Skip to main content

tv   The Five  FOX News  February 24, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PST

2:00 pm
live", my weekend show. and also the ukraine wear, going into its second year. we'll have more on the chinese overture to get a peace agreement at the same time getting cozy with russia. and a reflection on jimmy carter who said he made a difference. here's "the five." >> jesse: wey on jesse watters with joe jeanine jr., harold ford jr., paid katie pavlik, and this is "the five." alex murdaugh done with his testimony after a dramatic day in the double murder trial and disgraced attorney admits to being help hopping serial layer but not a murder. the prosecutors to poke holes in his timeline of what happened
2:01 pm
that night and yesterday, murdaugh changed his story to admit he was at the dog kennels where his wife and son worships slade something that he did not tell the police at the time. >> ... the last time you sell supposedly your wife and child and all of this detail, you as a lawyer and a prosecutor didn't think that was important to offer? >> i think it is important here in and al murdaugh helped l.a. about being at the kennels, he left his wife and son minutes before slaughtered, no one else was around. >> >> you hear the dogs barking, caring on and they sent somebody was around? >> no, they weren't. there was nobody around and the dogs didn't know. there was nobody else around. >> good. >> for him to sense. >> jesse: but the most explosive moment of the day murdaugh putting his own theory
2:02 pm
who murdered his family. he believes it is revenge over a vote accident involving his now deceased son paul. paul was driving the family vote drunk when he crashed and killed one of his friends. >> i didn't believe any of the family, the people that were involved in the vote rack had anything to do with hurting paul but i can tell you at that time as i sit here today that i believe that boat rick is the reason why paul-paul and maggie were killed. >> so we have random vigil lead vigilantes because of the boat rick. >> i don't know that it is random vigilantes. >> so you are saying someone off of social media? you don't have any evidence of that, do you? you just believe that informed that theory and tried to explain the light that you told for the first time yesterday, isn't that right? you are telling this jury it is random vigilante, the
2:03 pm
12-year-old that just happen to know paul and maggie were in brazil june 7th. they knew they would be at the kennels alone on june 7th. note that you wouldn't be there for only between the times 8:49 and nine:02 ansi crime is committed during that tour that short time around the same time that you are in alameda. that is what you are trying to tell the jury? >> you got a lot of factors in there, mr. waters which i do not agree with and some of it which i do. >> jesse: judge jean pirro, how was it that murdaugh put forward this alternative theory of the killing? >> judge jeanine: look, he started this yesterday. this guy is without a doubt one of the best, not just defendants, certainly the best defenses on the court room stand.
2:04 pm
no one can put words in his mouth as hard as i try. no one can pull the wool over his eyes any sharper than the prosecutor. and the prosecutor has a game plan. this guy has to have a terrific memory to be able to keep telling the lies he's telling. but what is going on today is that he has consistently added to another possibility so some jurors owing to say, there could be someone out there that did this, okay? but the prosecutor if he has any brains and i don't like that cross-examination. yesterday, i like him, he was a bulldog but he can't be a bulldog straight for two days. the jury is gone. they left after the third time and stalled and the look in his eyes. they say he is a liar, thief and a con man. and he says, "i am." but when he said he left the scene and he goes back within 2 minutes, all of a sudden, he called him again. why is he calling mags and
2:05 pm
paul-paul again? he's making 293 footsteps. he's pacing. he's pacing because they are not answering the phone. but he is only 1100 yards away. all he has to do is get in the golf cart and go back there. but the prosecutor is not making the point the way he should appear at his summation has to be brilliant. it has to had all the points he missed. understand one thing, a verdict in a criminal case, murder case and criminal case has to be on beyond a reasonable doubt. i would bet my house there is one person that will hang this jury if not one more person. >> jesse: that is a pretty nice house, harold. would you take her up on the bet? >> harold: first of all it's good to be back. i hope the judge is wrong. she has a lot of experience and understands courtrooms and prosecutors. i didn't watch a whole lot of admittedly until today and i read a lot about it as we were going to talk about it today. and i guess i agree with the judge in one huge regard to come i think the jury who never saw
2:06 pm
on television, we couldn't see the jury but maybe somebody else but it all depends on what the jury believes this man right here between 8:49 and 9:02:00 p.m. if you believe he lied about everything, there are a lot of things before that and you believe you lied about things after that, which he admitted to, and he lied about some things he did in his own private, personal private commercial practice in life and we talk about the law and his family's life. he has an audible history with his father, great-grandfather, and how does he not remember the 13 minutes on the property? i do agree with the judge come if i was the prosecutor i would put a white board and just write down all of these things. i would want the jury to relate as they sit back in that room to remember what he was doing when he wrote those things on the whiteboard. look, i will not second-guess
2:07 pm
the prosecution. they sold at jury and the prosecution had an opportunity and i think his name is waters, no relation. so he saw what the jury was thinking and he could see their eyes. i guess the one question i have for the judge, what do you think they would do? to they have the opportunity to call -- would you call a police officer or somebody just to reaffirm and reinforce for the jury that he lied to them? and what they think he would be lying? >> judge jeanine: absolutely has a d.a. prosecutor. >> harold: i don't know enough about it. >> judge jeanine: you have a right to rebuttal testimony. but the problem as a judge, i'm not going to allow it. because it is not material to the murder. we have already established he's lied. i'm going to say as a judge, the jury already heard that up and you can bring it up in summation. that said. >> jesse: correct me if i am wrong, they don't have a ton of physical evidence. they don't have the murder weapon. they have the video around the crime scene at the time.
