tv The Five FOX News June 27, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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weigh bags like europe and asia so you can avoid that but you might want to wear your jeans or your sweater or something like that to keep o warm on the plan. >> neil: lee, i've got to get out of here fast vehicle that was a great job. >> thanks. >> neil: here comes "the five." ♪ ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i'm dana perino moment judge jeanine pirro, jessica tarlov, jesse watters, and greg gutfeld. it is 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ check this out. kamala harris breaking new barriers as vice president, and not just not the one she hoped for. harris just received the worst vice presidential ratings and nbc news bowling history. just 32% of respondents held a positive view of the vice president. 49% held a negative opinion of
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her. that gives kamala a net favorability rating of minus 17, i can do my own math here if you stuck that number against previous vps, the picture is not that pretty. mike pence emma dick cheney, and al gore, all seen as more favorable. but harris does have one public cheerleader. who is that? >> i want to thank kamala, who is there for every single important thing we do, and i'm not sure how we would do it without her. >> dana: rehabbing kamala's image is a top priority for the white house. saying, "i think the energy and enthusiasm is palpable, we just need to make sure we do a good job of exposing her to the american public." but exposure may not be the problem. >> i mean, i tell you the bangor of the summer, okay, that you need to play for your people, and they are going to love it, everyone is going to go crazy. ♪ ♪ >> i like it. >> yes. this is the song of the summer.
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you need to tell the d.j. to have that going. are you ready to see stonewall? okay. >> dana: okay... i don't know if more exposure is a good idea. think about biden. >> greg: they were wearing the same suit. and she was biting her lower lip like a white guy, dancing at a wedding. that is so uncomfortable and awkward to watch. i mean, it's almost as awkward as when john mayer was dating taylor swift. [laughter] that's what they said to me at the break. >> dana: that is more awkward even now. to be three she is a historical figure. she is, obviously, the first female vice president, first woman of color, now the worst vp in history and that is because of the first two. the first two got her in but that did not promise any competence or excellence. all she had to do was take those boxes, and unfortunately, she did not deliver the rest, which is like 10%, just show up, show
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up, do one thing a year. that's all you've got to do. but she couldn't even do that. that is where they are at right now. she is kind of the current state of the democratic party. you know, identity trumps competence and it never reflects it. they continually act like it is the 1850s or the 1950s. i'm sorry, if you are a black woman and you've got an education, you have the golden key that unlocks every door. and when you get inside, and you can't achieve anything, that's on you. by the way, did you see the other survey, dana? >> dana: what was that survey? >> greg: this is amazing, reuters found out that every single u.s. president including barack obama was the descendant of slave owners, except for donald trump. [laughter] that means obama has to play reparations, but trump doesn't. >> dana: there you have it. you know what? that's a good survey. that's very interesting. judge, one of the things we get about kamala harris is about
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once a week, there is a story -- maybe it is every other week, but it is a lot -- that they have a new plan and a new makeover and a new plan to rehab her reputation, and this is now two and a half years into the administration and so far not working. >> jeanine: the amazing part of this is never in history has a position of vice president been more important than it is now. should biden be elected, he will be 82 at the time he is sworn in. she is literally a heartbeat away from the presidency. and with this negative, what is it, 39% had very negative feelings about her, like, hated her. it is not just negative with 49 -- 39, very negative. she has an office with a toxic work environment. people are fighting with each other to get to the exit door. this is a woman who was in a position to make it easy for other women behind her to come forward and do the job, where americans can say, you know, a
