tv The Five FOX News August 16, 2023 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT
9:00 pm
which may be permanent. high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, weight gain and high cholesterol may occur. movement dysfunction and restlessness are common side effects. sleepiness and stomach issues are also common. side effects may not appear for several weeks. ask about vraylar and learn how abbvie could help you save. "the five" is now. >> jeanine: hello, everyone. i'm judge jeanine pirro along with dana perino and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." >> jeanine: here's how to deal with the woke mob. republican presidential candidate vivak is schooling a self-described pan sexual activist who decided to confront him over lgbtq issues. >> have a negative view of same sex couples. but i do have a negative view of
9:01 pm
a tyranny. we have now in the name of the majority created a new tyranny. and i think that's wrong. i don't think that somebody who is religious should be forced to officiate a wedding they disagree with. i don't think somebody who is a woman who has worked really hard for her achievements should be forced to compete against a biological male in a swim competition. i don't think that somebody who is a woman that respects her bodily autonomy and dignity should be forced to change clothes in a locker room with a man. that's not freedom. that's oppression. >> jeanine: here's exactly the type of broken sanity vivek is standing up to. cnn publishing a detailed guide to the use of pronouns. a new kind of gender neutral or nonbinary pronoun that allows people to characterize themselves using genderless descriptions like leaf, sun and star. and as we try to figure that one out, there is growing outrage after a biological male who identifies as a woman smashed a
9:02 pm
women's world power lifting record in canada. >> it's so important to keep women and girls sports fair and safe. we need to use our voices, men and women, to let everyone know that fairness and safety has to be top priority of every federation. any woman, man or federation that supports men lifting or competing with women is part of the problem. and they should be ashamed and they are literally helping erase women's sports. >> jeanine: ok, so let's start with you, charlie. i mean, a recent poll showed the 65% of americans believe there's only two gender identities. >> shocking. >> jeanine: and 34% disagree. is vivek right that the minority at this point is now speaking for the majority? >> i think without a doubt especially if you consider how
9:03 pm
much conversation gets used up talking about this issue. and, you know, i think it's, by the way, i think it's sort of tactical. i think a lot of leftists want to do this because sane people throw their hands up and say this is nuts. i'm walking out and not having a conversation and it drives people out of the political discussion which is very bad for the country. but it's good for sort of leftist ideology. i love the way that vivek handled that. and i think it's why vivek is so valuable to the discussion today. and why i think he's going to be part of the discussion for a long time no matter what happens. he starts off by chiding her for doing the lgbtq thing saying i don't see those as one thing. i see people as individuals. and then goes full federalist papers on her, starts talking about the tyranny of the minority which is just as bad as the tyranny of the majority. and that whole discussion, while we shouldn't really have to be having it, is something that like the founders envisioned and they explained it all. and they argued about it.
9:04 pm
we came up with the process that we came up with. but then at the end of all of it, he then says -- and he thanks her. she's got this look on her face like i just got my lunch eaten. i don't know what to say. and she's kind of freaking out and he says thank you for your civility. it was perfect. >> jeanine: yeah, that's why it's gone viral. jessica, so many people are stunned by the fact that they had a very civil conversation about something that is divisive in this country. but more to the point. they have now identified more than 100 genders. are we supposed to or are we compelled to call people the gender that they want like these neo-pronouns, xyr, aer, are we insulting people if we can't keep it straight? >> jessica: no, and i don't know anybody that is adhering to that. i do think that these are things that companies and we've seen there's been a backlash and people are losing their jobs because they're finding these things are incredibly divisive
9:05 pm
but it's not actually helping company culture, etc. i think these are just talking points and kind of click bait items. i do think actually that the point was that the civil conversation occurred and you guys know i'm a big supporter of the idea of talking to people who you don't ideologically agree with and can find a lot more common ground than you expected to walking into a conversation like that. and he knows how to be a politician insofar as he's treating every potential voter with respect. that's what you absolutely have to do. i do think, though, on the merits of his point that he's wrong. so the tyranny of the minority party is the g.o.p. today. if you look at, on the trans issue, our own polling shows 57% of americans think trans kids and their families being the target of political attacks is a major problem. when you look at the actual numbers of kids that are, for instance, they have gender dysphoria and getting top surgery. how many kids do you think had top surgery last year? under 300. then think about an issue that's
