tv The Five FOX News April 26, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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amendment and get a floor vote on women's reproductive health. that's the horse trading that she's executed to get the votes for this bill, sandra. >> sandra: thanks for the update. that's all for today. thanks for watching. i'll see you in "america reports." "the five" starts right now. hello. i'm dana perino along with judge jeanine pirro. jessica tarlov and greg gutfeld judge jeanine pirro. this is "the five." the head of the one of the most powerful teacher's union is in the hot seat. randy weingarten refusing to apologize or devastating shut downs during the pandemic. half of america's students are behind and entire academic year because of those closures. republicans demanding answers
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over e-mails showing teacher's union helped coordinate the cdc's school's reopening guidance. weingarten says it's way out of proportion. >> to summarize, aft was provided with a full draft of the copy suggested line by line edits -- >> we did not, sir. did not suggest line by line edits to the document. >> well, do you remember how many edits that you suggested? >> we suggested concepts, sir. >> do you know how many edits were included? >> one. >> it's unusual for political union to have such a role in scientific guidance process and hopefully we can find more answers. >> weingarten forced to admit that she had a direct line to the cdc director, rochelle
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walensky. do you have a direct number to her? >> do i have her direct number? >> yes. >> yes, i have her directed enough. >> hopefully she will give it to me, too. >> the school lockdown fallout does not end there. dr. fauci said show me a school i shut down and factory i shut down. never. never i did. i gave a public health recommendation and people made a decision based on that. a lot of things coming out today, judge. we do know that the cdc wanted to open schools. rochelle walensky from the cdc said she wanted to reopen schools. all of a sudden she was admonished. she said she was speaking in her personal capacity. later on we find out these e-mails had changed.
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they're quibbling over splitting hairs here. >> they're quibbling because they have nothing else to do in terms of defending themselves. randy weingarten, this is a woman who actually went to the ukraine to assess the value of damage to education. she's more concerned about the kids in ukraine than she's seems to have been about the kids in the united states that suffered the greatest loss in educational learning since the beginning of the 19th century in america. there's no question that what happened to our children was a devastating thing in terms of as they grow up, as they compete in this world. they will be at a loss compared to other countries. now, you know, she can say randy weingarten and that, you know, it was about protecting the kids. that's hog wash. she wanted a metric so that as soon as a teacher might be ill, they would shut down the schools. it wasn't about the kids. it was about the teachers.
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and they resisted the effort on the part of parents to take their children and the money to a school that was open. make no mistake, there were schools that were open, the catholic schools, the charter schools. all kinds of schools. these were her decisions. her working with the cdc as they indicated having the private number of rachel walensky who said it's safe enough to open and she got slapped down. >> and they backed down. randy weingarten had lobbied successfully for federal taxpayer dollars to go to the schools that were never spent. they're sitting there waiting for -- >> sitting there. think about what is the uft and the aft do with their money? they give money to political parties. mostly the democrats. so while they're taking that money and collecting it for covid, our kids are not in school and the teachers would not agree to teach in the summertime so the kids could get at least a jump up. >> meanwhile, dr. fauci was on
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cnn. here he is. >> it was a personification of me as a person who essentially closed everything down. those were public health recommendations that came from the cdc. the initial decision early on in the middle of that crisis i believe was the right decision. how long you kept them closed really varied depending upon the locale. >> you have a little one. you have a lot of friends that have friends that have kids in school. even they were saying this is out of control. >> absolutely. we talk a lot about the exodus from liberal cities or liberal states to more conservative states because of lower taxes. a principal reason for that is schools. people wanted their kids to go to states where they had school. some people are coming back. some decided to stay there. there's all sorts of factors to why you want to remain in a place. it was a part of that
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conversation. something that randy weingarten said that i think is important though, this is about the teachers. right? the kids are important. we're educating them. she had teachers that said we're not going back in the classroom, what was she going to do? i think that it comes back to and we talk about this a lot. the fact that we were just not being told honestly what was going on. this was from the start. the conversations about masks. they didn't want people to buy all the masks. that we didn't have them for the doctors and ensen -- essential workers. should have been a more open and honest conversation. that's what people hold against randy weingarten or dr. fauci. if you treat adults like adults, everyone can make their own decision. >> including if they told us to leave the masks for the doctors and the nurses -- there wouldn't have been a problem. greg president biden also weighed in on kids yesterday.
