abiding citizens, but when they catch a defendant with a gun, they immediately let him out on cashless bail. or have laws, even though they have a gun, we won't add additional penalties for having a gun. you shoot someone with a gun, four years, they don't die, that's enough. >> jesse: do you think the press will ask muriel bowser, shoot someone with a gun, four years? seems like a good question. >> harold: the council and her, she's done the right thing. i quarrel with parts of the law. we should be urging a recall vote. unless the city council people can explain to me what is it that this -- what is it that,
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overriding her, is going to do to enhance and uphold the public safety? if you can't answer that question, if i were living in washington, d.c., i would move to recall them. i think "the washington post" has laid it out well. the judge laid it out right. i think it's an effort to strengthen -- i think it's a weak law. for them to believe this is another disallowing people, or for that matter, unempowering people, you're empowering criminals, empowering murderers, those who create the kind of harm and strife in communities that are many ways helpless. if this story, the way we've read it, researched it today, is correct, they should be recalled. >> jesse: the council members don't have to persuade why their ideas are going to make you safe. they say things like equity, social justice, and the conversation is over. >> dana: and it's been unfair for so long, that's the reason they do it. harold, you say you would move to recall them, but also you would probably move. the problem for a lot of people
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who live in this area, are going to be victims of crimes, they can't move. that's not an option for them. i think it's stuff like this that shows why d.c. is never going to be a state, because they come up with crazy ideas like this. the congress still oversees d.c. they will probably have to step in here. the calls for d.c. statehood will again go by the wayside. >> jesse: can congress step? >> dana: yeah. >> jesse: oh, good. >> greg: isn't it crazy this is our nation's capital, and it's basically a third -- it's somalia, a crime-ridden mess. i agree with the carjackian thing, a measure to deal with our carbon imprint, because fewer people will be driving. the of this idea is so crazy that it forces you to ememploy cognitive empathy.
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why would anybody vote to reduce punishment for a violent crime that's dramatically increased? it's exploding. so why would you do that? everybody knows this is crazy, even the radical mayor. i call this criminal reparations. they believe the criminals are in their predicament due to a racist society, so eliminating punishment is their reparation, right? the payout, the damages. they will say that. basically what they're trying to do its right the wrongs of a justice system that existed back when they were truly oppressed, truly oppressive. you get stuff like no cash bail, reduced sentences, and -- even if they're seen as a cold act of punishment against society, that's what it's meant to be. we deserve this. radical progressives see this as we deserve this. so if you get mugged, your daughter gets raped, well, you know what, call it even for 400 years of oppression. they foolishly believe this
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somehow benefits minorities, as if minorities are never the victim, they're only the carjacker. minorities should be thrilled. oh, you mean, you can carjack more? awesome. it's at its core racist. this is why radicalism is so profoundly dangerous, because they are choosing to destroy society, because they believe it's hopelessly oppressive. >> harold: we just celebrated dr. king this weekend. dr. king never argued for anything like this. >> greg: yeah. >> harold: your point is well taken. i want to make the point, black people don't want this happening. >> greg: exactly. >> harold: which is the point that you're making. >> greg: thank you. >> harold: point well taken. permission to end now? >> jesse: permission granted. up next, climate alarm goes extraterrestrial. john kerry thinks he's been chosen to save the planet. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> harold: strategizing how to fix all the world's problems. president biden's climate czar, former secretary of state john kerry, boasting about a plan to save our planet. >> it's pretty extraordinary that we, a select group of human beings, because of whatever touched us at some point in our lives, are able to sit in a room and come together and actually talk about saving the planet. i mean, it's so almost extraterrestrial to think about, quote, saving the planet. if you said that to most people, most people they think you're a crazy tree-hugging lefty liberal, do-gooder, whatever. >> harold: and former vice president al gore painting a
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rather dismal picture of what lugspollution is doing to mother earth. >> that's what's boiling the ocean, creating atmospheric rivers, the rain bombs, sucking the moisture out of the land, creating the droughts and melting the ice, raising the sea level, climate refugees, 1 bill in this century, we have to actt has bib been moved by this issr a long time. is this just a bunch of rich people? >> dana: 140,000 private planes showed up for this meeting. i don't know if they attend the al gore's electture there. as to what john kerry said, he said isn't it amazing that -- we were touched. we are the special ones. we are the ones who are going -- we get to sit in a room and talk about saving the planet. what about doing something to
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save the planet? what about the people who are not touched like john kerry, who might to live in nairobi, in the congo, maybe places in africa, for example, where they've been denied the ability to develop resources so they can have their own energy and electricity and become more independent, which could lead to more innovations, so we could get to something like fusion sooner and all do something good for the planet on that point. here's the thing, also, they want to focus on climate change, but don't talk about china. the china energy investment group, that is the main entity that's expanding use of coal there. why wouldn't they talk about it there? guess what i found out. they're a sponsor of davos. >> jeanine: of course. >> harold: judge, you sound ready. >> jeanine: china is everywhere. china is in the universities. china is in the colleges. i mean, it's in the government. we shouldn't be surprised.