9:06 pm
really important to democrats. >> is that children? >> jessica: minors. >> children. >> greg: that's an atrocity but continue. >> jessica: over 5800 kids were victims of gun violence, for instance. i don't hear republicans talking about that. >> greg: not a comparison. >> jessica: it isn't. it's a priority on the right to talk about trans issues and priority on the left to talk about gun issues. which affects more people? abortion is another issue. send it back to the states. group of elected officials have decided, for instance, in texas and louisiana that women should not be able to get abortions after six weeks. we have women that are bleeding out, going into sepsis. in louisiana, a woman was forced to carry a baby that had no skull. >> greg: what does this have to do with this topic? >> jessica: what are you talking about? he says tyranny of the minority. >> greg: that has to do with lgbtq. not with all of your favorite issues. >> jessica: he's running to be the president of the united states of america. >> jeanine: i asked you specifically. >> jessica: he was wrong to act
9:07 pm
as if the g.o.p. is the party of the majority opinion. they are not. they're taking minority positions and running with them. >> greg: her life isn't a minority position. >> jessica: it is, actually. >> greg: talk about the fact that it's 48%. >> jessica: no, i'll talk about the 69% is the highest it's been recorded that now support abortion through the first trimester. >> greg: first trimester? >> jessica: yeah. what's happening in ohio, kansas and kentucky? >> greg: what's the democrat stance on abortion? >> jessica: that it's between a woman and her doctor. >> greg: what's the cutoff? the logic if you're slicing these issues. >> jessica: we want to kill live babies. >> greg: i didn't say that. i'm pointing out this is actually the right argument but go ahead. >> jessica: finally got to the right argument? >> greg: getting there. >> jeanine: i'd like to get back to the issue. >> jessica: issue is not calling someone -- >> jeanine: the issue is not abortion today. the issue is pronouns and lgbtq
9:08 pm
and the tyranny of the minority that vivek was talking about was lgbtq. now, you know what? greg, i'll let you answer that but a maryland court ruled on monday that parents now can now challenge school district's decision to keep gender transitions before families. how do you think teachers feel about this? and no one is asking for their moral perspective. >> greg: first of all, you know i've got nothing against it. i am a pan sexual. i mean, who doesn't love a woman who can cook? i did that for you, jessica. look, ok, this is a perfect example. see, the -- if you believe in two sexes and there are only two sexes, we have these chromosomes that tell us this. you are putting trans lives in danger. so the activist class creates an illusion of risk which puts everybody in fear. that's what this story is really about. like people don't get scared when they're talking about abortion issues or when they're talking about race sometimes they do because they'll be called racist. in this case, you have an
9:09 pm
aggressive activist class that will come after you so if you are against removing healthy genitals from children, top surgery, first of all. top surgery. remember, when they change the language, they're screwing you over, ok? that gets back to the pronouns. but the fact is you are against removing healthy genitals or breasts from children, then you know you're putting people at risk. you ask how many people are you putting at risk? they don't know! they don't know. because it doesn't exist. or we would have seen those numbers already. so we're in this disturbing reality where this attention that is given to children is being disguised as therapeutic right, but it only happened to 300 people, right? but once that phase is over those 300 kids are destroyed. so the people that are faking victims status in the trans activists world are creating more victims out of children. that is the tyranny of the minority. he is right. radical fascists don this cloak
9:10 pm
of victimhood to claim protection that enables them to exact insane demands in sports and in school, to your question it's like they can now say like you know what? you can talk to your kids because it's a privacy matter. it's between the activist teacher and the child. not the parents. that is insane! that is absolutely insane. i'm sure vivek is going to get destroyed for saying that. i think there is this big lie. this is the biggest lie of all. but you're punching down when you criticize transactivism. you're punching down when you go after parents and their children. that's the attack. they don't have the media on their side. so as long as you have the trans community changing their language. top surgery, bottom surgery nonbinary, i'm a leaf. you can get away with anything. now, it's done.