2:08 pm
>> my understanding is all circumstantial evidence. so the prosecutor have established i'm a liar, he's a liar, he lies about all these other things, why wouldn't he be lying about killing his wife and son? that is not the standard. the standard is beyond the reasonable doubt on murder charges. not beyond reasonable doubt whether he is a liar or not. so maybe that won't lie when it comes to the jury deliberating. the one thing he was asked by the defense attorney before they adjourned for the day was, "did you murder maggie and paul? "and he said i would never hurt either one of them. he did not say "no." so may be a your answer to give. [overlapping voices] >> katie: it would hurt but he didn't answer the question and of course, the remaining question come if he didn't do it, who did and the police clearly don't have any other leads when it comes to the man
2:09 pm
who'd has done this. >> katt: judge come i agree with you i think there will be one person -- i don't know. there are plenty of reasons why to hit this family and to hate more than him and to be so mad that kid was driving the vote and killed that girl. do i think that is what happened? no. i think he killed these people. but i actually think the prosecutor's plan is okay, i will show this guy is a liar, and attic and he says, "absolutely i am." and because i'm an avid that is why i behaved and crazy ways but i would never do this. he is doing such a great job. it is almost makes me hate him even more because you can see how you can get away with all of these different things that they seem to get away with their entire lives by one, the way he is coming off of a year of her dis- media about trashing all these people are to watch that and still come up is pretty sympathetic.
2:10 pm
>> harold: one thing as the judge, in light of what was said, wouldn't you want to call the police back to rebut the fact that we did explore and we did look into these other things and found that was not there? >> judge jeanine: know that was defense and o.j. simpson saying or the prosecutions they will call somebody and say, we checked everybody else out. no, it is an argument -- >> harold: i didn't practice like you, but i went to law school. >> judge jeanine: he opened the door. that is not material. you don't have to eliminate everyone to and type this person. i will tell you with the winner is here for him in terms of his being acquitted, to coconspirator was talking to a friend of mine fitzpatrick ada and the president of national das and we are pals and store and he said jeanine in all your years have you ever seen a homicide scene where they used to cope guns with one person? i said, never. he said, jeanine, never. i've never seen it and you've never seen it so what does that
2:11 pm
tell you? >> jesse: if he skates on the double homicide can he go to prison for the fines? >> judge jeanine: this is one thing that jury may say, look, we will let him go and he will be convicted of financial crisis. [overlapping voices] >> jesse: all right. coming up pete buttigieg playing dress up finally going to east palestine but where the heck is joe biden?
