tv The Five FOX News September 18, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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moment. >> brandon: new york has reached the breaking point. that is new york city. it might be los angeles. there are a bunch of liberal cities and other liberal states, they haven't reached the breaking point yet and so the base is still where it's at. they won't give up. >> neil: you might be right about that. here comes "the five." ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody. i'm jesse watters and dana perino, greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." a gruesome hit-and-run murder sparking outrage in america. sickening video posted to social media showing a peer of teen killers laughing as they plow their car into a 64-year-old retired police chief who was out
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for a morning bike ride last month in vegas. a warning, this is extremely tough to watch. [beep] >> jesse: the victim grul left on the side of the road, later discovered by his daughter who got an apple alert that her father was fallen. he was immediately rushed to the hospital and announced dead. police arrested the 17-year-old on murder charges and they plan to charge him as an adult but they need the public's help in hunting down the person on the passenger side who recorded the horrific clip. he's remembered by his family as an mazing man and a ray of sunshine. greg, we have seen this video. i mean, we couldn't play the whole thing. when you saw it for the first time, it had to have an impact. >> greg: it's like -- i talked to -- i tweeted like it being like the isis video. it's hard to effect the city
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mentality. it's like talking to a drug addict. hey, did you know that crime is really bad for you? it's like, dude, no, man. maybe you should cut back on the crime. dude, we're good. we're good. so what you need is transformational experience in events that would change this mindset. the before and after incident. like, the isis videos. the thing that jars you into a new reality. some of the -- when you see this, you cannot unsee it. it's just -- it's why i avoided the ice ice videos -- the isis videos. i knew it would change me permanently. that heinous murder is such an transformational event. i saw it. it's now in my brain. it's changed the way i think. i imagine this happened to a lot of people. it's something you didn't want to see. the problem is we're the only people that care. the media doesn't care if the pigment doesn't fit their program. the villains must be white or it didn't happen. the fact is they recycled and
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recycled and recycled the george floyd video so much that it transformed a country into a self-loathing, self-destructive entity. the city's leaders stood by and let the violent months kill people because they were brainwashed into that video to believe we deserved it. something like this is rare. that's why it's so shocking and you don't -- you don't have to riot over this. now, imagine if those sentences were said after george floyd instead of, this reflects an entire corrupt racist system, an entire vocation of racist officers, we don't do that here because we love our country. we find this heinous and disgusting but we're not saying it's emblematic of the group unlike the left and mainstream media. >> jesse: judge, what do you think that authorities break this teen and just get him to admit who was sitting shotgun
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filming? >> jeanine: oh, they'll break him. my understanding is this teen has some priors which, of course, lends to his being required to be treated and tried in an adult court but make no mistake, even though he's 17 and tried in an adult court, his sentencing can be 35% less because he's 17 years old. will they get the other guy, will they break him? there's no question. but this is a filming of a public execution, ok, with no regard for the consequences. and this is not just repulsive and something that is not forgettable. you know, when greg talks about the isis videos and, you know, there are certain things you don't forget but this is about the devolution of our society, this is more than one case. this is a place where murder is a sport and where video is your bravado, where the victim is
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nothing more than collateral damage and where no justice will ever be gotten for the victim or the victim's family. and that's all we're seeing now with this generation z that doesn't care about consequences which to them now is relatively new concept. i'll spin off what greg just talked about. the villains the media covers must be white or it didn't happen. so let's talk about the impact of george floyd. this murder was 17 years old, alleged murderer. the kid who hit him with the bike and said, yeah, let's get his ass, there's no question this was an intentional murder. now, if at the time of george floyd, he was 13 or 14. at the time of -- who was it, michael brown? yeah, hands up, don't shoot, which we knew was not accurate because michael brown reached for the cop's gun first. this kid was 8 years old. all right. and so we watched businesses burn, neighborhoods burn, murder, mayhem, no consequences,