9:11 pm
people are finally fighting back. >> jeanine: all right, dana, on a similar subject. nearly 75% of americans believe that transgender girls have a competitive advantage over biological girls. so why are they still being allowed to compete in sports like we saw this week with power lifting where men are clearly stronger than women? >> dana: it's so absurd. a couple of things, i'll make them quick. one is that i think it's very difficult, i understand that a lot of people think they don't have time to talk about this. it's so ridiculous. very difficult for parents to walk away. that's why you saw parents in new jersey this week who probably thought they would protest their own school district saying heck no, you're not going to do this for me. if my child says they want to be a different sex, the government is going to have the right to prevent me from knowing that? so it's harder, so parents are in a difficult position on that. then the other thing is i really think that the woman who approached vivek, i admire her. she was like i'd like a word. and he said ok, i'll give you a word. that was a great exchange.
9:12 pm
compare that to just last week when riley gains and others were spat upon when they went to an event in texas where they were signing a bill about girls sports. yesterday, ennis canter was on our show and said what if i put on a wig and went and tried out for the wnba? i'd score 60 points a game. and what would they say then? he said he's already black balled from the nba. why doesn't he give this a shot? everybody is like that's so absurd. he's so awful. think about this. >> greg: numbers would definitely go up. >> dana: ratings would really improve. i hope that the girls issue with sports, i hope this gets solved in the next year. and i think that that power lifter, she was very impressive and i'd like to meet her. >> greg: which one? >> jeanine: maybe we should have her on "america's newsroom." up next, shocking reminder of what police officers have to deal with on a daily basis. a cop rams his cruiser into a woman waving a gun and saves her life. her
9:17 pm
>> another day, another reminder stunning bravery of our police officers. a quick thinking cop in new york saving the life of a woman holding a gun to her head and waving it around at others in the street after doing this. watch. good reminder of why you call the police when there's danger. what happens if they're all gone? defund the police lunatics who pine for an anti-cop utopia just got their wish. an entire police force just quit in small city in minnesota.
9:18 pm
the police chief and six others resigned over low pay, and there have been recruitment trouble in the last few months. he said officers don't make enough money at just $22 per hour. so greg, i couldn't help watching -- i've watched that video like 7,000 times, i couldn't help but imagine you probably have an opinion about that particular police technique. >> greg: you know, it's a risky move. i'll give it that. not just for her but also for him. he risked his entire career right, his life on that to save that woman's life. or to save the lives of others because she might have been pointing the gun. he basically put her life before his. she's obviously not well. who knows? she could have been gravely injured or killed. but he would have been crucified and think about this, you only see that video on fox and you might see it five times today right? you'll see it on my show.
9:19 pm
if it had gone another way, it would be on a 24-hour loop on cnn followed by riots and fires and looting. the problem with this world we live in, when cops do amazing good things, you never see it and when they end up doing bad things, you do oftentimes it can be from the same place. trying to do good sometimes go bad. in this case, it went well. as for the small town, how small is it? six person force. >> dana: 1,200 people in the town. >> greg: maybe this is a great experiment to go private, you know. private always does public better. >> you know for sure they can't afford it. can i speak? they were paying them something like $20, $22 an hour. they had ridiculous hours. there was low morale. the police chief went before the town board and said to the mayor, mayor, you got to give them some kind of raise. all of the neighboring police departments are offering them $30 and $45 an hour. and here, they have like high
9:20 pm
risk, ridiculous hours, no support from you, and the mayor does nothing and now the mayor says we're going to get through this. i mean, really? you couldn't get through it when he told you about it. but i think that this is part of the ripple effect because that town is 65 miles from where george floyd was killed. the original, you know, ground zero of defund the police. and it's like you throw a stone in the pond and the stone just doesn't hit one place. it kind of keeps rippling across the pond and that's what we're seeing in this little town. and a lot of towns where it's the ripple effect of the defund police. and it's not going to work. it's just not going to work with when people think the police aren't worth the value that we know they are. and as for that cop who hit that woman, that's nassau county p.d. let me tell you, they are great! that police department is competent. they're experienced. it took not only competence knowledge of the law, because he can use deadly physical force to prevent that woman from engaging
9:21 pm
in deadly physical force towards another person and did it in a way where he didn't kill her. this is an example of excellence police work. >> may have saved her life and no telling who else's, i have never been to this town in minnesota. i can imagine there's not a huge defund the police movement there politically speaking. as you point out, it's the ripple effect when you have that movement elsewhere and cops are leaving and then you wind up drawing them from small towns. it doesn't matter what, you know, you might have the right you know, politics about things but still suffering the consequences of these sort of big city democrat utopia ideas. >> jessica: i think it's fair to say there's a national police morale problem. that they are nationally underpaid, that they are nationally mistreated in some circumstances, and we've covered a lot of stories like this. it it always sticks in my mind. remember the police officer who broke up the fight between two young girls in ohio and one of them ended up dying.