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woman is capable of doing this. if anything, she has established that the precedent that a woman is incapable of being vice president, and just look at her with respect to what she has done. causes at the border. and this nonsense by joe is trying to sell us that "i couldn't do it without kamala," i mean, who was he kidding? i guess the real question for them is, would we let out? joe, we do not know if he is going to fall or stumble on his words, or kamala, who would just laugh your way through the whole thing. i don't know what she is giggling about. but i have a philosophy in life and my philosophy is, if somebody is out there always giggling, they are a miserable person. you get to work for them. and finally, let me just say about setting records, do you remember when they came out and she said "joe, we did it" when they won? it was so inauthentic. there was something about it that you just couldn't buy. so if they really want to show kamala more, the problem is
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she's got nothing to tout. maybe she will talk about abortion, but they want her to talk about infrastructure. i don't know if that will go so well. but for a woman who had it handed to her on a silver platter because she checked off all the boxes, for her to literally fail in this job is really a sad commentary on her abilities. >> dana: abortion is certainly an issue that she is going to push forward on, but jessica, will that be enough? >> jessica: it really depends who is running in 2024. this is all candidate-based beer find if it joe biden versus donald trump, i think it is going to be fine for the democrats. we are in incredibly polarized country. i don't think anyone is ever going to have a landslide. but when you look at all of the data, it suggests that trump, if he is in the race, he makes it about trump, and people have very clear views about that. his diehard supporters, you see him gaining and gaining and gaining in the primaries and falling, falling, falling in the general election and fight and picking up more independents, suburban voters, people who
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could be swayed by a more moderate candidate, potentially. you look at the nbc approval ratings, it is like a race to the bottom. so, kamala's approval rating is higher than nikki haley's, mike pence's, ron desantis', tim scott scum all people who want to be the republican candidate, and donald donald trump's net negative rating makes kamala look like the most successful woman in history, it is negative 56. write? so this is a guy who seems to be sweeping the primary season with each new bit of information about another indictment coming. last night, we all heard audio of him showing people a classified document, he lied to bret baier come he said there was no document, we heard shuffling of papers, and he sounds like a teenager, "hey, guys, isn't this cool? look what i got." talking about the nation's secrets. not about a personal thing beards before what about her, though? >> jessica: it's obvious she does not resonate with the american public. whatever is happening right now is not working, i don't know if showing her off more makes a difference but it all comes down
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to what are the names going to be on the top of the ballot? end of donald trump is the name under the r, i don't know if talking about the net negatives, has makes any difference. >> greg: owned, is not the thing, jessica? >> jessica: something of a good business dealer -- >> jesse: donald trump might be more popular if the department of justice wasn't leaking evidence in the middle of a criminal investigation. mitt disco, don lemon, marg margarine. people out there use to chant "save the whales, save the whales," but now they had it coming. you don't understand what is going on. the media can market anything except kamala harris. they have tried. jessica, cigarettes kill people. and cigarettes are more popular than kamala harris.
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they tried to melon scoop this woman out of the ticket a couple months ago, and they couldn't fall it off. >> jessica: who tried to melon scoop her out? >> jesse: comforted on the show, jessica! and why did biden run? he said he was meant to be a bridge to the new generation. that bridge was blown to smithereens because the woman fails under pressure and now he is stuck with someone as b about as popular as toxic waste. would you fly in airplane up the pilot was old and rickety in the cold pilot couldn't land it? do not fly the plane you drive. nikki haley hit it right on the head the other day when she said we are not running against joe biden, we are running against kamala harris, and that sent the white house into a panic mode. what they are trying to do is now every answer out of this woman's mouth is abortion. ask her about infrastructure, it's abortion, abortion, abortion. that is all you are going to hear. but i am waiting for one thing.
