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tv   The Five  FOX News  May 26, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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could bring out from both sides of the aisle. >> neil: reminds me of my dad after pearl harbor. he signed up to going to war. i asked him if he thought to go to canada. he launched me in to orbit. he should have. this is outstanding. history channel, fdr. starts monday. >> hello, everyone, it is 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." >> more bad news for biden as he bolts to camp david for the holiday weekend. it's not just the debt ceiling talks or a growing republican primary field he has to worry about. it's his own party and the
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american people. a new fox news poll shows that the president is basing serious competition from democrats. he only captured 62% of the vote against challengers robert f. kennedy jr. and maryanne williamson, and worse, 67% of americans view a biden victory in 2024 as a "disaster or setback" for america, the media pointing out that biden does face an uphill battle. >> horrible news, horrible news for joe biden and the cnn poll. while he leads his competitors by a huge margin, 2/3 of all of the american people surveyed, 66% of the public say a biden victory would either be a setback or a disaster for the united states. >> our cnn poll had kennedy at 20%. we've had two fox polls out in the last month. one had him at 16%. the other one had him at 19%. kennedy is putting up a far more impressive showing than i would have thought when he first
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entered the race. >> with numbers that bad critics say the president isn't doing himself any favors by avoiding the media. it's more than a month since the president announced he'll elect for re-election. he's been very stingy with press conferences but the white house insists the president is out there. >> i feel strongly by saying this. the president is certainly not media shy. he would disagree with that characterization of him. >> we may not. okay, while the president stays away the republicans are going offense and attacking his presidency. >> we have a president who is a listless vessel. not energetic and not dealing with the key challenges that are facing our country but it does not have to be this way. our decline as a country is not inevitable. it is a choice, and i think we can choose a better pathway. >> under biden our nation is retreating away from patriotism and faith. >> the radical left is pushing
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us into a culture of grievance instead of a culture of greatness. >> okay. a lot to discuss there. let's start with this. the white house saying he's available to the media and he would take issue with any of us calling him press shy. >> well, it's obvious he's not out there. the stuff we were reading said, he's out there but it's good for him. listen. he's not ready for primetime right now. he's made too many mistakes. it's better to keep him out. it's worked before. >> it did. it worked in 2020, but jessica, we're over covid. he's going to have to get out there. he's doing it with negative numbers. to beat a sitting president and have 40% of your party looking to someone else is not a good start. >> no, it's not. i definitely thought that this would whittle away. it may still. we're pretty far out from general election time and from when the debates would technically start. >> do you think they should have those debates? >> listen, i know it's out there
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but there have been a number of democrats who stepped forward to say i think we should do it. >> i always think that it's best to be out there as much as possible. i think biden does well in interviews honestly and he shows his breath and depth of understanding the job, what he did as a senator, and the president and all of it. i think he should do more. he should have more press conferences, but to the point about the debates, this would be completely controverting tradition, the rnc did exactly the same thing. they declared even earlier than the dnc did in terms of blocking debates for biden. supporting donald trump, there were other candidates in the field like mark sanford. they didn't get their chance to do it. some states didn't even hold primaries. they just walked donald trump to the finish line there. it's a bit of hypocritical when people throw that at the democrats but obviously these
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numbers aren't fantastic. something has shifted. a good amount is going around the debt ceiling fight. i was looking back at the polling when obama had the same fight. when the public was asked who would you blame by default, it was the republicans by plus 10. if we default, i saw janet yellen -- hopefully we'll get something done, but it's biden plus three or four points. >> that he would be the one responsible. >> something is shifting in the american psyche in terms of who they are holding responsible and the perception that they have, republicans, obviously think to some degree, is that mccarthy is out there doing more negotiating. >> he had a hard start being a speaker. he's gotten a dead ceiling passed. a bill, you know, now that they are negotiating over this thing, but joy, a lot of people didn't think he could polled the republicans together to do that. on the other side, let's stay with the president. 2/3 of the country saying it would be a disaster or setback