9:22 pm
and he saved the life of the other girl. but the initial reaction, there was a huge pile-on. it became a celebrity culture story, etc., was this was another instance of a white cop going after black people. and it wasn't the truth at all. and i think that anyone who is being responsible about this knows that the vast majority of cops are in it for the right reasons. and they're out there to protect and serve. they should be paid what they deserve. but i do think that the defund the police movement is being greatly exaggerated in terms of its -- how much it's permeated the democratic party. this is not the position of the party. there were a few outliars that were talking about it like the cory bushes of the world and cortez but joe biden has never said anything like that. >> he's not said the words. >> jessica: he's been more money -- >> in league with a lot of these sentiments which i think this to me, is what's interesting about this particular case. is when you take the political -- partisan back and forth out
9:23 pm
of it, and you just -- and you just look at the actual results you wind up with a town that loses its entire police force! that's a problem. >> dana: i have a list here of all the major cities from seattle and denver to new york city, san francisco, all of them have had major drops since 2020. the highest is up to 45%. actually, i'm sorry, portland had a 60% drop in applications since 2020. but i thought this was a super interesting story this morning. we did it on newsroom with garrett teney and i thought it was about goodhue, minnesota. then he started talking about all these other small towns especially in the midwest and some of these towns have zero police. so these town councils, i know it's difficult, local government is the hardest government. but you have to get your priorities straight because your number one job is public safety. if you don't do it, the people will. they will protect themselves. somehow. but one thing that people cannot do is do what these police officers are being asked to do deal with the fentanyl coming across the border, meth coming
9:24 pm
across the border. how are they supposed to deal with, you know, the migrant crisis? and housing issues and law and order for all these people? school shootings, also an issue. that doesn't happen in big cities. it happens in small towns as well. and what you're losing when you lose these police officers and you live in a small town. i grew up in small towns. you lose the people who know you. and know the community. and they're like oh, yeah, you know what? they got a call down at the diner. he's fine. they got a call over there? we better go. you lose all of that institutional knowledge and that community love. they're going to have to go find jobs somewhere else. and the other thing i would say is the governor of minnesota should get on the phone with the justice department and say give me some money right now. we need an emergency funding right, asap. >> greg: you could definitely do a song called "try that in a big town." it almost is a compliment this could be done in a small town because it's like if the town --
9:25 pm
obviously, people think the town is going to survive, right? so you could actually do that. you could actually do this in a small town. you can't do it in a big town. >> the reason this is news to so many people is because the little towns don't break out in riots because there aren't police there and everybody is armed. >> greg: second amendment. >> armed society is a polite society. >> greg: all vigilantes. >> jessica: my point. >> greg: i knew it was coming. >> finally, unity. >> greg: 300 of them. >> up next, democrats spiking the football over president biden's crummy economy. e footba biden's crummy economy.