2:12 pm
2:13 pm
2:14 pm
2:15 pm
♪ ♪
2:16 pm
>> judge jeanine: mayor pete finally putting his big boy pants on and visiting east palestine. but where is president biden? instead of going to ohio, president biden is heading home to delaware to relax after his big ukraine trip here of the residents are scared about toxic chemicals but neither biden or kamala harris think it is important to show up. the white house said it was all excuses. >> is the president in those states? of course he wants to provide support. >> he can do it directly? >> but i think, but i think offering assistance and the help is doing it directly. when you see the federal government on the ground providing the assistance that is needed, that is doing it directly. >> judge jeanine: if that isn't bad enough, these people are how do mike somehow making him the video. political reports the world is frustrated that g.o.p. tax over the train wreck with one senior democrat saying "pete buttigieg
2:17 pm
has taken a lot of bullets for the president on this." pete is a big guy, isn't he, jesse? he will really take it on. >> jesse: this whole transportation gig was to be the on ramp to the presidency. the on-ramp is derailed and he's whining about it and it doesn't look good in the costume that he put on last night. biden is not going to go, judge. it is too late at this point for joe to go. it is trump country. he would rather have pete take the heat for him. he talks of a game about empathy and the environment and giving back to the working class, but that is all talk. you will never see the president over there come back from europe and i hope this thing blows over and that is at pier that is sad because the country wants people there. he even said it last night, not just prompts but rudy and everyone who cares about the environment and the country should be there right now.
2:18 pm
this has captured the country's sole attention and the people that matter are ignoring it. >> kat: that is a good point. where al gore and john kerry? they have no problem hopping onto the jet to talk about environmental issues somewhere but they don't want to get on the jets to bring attention to and maybe bring some water. i don't leave the water is safe to drink and drinking one glass pier that will not get you over time. it reminds me flint, michigan, an hour from where i grew up, the water is fine to drink and people are saying i'm sick, i'm sick. like people in east palestine and 18 months after estimated 9,000 water level to say, okay, no it's not. >> jesse: fiji should be sending pallets. bring them some water. >> judge jeanine: harold, your turn. i want you to take a listen to
2:19 pm
what democrat congressman john and his take on all of this. >> east palestine must come to norfolk southern. this is not a taxpayer problem here this is a railroad company problem. they created the problem, they must be fully down to the very last penny responsible. >> judge jeanine: okay, this isn't our problem, but ukraine is. explain this for me. >> harold: a couple of things, i think the cumbersome and is largely when corporate malfeasance or a corporate challenge like this into space argument for greater leeway in flexibility how they were able to manage the operation spirit but the finger-pointing has never been my strength. right now, if i were anywhere else in the country you have these chemicals being transported by rail him i would want to know because you can look out your window and your home window how you travel to those places. could we have a problem here?
2:20 pm
and i think i give jim jordan a lot of credit going to the border and i think that is important. those are the kind of hearings i want to see i was holding. i would hold a hearing in east palestine. drink the water and hopefully you don't get sick. they say to say. i will call up the operators and say, look in tsb will investigate this and i don't want to get in the way of that. where do you transport chemicals across the country that you have these kinds of challenges, potential challenges you can have? where do you get such control when you stop those trains to conductors? we should change those rules. if i'm the president and i hope you are wrong, i would issue an executive order any time you have these kind of increases, i'm not an expert but 75 degrees to 236 degrees in 2 miles is a lot. i don't know if the number should be 200, 175, 150. that is where you have experts. i would hold hearings to make sure nothing like this happens again. we can allocate the blame the
2:21 pm
insurance company, norfolk southern or whoever it should be, they should be held accountable. buttigieg should have been there early, president biden should be there early and i don't disagree those affirmative activists who talk a good game should be there also. but we should think how we prevent this from happening over the next several months. >> judge jeanine: this do something for the people involved right now. wait a minute, katie. the issue right now is that the president is throwing buttigieg under the bus. okay, but the truth is that fema refused to offer assistance when the president offered a half a billion dollars on presidents day. and i hear another $2 billion more we are giving ukraine. >> katie: look, this story and east palestine the situation has everything joe biden claims to care about, environment, trains, empathy, regulation. yet, he didn't show up. now to jesse's point, it is way
2:22 pm
too late to go and highlight his deed from behind strategy when it comes to this crisis, domestically at home in a place he claims to care about. it totally blows away his brand of being a hard-charging blue-collar stand with a worker kind of guy when he refuses to show up there but will show up in europe and other places where it is more convenient for him and there are a type of political prospects and where he is polling better. ukraine is one of them. when it comes to pete buttigieg, the white house is throwing him under the bus, kind of, by fall because joe biden handled this poorly. yesterday the white house press secretary was defending him in the briefing room. i'm curious if this guy gets to screw up before they actually decide to get rid of him and start over. it turns out the transportation secretary actually has responsibilities. and pete buttigieg was up for the job given his lack of experience even though he was the man who failed to fill potholes. where was he during the cargo
2:23 pm
crisis? while the car goes out to sea? what about the rail strikes? there is a number things m.i.a. in and this is another one. the rule is when you start making the president look bad, that is when it's time to go. we found that a lot of different times. they say they have confidence in him, but we will see how long that lasts. >> judge jeanine: i think jesse is right they will just be time before pete buttigieg. but he cam video shows rick arresting the career criminal who slaughtered a 9-year-old girl and news reporter in a shooting rampage. ♪ ♪ ncer with two different types of medicine. in a clinical trial, keytruda and chemotherapy was proven to help people live longer than chemotherapy alone.