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for the current president to be elected. that's got to be troubling. >> i don't remember trump ever position under 90% with the republicans going into 2020. when you look at biden, it's not about being a character -- not only is it the hunter story that's pulling people back. people are concerned. concerned that he won't make it through a second term. that he's not with it right now. i'm not attacking for his age. if you're a moderate or on the left you've got to run to the left but can you run to the left of a guy who says, progressives are saying, we're for that. that's what we'll do. then you run more moderate like jfk jr. is doing, he's holding that populace space held for the republicans. i don't know if that's waning strategy but it's enough, i mean, when trump first came on the scene he was at 30% which is not a majority. it's just a majority compared to 10 other people dividing what's
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left so he has some traffic and maybe they don't but they aren't going to let anyone meaningful, unless he's complete outlier. >> the style of the dnc is like the chinese style. >> the party isn't a democrat anymore. >> i think i would walk away as well. >> i believe that rfk is occupying a separate in the democratic party where he's the alternative to biden. >> it's not whether democrats -- whether jfk jr. voters won't go to biden. >> tyrus, how do we solve all the world's problems? >> how do we solve all the world's problems? [laughter] >> we take them one at a time and deal with them. the bad news is president biden. we saw the g-7, the state he's in. that speech was painful to watch. it had nothing to do with
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politics. we see a deteriorating old man. period whooflt is running for democrat right now is irrelevant. kennedy is never going to get there. gavin newsom, probably, when 2 time is right, he's starting to do things. he's starting to take positions the california way but the bottom line is, and the thing, with 97 days, mccarthy wants to negotiate with the president. it's not going to happen. you can't negotiate now. we see the state of his speeches. everything he does is controlled. when he gets into situations and asked questions that's when we see the deterioration. he's not going to run can. here's the deal. >> he won't run this campaign. >> here's the thing. >> joe biden? >> even biden -- >> i agree with you. >> a deteriorated joe biden would still get votes because as long as it's trump because it will be, i will vote for a deteriorating biden before i will vote for trump so as long as trump is in it biden is in it. if something happens and trump goes out look for a big change and that's when you see newsom.
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who else is running -- >> i have been saying for a long time that biden won't make it until the end and michelle obama will be brought in. after all, obamas are pretty much running this administration. >> we've got to think it will be an obama-newsom, or newsom obama. >> the woman -- >> okay, all right. >> further predictions. >> he checked out the curtains. >> curtis, that's what happens. >> biden went to yearn. >> he showed up in his house. >> if i leave home on the road and some man goes into my house while i'm gone and he's checking out the house and starts talking to my kids about his more compass, that man is making a move. >> hoping to avoid a meltdown this weekend by giving people a website. ♪
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>> the white house scrambling to avoid another travel meltdown this memorial day weekend. experts think it could be one of the busiest on-record but the faa warning that a major staffing shortage of air traffic controllers could fuel delays and canceled flights. it's something the biden administration had a whole lot of time to fix but don't worry, buttigieg is on the case and ready to deflect. >> you were very hard on the airlines about their staffing issues. a year later, they are still having their own staffing issues. why hasn't that gotten fixed? >> we're going to own anything that's under our control. we're talking about 5% of the issue. we're hiring up, staffing up. meanwhile, the airlines, which are responsible for a much greater share of the delays and cancellations, have made improvements since we put that pressure on them a year ago. >> and joe biden has a website.
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the president touting his new effort to compensate travelers for flight delays tweeting "heads up for travelers this memorial day. we launched --" if your light was canceled or delayed because of an airline, you can check the dashboard to see how you can be compensated. mayor pete pumping up the website. >> there are stories of folks sitting on the tarmac for seven, eight, nine hours, and unless you had some sort of status on the airline you got nothing for it. >> you can see airline by airline who is going to cover your meal, who is going to give you extra compensation, who is going to rebook you no matter what and transparency is how we got them to make more enforceable commitments about what they would do. >> i'm just getting mad. >> let me start with you, joey. is the way to understand pete buttigieg's actions and inallegations to just understand that if you look at it through