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america was under fire, and this is what we got. and this is what we're going to have for the next 20 years unless that pendulum swings the other way. and, you know, the juvi court and lowering the age is a bunch of nonsense. until we as a society have the nerve and the verve and determination to lock these kids up, to make them examples, they're going to continue to do this. >> jesse: harold ford jr.? >> harold: i share your view that these young men should be tried as adults. this is just utter evil. there's no way to characterize it any more than that. we can talk about the floyd thing and the race thing later but i don't -- this is -- i don't care what color they are. i don't care what part of the country they're from. i hope they break this kid and he tells on the other kid. and they not only are tried as adults but i hope they don't get the 35% reduction from the
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judge. now, they're innocent until proven guilty but it looks like they're guilty here and indeed if they're proven guilty, with what happened here, i think there should be aggravating -- before we went on, dana was asking a question about, could there be an aggravated sentence or could we increase the penalty here? i think we ought to look at a federal law in this country that when you kill police officers, retired or not, that there should be a different standard. and this is one of those cases that i hope whether the media has covered it appropriately, enough, or accessibly, this is the first i heard of this matter, this is something that we as a nation should consider and i hope in nevada, however you say it, that they contemplate doing something like that. >> jesse: dana? >> dana: it's nevada when you run for president, for you to say it. i think there is a scary lack of humanity that's out there and i also think -- do you remember when kids were doing the knockout game? it's almost as if they don't think that that's a real person.
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car was also stolen. but to the media point, so we are doing the story that's leading "the five." let me tell you, it's a big deal. you can find this story on twitter. but when jordan neely put the crazed drug addict who was threatening to kill people on a subway, when jordan neely, white guy, former marine, put him in a headlock and chokehold, released him, after that, he died. that was everywhere. there were protests. oh, and guess what we heard from them? you heard from the squad at that point. you don't hear anything about this. the deprafity -- epr -- depravity, how do you say that word? maybe that's good in terms of fighting crime, these criminals want to film themselves so that helps prosecutors prove in a court of law beyond a reasonable doubt and hopefully he goes to
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jail quickly and for the rest of his life. >> greg: that makes me think how many of these murders we don't see the glee in the murders because they didn't film it. we just happened to see this. is there a possibility that you can execute somebody 65% of them if it's a 35% reduction? >> jesse: i wonder, do they have the death penalty in nevada? >> jeanine: not someone, the advancements that have been made and cameras everywhere, they will have law enforcement and the -- in the way that was never possible. >> jesse: well, this was pure evil and these people should be punished severely. coming up next -- hunter biden is suing the irs for embarrassing him but it could backfire big time. ♪
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his tax returns and to congress. and the whistleblowers, quote, targeted and sought to embarrass him by releasing unsavoring stuff like this -- >> hunter biden falsely claimed business deductions for claims to a hotel room for his supposed drug dealer, sex club memberships, falsely referenced on the wire as a golf membership, hotels he was black-listed from and a columbia tuition payment for his adult daughters. >> they asked not to talk about the big guy or dad when talking about the investigation. and hunter biden's i cloud backup where he sarthed he was -- suggested he was sitting next to his daughter. >> greg: one of the whistleblowers are dcalling his tactic frivolous. meanwhile, it seems like the hunter saying it's draining his
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mojo. jesse, i have a theory. would you like to hear it? >> jesse: please. >> greg: ok. i'll tell you later after the show. here's the question. joe needs hunter to sue the irs to keep them from following the money because this is about joe. what say you? >> jesse: that's exactly what i was going to say because now he was using his son to get rich and now he's using his son to obstruct justice. this is a cover-up and you can't say that joe has nothing to do with it. his family is suing the irs agents who were blocked from pursuing him. and this guy, hunter, you know the guy that walks around probably with a popped collar saying, don't you know who my father is? >> greg: you mean jesse watters? >> jesse: yeah. except my dad is not the president. it's now a crime to get hunter in trouble. if you get hunter in trouble, you're in trouble. and so -- but this is what the bidens do. they indict trump. they threaten reporters for covering impeachment. you know, anytime you do