2:24 pm
keytruda is used to treat more patients with advanced lung cancer than any other immunotherapy. keytruda may be used with certain chemotherapies as your first treatment if you have advanced nonsquamous, non-small cell lung cancer and you do not have an abnormal “egfr” or “alk” gene. keytruda can cause your immune system to attack healthy parts of your body during or after treatment. this may be severe and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you have cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, diarrhea, severe stomach pain, severe nausea or vomiting, headache, light sensitivity, eye problems, irregular heartbeat, extreme tiredness, constipation, dizziness or fainting, changes in appetite, thirst, or urine, confusion, memory problems, muscle pain or weakness, fever, rash, itching, or flushing. there may be other side effects. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions, including immune system problems, if you've had or plan to have an organ or stem cell transplant, received chest radiation, or have a nervous system problem. it feels good to be here for them. living longer is possible. it's tru. keytruda from merck.
2:25 pm
ask your doctor about keytruda.
2:26 pm
2:27 pm
chevy silverado factory-lifted trucks. where will they take you? ♪ ♪ (dog barks) ♪ silverado zr2, trail boss, and custom trail boss. because adventure is everywhere. ♪ ♪ >> kat: dramatic police cam footage released with a career criminal and gang member who went on a horrible shooting spree that took the lives of three people including a 9-year-old girl and local tv news reporter. >> let me go, let me go, let me
2:28 pm
go! >> pull over to the side real quick. >> i can't breathe! >> kat: the deadly rampage started 11:00 a.m. wednesday. the gunmen shot and killed his first victim, a woman in her 30s. five hours later the suspect return to the scene and opened fire on a reporter and a cameraman's carrying the story. then went to a nearby house and shot a little girl while with her mother. furious over this gang member with a rap sheet in mile-long was out on the streets and able to do this. speak with the criminal justice system needs to be changed. here is an adult now but when he was a juvenile committed several crimes and he really has not been held accountable. so, what this has done, it has emboldened him and other juveniles and young adults, hey,
2:29 pm
if you are rested 19 times and nothing happens, there is no consequences so we are not holding these criminals again accountable. >> kat: judge it is infuriating to say the least and it happens all over the country on a regular basis, these guys getting out of jail with rap sheets and taking innocent lives away from people or changing lives permanently. there was so much focus on criminal justice reform in the opposite direction that seems like there needs to be reformed to get these guys back behind bars. >> judge jeanine: there was no question, the pendulum will swing the way it did in '93 when they have the crime bill and joe biden was one of the authors of it if not the author of it. here is the bottom line, when american citizens are afraid to go outside at night and i was afraid, i read two early and it was early before i walked into store, there were four or five guys in hoodies. i was afraid of them and i walked in the store and i said, "what are they doing out there? speak with the security said we
2:30 pm
can't do anything about it. they were selling candy. they want money. you must have money for candy. bottom line, no consequences and until we put these guys in jail and remove them from society, even my pets understand peer this guy a career criminal at the age of 19. why do we see juvenile records? number one come if we see juvenile records, seal it for petty larceny until mike larceny but gang banging guys like thisy in number two make them be clean several years and we will consider sealing the record. this is what is expected to be expected where social justice is of utmost importance appearance before you know, harold, there is always more lights for a lot of different things. but if the laws that we have are not in forest, how does that work? this guy's rep sheet, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, grand theft charges, the list goes on and on.