9:30 pm
>> greg: i didn't even pick that one. all right. joe biden trying to sell americans on the crap sandwich he calls bidenomics. the key ingredients being soaring inflation that's got families spending $700 more per month than two years ago. i won't be able to afford my top surgery, dana. living paycheck to paycheck is becoming the new norm, and how about a scoop of surging gas prices? the president and his cronies touting the one year birthday of his inflation reduction act. a name the big guy regrets since it's more of a bloated climate slush fund. >> mr. president, this is your day. this is your day. mr. president, introduce the first climate bill in the senate. 1986. before i was in congress. you were already here. >> this was such an amazing effort to pass one of the great
9:31 pm
legislative feats of the 20th century -- 21st century probably of the 20th, too. >> the financial times and "the wall street journal" initially called my plan bidenomics. i'm not sure they meant it in a totally complimentary way at the time. but guess what? it's working! >> greg: charlie, he's our president. you know, so a year later, he kind of doesn't like the name of it. it really didn't reduce inflation. he wish he had lied better. >> exactly! you know, you have to give him credit where credit is due. he's admitting he's been lying for a year and it was a lie from the beginning. and they knew it! and the only reason they're doing it is because they've seen the poll and the polling is terrible. and i always hate these statistics like you go to the department of labor and you don't need statistics from a federal department to know that
9:32 pm
people pay way more at the grocery store. people are getting -- we're getting close to $4 a gallon of gasoline and this is all -- and of course, why do -- you know why does joe biden want to talk about the environment in the first place? why does he want the green new deal in the first place? let's not forget, the green new deal that allowed vladimir putin to invade ukraine, why is it that they want to talk about the environment? it's because they can't fix anything that actually matters! that people actually care about. so they're going to fix the weather. and something tells me they're not going to work at that. >> greg: that's not gonna work. judge, don't you feel bad for the media people who parodied the hilarious lie it was about taxes, and now our supreme leader says it wasn't that at all. i'd feel pretty bad. >> jeanine: i don't think jessica feels bad about it. >> jessica: translates my mood correctly.
9:33 pm
>> jeanine: the amazing part of it is he says himself i wish i hadn't called the inflation reduction act. and he knew immediately it wasn't going to reduce inflation because the c.b.o. came out and said this has nothing to do with inflation. so it wasn't like a mistake. it was an out and out lie where it was nothing more than a contribution to green energy and all this other stuff that he wanted to -- that he wanted to fund. so the question is why did he lie in the first place? he's lying about everything since he came on the scene. whether it had to do with his grades, whether it had to do with, you know, whether he worked in the coal mines like who was it? that british poet. and had to drop out of the presidential race. this guy has lied his whole life. he lied when he said he knew nothing about his son's overseas business. the guy is a liar. given all that, here's the issue. the issue is 51% of americans think the economy is getting worse and the truth is that 34% approve of his handling of the economy.
9:34 pm
now, what i did which i thought was interesting because i hate math is you take a guy or family that's making $55,000 a year. now we know that $709 a month goes to inflation. so you figure out for a year and you know, that guy who makes $55,000 a year or that family now only makes $46,000 a year. that's bidenomics at its best. and that's not a lie! >> greg: uh-huh. jessica, it costs $709 more to live the way you lived before biden was in office. and as a pan sexual, i, you know, i am deeply offended because how can i act in a pan sexual manner when i'm out of money? >> jessica: do you know what that would mean? >> greg: yes, fewer pans. >> jessica: ok. so i understand why he wants to change what he called it because he isn't getting the kudos that he deserves for the climate
9:35 pm
agenda aspect of this. i think it's $380 billion worth of investment. and struggling with younger voters who have not latched on to that and identified it. but the elephant in the room is the actual inflation numbers and i understand that it's a marriage between policy and what's going on in the fed and the interest rates are up. we started with over 9% inflation at this point last year. now it's at 3.2%. before you say it's still too high, grocery prices, i get all of it. i, too, eat and go to the grocery store. but we have the lowest inflation of the g-7 in general. this is a global problem. much like the issue with energy prices was when russia invaded ukraine which had nothing to do with the green new deal that hasn't been enacted but these are the markers out there. if everything is so terrible for instance, why does bank of america, goldman-sachs, j.p. morgan say we're not going to have a recession now when they thought we would. why is the unemployment rate so low? why are we gaining this many jobs? there are anchors our own
9:36 pm
network talking about this completely flabbergasted when the jobs numbers come in. oh, my god, this is incredible what we're seeing. we're rising up by hundreds of thousands. >> greg: you're even surprised when it goes well. >> jessica: i'm just imitating an anchor that was surprised. i knew it was happening. >> greg: he's no longer with us. >> jessica: this one was. the inflation reduction act has had a lot of tangible results that the republicans are happy with. like tim scott, for instance has been bragging about the investment from this company redwood materials coming to south carolina. when you ask redwood materials why they came, they said the benefits of the inflation reduction act. that's what it did. it gave incentives to companies. >> greg: dana is starting to confirm. -- squirm. >> dana: it is true that a lot of these companies that are getting money from this big gigantic bill are deciding to go into red states. why? oh, because the cost of living is better. the tax base is better. there are more employees that are there.