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anything to the bidens, you're the ones in trouble and now they're trying to bankrupt the whistleblowers because these guys don't have a sugar brother with deep pockets financing the lawsuits. these guys have no money at all. they're irs agents. they probably make $110,000. the last 30 years of their lives. so it's a strategy. i don't think it's going to work. i've never heard of someone getting caught for tax evasion by an agent and then suing the agent for catching them. >> greg: i now love hunter biden for this. i mean, i hate the irs. can we do this, dana? >> dana: i wrote down hunter biden has entered the chat. you are welcome here. i'm trying to remember the irs lady that everybody was mad at. >> jeanine: lois learner. >> dana: remember the tea party conservatives, how dare you, and the irs goes after people. so this is exactly what conservatives have been talking about. the other thing that happened over the weekend is biden allies
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were sending smoke signals to the attorney general marek garland saying -- marrick garland saying, you better wrap this thing up quickly or else you'll lose favor with the president. >> greg: did they have liz warren translate the smoke signi signals? judge, should hunter sue his crack dealer for the crack he snorted? >> jeanine: yeah, because if you don't take responsibility for yourself, you have to blame somebody. that makes sense. look, the amazing part of it -- i was looking at the complaint. here's one of my favorite lines. he says, mr. biden has cooperated fully with the irs investigation. give me a break. that's number one. and number two, says my client, 110th hunter biden, just wants treated like every other american. ok, here's the problem. ok. here's the problem. this is the essence of the whistleblowers' complaint, that
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he wasn't treated like every other american, that the fact is they didn't allow the agents to treat him like every other american. so the question is, you know, there's -- does their status as whistleblowers shield them from wrongful conduct? and that's what abby lowell is saying. you know, this is wrongful conduct. no, it's exactly why the w whistleblower statute was passed, to protect them in this kind of scenario. whistleblower is supposed to uncover government misconduct. and they say it violates his privacy act. the truth is, it was the judge who un-earthed what was going on between the department of justice and hunter's lawyers after the whistleblowers exposed the secret. so the truth is that the whistleblower complaint is accurate and it is appropriate under the statute. the bidens just want to make $1,000 every time the whistleblowers mention his name. and that's just what they do. but you know what, this is
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bigger than biden. this is telling everybody who's thinking about coming out, don't you come out. you don't want to deal with this. >> greg: harold, in the green room you said this is the last straw. you were going to vote trump. i was shocked, frankly shocked you said that especially in front of the children. >> harold: i have a slightly different opinion of what i said. look, hunter biden is innocent until proven guilty like anyone accused in our country. he has every right to follow a lawsuit against the irs. and people have every right who the filing is against to react and it sounds like the whistleblowers is reacting. this will conduct itself or play out in a courtroom as you know. judge, you commented on his lawyer, abby lowell, before. it will be interesting to see if this line of defense is the right one for hunter. it appears after what you said, judge, and what has happened, that this judge was able to allow the prosecution, the justice department, and the
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defense, mr. biden's team, to realize they did not have a meeting of the minds about this plea agreement that they thought they had achieved. and the fact that he's now been indicted on one of these things, the gun charge mr. biden has and now it looks like he's indicted on something else, these are all lines of defense as you know, judge, and see if it works or doesn't work. >> greg: you know, the media would say, this will have a chilling effect on the misreporting. remember that? anything a republican did would have a chilling effect. >> jesse: we have the irs whistleblower on the show tonight at 8:00. >> dana: i would definitely watch that show. >> greg: i definitely wouldn't watch football. >> jesse: football's not on. >> greg: they canceled "monday night football" because of the strike. the auto workers out, they canceled football. >> dana: you can watch football
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and our shipping is fast and reliable. remember. keep it simple. make gold your new standard. call rosland capital today at 800-630-8900, 800-630-8900. that's 800-630-8900. >> jeanine: a liberal comic is doing his best jesse smollett impression. hasan minhaj is admitting he fabricated some stories about racism and islamophobia in his standup performances. one includes a police slamming the comedian against a hood of a car after someone infiltrated his mosque after 9/11. and another bizarre fake story involves exposing his daughter to anthrax.