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listen here. >> kids. >> there's no such thing has someone else's child. no such thing has someone else's child. our nation's children are all of our children. >> are they? >> i think that's so moving. i really do. you missed the second part. he says, you know, there's no such thing as someone else's child. we cut it off before he said unless it's my granddaughter. >> the 4-year-old. >> who is the baby of a stripper. then all bets are off. he should be lecturing anybody. that hearing is about accountability and its important. what went missing was accountability. when the government and the tech industries, the media and corporations all went in on one side, you realize that anything goes. two weeks to flatten the curve became two years. you can extort people for -- on vaccines or on masks by using their livelihood, where they
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worked. even if where you worked, they had to do it because they had the thumb on them from above. what did the media do? they led the charge by spiring anybody anti-lockdown as a danger to america. they did what kind of hawks would do to the anti-war movement. they would paint you as a threat to security for voicing any kind of opposition or hey, you mow, maybe we're going to far. the shut downs have correlated with multiple consequences. suicides, overdoses, dis dismorphias. we leave kids alone in a room with a tik tok influencer inted of a teacher. gary is going to turn to glenda. thousands of businesses were closed. killed thousands of people needlessly because being
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outside, being active would reduce your reliance on drugs and alcohol. if we were a country in covid was a country we're at war with, randy weingarten would be tried as a war criminal. that's a hypothetical. >> absolutely. >> she's not really a war criminal. >> charlie, take all of these things that you do and analyze from your perch. >> so i think that that statement from joe biden is really creepy. of course, you know, the idea -- it's saying the quiet part out loud about socialism. what is socialism? they believe that people don't have any relationships except to government. you don't have a family. you don't have parents. everything goes to the government. which is a really frightening terrifying thing that usually politicians don't come out and say. isn't that the whole problem with the teacher's unions? is that the decisions they're
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making are about the best interest to the teachers and not what is in the best interest of the children. they're completely obsessed with the idea that teachers wouldn't show up. that is crazy. and by the way, i know a lot of teachers who they're concerned -- were concerned about covid but they would never ever place themselves ahead of the interests of the children. so i think -- if that is the position of the teacher's unions, then why did the teacher's unions have this kind of power in government to write the regulations about going back to school or anything else for that matter? they shouldn't be allowed to have any authority at all. >> if i was misunderstood that they didn't care about kids, i didn't mean to intimate that. i meant her job was more difficult than people are making it out to be. she sits alone in a room and says we would rather sit inside and be on zoom all day. she had thousands of people that said they had pre-existing conditions, scared about this.
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>> even when they got vaccines first in fairfax county. they didn't go back to school. >> by the way, of all the e-mails that they found, there was nothing about how to keep the schools open. it was never about the kids. it was about the teachers. >> up next, the kamala rescue squad are at it again. time biden tries to shore up his popularity before 2024. the chase ink business premier card is made for people like sam who make...? ...everyday products... ...designed smarter. like a smart coffee grinder - that orders fresh beans for you. oh, genius! for more breakthroughs like that... ...i need a breakthrough card... like ours! with 2.5% cash back on purchases of $5,000 or more... plus unlimited 2% cash back on all other purchases! and with greater spending potential, sam can keep making smart ideas... ...a brilliant reality! the ink business premier card from
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rehab. white house officials are rushing to boost her image. some of the moves to pump her up include dramatic slow watching in biden's campaign video featuring her prominently on his website and scheduling events that promote popular democratic causes. they better rebeat kamala quickly. >> she will have a prominent place because of his age. they need to strengthen her as a player in this. there's a real focus on trying to left her up here because people will ask like who is your backup? >> greg: happy easter. part of the reason to hype up kamala is the effort to hide biden. the media calls it a "quiet re-election strategy". they don't want joe to answer tough questions like this. >> you've said questions about
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your age are legitimate. your response is just watch me. the country is watching. recent polling shows that 70% of americans including a majority of democrats believe you shouldn't run again. >> everybody running for re-election has been in this same position. you're making it sound like biden is really under water. number 1. number 2, when the same polling data asks what kind of job's done, it's overwhelmingly positive results. with regard to age, i can't even say i guess how old i am. i can't say the number. it doesn't register with me. >> greg: you know, charlie, there was a hope in 2020 that she would balance the ticket. you know, turns out they're right. here loopy incompetence balances his musty senility. >> charlie: yeah, and of course they had to go -- they had to
