tv The Five FOX News December 27, 2023 9:00pm-10:00pm PST
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>> bret: panel, thanks. happy new year.ts finally, tonight, a special day. >> he shoots it and it is selfgs rewarding and then he gets excited when i get excited. so i think we have a good connection and a good bond off of each other. b >> bret: a new top dog when it comes to dunking basketballs.ie that's a 5-year-old border collie named leonard. this week he set a new world record with 22 slam dunks in just one minute. l this happened outside the lazy dog restaurant and bar in chantilly, virginia. he's apparently also a very gooe artist, making him one well-rounded canine. thanks a lot for inviting usinth into your home tonight. that's it for this "special report." fair, balanced, and still unafraid. i will see you in the new year.
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>> hello, everyone. i am here with kennedy, jessica this is the five. ♪ ♪ tyrone, joey jones, kennedy. >> katie: and he's out o and he is out of office. well, not yet. president biden using the kids upstairs instead of -- and stepping foot down. for the long holiday weekend. joe is hoping for rest and relaxation. nearly 2,000 miles away from all the problems he is facing in washington. which now includes an impeachment inquiry. his sons' -- son's two indictments. the big guys already on our the time. skipping a year and news conference. not surprising why he is supporting the prospect of a man, who would want to answer a question on what you have the worst year end rating of any modern president seeking reelection. but and probably also wants to get away from democrats bickering over whether he has a
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shot at a second term. former candidate —-dash. >> i think trauma can win. he could win in pennsylvania. i think the thing that biden has to do is he has to in march of the youth vote and minority report. he has to say to people, here is what you put in here -- here is what it is important to report. to have to get that sense of hope back. i think the word hope is important to. but it sounds to me like you think it is the election were held today, biden would lose. >> for me and everybody else,. >> senator john fetterman is firing back for saying that joke and saying, "i will use this as another opportunity to tell james carville to shut the [bleep] up." my man has not been relevant since greenwich was a, i take exception to that remark. ranch was a thing. >> grunge forever. and i think what he was trying to do is what david asked the
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asked her what is trying to do. it is. it is what jessica tarlov tries to do. he tried to tell people the truth to get voters to pay attention because also the by the nights are wonderful propagandists and they are telling all of us how rosy the economy is and how stable the global picture is, actually the president is in real trouble. and unless you telegraphed that to people, they are going to be very comfortable with some of the economic numbers that are coming out right now, even though a lot of them are feeling the pain. so they are trying to be truth tellers. i don't know what john fetterman is doing other than trying to pick a fight with every faction of the democratic party. >> jessica, where are you on the federman carville, you know, saga. the difference there? >> i am actually team carville and i am 15 federman. i think that this is healthy. i think that carville still has a place in the party. we are the big 10. he was responsible for one of the more successful modern presidencies, ones that made the democrats and republicans happy.
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when you say it is the economy, stupid, you're saying that because james carville was the one who figured it out and someone should be running on this in fact and are also with john fetterman in so far as and i appreciate how you open this, and think that we are to be truth tellers about this. that at this point, joe biden is running. there is no primary. there's no getting him off the ballot and so it does not actually help democrats to have this conversation about, you know, dean phillips is not really going to get it done. but is gavin newsom going to get it? this is who the candidate is. and there is, like we talked about yesterday others are, a lot of positive things about the agenda that you could be discussing. and federman has been doing a good job of that. carville is in a little bit of a grin she mood. but it is hard when you have, you know, he is a party elder. what are you going to do? he goes on tv. >> james carville. [laughter]
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>> trrip is a party elder and carville is a party out to shoulder. >> her numbers are the numbers and, paradigms, biden's approval from december 6 at 39%. trump was at 45%. obama's 43%. so he is having some problems here, joey. and instead of coming out and having an year end press conference to talk to the american people of what he thinks our achievements, he built on that and with the what has was asked about it, they said, well, he had a press conference with the president of ukraine and the fourth that is enough. >> it is 40. we had this reporting a couple weeks ago that biden was upset at kind of with the public perception was and he told his team, circle the wagons and come up with a strategy and we realize that strategy is to get him further away from ever everything. antony blinken might be the most powerful person in the dc. does that make you worried? he is the one leading the charge on what is happening with the borders overseas. he is leading the -- he is leading the charge on the southern border. we are not in a good place when
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it comes to perception of leadership. i will give federman and cover all the credit in the world as far as being party guards and having a disagreement there. and, you know, there's a difference between what you call and what you are was possible for. that is lesson number one in a leadership. i don't really care if joe biden' is because all the problems, i care as americans, we don't feel like she has the wherewithal to fix them or the team to fix them or their policies to fix them and that is going to hurt him. it is going to hurt her with young voters. take care more if they can pay for an apartment and with minorities. those are two factions the democrats. they have a monopoly on. >> so tyrus, what is your perspective on vacation from prospectus vacations? >> it is never a good look. and wherewithal, john, it was the perfect word because what we are seeing from our president is lack thereof. he barely speaks to the press. so when he doesn't speak to the press to the press, it is more have your has more -- and the last two press conferences have been real.