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>> he hands them to me. i flip it over. all this white powder falls into the stroller. and it falls on my daughter's shoulder. her neck, her cheeks. we rushed down to nyu but this time ywe go through the emergeny room and the moment they see the baby they just rip the clothes off her and they take her away. >> jeanine: turns out that none of that happened. and here's the kicker. minhaj isn't sorry about his lies. he's actually defending them saying, quote, my comedy, around arnold palmer, has something like 70% truth, someone that did occur, and oerz tothers that ha fix particularsal -- fictional elements. whoopie: if you're going to hold
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a comic to the point you're going to check up on their stories, you have to understand, a lot of it is not the exact thing that happened because, why would we tell exactly what happened? it ain't that interesting. that's our job. sometimes total b.s. >> jeanine: greg, he says that his embellishments or fabrications are inherent art form. yet, when you think about it -- so he can trash the fbi and whites but we can't do it the other way. why is that? >> greg: when i hear him, i just -- look, anyone can embellish stories, especially if you tell them over and over again. i tell everyone i'm 5'7". that doesn't hurt anybody, it doesn't affect anybody. there are some things when you lie become dangerous because you're smearing groups as racist. that's what smollett did. he could unleash a race war because there would no cost to
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him. it would benefit him at the expense of the country. why did he do this? is it his fault? clearly it's not. we have a problem in this country. we have a racism shortage and the demand for accusations and stories exceeds the supply and any hajj only stepped -- minhaj only stepped in to fulfill the order that was at netflix, at hollywood to please them. tell us -- tell us how bad white folg are to you -- folk are to you and he said, no problem. he probably got a seven, eight-figure deal for it. so racism is incentivized, there is a payoff. if he wasn't that dramatic he wouldn't have this special. he is climbing the ladder because victimhood is the skeleton key that opens all doors. and if you say, what if it's a line? the response is, it was true somewhere. so maybe he's telling a truth. maybe it's not his truth. the system has created this opportunity for him, and the system is terrified of being
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called racist. he benefits from that. >> jeanine: dana, what greg is saying is obviously, he was one of three finalists to host "the daily show" even after this story came out. so he lies and he divides people and he succeeds on that. >> dana: and also, when he's telling that story that's a made-up about his daughter going to nyu and the powder on the face, that's not funny. this is a comedy special? one, i don't think it's funny. i also think about to me, like, your real-life stories are really funny. like, for example, when tom talks about things that happened to him or even seinfeld, those things were hilarious because those were things that happened to everyday people. >> greg: white people, dana. >> dana: i was going to say dave chappelle. he surprises because he tells you something that makes you think and it is different and
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that's why he's so successful. >> jeanine: jesse? >> jesse: it's funny we won't investigate a president but investigate a comedian. i don't think we should be fact-checking comic. but i think it's someone might have fed some reporters information about his material. but i agree with greg. i can see how you can scrutinize this type of material because he's profiting from intolerance. and there is a market for people who want to hear about intolerance. and so he just made up stories about intolerance, got rich from it, and now he's burned. and i think his career is going to suffer long-term damage from it and that's a good thing because it was a very divisive story that he told the american people. we don't need any more division. >> jeanine: harold, if that's true, how do we stop the trend? >> harold: i don't know, i think the guy is funny. i don't hold comics or comedians -- we don't hold
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politicians enough, to your point, whatever your point of view is about in washington or people in your state capitals or cities, i think it's out of bounds to talk about your kids. i would never told a joke about -- >> jeanine: his wife was very upset. >> harold: something happening to my daughter or my son, but i think most jokes are inspired by true stories. they're not totally the story but it gets people -- it gets people to laugh. so he'll be -- he'll be held accountable because of what greg and what jesse said. the marketplace is probably not going to react to him as favorably. >> greg: the media will be fine with it and the entertainment industry will be fine with it. >> harold: i'm someone that wants him. i didn't think -- i didn't know that thing about his daughter was not true. it would have been funnier if he said at the end this didn't happen. but he continued with it. so that will affect how i will think about it. i watched that special and i thought it was funny. i didn't know it was true. >> jeanine: why would it be funny to talk about possible anthrax on his daughter?