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search far and wide to find somebody more buffoonish than joe biden himself. they didn't want somebody to outshrine him. they succeeded. oftentimes these elections, they pop when both sides want the same thing, to be a prominent issue. if democrats want kamala harris to be a prominent issue, so do democrats. so do republicans. i don't think it's -- i don't think democrats are going to win that fight. but i think it's really interesting that a lot of her supporters are -- they're greatful that the white house is focusing on kamala harris. but the only reason they're focusing on kamala harris is because they now view -- the white house views her as a drag on the ticket, which doesn't seem -- it's not like they're doing it out of the kindness of their heart. this is what happens. i hate to go here, but it's true. if you're playing identity politics and you pick her because she checks a couple of the boxes on identity politics, you can't be surprised that she's incompetent. you didn't look at competency
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when you picked her. >> greg: i disagree with you. i don't think you hated to go there. you made me think that like if they picked kamala because she's inferior to joe biden as a vice president harris, how will they ever get a v.p. for kamala? it will get worse and worse. >> charlie: they can get dylan mulvaney. >> greg: there you go. >> jeanine: don't put that out there. >> greg: a great idea. dana, they acted like she's a broken computer. they can turn her off and plug her back in. >> dana: we're on the ninth reset of kamala harris. she's not had a communications director for several months. that's a very coveted jobs. white house coms director for the vice president of the united states? turns out nobody wants the job. i also think they have realized that republicans will -- let's see if they can communicate it
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well. imagine the ad if joe biden wins, every single day for the next four years could be kamala's inauguration day. get that swirling around. because i'm not saying that people vote because of a vice presidential choice. they have a very limited amount of effect on a ticket. that could be different this year. i also feel like they're trying to talk her up. yep, they're playing her, but we're only halfway through the season and we're going to make it through and they're going to be fine and water going win in the end. >> charlie: you can to an ad and count how many heartbeats closer to presidency that kamala harris is now. >> greg: we have a call for her latest word salad. do we have that ready? let's roll it. >> i think it's very important as you have heard from so many incredible leaders, for us at
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every moment in time and certainly this one, to see the moment in time in which we exist in our present and to be able to contextualize it, to understand where we exist in the history and in the moment as it relates not only to the past but the future. >> greg: you were crying, jessica. you were crying. you were moved by it. that's your vice president. >> jessica: that's all of our vice president. >> greg: she's not my haven't. that's a joke. >> jessica: that could be serious. the time talking is not -- we've had a passage of time incidents before. it goes on too long. that was not her most coherent of comments. but every moment that democrats spend doing this, they're not focusing on republicans. and that's what we're up
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against. everybody knew that joe biden would announce. the question is april 25 or june -- whatever it was, we knew it was happening. we knew he wasn't pushing her off the ticket either. how many people anonymously -- a couple of congress people went on record talking about it. otherwise, it was all this. all the time. everyone wants to complain to their favorite reporter about this or that. we knew this would be the ticket. and this ticket has been hugely successful. that gets lost in all of this. so they won in 2020. the most votes in american history. in 2022, the democrats had a better night than anybody expected. the issue that sealed the deal is the issue of abortion. she was the face of roling back reproductive rights. it's weird -- >> greg: face of abortion. >> jessica: when there were complaints about she got the border, which is a thankless portfolio and she was going to work on the voting rights big.
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we have a female vice president and it's important to be talking about this. she toured the country and did her best interviews on this issue and how pivotal it would be. democrats overperformed. so i get it that it's fun to make fun of her, for you guys, not for me, but there's no end case that she's actually a drag on a this ticket whatsoever or we would lose in 2024. the guy on the other side has been indicted. >> greg: judge? what you think? >> jeanine: well, i haven't seen her give any speech that was forceful and good. you know, i'm thrilled that you played her last speech where she talks about we're in the moment and we have to exist and look at it and feel it. i don't know what the hell she's talking about when she opens her mouth. her poll numbers are lower than joe's poll numbers. so i understand why they feel the need to keep her, given that she was picked because of identity politics. but i don't understand why there's so much power between those two. because the democrats don't want
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joe to run. okay? and they don't like him. they don't like her. yet nobody is coming up and saying, you know, i'm going to push my way in there. i'm going to primary him. why is there so much power in that couple? i don't deny what you're saying about the fact that 2022 wasn't a significant as we thought. but the woman is an embarrassment. she goes on the world stage and she's an embarrassment. she's not prepped. she doesn't have a coms director because she tried them all and they all quit. she doesn't put the time or work in to focus on the issues to communicate to the public that she's not only capable but she's interested in the job. this is like an escape for her. she says as little and does as little as she got. she got voting rights, she got the border. what has she done? nothing. get out there and do something. that's not what she's doing. social scape.