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i am waiting for reporters to ask kamala harris about her boss extorting foreign nations for cash bribes. what she says there will tell you everything about kamala harris. and that's what i'm waiting for. >> dana: you might have to wait a long time because i don't think one of those interviews are going to happen. but the andy cohen interview, that will happen. the next time, you can wear something different. all right, coming up, who is telling the truth? president biden denied he ever talk business with hunter, despite a whistle-blower saying otherwise. ♪ ♪
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>> greg: the big guy is giving a big denial despite an irs whistle-blower providing a text message that points to dad being in the room while hunter was shaking down a chinese businessman. joe biden still denying that it ever happened. >> mr. president, did you ever speak -- [indistinct] >> greg: what a life. and "the view" things we are misinterpreting the hunter scandal. speak of hunter biden story, scandal, this or that, it is also the story of a father's love. and joe biden has never and will never give up on his son, hunter, and will never treat him lesser then. and so he is a father first. take it or leave it. >> he's an addict. he has had this addiction for many years, to various things. i wonder where our compassion is. a >> greg: that is very
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touching. dana, usually "the view" only cries when the green room runs out of krill. so, do they have a point or are they that thing where they are using the addiction as protection against any crit criticism? >> dana: well, if you noticed come in the last 48 hours, where this line about hunter's addiction has come back into fashion. there is that democratic bat signal that goes out, okay, now he has pled guilty to these two misdemeanors, everybody deploy the addiction defense. when is the last time you heard that? we talk about hunter biden all the time, get asked about it often, it is true he was an addict. it is also true it is impossible to believe maybe not believable that a father of a son he loves so much, a son who is addicted, would not ask his son, how are you doing? what are you doing today? what is your purpose in life today? what are you getting up to do? how the hell are getting all of
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this money and stop using my name to get it. where is the tough love? i have some friends who have been through this with their children, and it is a heart-wrenching thing. sometimes the tough love has got to be the hardest part of it. the worry, all of that. but there are also consequences. i think everyone should take a look, many things written about this but byron york at the "washington examiner" has done interesting piece about whistle-blower number 2 because it is curious, if this goes all the way back to 2014 and 2015 and he was not paying taxes then but he only has to deal with the tax misdemeanors from 2018 and 2019, no one in america would get that deal except for someone like hunter biden, so there does seem to be something there and i know the white house would love to say "case closed, this is over, and a father loves his son," but this is not going to cut it. >> greg: judge, what gets me about that excuse, it could be real but we know it is not because clearly hunter is incredibly competent at raising money.
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>> jeanine: not only -- >> greg: you cannot be an absolute incapacitated junkie if you're raising millions for the big guy. >> jeanine: not only that, raising millions in countries where he does not speak the language. maybe there is a certain language that is always needed. biden, vice president, future president. the thing is, the unclassified document, the 20 -- 1023, that wasn't classified. there apparently is a tape of the president, of burisma, saying, you know, give you $5 million each, and in exchange, i want this. now, we don't have those tapes. the person who says it, someone who is very credible and fbi informed for a long time. they got that money within ten months in 2017 and 2018, those are the years they pled guilty to the tax charges. so you've got $5 million each there.
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and if you -- joe is such a great father, why are there all of these llcs being set up? is that a sign of love? why does the father say, why are you giving your money to your sister, ex-lover, sister-in-law, all of the kids, and finally, let me just say come as it relates to joe biden and his love for his son, it really is love for the family and what they can get. what i want to know is why there -- why they have not started impeachment. whether it is for garland or mayorkas, and i throw myself back -- not in this segment. we want to do the whole thing, what happened? don't the republicans have the chutzpah or whatever to get it done? and what about mayorkas? this guy lied and move garland lied to. >> greg: yeah, jesse, republicans are down by two with impeachments. i'm not pro-impeachment but they have it coming now and i'm
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thinking, when does your show premiere? july? >> jesse: 17th. >> greg: what do you think about and impeachment that day -- >> jesse: let me talk to mccarthy about dialing up and impeachment. >> greg: i have his number, we will get it at the break >> jesse: how does a set up 17 shell companies. can you be so blasted on crack that you can set up 17 shells and take hundreds of thousands from marie's mom, loaned it to the chinese shell companies, ann you the money back so you do not have to pay taxes. man, if you could do that on crack, pass me the pipe. >> greg: there you go. >> jesse: the bidens now have a new message that just dropped, this is from hunter to the chinese. the bidens are the best i know it doing exactly what the chairman wants, from this partnership. the chairman, oh, the head of the chinese communist party energy company that was trying