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>> harold: comics do that stuff all the time. have you ever watched -- >> jeanine: yeah. >> harold: you ever watch chris rock? >> jeanine: he doesn't divide. this is a guy that lies and divides and that's not funny bus that's just me. >> harold: well, look, don't watch him. >> jeanine: ok. coming up, "better call saul" actor said his anti-republican politics almost killed him. we'll explain, next. ♪ if you struggle. and struggle. and struggle with cpap. you should check out inspire. no mask. no hose. just sleep. learn more and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com
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trusted the republican doctor after suffering a near fatal heart attack nears later. >> bob: my doctor was conservative. he got crankier and crankier. i hated this side of him that i learned over time. he said, you need to start taking meds right now. i said, i don't know. i don't have heart disease in my family. he said just take him. i had a heart attack. i think the first doctor was right. he was a [beep] good doctor. his political point of view doesn't have anything to do with his ability to judge your health. and your health choices and needs. >> harold: greg, you have a strong opinion on this. i think it's big of him to say this. you think similarly or differently? >> greg: duh, how stupid do you have to think anything other than that, it's absolutely ridiculous. oh, i appreciate his honesty and
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new-found wisdom. i tell you one thing, politics will matter if you have a woke doctor. imagine having a woke daughter. dr. smith, why -- imagine you have a woke doctor. dr. smith, i could have been saved. well, tom, rates of cancer is higher among blacks so the priority is equity. you have six months to live but you can enjoy these precious last months with your family knowing you contributed to an equitable society. here is the do not resuscitate literature and a donation envelope for blm. >> harold: i differ there. dana, i think for him -- he didn't have to say this. he could have kept it to himself. it's a big thing. >> dana: it's a good message for everybody to hear. there is an organization called do no harm. this is their mission. basically, they're looking at medical schools that are trying to basically put all these woke policies on students, getting rid of equity, making them do all of these policies that have nothing to do with figuring out
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whether if somebody is about to have a heart attack. i think the more of this would be welcomed. >> harold: jesse, i don't disagree with you guys. we let politics permeate everything. when you go to doctor, i don't -- i love chick-fil-a. they say people are not with my politics. i love my chick. >> jesse: you love your chicken? >> harold: i love my chicken. everything is political now. >> jesse: i had a progressive virologist and he said i should get a vasectomy. i had a cranky, conservative urologist. he said, don't snip it. that's why you don't g-- that's why you get a second opinion. >> greg: was that a minhaj story? >> jesse: go to fact check fox
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news. i remember when reagan got shot. he looks at the surgeon and he said, i hope everybody here is a republican and the surgeon was a huge democrat and said, today we're all republicans, mr. president. and that's what really counts. >> harold: totally agree. judge, do you have a strong opinion about this? >> jeanine: yeah. he let his liberal lunacy to cloud his judgment and he paid the price for it. apparently what it said was, we don't take obamacare. have you ever seen the sign that says, we don't take chair, we don't -- medicare, we don't take a check. so what? if he's dumb enough to keep going to a doctor that he thinks is not that smart but he's not listening to him, go to another doctor. you know. so it makes no sense to me. maybe -- maybe -- you think doctors should choose their patients, like if i'm a republican doctor, maybe i can -- >> harold: some used to do that.