9:37 pm
and that's why. so i think that in a way, a lot of these democrats are like shoot, what did we do here? why doesn't anybody want to live in our state? that's the reason why. joe biden couldn't call this bill. the largest climate giveaway in history because it wouldn't pass the congress. #neverforget. senator joe manchin is the one that got this bill passed. he twisted himself into knots and said this is really about reducing inflation. it wasn't. don't forget that if he decides to run for president. other thing is it's interesting i just learned this the other day. historically, when you go up to a presidential election, people look backwards on the economy. like they remember what it was like when gas prices were at $5 a gallon. and they're like, that will never happen again! for some reason, it's very difficult for a current president to say no, look, it's getting better! and goldman-sachs says in eight months, we're not going to have a recession and people don't
9:38 pm
hear that for some reason. last thing i would say is they're trying at the white house to tell people how they should feel rather than dealing with how they already feel. and that's a loser. >> greg: excellent point, dana. >> dana: thank you. >> greg: all right, ahead, the media is blasting republicans over men being too masculine. i know that feeling.
9:41 pm
so much more now? other companies are charging you more and more for less and less. and we hate that! that's why force factor has partnered with walmart to provide amazing supplements at great prices for all americans. force factor products use clinically studied patented ingredients to powerfully improve your health. they're also delicious, easy to use and affordable. that's why force factor is now the number one best selling herbs and supplements brand at walmart. rush to walmart and unleash your potential with force factor.
9:42 pm
hi, i'm jill and i've lost 56 pounds on golo. hi, i'm barry and i've lost 42 pounds. jill and i are a team. if she tells me to do something, i usually jump on board. golo was doable, it's realistic, and it's something we can do the rest of our lives. >> ♪ i'm speechless ♪ >> dana: men are apparently too manly. >> you're hit. you're bleeding, man. >> i ain't got time to bleed. >> oh, ok. >> dana: "the washington post" blaming republicans for "cowboy mentality" where men think they can do things by themselves. the paper suggests it could be a factor and epidemic of male loneliness in america. they say a battle over the face of an american -- of american masculinity is under way.
9:43 pm
popular music, action movies and leaders like former president donald trump and senator josh holley, what, pushed for a more aggressive model. what in the heck is going on? i have friends raising boys and they just want them to be kind responsible, courageous, people. >> greg: gross. >> dana: what about you? you go, boy! you tell me what you think. >> greg: what i love is like the idea of toxic masculinity was created by the media. and now they're going why are men feeling like they're under attack? for 40 to 50 years now you've been calling us scum and the cure for toxic masculinity is toxic femininity. look at the hierarchy in the pyramid of sexes, at the bottom you have men and then you have women. then you have minority men and then you have minority women and then you have men becoming women. that's the cure. lipstick in a dress. bottom line, there are two sexes. and they need each other, right?
9:44 pm
if men leave the system, you get anarchy. if women leave the system, you get violence. >> jessica: you go hungry. >> greg: you stole my joke! men get hungry. that's good. >> dana: we all need more men to speak up on things like transgender men, whatever -- whatever. men competing in women's sports. we need more men to speak up against that. judge? >> jeanine: i think they should. but i got to tell you, this whole thing made no sense to me. first of all, i think the guy is a generation late, ok? i don't live in the world he's talking about that men are lonely because they're not like cowboys. you know, romance is not new and it's not limited to men who are not as cowboy masculine as cowboys are. and there's more opportunity for people to connect than there has been at any time in the world. i don't know what this guy is
9:45 pm
talking about. is he trying to create something new? trying to explain the reason for loneliness? and it's just -- it makes no sense. just let men let the emotions flow freely. >> dana: to this day, peter will not buy anything from gillette because of toxic masculinity. >> good for him. the problem with this story in "the washington post." >> greg: is that why he's hairless? >> it's womansplaining. woman writer interviewing a woman psychologist. i don't know if the psychologist is the fake one or real one but it's a woman named tara interviewing dr. way who identifies as a she in her biography anyway. it's all womansplaining and then you're doing the topic. so it's triple womansplaining. >> dana: let's ask a woman to explain before we go. >> jessica: you started it all!