2:31 pm
clearly charges based on laws on the past but if these guys are lead on the streets. >> harold: i don't disagree with everything you said but it is my understanding a lot of this was when he was in juvenile. and we need to rethink the way we assess and factor the juvenile record because a lot of times it is expunged. but one of the things i can if i were in congress come i would hold a hearing on this we would pass federal legislation to give states and provide states with protection to be able to do this. i think we have to look at it on both ends, how you think about juvenile record, which i think you have to think about it differently when there are violent crimes as we have seen here. and this screams for gang units as much as i think we should band units that have no training and so forth, this is why you have to have special units and cities all across the country. and there may be some disagreement with me around the table, but i still believe you have to have -- you should not be able to buy a gun, access to
2:32 pm
a gun if you committed a crime as a juvenile, if you committed a crime against your wife and spouse, we need to have stronger rules. then the movie need to give the police the tools they need to arrest and expand jail space, judge to put people behind that prosecute roles and around guns today. we should absolutely do that. >> kat: jesse. >> jesse: his father probably abandon him, which is why he joined a gang. and the gang handed him the weapons because they know if you are a juvenile, you are not going to serve much time. so, you have to give these joseph don't make judge's discretion. if you are 16 and caught with a gun for some drugs come okay. maybe you give the guy a second chance. but this guy racking up felony charges, aggravated burglary, carjacking. >> kat: domestic violence? >> jesse: you have to give the judge a chance to say this is an evil guy, no good guy.
2:33 pm
you have to throw the book at him. because if you don't, you're letting a hand grenade go off in society, why? why at that point? to protect the rights of an 18-year-old who has already got five felonies? protect the society more importantly. >> kat: look, probably nobody at this table would agree with me here, but i'm somebody that has been a huge proponent of criminal justice reform when it comes to things like nonviolent drug offense. and i think people who somehow think that means okay, domestic violence, felony assault with a weapon, that is violence. we are not talking about those people! and judge i think you are right the pendulum will swing so far to the other direction. these idiots come i would say that anybody wants violent, repeated offenders on the street. they will do more to create tough on crime since i anyone flake tom cotton ever could. because people want to be safe. i really do think there is
2:34 pm
criminal justice when it comes to nonviolent drug crimes and but this is ridiculous. >> up next claimant list them at claimant alarmists to ration your food to save the planet. n't know they have it. so ask for your kidney numbers and farxiga. ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ if you have chronic kidney disease, farxiga reduces the risk of kidney failure, which can lead to dialysis. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, urinary tract or genital yeast infections in women and men, and low blood sugar.
2:35 pm
ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may lead to death. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this bacterial infection, an allergic reaction, or ketoacidosis. and don't take it if you are on dialysis. take aim at chronic kidney disease-- ask your doctor for your kidney numbers and ask for farxiga. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ we pulled people off the street and asked them about their hearts. how's your heart? my heart's pretty good. you sure? how do you know? you're driving a car you have to check engine light. but the heart doesn't have a hey check heart sign. with kardiamobile. the fda cleared a personal ekg device. you can take a medical grade ekg in just 30 seconds from anywhere. kardiamobile is proven to detect atrial fibrillation, one of the leading causes of stroke. kardiamobile is now available for just $79. order at kardiamobile.com or amazon.
2:36 pm
to finally lose 80 pounds and keep it off with golo
2:37 pm
is amazing. i've been maintaining. the weight is gone and it's never coming back. with golo, i've not only kept off the weight but i'm happier, i'm healthier, and i have a new lease on life. golo is the only thing that will let you lose weight and keep it off. who loses 138 pounds in nine months? i did! golo's a lifestyle change and you make the change and it stays off. (soft music) - [female narrator] five billion people lack access to safe surgery. thousands of children are suffering and dying from treatable causes. for 40 years, mercy ships has deployed floating hospitals to provide the free surgeries these children need. join us. together, we can give children the hope and healing they never thought possible. it's a mission powered by love, made possible by you. give today. [♪] if you have diabetes, it's important to have confidence
2:38 pm