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to take over the entire world. and then, who are the bidens, plural? is it hunter? is it four fingers, the chin? no, joe, that is what makes it plural. then you have threatening to shake down the chinese while his dad is in the room paying millions or else you are in big, big trouble. finally, the media is starting to catch on, finally they are starting to ask about this, it is about time. and then you find out the department of justice tipped off hunter to search warrants. now, imagine someone at justice, trump, they are coming to mar-a-lago tomorrow. they would be in isolation right now, and blocking felonies, running out the clock, come on, jessica, answer this question. what is hunter's job? >> jessica: he is a consultant. >> jesse: for what? >> jessica: anything. >> jesse: anything! that's your answer. >> jessica: it is, no one is defending the character of
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hunter biden. i have not seen a democrat do that. everyone said, sleazy, crack head. >> jesse: this is about joe biden. >> jessica: you just asked me what hunter's job was and i'm telling you that hunter biden went around the world -- >> greg: get money for joe. >> jessica: that isn't what i was saying. no it's not. >> greg: yes, it is. >> jessica: i can talk lower than you. >> jesse: whisper now. >> jessica: let me melon scoop this for you guys. i hear a lot of, apparently, rumored, et cetera. we see the hits. jim palmer doing it, nancy mace, you just said there is apparently this tape. get the tapes, get the stuff. that is something we have, donald trump, we have him on tape. we have the whistle-blowers corroborated by an ig, that is what happened with the first impeachment, second impeachment, i get them confused. >> greg: typical. >> jessica: well, there are so
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many. they were very complicated. the american public, even for all of the ramp up in terms of discussing this, does not care. >> jesse: we haven't started. we're just wrapping up now. >> jessica: that's a shame commitment going on for months -- >> jesse: we did russia for two and half years. let us -- give us room to ramp up. >> greg: we are owed rampage. >> jessica: i'm going to show up every day no matter what, but i'm telling you, the people at home, who are thinking about who they want to be their elected officials, et cetera, it is not registering for them. they are not carrying caring about it. >> jesse: because -- >> jessica: you just said the mainstream media is talking -- >> jesse: an hour ago. >> jessica: when it becomes the number one issue in the general election, i will eat my words, hat, whisper a whole episode, no one can hear me. it will be great. that is what i will give you. >> greg: we got to move on. i'm next, the lives thinks grocery stores have too
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♪ ♪ >> jeanine: a writer at "the atlantic" getting mocked after complaining he gets "overwhelmed" by the grocery store variety. he argues what people really need is less choice, not more and recounts a recent trip to the store where he "froze" in the orange juice i'll of a big box store. so many different brands lay before me and each brand offered juices of various configurations of pulp, vitamins, and concentrate. the sheer plen planted to -- i left the store without any orange juice.
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a selection of items to choose from. is this guy a genius or what? i'm going to start with you, greg. this is really a first world complaint. pour me, i have so much, so many options. i mean, is this something to even complain about? >> greg: it's hilarious because apparently we have too many options for food but not enough for pronouns. i doubt this guy would ever write a piece that says "72 pronouns!" this is actually decent point, you walk into a supermarket and it is huge, but the response is very simple. so? that would have killed the article. i want to do this piece. go to the supermarket, it's huge! if i were the editor, i would go, so? go to a smaller store. what your problem? i mean, what's your problem? are you on some kind of drug? a lot of people have brought old world relatives from eastern europe, go into a supermarket, and they are truly stunned into silence.
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it is not just about the cereal aisle, vegetables, a tomato, and they think to themselves, it is not just today that i missed this, my family, no one ever had a tomato like this for 50-60 years because i lived -- try not to swear -- a communist hell hole, that kept us from things, decided what the options are, what is so interesting about the left, they always talk about limiting freedoms, they never tell you who is going to do that. it is always them. >> jeanine: it is always them in the government. greg has a great point, dana, bringing communism into the supermarkets. >> dana: also, this guy, he is so privileged to come he gets to live in america, and if you can't snap out of it and pick up an orange juice, you have bigger problems, and the fact that the atlantic has room for a story like this, so very thought-provoking articles, i
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would not say this is one of them. i remember a story "the new york times" did years ago, but i love this story, remember the lost boys of sudan? after that civil war? several of them were able to move to america and they moved to minnesota so they go from sudan and now they are in january in minnesota and they take their first trip to the grocery store and the way they described it was, as you said, magic, i can't believe it, look at these things, look at these options. if you are an immigrant to this country, coming here illegally, for all of the good reasons, you are thinking the glass is half-full in america. this guy looks at it and goes, it is half empty because we have so many choices. it really is backward. >> jeanine: jessica martin we a country that needs choices? some people are allergic, you can just get regular bread or you can get regular chocolate, may become a chocolate peanuts aren't we all looking? >> jesse: the gluten allergy phenomenon... >> greg: stop it! >> dana: don't do it.