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it's in sports. it's in movies. we are a select group of human beings. imagine, we're talking about the planet. the rest of the people are just rubes. they don't know anything. there's such a condescending kind of arrogance, they pontificate about themselves, and the truth is they're spending our tax dollars. we're working and they're spending our money. we've already spent a trillion dollars for renewable energy. it's the richest countries that have the lowest carbon emissions, other than, china, which is not the richest yet. but the money that's being spent money, money, money -- is money that the united states is giving to other governments. so they tax us, call us rubes, and then run around in their private planes. >> harold: greg, in the greenroom, you told me, what do you think about this speech by vice president gore? >> greg: well, i agree with you completely. it was an absolute total embarrassment.
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i'm glad you said that. [laughter] you look back in the show, you'll find it there. why is it -- you look at al gore, you look at john kerry. why are the people so concerned by the health of the planet look so unhealthy. why do they look so sick? i mean, they're talking about sucking the moisture out of the earth. that guy looks like he needs watering, right? he's got the complexion of a delapidated tumbleweed. they're all driftwood, all come together for one year, and pat each other on their splintered backs. i'll tell you what -- you know what -- i forgot what i was going to say. stelter is there, talking about disinformation. isn't it amazing? what's he going to talk about next? how to get washboard abs. seriously. i'm not invited to these things, because if you go there with solution they can't have their
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fun anymore. the climate change is great, because every year that's always the problem. you can still have your davos party, still fly in, and it will never be solved. >> harold: the oil companies' ceos are in demand at this conference for the first time in a long time. >> jesse: is that right? >> harold: yeah. >> jesse: i'm glad is talking about people's physical appearances. full bush beat these two guys, kerry and gore, they're losers, and they know it, and now they have to be someone else's savior. if you're al gore, have to create a term called a rain bomb to convince me to give up money to save the world, that's not doing it. boiling the oceans? talk about it normally, and maybe i'll be more open-minded. a little advice for john kerry. you don't say you're saving the world. you say you saved it.
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save it and then brag it. that's what i did. >> harold: up next, is she right or wrong? marie osmond says she won't be giving a penny to her kids. ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> greg: it's every rich brat's worst nightmare, show biz legend marie osmond won't give her kids a single dime, saying, quote, i don't know who becomes anything if they're just handed money. so true. i just think all an inheritance does is breed laziness and entitlement. bravo, marie. this is why i'm not giving any money to your kids also. jesse, you have offspring. you probably won't have money when you're gone. will this even matter? >> jesse: you saying i'm going to die bankrupt? >> greg: broke, yes. you'll be selling plasma. >> jesse: you can set up a trust, and you can give them money if they hit certain requirements, like if they get married at this age, or if they
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set up their own business at this age, in order to inspire them. so that's what i will not be doing. >> greg: harold, you have lovely children. it's going to be hard to say no to them. >> jesse: put their pictures up for a second. [laughter] >> harold: i get what she's saying. but about i think when you give your kids money, you don't give your kids money, whether you have money to give, it's what you teach them in terms of values at home, whether you teach them right or wrong, whether you teach them to be kind, whether you teach them to give back to society. i don't care if you're rich or poor, you can do that. now i'm glad she's not my mom. [laughter] in all fairness, i think the message is right. i'm not convinced this is the only way to do it. i wish her kids the best. >> greg: judge, i bet she's been around spoiled kids of rich people and hates them with a deep passion, like i do.