in the nutritional drink you choose. try boost glucose control®. it's clinically shown to help manage blood sugar levels and contains high quality protein to help manage hunger and support muscle health. try boost® today. oh booking.com, ♪ i'm going to somewhere, anywhere. ♪ ♪ a beach house, a treehouse, ♪ ♪ honestly i don't care ♪ find the perfect vacation rental for you booking.com, booking. yeah. ♪ ♪ >> a group of british researchers want to bring back, get it world war ii style rationing of food and gas as a way to fight global warming. they claim it has been wrongfully neglected as a policy to cut carbon emissions rapidly and fairly. speaking of climate change, a
2:39 pm
fancy new recently compressed as not been a big problem. when asked if global warming was a hoax much at jide bt said no. but when the president forced to admit it has not been a big issue since 2016. now, this is interesting, and so we will go around the table, the british research issue is a ration? is that a fair way to do carbon emissions question marks before this is the kind of thing only academics could say, locked away in their little libraries not talking to anyone because if you talk to anyone commit would never be published. if you don't believe me, america, friday night, you're out to dinner and saved to the person across from you, are you sure you should be eating that in this climate question market will not go well. and they don't have solutions. it is an excuse. it is a nice distraction to the fact they don't have solutions, i think. no one is going to get on board
2:40 pm
this idea. it is the little libraries, oh, i have an idea, in practice no way. >> harold: ten seconds, what is your thought on chatgpt? >> kat: i think real people want to have conversations but we can't get mad at the person who wrote the articles. >> harold: katie, do you believe that if someone tells you to ration fuel and food, could you do it? >> katie: look, the people advocating on a global scale, john kerry, rationing food or not rationing stakes or law birds are on private jets. they are not rationing when it comes to the paris claimant accords and world leaders having their fancy get-togethers on behalf of the american taxpayer. i've been a conservationist my whole life. i spend a lot of times outdoors. i care about the environment and i want clean air and clean water but there is big difference between fixing pollution and this climate change charade, which the other side of the debate on much like covid-19 has
2:41 pm
been completely censored and pushed aside as not applicable to the current environment because they just want to move forward with their own agenda. the solution to pollution has been natural gas and cleaning up the environment. so, and for all of the above approach and open debate rather than since her ship out we continue to move forward with cleaner air energy and telling people they have to ration what they eat when the people demand it. that is ridiculous. >> harold: do you have chatgpt? >> katie: i do not. i'm too afraid of it. >> harold: cows are the biggest emitters of carbon appeared how do you address that? with the findings of this research, how do you deal with that as you think about it? >> jesse: you are saying concrete? >> harold: concrete and cows are just facts, they are, they are. >> jesse: i think we will be just fine. to think what we are doing is just fine. but we are the baddest country in the world already, harold.
2:42 pm
you will not tell fat americans they have to eat last. that is a way to have rights on the streets. do you think the rights in 2020 will be bad, take away food from a fat guy. have you ever seen the average slice of pie in the united states? there is a great advertisement. in france, you get a sliver. you could floss your teeth with the size of a piece of pie in france. america, a quarter of a pico maple wedge. i'm down with eating less portion control, but don't tell americans they can't have seconds, and don't tell americans they can't have an appetizer pier that will lead to a bloody -- >> take away the buffets. >> harold: chatgpt do you use it? >> jesse: i don't understand it. >> harold: chatgpt? >> judge jeanine: chatgpt it scares me and i don't like the way it replaces everybody. but if you think everybody is teed off now, take their food
2:43 pm
away from them. you think people are going nuts now? you take their foot away, no, you can't buy 5 pounds of beef. you can only buy 1 pound of beef. are you kidding? i have to make macaroni this week, meatballs. there is going to be a shoot out -- >> jesse: judge might take a fork and a goat like this to my wife's plate. [laughter] [overlapping voices] >> judge jeanine: don't take our food away. aoc is the one who said stop eating hamburgers. stop eating hamburgers. you stopped driving around in your big car, your big suv. >> harold: what happens if you take food away? "the fastest" is up next. ♪ ♪ for a payroll tax refund of up to $26,000 per employee,
2:44 pm
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 claim over $2 billion but it's only available for a limited time. go to getrefunds.com, powered by innovation refunds.
2:45 pm
okay everyone, our mission is complete balanced nutrition. together we support immune function. supply fuel for immune cells and sustain tissue health. ensure with twenty-five vitamins and minerals, and ensure complete with thirty grams of protein.