9:46 pm
should be our conversation. we had help. last to you. >> jessica: the gillette ad was the example i wanted to raise. academic of male loneliness is video games and porn and too much time in your mother's basement. >> dana: no. >> trying to figure out what's wrong with that. >> dana: greg is like i prefer to be alone. all right. >> greg: underrated. >> jessica: welcome back. >> greg: underrated. hey, jamie. new client?
9:47 pm
yeah, and you'll never guess who, but let's just say she saved when she bundled her dream house and her dream car -- -barbie. -barbie. -barbie. well, i wouldn't be so sure. it could be -- -oh, it's definitely barbie. -everyone knows who she is. we're standing in front of her house, dude. "barbie" in theaters now. listen up, you dogs with allergic itch! today's talking lesson is just one word: apoquel. ap--o--quel. ♪ you can't teach your itchy dog to talk... ...so, talk to your vet about apoquel. apoquel is for the control of allergic itch in dogs. do not use apoquel in dogs with serious infections. apoquel may increase the chances of developing serious infections... ...and may cause existing parasitic skin infections or pre-existing cancers to worsen. new neoplasias have been observed. i'm glad we speak the same language. ask your vet for apoquel.
9:50 pm
>> jessica: welcome back. first up, on behalf of america i think we owe france an apology. a pair of drunk u.s. tourists pulling an all nighter in the eiffel tower after jumping the security barriers and getting trapped. security guards stumbled upon the tipsy goers early the morning. now they face legal consequences. no? >> dana: no, america does not have to apologize to france for anything. for a long time. for many, many, many decades america does not have to do
9:51 pm
that. france should be thanking us. you're welcome that we come and visit you. i'm sorry about the eiffel tower thing. but that's the thing. one and two. >> it's funny, all these museum heist movies where americans go and steal like the pink panther jewel and then now we're going over there and like getting drunk. >> jessica: and sleeping in their monuments? >> yeah. >> jessica: greg, have you slept in the eiffel tower? >> greg: done some things there. >> can you imagine how tall the eiffel tower is? >> greg: compared to me, it's very tall. i find it's the most overrated monument on the planet. anybody could put that together. it's basically like a child's erector set. remember those? you get there and you're like that's all there is. can we agree, there's nothing more annoying than drunk tourists unless you are the drunk tourist. >> dana: then it's fun. >> greg: it's the best thing. you know, today driving up sixth avenue looking at tourists and going what do you see in new
9:52 pm
york city? why did you come here? >> jeanine: to look at the buildings. >> greg: it's awful. i see ugliness everywhere and then -- but there's all these families here. so apparently, your ugliness is another person's splendor. >> jeanine: beauty is in the eye of the beholder. >> i don't think they're coming to see you. >> greg: how dare you. >> jeanine: long, long time but i just think it's amazing, we've got the coliseum. the fountain and now the eiffel tower. i mean, people just in europe go crazy. they have a good time. they're like i love it here. my favorite city? i went to malta and just blew my mind. if i were going to do that. >> dana: if you want to get drunk and see the eiffel tower go to england and they have a replica. >> greg: vegas! vegas has a better eiffel tower. >> dana: right. >> jessica: that's cool. >> greg: play the slots. >> jessica: ok.
9:55 pm
cop thank goodness this is for real and pray for these moments. every touchdown from every game ,every sunday afternoon, largest comeback in nfl history . do you know where you are? i'm in a dream. and in my dream. we don't consider ourselves afflicted. >> i'm like a lot. tell me where you went today.