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>> jesse: i'm not going to go there. >> jeanine: jesse, don't. >> jesse: here is how you limit paralysis of the supermarket, go to the butcher for the meat and the bread you go to the bakery and then when you get to the grocery store you just do the perimeter. you don't pac-man through all of the stupid aisles, that is where all of the overwhelming choices are. >> jeanine: vegetables. >> jesse: you hit fruit and veggies off the bat, avocados, raspberries, bananas, i would be interested in a lot of exotic fruit recently, coconut. the best way to crack a coconut, i used to take a screwdriver, hammer, boom, tip it, that is how you get the coconut water. if you're really smart, you put it in a little plastic bag and smash it into your steps, then it shatters into a million pieces. you lose the coconut water, but you still have the coconut meat, and isn't it weird that they call it meat and it is not an animal? i digress. then you stay around the perimeter and hit the dairy, get your butter, your milk, your cheese. >> jeanine: lactose-free milk.
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>> jesse: if you are weird. and then your eggs. the end choices are very simple. here is the egg hierarchy. you got your regular eggs, your organic eggs, your cage free eggs, and the best ones, pasteurized. >> dana: free range. >> jesse: write this down, jessica. then finish your perimeter shopping and you are out the door. or you live near italians and then have little lots of shops, you don't have to live next door to them -- [laughter] >> jeanine: what did that mean? >> jesse: you are not even italian. are you be offended on behalf of the italians? >> jeanine: my children are half italian. that's enough. jessica, why don't you end this for us nicely? >> greg: so awful. [laughs] >> jessica: it was pretty bad. not your worst, but it is up there. i think this was just, like, supposed to be a fun piece and we are taking it seriously. >> dana: i think it is serious. >> jessica: he might be but i don't think -- the publisher of "the atlantic" -- said this is
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going to be the most important piece we have ever done. >> greg: he is a liar. >> jessica: i do feel an unnecessary amount of pressure to buy the most expensive berries, and that bothers me. so, little kids love berries. cleo thinks that raspberries are free, and they are not. they are really expensive. so i go in, i am in the store and looking at i see these nice raspberries, california grown, right, they are like $5.99, and then i see the driscoll's and they are $7.99, and i think to myself, do i love my little girl? i do, so i buy the $7.99 ones, she eats them as a snack while we are rolling in the stroller, once more berries. i don't have any more berries, they are too expensive. >> jeanine: $15. >> jessica: if i had less choice, i would have more money in my pocket and cleo would still have berries, so that is my problem with the supermarket. >> greg: so give the child up, jessica. >> dana: you don't have to take your child to the
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grocery store. >> jessica: then i need a nanny to watch her, she has to come with me. it is fun and they love it. >> jeanine: give flowers, smell the flowers. >> greg: i hate kids in supermarkets. >> jessica: you hate kids, period. >> greg: they slow everything down, always touching stuff. >> jessica: they don't slow -- >> greg: touching the fruit and vegetables. they are diseased. here is what you should do. you know how you lock stuff up in lockers, they should lock the kids up. >> jessica: we could park them at the beginning. >> jeanine: how about we do that to dogs, too? how do you like them apples? >> jessica: i don't even eat apples. >> jeanine: here we go, idiot tourists are ruining everything. italy is looking for this moron who defaced the ancient ruins. ♪ ♪ if you struggle. and struggle. and struggle with cpap. you should check out inspire.