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♪ >> charlie: shopping in san francisco is a treat. video shows a target store showing all of their merchandise behind locked plexiglass. things are so bad, gavin newsome plans to send in the national guards. the liberal georgia -- governor is mike ago surprise visit to the city. >> gavin, tell me what you're
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going to do about the fentanyl epidemic. please? my name is j.j. smith. what are you going to do about the fentanyl? >> you tell me what we need to do? that's why i'm here. >> dana: that's pitful. >> jeanine: that is sad. >> charlie: the arrogance. >> jeanine: exactly. condescending. i've seen a city or a government's number 1 responsibility is safety. if you look at a city like this or a lot of cities around today that have been run by democrats for a very long time, it's a resume of democrat policies. they're failing by any measure. >> jeanine: look, what is happening here is aside from his arrogance and his condescension, what should i do? stand and talk to the guy. you're the governor of that state. give him time. have decency. this is a classic progressive agenda. you basically get a proposition 47 where you raise the level of
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arrests to -- it's got to be more than $950 if you're going to arrest someone. and then if you arrest people irrespective of the crime, you basically let them out. if you have a prosecutor willing to pros cute, you can pros cute, but the cases don't go to trial. they don't go to jail. let's defund the police in the meantime. what do you expect to get? the sad part is, not only was it a beautiful city and we know that and we all have a connection there, but now he wants to call out the national guard. where the hell were you when they were defunding police? where were you when this crime was happening all over the state, when there's the open air drug markets? oh, no, let them to what they want so they can do their drugs and sex and everything else in front hoff our kids. the bottom line is they're allowing people to be addicted, to act out their mental illness on the street and not doing anything about it. the saddest thing has happened
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is the police commissioner who was supposedly -- attacked by a guy with a crowbar. right? he's got 51 stitches. it turns out that they dropped the crime -- the charges against the guy with the crowbar and they say well, he may have pepper sprayed him first and that was not right. as if the prosecutors don't understand that self-defense is available to you in the sense that you rebutted the same level of offense coming against you. you cannot use lethal deadly physical force when someone sprays you with a pepper spray. they don't know the law and don't care about it and don't want to implement it. >> i get the idea that all of these things become debating points back and forth. at the end of the day, democrats don't want to live like this. they don't want cities to be like this. when you look at the democrat policies that are widely embraced all the way up to president biden, how can you
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defend these policies when you see the results in -- like in real terms on the street. >> jessica: i think two things. maybe three things. >> greg: don't tax yourself. >> jessica: i am exhausted. i've been on vacation. >> charlie: you don't have the sexist would say? >> greg: not here. >> jessica: i'm thinking it. everyone knows it at home. we do know and we talked about the statistics don't beer out that the violent crime is the highest in these cities or the murder rates are the highest. you do have to differentiate when you're talking about here. we talked about how annoyed everybody is when you walk into your walgreen's, the things you want are locked up and you're not living in a safe place from shoplifting, petty crime, et cetera anymore. what i'd love the see and i think there's this disconnect between what the activist class is saying a and what local
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voters are saying. we saw that in the new york city mayoral election. eric adams was the tough on crime guy and he won. the stat that came out that a third of all ship lifting arrests were 327 people and rearrested 6,000 times? i want that stat for every city in this country. when that gets out there and something that says go find those 327 people and put them in jail and keep them in jail. that could make a real effect. >> charlie: change the law. dana, when you go down the street and you she the people lying on the sidewalk, they're not living their best lives. it's so heart breaking. >> dana: it is terrible. also, imagine we're not -- we tonight have enough people to take care of them and help them. the police are asked to go and do that. they're not supposed to have to do that and they're not trained to do that. we do have a huge problem. i understand why the why house was never worried about gavin
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newsome. they think ron desantis doesn't have people skills in that guy -- does he realize that he works for the people of california? they don't work for him. he can't say j.j., i hear you. i'm working on it. it's a big problem. he's on camera thinking i've got a reservation at the french laundry i have to get to. it's your job to have an idea. it's not your job to give up. i think that's the dismay that people feel and that pugh poll that people say the country is headed in the wrong direction. it looks like a lot of the leaders have given up because they don't have ideas anymore. one idea on the store fronts, a loot of things are being stole from the stores and resold online. gavin newsome, all the tech companies. is there something that could be done to work on that problem to cut off that supply line for their funds? >> charlie: greg, when you see a guy running out of the store with an arm full of stuff he
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hasn't paid for, you get jealous? >> greg: doocy, put that down. it's funny when you look at that tape of target. it's like you're at the museum of anti-perspirant. this is how they fought b.o. this is what happens when everything is up for grabs. i know how people see this as less important than violent crime. there's something about thiefery that hits you hard. if you -- if you find out that a friend of yours stole from you, you can't be around that person anymore. it's a weird things. guys, when you were growing up, you could get into a fist fight with your friends and ten minutes later, you're playing football. >> jeanine: such a good point.