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the rhythm that his whole goal is to get you to actually fly less an drive less it all makes sense. >> i get it. the green energy. i think it's just absolute fundamental democrat policy ideas. rather than fix a problem, we'll just give you some money so you'll deal with it rather than getting you where you want to go we'll get you reimbursed and sprinkle traffic on top. rather than starting a business and going out and risking making a fortune we'll keep on social welfare programs. it's how they do business. put cash in your pocket. it doesn't matter that we're not getting you where you want to got. we're all victims. just compensate us and we'll go home and be okay about it. he said it's only 5% of what's going on. in the aftermath of the airline problems last year, he was supposed to go in and regulate the airlines more to have them in a better place and now his song is, well, whoever is under my control i'll own but the rest
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of it, 95% of it is on them. who is the regulating authority for them? some commerce and probably financial parts to that that aren't necessarily under his authority but who will bring the people to the table if not him. >> part of the problem is there an airline traffic control shortage. let's get the best, and we used to look at just the best for this important job. he's looking at it and we have all the evidence that he's been looking at it through a diversity lens. let's make it more diverse than just get more of the best. >> i don't know about that aspect of it. i haven't seen anything that pete buttigieg -- >> that he's only on the hunt for black, trans, air traffic controllers. >> anyone. >> i don't think there is a straight line between dei and incompetence. i think it's been proven time and again that it doesn't make
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people or organizations less successful because they have well thought out representation that reflects the country and people are given opportunities that they haven't been given for decades if not longer. >> i'm curious where all the covid money went and we say this about the schools as well. there is billions of dollars that's been handed out and they went to all the major airlines and we shouldn't be having these kinds of problems. i'm curious, you and tyrus are the biggest flyers. how would you fix this? >> he's the big flyer. >> are you going to the use website? [laughter] >> if you're delayed. >> tyrus, smash cup, i'm stuck. why does the government continue to insult us with websites and aps? >> yes. >> it doesn't work. people on the border, there is an app for you to fill out your
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amnesty work and they have no signal. now it's memorial day weekend. i've got six kids, you have like double that and we're sitting on a plane and the plane is canceled and you're going to tell me and my screaming kids, and my wife is going nuts, for me to get on an app and i'm going to be compensated. is there a time machine on the app that's going to take our time back, and when poor grandma doesn't get to see the little babies the whole weekend is ruined and the best parts, oh, when are you going to get the money? six to eight weeks. just in time for you to pay taxes with that money. the problem, and i try not to attack the other side of the aisle, he just doesn't get it. it's not an app. you throw out all kinds of money, it doesn't work. firefighters, air traffic controllers, doctors, i want the best. i don't care what color they are. i don't care who they sleep
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with. i don't want someone is higher than them, get them in there, give them their money, take that money you were going to give me for being stuck on a connect flight. and give it to the people that need to it make money. >> there are air traffic controller whistleblowers who have come out and made the point they are actually afraid, that safety has been compromised by dei policies. but jessica did bring up the money. she said where is the covid money? we also had an infrastructure bill that turned out to just be a climate bill. so, i mean, this is more and more of the priorities of pete buttigieg and the left coming out. he's not doing his job. he's promoting other things. >> remember, we had the faa administrator nominee withdraw after tough questioning on the hill, he couldn't answer any of the questions. apparently he had successfully run the denver international airport but his showing was so bad in the senate we're not going to advance this guy and he pulled out. they have key positions that are
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open, that need somebody in there, if you're going to oversee some of these other problems. air traffic controllers and others, he had a tough time in the senate, so who is next? >> that's a great question. are you going to use the website. >> >> i will not. i fly every week. i just have to say people have gone completely crazy on planes. i was on one not long ago where they came over and said, everybody look at your feet, there is a cat on the loose that's gotten loose and if you, just grab the cat and we'll get it back to the owner, and people started screening about it, if you don't like cats or are afraid of getting scratched, don't touch it and we'll come get it. air traffic has just -- air travel has gotten completely ridiculous. >> he did find the cat. >> the people who do the job, give them the money. the traffic controllers, pilots, the attendants, the tsa, the luggage guys, pay them. make them want to come to work. >> the cat wranglers. >> the cat wranglers.