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[laughter] >> jesse: republicans over here. everybody over there. >> jeanine: well, they're haters. they're the ones that are putting us out. we don't care. >> jesse: jeanine is saying, the guy deserved a heart attack. >> harold: thank god that reagan ope operated. and the senate rule may allow jon fetterman to wear those hoodies and gym shorts. ♪ we start with sustainably grown cotton from the rich red soul of north alabama, here on our family farm. then we partner with family owned mills from maine to mississippi to manufacture our cotton into quality american made fabrics that become our heirloom inspired bedding, towels, blankets and apparel. experience our 100% american made luxury linens for yourself. go to red line cotton dot
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♪ >> dana: so good news for hoodie and gym shorts-loving john fetterman. the senate will not longer have a dress rule with the suit and tie. senators are able to choose to wear on the senate floor. i will continue to wear a suit. talk about a two-tiered fashion system. the new dress code allows to senators, not to staff and others. they're still expected to remain in business atierl. this could only happen -- business attire. this could only happen in washington. judge, they're lowering the standards for one person --
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>> jeanine: one guy. >> dana: how does it help him or anybody else? >> jeanine: the amazing thing is, if they thought about what they did and how many votes it takes to get something done, all of a sudden they have one guy, schumer is saying for the benefit of fetterman, you can wear whatever you want, and you have the staffers who barely make a living, you have to go out and buy fancy clothes. this guy looks like he's in a gang or he's working out somewhere. and -- but the house has to stay dressed up. they have to wear a jacket and a tie. maybe women should start wearing lulu lemon in the senate. is it just the men in the senate? i think the whole thing is horrible. i think it's part of the deterioration of this country. for one guy, that guy they're going to change the rules? ridiculous. and how long does this stay in effect? >> dana: well, probably, harold, until the republicans win the senate back. >> harold: we'll see. i agree with the judge. i think this is an abomination to our -- to the way government should conduct itself. if you have a health issue or a medical issue that requires you not to be able to dress, i get
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it. if you're able to dress, you should wear a shirt and tie and a suit and real shoes on the house and senate floor. i went to school in washington and we had to wear a shirt and tie and jacket to school every day. it helped. i'm -- thank you, greg. he said, i'm surprised. i am comfortable in a shirt and tie. it also i think helps you get more organized. it helps people to think more seriously about what they're doing. and i hope that senator schumer, i know it was his decision. i disagree with it. i hope you change your mind on this. if republicans -- when republicans do regain a majority in the senate, i hope they change it and i hope mccarthy in the house they don't do this. not to mention the equity issue y which you don't allow the staffers and others to do but allow one person to do it. >> dana: like the covid rules. for everybody else but not for them. greg, you have major trust and confidence issues in the institution and republicans and
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democrats say this is a major problem. here you have somebody that's part of the conversation that spends millions of our taxpayer dollars on things and he gets to wear gym clothes to work. >> greg: when asked if he was happy about the change, fetterman blinked twice. but fetterman, come on, frankenstein wore a suit and jacket. >> dana: it was ill-fitting. >> greg: but i have to say i think this might be good for women because women have horrible choices for business attire. i think -- why do women dress in the senate or congress they look like captains on a cruise ship? did you notice that, the lbig l peps. men are different. -- lapels. men are different. if we don't have standards here i would be in a mesh half shirt and sweatpants. >> jesse: no way. >> greg: yes, i would. stop staring at me, harold. it if men don't have standards imposed on them, they stop caring. and i think women should wear
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what they want and dress how comfortable they want because women know how to dress. they know -- they enjoy looking good. men enjoy looking comfortable. i think the dudes should stick to the suits. this isn't a poker game or strip club. it's not going for lunch at the cheesecake factory. we're reducing the decline in standards in everything. >> dana: this happened in the fall of the roman empire. they let people wear togas everywhere. >> greg: jesse doesn't know what the roman empire is. >> jesse: i don't know what a toga is. civilization celebrates mediocrity. you're pannedoring to the -- pandering to the lowest common denominate and existing as an accomplishment. that's what we're doing in this country. if you reduce competition and you are an elitist, then you should say, everybody should not have to strive, you stay on top, you stay -- we stay on top, you
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stay down there. you tell people, you know what, you stay in your place. you wear your hoodie. if you look at how models are these days, models aren't good-looking. if you look at them in the '70's and '80's, they're all smokes. if you look at everyone at the beach, everyone has a tattoo. that's -- >> greg: tell him that. >> jesse: if you are a sick or unhealthy person, you are a victim and victims are unhealthy heroes. they said, working-class, blue-collar voters in pennsylvania will see themselves in john fetterman and that will help us, you know, win. i don't see that. i think people look at the guy and they're disgusted. >> dana: judge, how do we bring back manners and etiquette? is it possible? >> jeanine: i worry about crime, but i think that it's schumer who made this decision. we got to -- you know, we got to make sure we get someone else in
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who changes that opinion. i don't know how else to do it. i mean, are adults teaching their kids? are your kids going to school with a jacket and tie? >> harold: they wear a uniform. not a shirt and tie but i hope. >> dana: a and -- all right. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ every day, more dog people, and more vets are deciding it's time for a fresh approach to pet food.