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>> greg: when somebody steals from you, it's over. you can't get back. we're giving up in society something really important. i have to put that t in there. kind of letting part of us tie. the only solution is you have to move out of these cities. some people can't and you have to think, okay. a lot of minorities live in the cities. a lot of them are black. maybe that's where reparations come in. relocation fees. you want to get out of the city, we'll pay. >> charlie: okay. up next, hollywood legend stephen spielberg is attacking cancel culture on classic movies. ♪ and incredible offers on any of five mercedes-benz electric vehicles.
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>> jeanine: stephen spielberg is taking a serious stand against cancel culture. the hollywood legend thinks classic movies shouldn't be changed from modern woke audiences that get offensed by everything. he regrets doing it himself after making a change to his blockbuster, e.t. >> at one point you took some guns out of e.t. and regretted it? >> that was a mistake. i never should have done that. because e.t. is a product of its era. no film should be revised based on the lenses that we are now voluntarily or be forced to peer through. >> jeanine: i was so impressed, dana, with how spielberg talked about it. he still made the change, but is cancel culture changing?
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>> dana: has he been cancelled this afternoon? i lost track. i think it's refreshing what he said. i hope we can apply that wisdom to other things. like tearing down statues across america and rewrite history in a way that we would normally say. i just thought of this. so not long ago, i listened to a classic book that i had read years and years ago by ernest hemingway. i had read it a long time ago and now listening to it on audible. i'm like oh, wow. i can't believe that they used that. oh, that word, too. it's like one of those things. i didn't judge it to say what a terrible person he was. >> greg: did he is a gosh darn? >> dana: el tell you in the break because i don'ts want to get cancelled. >> jeanine: you know what? isn't rewriting the past one of the most dangerous things we're doing in terms of history?
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>> greg: they realize it can't work. there was a moments in time that they were treating guns like cigarettes. maybe we can get them out of the movies. if you remove guns from movies, there's no movies. it's integral to the plot. alec baldwin should stick to romantic comedies. i have a theory. we work in cable news where people are auditing every word we say but still we show up and take risks. in hollywood, they don't have opposition. the only opposition they have is their own fear of not belonging. they obey and stay in the flock. that's the irony of this. hollywood portrays celebrities as edgy but they're all wimps. they never take a stand about anything. who will cancel them? nobody. it's a single industry. >> jeanine: speaking of cowards, take a listen to this sound. there's no sound. okay. there's no sound. this is molly ringwald
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criticizing cancel culture. she says people have got swept up in cancelling. it's unsustainable. people have been unfairly cancelled and they don't belong in the same category as harvey weinstein. >> charlie: she's right. welcome to the fight of stephen spielberg. the idea that he's going to speak up to defend his movie it's and some of the movies are great. but after standing by and watching hundreds of years of statues being destroyed in this country and defaced like some sort of weird modern american isis, wrecking cities and wrecking monuments i think is selfish and a little late to the game. >> jeanine: yeah. and it doesn't reflect who we were at that time. what do you think? is cancel culture leaving us? >> jessica: i think it is a little by.