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now we are seeing the democrats are turning that moderate democrats are saying, hey, mayor adams was like, he won't even speak to me. he is not helping at all, the century cities are a mess. and then carville, who lives in louisiana, where our live is speaking on what he is a thing, the same things that i'm seeing in the city of new orleans and he is seeing it is not just in the cities. it is spreading everywhere. so people are going, that is why we are seeing the numbers and the complaining and what we are not getting from the previous administration, stuff going on, barack obama would give us a speech and a press conference. he would break it down. whether you agree or disagree, you have the information to do what you want. we are not getting those explanations. we are getting, deferred to trumpeted it or what we already spoke, and that is the scary part. i think it is health, his house has to be iterating because we are seeing less and less of the impromptu speeches. noah morgan talking to with reporters from the helicopter, no more of this stuff and he really should have had a press conference going into the new
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year. >> i think this is just the usual partisan bickering. we were all on tv during the obama years. and i heard he is nonstop golfing. i went back and look at the numbers. he took 358 personal days of eight years, unless you are jimmy carter, who only took 78 days across his four years, you go on vacation, biden is pacing the same as trump. so that was going to his own places and presently profiting. >> but the difference was he was -- [overlapping speakers] >> i will take a rabble. >> there was access. >> biden gives you a rebel and you are upset about that. >> there's a difference between a ramble. ramble is i'm talking fast and saying a lot of things and going -- >> maybe trump was giving a rumble. >> but he was actually going back and forth and engaging the press and answering questions, yes, he was insulting people. but jim acosta made a career by standing up and being a blowhard. so incredibly disrespectful. when you contrast him with peter doocy, with those we would love
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to ask the person some questions and two by two with zelenskyy is not the same thing as a press conference. we have to answer about immigration and crime and the economy. >> it is a lot easier to take a golfing vacations when interest rates are low? the economy is doing good and you have not started or been involved in three wars and you did not start any? the things that we are talk about, and the war was a heck of a lot better for most of trump's terms. yes, he took vacation days, biden is outpacing trump, actually. trump did not take 400 -- >> so jessica, the white house has this problem where there is a disconnect between what people are people -- feeling on the economy and what the white house continues to say and it is not the president saying it on a regular basis. it is the white house press secretary. it is their economic advisers. do you think that he would benefit from giving it some more access to reporters, not just answer one or two questions at a press conference about something happening far away from the country, but about issues that are affecting americans every
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single day? the press conference that they are not going to do. >> whether it is end of year start of year just because it is tuesday, i think that president biden does well when he speaks to the public. when he talks about, he goes to manufacturing plants. he plants. he goes to the ship's plans and talks about the jobs that they are bringing back. he is the ambassador of bidenomics. and i have been very critical of his communications team, that they are not making it work, whether that is a strategy problem or a delivery problem, and i think that there are some great people who show up and i love that they come on fox, like jared bernstein, john kirby is out here all the time talking about the administration. but it is to -- too far and few between. >> is the president and he does have the ability to say, i want to talk to the press whenever i want. >> are what, we got to go. shocking new details on the deranged lunatic who stabbed two teenage girls while ranting about how he wanted to kill all white people. ♪ ♪
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♪ >> joey: repeat offenders leaving a trail of carnage in liberal cities. a career criminal with 17 prior arrests randomly stabbing two teenage girls who were visiting new york city on christmas day. the lunatic reportedly yelled "i want all the white people dead." thankfully, both the girls sustained non life-threatening injuries. cops arresting 36-year-old homeless stan steven hutcherson for the ruthless attack. is he facing multiple hate crime charges including attempted murder. two weeks ago houstonerson pleaded guilty to third degree assault after he reportedly threatened to kill a man but the judge let him out. victim in that previous attack telling the "new york post" that hutcherson shouldn't have been on the streets at all. the new york city mayor eric adams is weighing in on what happened. >> any time you have incidents in these high profile locations
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we have to zero in and make the arrest as soon as possible and make sure we get those repeated offenders off our streets. >> joey: kennedy, people don't feel safe because somebody with 17 priors and gun walking around on the streets. >> grand central. want to visit the center iconic and christmassy that's where you go. nice american from south america sitting down and trying to have breakfast. this guy comes up and stabs one girl in the back and the other in the thai. they are very lucky they weren't murdered. that's what he was trying to do. he is has had this intent. the prior with the gun and the man he was telling i don't care if they gave you a green card. go back to where you are from. he is racist. is he violent i don't know what the junction are waiting for to happen next. that's why it feels unsafe because it is unsafe. they are doing a really, really bad job of keeping violent people already committed violent felonies off the street.