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♪ ♪ >> jessica: it is great girl music. dumb tourists are at it again. a man sparking outrage in italy after caught on video carving his and his girlfriends name into rome's ancient coliseum. >> [bleep]. >> stupid [bleep]. >> jessica: a heavy price to pay for stupidity. italian officials are trying to hunt the guy down and slap them with a fun and past cases cost as much as $20,000 and possibly jail time. greg, horrify us. >> greg: let's face it, the colosseum is not all that, it is trash, it is ugly, they have done nothing to it. if you're going to vandalize something, vandalize something that is already wrecked. even more. this is where i approximate the
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jesse watters school of wisdom. you can vandalize a structure, you can vandalize a structure, defaced a wall, destroy public property, if it is married to a social justice cause. that is what his mistake was. when he was done there, go like that, this is in honor of police brutality in america. police brutality has to stop, and then everybody will go, whoa, because in america you can come here as a tourist and set fire to stores, right, you can tear down statues. you can tear down historic monuments. and just say, it's because of 400 years of oppression. >> jessica: it was italian tourists that took down robert e. lee? >> greg: yes, read your history books. >> jessica: they have been banned, i couldn't get access. judge? >> jeanine: first of all, the guy is an idiot. number one, he puts his girlfriend's name, how does he know he is going to marry her, his wife -- >> jessica: when you are in
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love, you are in love. >> jeanine: in the future, she will know he is in love with this other girl. he needs to be prosecuted. they need to find out who he is purely historical landmarks are very important. why do people go places, touch it, carve it -- just look at it and enjoy it. >> jessica: jesse? >> jesse: i carved ""watters' world"" in the alamo. take a sharp right, knee-high, you can see it. no security at that place. >> jeanine: they don't, you are right. >> jesse: sources tell openly jesse watters prime time" they artie broke up. caught her cheating. >> jessica: on the trip? >> jesse: that couple is done. big mistake. i love making examples out of people. i am like the judge, i want to throw the book at this guy. no one is even going to sneeze near and antiquity if they see this guy getting ten years hard time and a quarter million dollar fine. >> jessica: dana? >> dana: if people can get canceled for speaking words come he should get counseled for
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carving words into the colosseum and also the fines and prosecution should go for all of those nut cases that are throwing blood or -- >> jessica: van gogh. >> dana: at beautiful classical art. >> greg: our colosseums are so much better. nassau coliseum. no, let's face it. let's be honest, we have been there. at best, 20 minutes and then you are out of there, usually very hot. it is very hot. >> jessica: go in the summer. >> greg: italy is overrated, let's be honest. >> jessica: whoa! [laughter] >> jesse: place to visit -- >> greg: spain. >> jessica: oh, my god. all right. joey jones is coming to talk to us about his new book on the incredible american warriors who fight for our freedom. ♪ ♪ i'm saving with liberty mutual, mom. they customize your car insurance
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joey putting the spotlight on the patriotic warriors who supported and inspired him during his military service come available now at foxbooks.com, and joey joins us now for more. tell us about the people here you are so inspired by. >> joey: you ask me on the way into this segment who these people were to me, and i love that question because that is the book, who these people are to me. these are ten people, three or four of them i served directly within the marine corps but the other five or six in th there, y best friend keith that i grew up with, we joined the service at the same time, he went to the army, i went to the marine corps, about what we shared, no longer with us, stacy greer, dano was standing beside me the day i was injured and took his life. and people asked, tell me about -- learn about the day i was injured through the lens and the eyes of the gold star wife of the guy standing beside me. telling about a nurse telling me
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i'm going to walk again, in germany that same day, same hospital, holding her husband's hand as they take the machine away. it is not all just doom and gloom and sadness, it is her story of triumph and recovery afterwards. my story of lost my wife, look at these beautiful children and these ten people that have all enriched my life before, during, and after going through that. if i want to write a book, you can learn about me and what i have been through. these are why i made it through. and others, but ten of the people. >> jeanine: wasn't beneficial for you to go back and examine all of this, was it cathartic? >> joey: beyond that, it was educational. you know, when i was done with the book, you work with an editor, you go down and write these ten chapters, you work with an editor to figure out how they fit together, and the themes of the book show themselves. in the book they are divided into three sections, but beyond band of brothers and a higher