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i'm seeing it in the data that i look at with younger generations. they want to accomplish things and get things done. that's why everybody got on board with joe biden. they've been overwhelmingly pleased with the agenda items -- what? >> greg: yes. they voted for joe biden to get rid of cancel culture. that's a hot take. >> jessica: i'm talking about being more moderate in your policy positions and in your life. >> greg: that is silly. you're being silly. >> jessica: that's where we were at the beginning of the me too moment. every man that may have raped to someone to go like this and not even touching -- >> greg: that's why joe biden was elected. i can't follow this argument. >> jessica: i'll explain it to you in the break. stephen spielberg can do no wrong. that's why it's good for him to
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have these conversations. >> greg: not one bad movie? >> jessica: he can do no wrong in conversations. i guess. >> greg: come on. >> jeanine: how long you want to go? >> greg: what is your favorite spielberg movie? >> jessica: i don't want to say "jaws." >> jeanine: all right. the fastest is up next. ♪ liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved, we tried electric unicycles. i think i've got it! doggy-paddle! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ♪ remember the things you loved doing... before your asthma got in the way? get back to the things you love... with fasenra. fasenra is an add-on treatment for eosinophilic asthma. having too many eosinophils, a type of white blood cell, can cause inflammation and asthma symptoms. fasenra is designed to target and remove eosinophils
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♪ >> jessica: welcome back. needs to get pumped up at work? you might need a theme song. listening to your favorite tune can calm your brain and make you more focused. we have a couple of minutes. i want every one's theme song. greg? >> greg: i think it's obvious. you think of me, it's afternoon delight by the star light vocal band. do you know what that is about? >> dana: no. tell me. >> jeanine: don't go there. >> greg: it's and ice cream. >> dana: should i google it? >> jessica: dana? >> dana: i have two.. i like "get along" by kenny
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chesney. somebody has to be a peace maker and "living" by dierks bentley. one of the best songs. >> jessica: charlie? >> charlie: if anybody looked at my music profile, they'd be very confused. i like so much music. if i had to think of one song would be "back in black" by ac/dc. >> jessica: cool. i think of that like walk out music. if we made it as athletes. >> charlie: the problem is lou reed would be good walk out music. >> jessica: terrible. maybe you can try it. >> jeanine: okay. i have two. i just remember every time i campaigned, i ran five times. before a debate, i would play kenny loggins "this is it." when i went to try a case, i would listen to "gladiator". >> charlie: it was war. >> jeanine: yes. the greatest prosecutor. >> charlie: the greatest political song of all time is
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"you can't all get what you want." >> jeanine: that wouldn't work for me. i wasn't a politician. i was a judge. >> jessica: a serious person. >> jeanine: yeah. >> dana: i'm going to play "this is it" in the commercial break. >> jeanine: good. >> jessica: i thought you might disagree at home. i'm an upbeat person. i thought about "walking on sunshine". >> greg: katrina and the waves. >> jessica: that's why joe biden won. one more thing is next. ♪ 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.
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for all you mothers that don't know, this is a beet. this baby loves beets. okay. your mother says they're her favorite. >> that must be some diaper. >> last week i went to los angeles to visit my sister and had a great time and there's will and hank and that's an ice cream cone. when you go away with babies all you do is go to playgrounds and play places. it's crazy. doing this is hard on your quads as we saw with some of someone that weighs 25 pounds it. is breakfast with the palms. she liked having >> i like her jean jacket with the sleeves rolled up. >> she's pretty sheik. >> very sheik. >> it's a new podcast on your radar called constitutional chats presented by constituting
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america. started in march of 2020 and actress guinean turner and cathy galespie and students that work on it. i don't know why you're laughing. >> it's so dana. >> features experts like constitutional guests and historians and constituting america.org and, greg, you're going to listen tonight. >> you make lye lisa simpson look like a hell's anoyell. >> afternoon delight. >> yeah. tonight what a great show. crista steph know. i screw up his name. kevin o'leery and tom shalu. that's at 11:00. >> charlie they gave you more time today. >> thank goodness. if you're traveling in form over function, swedish company created a few pair of jeans to save your life called air bag jeans that inflate upon impact.
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>> where you going to get your organ donors. >> what about them? >> always thinking. always thinking about the rest of us. we appreciate t greg. we appreciate it. that's it for us. special report is up next. hi, bret. >> bret: hey, dana. just moments ago, the house has passed a revised plan to address spending and the debt ceiling and house speaker kevin mccarthy made late changes to that plan that president biden has already promised to veto. this is a big deal because it sets up this show down. now the house really wants the president and senate democrats to sit down and negotiate. they haven't done that so far and there's a bill passed moments ago. senior congressional
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