2:46 pm
when that car hit my motorcycle, insurance wasn't fair. so i called the barnes firm, it was the best call i could've made. call the barnes firm now, and find out what your case could be worth. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million
2:47 pm
and i d d so my y quesonons coueouout hicacase.y y son, ♪ call one eight hundred, cacalledhehe bars s filion and i d d soit was the best call coueouout hii could've made. call the barnes firm aand find out what your case all ccould be worth.uld've made. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ >> kat: welcome back. it is time for "the fastest." first up, driving a car used to be a big deal growing up but is not anymore thanks to goober and zoom. today's teens are totally not
2:48 pm
cool with getting behind the wheel. 60% of 18-year-olds have a driver's license now compared to 80% in the '80s, judge what is it with kids these days? [laughter] uber, uber. >> judge jeanine: it is that simple, why pay for insurance, by car, buy gas and worried about where you park it, get a uber. you don't need a car, you really don't and that is the end of that appearance before i have a license but that is hilarious because i haven't driven and seven years. i don't even know if i remember how to college as he. >> jesse: i will stay off of the road if you are out there. >> kat: i recommend that you do. >> jesse: what is it like to be chauffeured everywhere? you want to hop behind the wheel, may be rolled down the window, get lost somewhere, figure life out? >> kat: i do get lost, katie what did you get? a driver's license first or a gun? >> katie: i got a gun six
2:49 pm
years before my driver's license. >> harold: what year was that? >> katie: i was ten years old and i used it to hunt a deer of the next season. back to the driving conversation, this is i think rule suburban city because if you are a rual kid, it is freedom and you have to work by having a truck if you work in a area and you can't get to work and there is no uber. today's culture shipped for sure. i couldn't wait to get my driver's license. >> kat: harold, will you teach me to drive? >> harold: i will pier the technology makes it you drive 13 or 14 because you can call an uber and get where you want. but i couldn't wait, i didn't have a gun six years before my driver's license but i couldn't wait because i wanted to drive and drive fast. >> judge jeanine: how old do you have to be to drive and have a gun? >> kat: it was locked up in my dad safe. all right, up next, we have to
2:50 pm
talk about robots because they might wind up killing us all. but at least they will do your laundry! experts predict automation can cut the time spent on chores by nearly 40% within a decade. jesse, when is the last time you did a tour? >> jesse: define chore, kat. [laughs] i put my dirty clothes in the room with a washing machine. >> kat: the room, not even in a hamper, the room. >> jesse: i put on top of the washing machine. sometimes i'd take my dish and put it in the sink. sometimes if i'm feeling really good to come i will soak the dish. >> kat: okay. >> jesse: we could use a robot around but then what would we argue about? >> kat: katie, i know if a robot was putting stuff away i would know where it was. >> katie: this is great to allow us to be more efficient instead of spending time cleaning, we could spend time doing other things. >> kat: would you let robots in your house?
2:51 pm
>> judge jeanine: no, not a chance. first of all come i want to do my own laundry and i don't want them doing dishes. everything would end up in the wrong place and that's the end of it. >> katie: i have a room. >> judge jeanine: >> judge jeanine: i do too. >> judge jeanine: i yell at it to get out of the way. >> kat: i don't need a robot. >> judge jeanine: [indistinct] periods >> kat: you are better at making the bed then i am. >> jesse: he's better at making the bed? [overlapping voices] >> kat: and breaking the glass ceiling by using the app, ladies, take notes. harold. >> harold: that does a mind trick. look, the one thing i like about the robot i believe all this hacking stuff and i watched homeland when they did that thing with the vice president
2:52 pm
heart machine or something. i don't want robots anywhere in the house. >> kat: one more quickly, turns out all those gift cards from grandma at a appeared americans have collected $21 billion in unspent gift cards and one hiding in a joy. till next door. harold i'm creative but i can't imagine you using a gift card. >> harold: i get gift cards and i resemble this i have a thousand dollars or $2,000 in my house. 90-year-olds have gift cards from arcades and stuff. just piled up in drawers. >> jesse: just collecting dust? >> kat: yes. >> jesse: i have $10,000 in cards. >> kat: how do you remember to bring them? >> katie: i have restaurants where i forget. covid. >> judge jeanine: and then the restaurants closed. >> katie: don't tell the federal government about these billions of dollars in gift cards because they will try to tax them. >> kat: they will walk around
2:53 pm
your house. >> harold: they tried to get the money back from people. they are parting with class action law to get the money back. >> judge jeanine: they never tried to give me money back. [laughter] >> harold: you want me to give you an arcade card? >> judge jeanine: no thank you. you know what i do to remember? i put them in my wallet and that way when i go to the store, give them my credit card. >> kat: you get stressed out. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ whoa. okay. easy does it. we switched to liberty mutual and saved $652. they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved, we thought we'd try electric unicycles. whoa! careful, babe! saving was definitely easier. hey babe, i think i got it! it's actually... whooooa! ok, show-off! help! oh! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