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♪ >> it took a while but progressive portland is finally cracking down on rampant homelessness that's plagued the city for years. it only took a report 50% increase in the problem for them to finally do something about it and crazy scenes like this where a family got terrorized by a group of squatters next door who almost set their house on fire. they are calling for a daytime ban on camps and fires on public property and restrict camping near schools and a dozen locations, repeated offenders could face fines and even jail time. the mayor spelling out the
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problem. >> there are currently hundreds of unsanctioned, sometimes dangerous, homeless camps across 176 square miles of portland. they represent nothing short of a humanitarian catastrophe. as a result, our community continues to suffer substantial public health, safety, and live ability concerns. my goal is to have enough shelter, housing and treatment access available so we can fully eliminate unsanctioned, unsheltered camping in the city of portland. >> a songwriter is releasing a song, where he accuses officials of destroying one of his favorite players. ♪
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♪ >> rachel, i don't know if you're a mellencamp fan or not, that video footage is from l.a. and, it's not even portland really that's in the video. all you're pointing out is is that other liberal-run cities have the same kind of problem. >> as a political spouse it's always something you make sure that the footage that you're using or your husbanding in the commercial is from the place it should be. making the action happen on the part of the government is the lawsuit from disabled people because they can't even get through the sidewalks. the homeless problem is ultimately a drug problem, and the drug problem is a border problem, so all of these issues, joey, are democrat issues. now, how do you solve it? we need more drug rehab. we need to control the border,
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so that we don't have these drugs on the street. when i look at those images, it's a drug problem. it's a spiritual problem. there are a lot of things going on. our country is going through a lot. >> jessica, i was going to go to you later. she says it's a democratic problem because of the policies the democrats put for the. there is literally a ninth circuit court ruling, most liberal court, saying you can't penalize people for being home legs and on top of that oregon comes in add passes a bill saying you can't stop people from keeping warm and dry. which means you can't stop hem from doing what they are doing in most places. >> first, we've had a drug problem for decades. if war on drugs was started the under another kind of administration and it continues and it's pervasive and we have a fentanyl problem and 90% of what gets brought into the country is coming across by americans themselves, and through regular ports of entry and that's why
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we're confiscating so much of it. i reject that explanation for it but this is one of the more heartbreaking things. my family spends a lot of time in portland. it's obviously not what it used to be. i think it's important to draw attention to this but the fundamental question that people have to ask themselves, and that i certainly ask myself is what is actually the thing that you need to do to help these people? everyone, most people, i would say, want to treat people with respect and with dignity, and for them to be able to have a better life. and what is the correct way to be able to get to that end goal? and it used to be, remember when bloomberg was mayor here in new york there was a shelter for every sickle homeless people in new york city and only cold nights you couldn't find people on the street. that's not the case anymore and it's not because there aren't beds available, it's because people are choosing it, whether strung out or drugs. we need to make sure in cities
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like portland there are enough beds for everyone and the root cause of why people are choosing this lifestyle, in some cases, not all of them, rather than going inside or getting into treatment programs and assisted housing, and getting back on their feet. >> in portland specifically it looks like, is there a politician more inept at their job than ted wheeler. they have spent billions of dollars. the problem is 50% worse and this is his answer. fine homeless people a hundred dollars or 30 days in jail. >> let's just stop -- >> he goes back and says, we might find other ways to punish them. >> this was your progressive socialist idea. you decimate the police force. you give everybody tents. you give everybody -- >> needles. >> lighters. whatever they need for their substance because this is the utopia that you wanted. here's the side effect of it. now, it's become a huge problem but you were the root cause of it with your policies. you have made places like
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portland a beacon for homeless -- you can come here, do whatever you want. you can have whatever you want so now they are all there and they have tents, and again, if you look at the thing, daytime fires, now, listen, i'm not a rocket surgeon but most of my fires would probably be at night when i'm cold so during the day if i'm going to make s'mores or something, you see a fire, you can't do that during the day but at night when a fire is going twhashgs are you going to do? it's the same thing. they are trying to put, oh, this is a human -- no, this is poor politicians making first worlders, making decisions that they have no experience in dealing with. they are not helping. they are causing problems and now it's a huge problem but it's not the homeless' fault. you put them into this position. you gave them these things, and now, oh, somebody, now it's a problem because it's affecting his bottom line. his voters are complaining. his donors are complaining, so now if they weren't, it would be
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the same thing. we see it, there were things, tents and make their little cities. that's what they are going to do. >> on that point, shannon, we asked, did you ask for this problem? did you vote for this problem? when we talk about legislation, oregon had a right to rest bill that would have compensated people for thousands of dollars for having to be homeless. that failed but we look at the bill that did pass, a keep warm and dry bill, you have a state legislature by working off what the ninth circuit said, almost took away his ability to do anything about this to begin with. >> i'm so impressed about your knowledge of the ninth circuit. >> impressed. >> i love it. >> yes, these -- they should not be unexpected consequences of what we've told people. when we have cities that are fighting to pass areas where you can shoot up, and they will have people standing by to save your life if you do this, if we're legalizing all kinds of things people will talk about
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compassion, we want people, i agree with you, 99.9% of people, their heart breaks when they see people in this condition because they seem helpless and overwhelmed. no one wants this kind of life but it's not compassionate to tell people that there is going to be no law enforcement, we're going to allow you to live in these horrible conditions, we'll love you you to shoot up drugs that are killing you or whether it's a mental health issues because so many of these cases are that as well. we live in new york. d.c., i walk by homeless people all the time that do not look well but if you have policies that awards the behavior, you can't expect it not to happen and i don't think it's compassionate. it's not compassionate. >> there is no compassionate in this. >> compassion kills sometimes. >> but it's always in the name of freedom. >> all right. up next, chaos in the skies. after a passenger opens the door during landing. see that video and more. ♪
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the all-new chevy colorado. made for more. ♪ ♪ >> welcome back, it's time for "the fastest." first up, it's every air passenger's worst nightmare. video shows a plane door opening on a south korean flight after a passenger grabbed the emergency exit. the plane landed safely and police detained the man responsible but nine people got sent to the hospital with breathing problems. shannon -- >> i would have a heart attack problem. forget th the breathing problem.