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purpose and shoulders to lean on our three other themes. my dad and all of the words of wisdom he had for me. football, and hunting. and even stacy, the one female in the book, it is this culture that we all ended up sharing one way or the other, not everyone in the book hunts, not everyone in the book is connected to football, and only a few of them knew my dad, but this wisdom that comes from those activities exist in all of their lives and it was cool to see how much of myself other people see. >> jessica: how did the people you feature in the book, the one still here, react to the idea you were going to do this? >> joey: all ten of these folks are still alive and i interviewed each of them, but they talk about someone to visit. tell me about the bonds, your unbroken bonds of battle. for stacy, it was her husband. for keith and i, our best friend chris that we tried to save. the first three chapters of the book, connected and service, and without knowing what the other person talked about, they both
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brought up two people, adamant no mike adams, benjamin, ej, the brother to send the book. the way we are all connected, the feedback, today they are all getting their books and reading the other chapters, but it is one text after the other of just thank you for letting me share my story. >> greg: i just noticed you acknowledged in your acknowledgments, you thanked pete hegseth. [laughter] but i can't seem to find my name in here. >> joey: listen, i thanked pete hegseth -- >> greg: not all heroes are in the military. i fight a war every day. i fight a war every day. i want to ask a question in seriousness because every now and then you will text me after a show and be concerned about something. what in the area of stress -- okay, you were in one of the most dangerous parts of the world, you all nearly died, and you are doing this job, do you find any kind of correlation and
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stress or can tv create an irrational stress for you that was worse, or is this so easy after what you have been thr through? >> this isn't stressful, this is stressful because i look at all of you as titans in this world. you all have careers. but seriously, literally, i look at all of you, a little bit of imposter syndrome walking into this building. this part of that i am good with, i know these folks but i also know i represent these folks when i'm on tv. they don't all agree with my political views but i should conduct myself in a way that makes them proud. and hold a conversation with you all, do my homework and be here, talking to 3 million americans, man, i know those folks, i live with them. >> dana: i want to ask you about best drive. >> joey: where i grew up, a cul-de-sac, literally a ho holl. my dad, two brothers,
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grandparents, bought 5 acres of land from a native american cherokee come her last name was bass, and the way the story goes, they gave the land back to her family, went from, to the cherokee indians. fought for decades, she takes it and sells it in my dad buys it. >> jesse: my favorite part of the book are the picture section. because you can see you with long hair. and it is worth the read for that. joey jones, thank you so much. go out and get your copy of "unbroken bonds of battle," it's out today. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪
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>> check out this massachusetts boy who invented a musical bike rack by attaching a xylophone to his wheel. >> that would be the most annoying kid in the neigh neighborhood. >> it he gets points for creativity and cuteness and that t-shirt. adorable. >> he is going to have a rough childhood. i am kidding. tonight, -- and >> robots. >> university of tokyo and japan created something greedy, who wants to have extra hands? they have created arms that are triggered by your body
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movements. you can have six detachable robot arms and you can replace your arms with claws as you claw your way up the corporate la ladder. [laughter] >> they had a grandparents weekend at the racetrack. check this out. everyone keeps falling and almost dying. let's go to the slow motion. you can see where he pops his achilles. the angry new york city pizza launcher, very upset. the booking war.
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>> season three, the finale of everything will be okay is out now and it has great lessons in it. if you are a graduate, tried to listen to the season. it is really good. comment and respond. that is a great lesson. now i will never have to do that podcast again. >> emerald downs' and washington. >> "special report" is up next. except thanks, dana. bret says good evening. plenty of blame to go over jeffrey epstein. the top republicans hit new hampshire today. former u.s. trade representative robert is here with us talking
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