2:54 pm
cole hauser is an award winning actor who has starred in good will hunting too fast, too furious and the current hit show yellowstone. beyond his impressive career, he is a proud supporter of the tunnel to towers foundation. i was able to spend some time with cole and his family to reflect on those who have sacrificed so much to defend our freedom. i know how much you care about america and our veterans and all the things. but you have such a platform now. yeah. and to share that with us that we need to get the word out that we have to take care of these great heroes and their families. you know, as i started to be more and more successful, i was like, how can i help? but when i heard of the tunnel of the towers, and i met brandon in idaho and his family, i was like, wow. there's actually a charity where we know where the money's. going to go. we have 95.1% of every dollar goes to our programs. and i think brandon's a great spokesman for t2t
2:55 pm
and and his wife, shannon, has two daughters. i mean, oh, my god. they're just special families. so pretty much, if you put your life on the line, if something goes bad, they're there. that's awesome. yeah. they're incredible people, man. you saw all the stuff we put in these homes, right? i was i was blown away. and they deserve it. they earned it. this is not of course, we give them a mortgage free home, but look what they gave up. they gave up their bodies so, cole, why should americans give donate help? tunnel to towers foundation. i mean, is there any better organization to help the people that has fought for this country and the freedoms that we have? it's that simple. it is that let's take care of each other. and you're going to join us on that mission. thank you. hey, i'm cole hauser. i want you to join me in supporting our nation's heroes and their families. it's only $11 a month. go to t2t dot org.
2:56 pm
("this little light of mine") - [narrator] in the world's poorest places, they're shunned, outcast, living in pain. you can reach out and change the life of a suffering child right now. a surgery that takes as little as 45 minutes and your act of love can change a child's life forever. please call or visit operationsmile.org now. thousands of children are waiting.
2:57 pm
♪ ♪ >> jesse: time now for "one more thing." judge jeanine. >> judge jeanine: city council meeting in the state of washington. every time somebody got up to a microphone there was a meowing cat that would interrupt every participant that came to the microphone. two hours into the meeting and well over three minute speaking time limit the cat was finally released. i don't know what that means
2:58 pm
well over 3 minute speaking time. bottom line is, there is a perfect ending to this because the cat was in between the roof and the ceiling and the cat found its people and that's the end of it. >> jesse: state of washington. >> judge jeanine: they are all high there. >> jesse: washington. i love how you say washington. >> judge jeanine: really? >> jesse: "jesse watters primetime" ladies night rachel cam poets duffy, tulsi gabbard, jeanine pirro and abby hornacek and now leave more time for harold. >> harold: serena williams, 23-time winner of majors is receiving an naacp image award the jackie robinson icon award joins michael jordan, magic johnson recipient of the award. a terrific career off the court. venture number of things. congrats to her. and could not be in a better name than jackie robinson.
2:59 pm
>> jesse: for sure. congrats. kat? >> kat: greg gutfeld is still alive. first of all. can you see him on bill maher's podcast club random airing this sunday. he went out to l.a. to do that with him. available on all platforms or watch it on youtube sunday #:00 p.m. eastern time. i'm definitely going to watch it because i want to see how that went down. >> there is activities. >> jesse: he was definitely sober. feel good story for you. at the start of his deployment u.s. army first lieutenant tad became atasmed to a starving abandoned dog named gus. he was heartbroken and felt guilty leaving his best friend behind. left tad paw for help new york nonprofit. answered the soldiers' call earlier this month to retrieve gus and bring him to a family in indiana where he is safe where tad can reunite with him. paws of war. focuses on bringing animals
3:00 pm
rescued by soldiers to the u.s. to be reunited to men and women who saved them. >> judge jeanine: that's beautiful. >> kat: makes me want to shed real tears. >> judge jeanine: can you shed fake ones? >> kat: so many things in my life would be easier if i could. >> jesse: you have it pretty good. >> kat: i don't. >> jesse: your husband does all the chores. >> kat: he is better. >> bret: good evening welcome to "special report," i'm bret baier. a top prosecutor, a skillful defendant, courtroom drama aplenty in the murdaugh trial. we will bring you there. how a billionaire liberal is financing progressive prosecutors across the nation and the fallout from that. and the effects of a major winter storm on a huge part of the u.s. ♪ >> bret: but, breaking tonight, this day marks the one-year anniversary of the russian invasion of ukraine. this evening, president biden faces a growing challenge about the role china could play in that conflict as it enters its

175 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on