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>> i am ready, when they come down to a aisle, are you going to be ready to handle -- i would not have allowed this. who knew it was possible at 700 feet. >> no. yes. >> i think maybe he was asleep and he thought someone said it was going to north korea and freaked out that would be my angle. >> oh, south korea. oh, i thought it was north. my bad. >> thanks, guys. >> i'll close the door now. that's what i would go with if i was him. >> i love your reason for sitting in an exit row but in a situation like this i wouldn't tyrus. >> i would have to grab you. >> if that door opens it's air breathe. >> all i can think about when i fly i take my legs off and put them in the bulkhead in front of me what if he did this and my legs go flying off the plane. >> you know, it's like -- >> that should -- i put my seat
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belt on, man. >> you need a weapon to -- >> i will jump on the floor and bite your kneecap off before i let you take this plane down. >> i'm flying with you. >> so now we have some incredible video which shows a paralyzed man walking around again on his own by using just the power of his thoughts. he had suffered a devastating bike accident 12 years ago but thanks to a revolutionary electronic implant he has regained control over his legs once again. i couldn't believe this. >> no, this is amazing. it's absolutely inspirational. when i first lost my legs i was on that deployment early because a guy i was living with he and i were racing dirt bikes a couple of weeks before we deployed and he was paralyzed so through my roommate going through it about paralysis i learned, how amazing, a lot of people who are paralyzed, they don't have a severed spinal cord, there is so much swelling around it their mind can't send a signal to the
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rest of the boy and the amazing thin about it is 20 years ago later the swelling is go away and all the parts are there but their mind is no longer communicating to the nerves in their legs so when i hear about this, i think are there people like that, the next step is to get their body just communicating again? it's quite an amazing thing. >> definitely. >> listen, this is what we hope technology and human ingenuity does. it makes us happy. >> exactly. >> to heal us. >> i don't have anything remote like like -- remotely like joey but i almost lost my foot. i look at the guy doing this, this is life changing. amazing. >> especially wounded warriors, people who suffer accidents, to have the tiniest bit of hope, that with technological advancement you may have a chance to regain some of your life. >> people that are paralyzed, a lot of times it's young people doing risky things.
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>> this is the part of a.i. that you want to hear about. this is the technology, and getting to where neurons in the brains and the technologies able to help you move. the next spot, terminator, but this is the part of a.i. that you want to hear about because it will have the ability to link your brain up to your body and help fix things and i'm excited for this. hopefully it continues to go and we'll see someone to where he doesn't need the wheels to help himself go anymore. >> stop with the robot dogs, scary stuff. >> yikes. >> all right. thank you for that very thoughtful conversation about a fascinating topic we usually don't get. fan mail friday is up next. ♪ meet the team... behind the team. the coach. the manager. and the snack dad. all using chase to keep up with their finances.
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♪ >> what it is, it's fan mail friday. let's get it on. mystery round, pick a card. bam. all right. facebook question from jennifer d. what movie did you really dislike that everyone else raved about? go. >> what's then to hanks one that
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everyone likes where he's a veteran, and -- >> forest gump. >> i could not stand that. >> "saving private ryan"? >> no, forest gump. >> people think i'm a bad person because didn't like it. >> i didn't expect that. >> you just possibly ruined the segment. please bail us out. >> i have a bad one -- i don't want to say like i hated it, but i don't get the godfather thing, and my husband is obsessed. and i sit there -- yes. >> what did we ever do for you to be so disrespectful? >> she's going to have a horse head. >> it's just not my thing. >> listen, for me, i was so terrified of getting lost that i could not watch wizard of oz, homeward bound. i hated the ones where you didn't know if they were going to make it back home or not. >> so you joined the military and went off.