9:56 pm
>> nowhere. july. it. >> my employees and i are excited to announce it's our 20th anniversary. and to celebrate, we're bringing you a limited edition. mypillow that gives the elegance. mypillow is made with the most amazing cotton, two inch pipe gusset comes in four custom mop levels, and it's machine archibald dreidel. when i got mypillow, i'm asleep . almost immediately. i stay asleep at night and i wake up more well-rested in the morning. my patented feel adjust your exact individual needs and helps keep your neck supported in the line. that's why we've been around for 20 years. because mypillow works. go to mypillow rt.com or call the number on your screen. use your promo code to get your limited edition 20th anniversary. mypillow queen size retails for 6998. not only 1998. >> that's right. only 1990 eight. >> with my 60 day money back guarantee you have nothing
9:57 pm
to lose. three fox news at night has you covered. we begin with breaking information from critical events here at home to the global conflict shaping our world. we will cover it in full. don't miss trace gallagher weeknights at 11 on fox news at night. ge jea >>ni it's time now for one mores thing and jessica goes first. all right. teabsolutely love this storytor so two adopted siblings just found out i dna testing that e actually siblings by blood. 19-year-old victoria was jusearr a babyia wasangela when angela b adopted her into their family. ody.they already had one biologl son and had adopted another name, frank, a year and a halfd before. they lived under the same roof for 20 years. yearthen they wente same on ancestry.com to figure out where they came from. their parents completelytheir unaware of the fact thatg: no. they were actually siblings. you thin k it's fake? >> no.e i'm just hoping that it's nothing happened before >> jso alters. >> so that's the first thing. i saw this. like, how were they?>> jes
9:58 pm
that's horrible. no, i'm just. >>. udge jear them horribl yes. i don't know. we all should be happy for them. likewhateverokay.i go nex what n whatever. okay, i go back, sell one. basketball fan took his love f for the game to the next level. this pas thet weekend at the any basketball hall of fame induction ceremony. a, he got a tattoo of the logo for the 2023 ceremony, but he wasn't done there. he then proceeded to get wellgraphse pl from the players getting inducted and is tattooing them on his arm as welwhat i goil. what is this guy going to do in 24, 25, 26 and so on? arm and there it is on his arm. the tattoo. r i' >> and what i glossed right over is that i'm hosting this show the prime time tonight. shame on me. se e you. kennkay, greg oh, what a show tonight. kennededy,y torpedo. >> timpf tyrus, look at thatt ac lineup. >> nothing but attractive people except for devito. let's do this. >> oh, great. you go, boy. new knew. you knowy newschildren, childree
9:59 pm
without children. we can't have life here.s. and you know what's really good about children? little boys. little boys really are our future. you go, bohere wy. >> like this toddler here who sings along with his grandfather in a touching duet. the grand dad is playing guitar . you know this little boy? he sang his heart out. out, >> a lot of boys can't sing their heart out, dana. but this boy did. did. mand that makes me want too you go, boy. >> do you know thanet i turned that one more thing down because i thought you would make fun of me with all the live in fear, the way >> dtually was able to make fun of a very nice one today, ted. and yet i said, judge, thisdogs is the one i chose so that greg went to make fun of me. check out these dogs florn in florida. they think there's something down in the water. and this manateethis said, oh, hello. and he wow, wow. look at those storms. >> this manatee is having none of that. none.. look at them. magazines are gigantic. we want to see that again. okay. let's say one more time we're>>j
10:00 pm
doneudge want to. lie, hit splash, then they were in the splash zone. betw, charlie, hit it. so check out this video between father and son. it's reall sy awesome.y aw >> call it cash. i drive cash. >> you're supposed to say topping. me on smart kid. yeah. that good boy, that' ts all forg us tonight. >> have a great night. it's the one year anniversary of the inflation reduction act and gas is still close to $4half a gallon. half the country is living paycheck the cou to paycheck, and everything at everbut prarket is way too expensive. but president biden today stood in front of the countrt biden dy and said, you're welcome. >> biden i'm actually justying another way, i say restoring the american dream. >> do you think
95 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on