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>> jeanine: look, i agree with harold. i think that that, you know, if she hasn't taught her kids how to live or how to survive, then, you know, waiting for her to die isn't going to help them out. i checked out the ages of her kids. they're 26, 33, 35, 39. they already know. they're either going to survive or not without her money. >> greg: maybe she knows something we don't know. >> dana: maybe she knows her children very well. maybe she's told them this from the beginning. it's not like all of a sudden she came up with this idea. it's not like i'm going to get a bunch of money when i turn 30, maybe because she's told them yet. there's a new book, called "die with zero," and it's about how to enjoy your life, your money, and spend it all before you go. >> jeanine: i'm buying that book. >> dana: i just ordered it on audible.
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bill perkins is the author. >> harold: he's a good author. ♪ ♪ when they got a crack in their windshield. [smash] >> dad: it's okay. pull over. >> tech: he wouldn't take his car just anywhere... ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...so he brought it to safelite. we replaced the windshield and recalibrated their car's advanced safety system, so features like automatic emergency braking will work properly. >> tech: alright, all finished. >> dad: wow, that's great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ ♪ ready to feel what it's like? when you can du more with less asthma. it's possible with dupixent. oble.
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if your business kept on employees through the pandemic, getrefunds.com can see if it may qualify for a payroll tax refund of up to $26,000 per employee, even if it received ppp, and all it takes is eight minutes to get started. then we'll work with you to fill out your forms and submit the application; that easy. and if your business doesn't get paid, we don't get paid. getrefunds.com has helped businesses like yours
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claim over $2 billion but it's only available for a limited time. go to getrefunds.com, powered by innovation refunds. ♪ >> judge jeanine: time now for "one more thing." here's the question. what is your favorite -- >> judge jeanine: all right. sorry about that. what is your favorite store bought cookie. a survey by study sets out to find the answer. they rank the cookies on a variety of features, texture, smell size and taste. here they are oreos, tate's bake shop chocolate ship. sugar cookies. milano and b and biscoff what'sr favorite. >> lotus. that's a biscoff. >> judge jeanine: what is your favorite? dine.
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>> dana: eating one i would choose a milano. >> judge jeanine: greg? >> nabisco. >> judge jeanine: i would normally do oreo but i'm not eating sugar. number one cookie store bought is oreos. and tate's bake shop that none of you selected is number 2. frosted sugar cookies. jesse's number 3. pepperidge farm milano 4. that's it. greg? >> greg: what a great show we have. mike baker. jamie lissow, kat timpf, tyrus. that's tonight at 11:00 p.m. let's do this. greg's celebrity sightings. i missed the golden globes but i saw what happened afterwards nearby restaurant meryl streep and glen close both fighting over a cigarette. biting oscar winners and contenders often mistaken for each other couldn't handle the other one in their presence and proceeded to beat and eat each other to death. we'll be right back.
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>> judge jeanine: that's it, jesse. >> jesse: are you flexible? >> judge jeanine: why? >> jesse: do your toes have dexterity? >> judge jeanine: you talking to me? yes. >> jesse: this woman shannon jones furthest world record arrow shoot using her feet. training her entire life break the record and hard work paid off. australian archer destroyed the previous 12 meters hit the bulls eye from 60 feet away. >> greg: this is going to come in handy. >> jesse: "jesse watters primetime" exclusive photos of hunter who are those people in the corvette. >> dana: amazing service could be the trick to bringing down grocery bill or egg bill. called rent a chicken. and it literally what it sounds like. farms all over the country supply everything you need 2 to 4 eggs laying hens up to six months. drop off a portable chicken coup. food and water dishes. all the food you need to get started jesse. sounds like a great idea for you
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guys. >> jesse: do cows, too? >> dana: google whether chicken coups are permitted in your county first. >> all under the age of # 0. new quarterbacks come in. i feel bad for my boy brady and rogers. time for a new era to come in. joe burrow i love them. >> judge jeanine: that's it for us. "special report" is up next. >> bret: i go with the milano cookie. >> judge jeanine: i will save them for you. >> bret: tragedy in ukraine plane crashes into a school killing more an than auto dozen people there. husband accused of killing a massachusetts woman formally charged with murder. we will get a look at some of the evidence. how a weight loss crazy may be endangering the lives of some diabetics. but breaking tonight, we have new information about the discovery of classified materials at the delaware home

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