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[laughter] >> actually -- >> i didn't say i had good judgment. that was my reason for not liking it. >> i used to not get caddie shack and all and then i married my husband and i know every one. >> hate it. worst friend in the world. >> i hate it, in the world. >> best friend. >> what is that? what is that. >> all right. >> the worst thing ever. >> facebook question from tracy d. would you hire today the person you were in your early 20's? >> yes, i would, just because i'm sort of a psycho, control freak. like i've always had my notebook and all of that so i would probably be a little irritated by me in my 20's. calm down, girl, but i would hire me. >> i was a united states marine. of course i would hire me. >> yes. i would hire me. >> 20 cents an hour. >> i would not hire me. >> i was in the real world in my
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early 20's, and i actually had an internship with a hispanic chamber of commerce but i was having so much funny would forget to she up for work, and my boss would have to pick me up, he would pick me up from the train station because it was in a bad neighborhood and sometimes he would be waiting for a long time so eventually he came to call me and say, today is a great day if you want to show up. if you're watching, he's a fox watcher but i still keep in touch with him oddly. >> you turned out great. >> i turned out okay. [laughter] >> you go. get out of my store. we're good on that one. that's another movie. okay. all right. roundtable, speed round here. what can turn your bad day into a good day? >> for me -- >> you go. >> a good flight. we were talking about earlier. a good night. >> my dog. >> cute video of my daughter. >> a smile, kisses for my kids.
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>> let me go ahead and just say something about my kids real quick. save myself here. >> he just wants a flight. >> i've got a picture of my daughter on a tricycle that made this day good. >> burger night, when it's burger night, love burgers. it makes my day but love. the weirdest neighbor experience you've ever had. >> okay. >> i got one. >> when -- was first elected to congress, we had a democrat neighbor and he would spy on us and take pictures and follow my baby sitters. he was an activist trying to get dirt. >> that feels like fake news to me. >> you moved and now you guys are friends. >> weirdest neighbor experience, i got on an elevator, met my neighbor who i had never seen before and the ended up marrying him. >> we had a corner apartment in
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d.c. and our neighbors next door, it was an arranged marriage and the noises that came, we never knew if it was fighting, loving, it was the same noise but a noise could you not figure out where one was coming from. >> we had college kids above us in a town house, and finally i got out in my pajamas one night to find out what is going on up there, they were actually below us and they said your hot water heater or something is broken because it's flooding your townhouse. oh, i'm sorry. i was going yell at them. >> my neighbor's ex-poor friend was mad and wanted to confront her and he came to my house pounding on the door and when i opened the door, he apologized immediately. [laughter] >> best neighbor experience. >> he had a bad day. he woke me up. >> all right. one more thing, up next. ♪
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♪ ♪ >> martha: tune in monday fan mail special answering all of your questions. don't miss it. okay. jessica, your one more thing. >> jessica: check out little league players from pennsylvania pretty girls walk on the field. >> [laughter] >> jessica: clearly a universally walk both teams. good sportsmanship and good vibes shown all around the little league. >> shannon: love love it. find there weekend speaker mccarthy in the midst of the negotiations is he going to join us live on set wherever we tore
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tell us what is happening. jim himes out of kentucky cut and lindsey graham who just met with velasquez is join us as well. many. >> joey: maybe a deal to talk about. unbroken bonds of battle. it's my book. it's on preorder now. comes out the end of june. i would really love for you to check this book out. there are 10 stories in here of 10 of the most amazing people i have known, most of them most of my life. and they mean a lot to me. also host fox news tonight. next week monday through friday. tune in and encourage good conversation. we will have a lot of fun and cover military stuff. >> shannon: i will set the dvr. rachel? >> rachel: so the boston celtics rob hale, he was invited to speak at a graduation. there were 2500 students there, and he gave a thousand dollars to each of them. very good but maybe not the best message for young graduates. >> shannon: be in that audience.
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>> tyrus: i would have took the cash. >> rachel: i would have preferred him to give it to factory workers or werldz. >> shannon: tyrus 10 seconds. >> tyrus: check out my tour tyrus live all over the country. of course that's just tyrus my new book "nuff said" comes out in october. >> shannon: that's it for us. have a great memorial day weekend. ♪ >> bret: good evening, welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. breaking tonight, the treasury secretary's june 1st deadline for default has now been pushed back to june 5th treasury secretary janet yellen updated her prediction today in a letter to lawmakers. it appears we will enter the long holiday weekend without a deal on increasing the debt ceiling. whether we will end up that way remains to be seen. it's been going back and forth all day. senior congressional correspondent chad pergram where things stand from capitol hill. good evening, chad. >> bret, good

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