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: time now for "one more thing." greg? >> greg: all right, an oldy but a goody. okay. maybe not. i hate these people! oh, man, do i hate these people. it's u.n. week in new york city. [laughter] >> dana: yep. >> greg: where every street is closed and congested for the incoming foreign leaders and
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bureaucrats. they are here to buy their mistresses tiffany bracelets and have their way with our ample sex workers. on the west side highway, there's a flashing sign that says it's u.n. week, heavy congestion, take the subway. so, we're supposed to risk our lives on the subway so that they can get back and forth to their little buying sprees. i say no. make those a-holes take the subway. we live here. i'm tired of this every year. let's have the damn u.n. thing in another country for god's sake. it's driving me crazy. >> jesse: tiffany's is going to have a good quarter. >> greg: tonight what a good show lou perez, emily compagno, kat timpf and rob lowe. >> no one invites me to dinner.
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>> greg: no one invites me to dinner. >> when clay pigeon shooting yesterday and it was fun. look at me. just look at me. >> greg: you are a jerk. >> judge jeanine: we're looking. >> jesse: tonight on "jesse watters primetime" we have ruffle brand sexual assault allegations. 8:00 eastern. again, football is not on. dana p.? >> dana: percy is kicking off his birthday week. we celebrate the week. he will be 2 on friday that picture peter took over the weekend. and unlike most other workers who were in traffic he was at the park this morning and found this ball. every single day he could find a ball at the park a real special talent. monday new episode on perino on politics. available with steven law. good info there. >> jesse: i will definitely listen to that harold? >> harold: first congrats to my kid winning soccer games i know you get it from your mom but you let me share in the credit, too.
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dramatic body cam video shows the moment two atlanta first responders rescued from floodwaters that surrounded the car. atlanta hit with two inches of rain. water become so deep that the distressed driver's car. used a baton to break the window before he and fire captain terrence simon carried the man to safety. congratulations to them. you always love to salute first responders when they do the right thing which is all of the time most of the time. thank you, guys. >> jesse: doesn't smashing the glass with a baton look like so much fun. the rescue is great. the smash probably the highlight. >> judge jeanine: phenomenal. >> harold: well done, guys. >> judge jeanine: you may have seen tiktok viral pizza and other cheesy foods to see how high they can stretch without snapping. doritos has taken the trend to a whole new level. they decided to get a helicopter lift a giant nacho 50 feet in the air and dump in a pile of loaded nachos with cheese
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setting a new world record of cheese pull of 50 feet. >> greg: i'm lactose intolerant, judge. just looking at this gives me diarrhea. >> judge jeanine: the truth is there is more than cheese that. >> dana: will it be explosive? >> greg: it will be explosive. >> jesse: good luck out there with the traffic. that's it for us. have a good night, everybody. ♪ ♪ >> john: good evening and welcome back to washington. i'm john roberts. bret baier will join us from saudi arabia a little later on. breaking tonight, five americans are on their way home this evening after being released from custody in iran. it is part of a prisoner swap with that country, one that includes the release of $6 billion of frozen iranian assets. that has led to fierce criticism of the deal. white house correspondent peter doocy starts us off tonight from 1600 pennsylvania. good evening, peter.
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