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guess what they are going to do. doesn't matter if organized retail theft theft or assaults they are going to do it again. they feel emboldened. i get is he mentally ill. the judge releases him over and over again but to no psychiatric care? it's -- it is mind boggling and not just about feeling unsafe. the mayor is also not doing enough to work with the d.a. to make sure these people are kept off the streets. >> joey: jessica, that's the premise here this guy is insane, i guess. but he is also racist and trying to kill people. is he violent. so, with 17 prior offenses, the most recent one being pulling a gun out or allegedly, holding it to a guy that wasn't white and saying why are you working for white people and then threatening to kill him for going to work justice system he has mental problems they don't want to put him in jail. there is a lot of talk in this city about people the places mentally ill people used to go
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that are shut down and there are reasons for that what's the answer to it. >> jessica: make more of them who run properly and treat people who are mentally ill with dignity and get the care they need. make sure the shelter system isn't overcrowded with people who shouldn't be in it. i have very little bad to say about undocumented people who are here in the country but they have taken shelter beds away from new yorkers and people from chicago and baltimore and all these places who have a right to be part of the system here. and that's a big problem. so there was abuse. should be creating more. i'm not for the island in wherever sending them away to some sort of colony. mayor adams is doing the right thing in talking about feelings because crime and safety is one of those issues that is a feeling issue. that statistics. we went over the last week.
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new fbi stats do not hold up that things are worse than they were. gotten so much better year over year from 2022 to 2023. violent crime, property crime. murder has plummeted at the fastest rate ever recorded those are the facts. there was obviously a huge spike at the beginning of the pandemic it has come down. safer than it was last year. period, end of story. you can't change the way people feel about it products are locked up at cvs. this is happening at grand central where you feel safe or you should feel safe, penn station never feel safe grand central to me. that is the problem. but we need proper humane care. >> katie: on the statistics issues documents cities like new york. a lot of crimes aren't properly recorded therefore the crime stats are going down even though when mayor adams says well people don't feel safe. no, it's not that they don't
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feel safe. there is a big difference between feeling a way and in reality of not being safe. if you can't sit down at grand central, one of the most famous tourist destinations in the entire world on christmas morning with you're family without having lung collapsed by 17-time offender you are unsafe. that is happening all the over the place with people randomly stabbing girls, bodega owners and so interesting that in this city they are really tough on someone who is wanting to follow the rules. wants to get a handgun to defend themselves. if they break any of the laws they are going straight to jail but this guy pulls out a gun and threatens someone with a deadly weapon and he gets out back on the street so can victimize these young girls from another country again. that's the whole point. if you let these people out of jail under the guise of mental illness not an excuse by the way especially if they are violent, they are going to hurt someone else. you are putting innocent people in positions where their lives will be changed forever as a result of those decisions.
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it doesn't have to be that way. >> joey: the shop keeper with video surveillance footage showing he was defending himself with a knife. goes jail no questions asked. have to rally to get him out of jail for defending himself with a knife. this guy has 17 priors, tyrus, he uses a knife and let's hope he stays in jail this time. >> tyrus: here is what is disheartening, the police department -- the defunded police department did their job 17 times they arrested this guy did their part. this guy wants to kill white people he figured out this is a defense he is oppressed. even though he is stabbing people from south america and man of color, doesn't matter. they are doing the hamas thing where we attack, pill alan, do whatever we want to. if you say it's because the other group started it first a million years ago. he says i want to kill all white people. it's a defense now. it's a defense. he feels oppressed.
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he feels something wrong. the way that they are tweaking the system in these cities everyone should be afraid. 17 times. this man was put in cuffs, book him, johnson, and he was turned out in the street. so if you have daughters and it doesn't matter what color you are, if you are a minority and out there going well he wants to kill white people, this dude is stabbing or attempting to kill from want to say. he is not -- he is smart enough to know what to yell because that will get him attention from these groups who say he is oppressed. >> joey: able brings up the best point about this statistics not labeled when you don't have as many cops writing as many police reports and crimes we know this person is going to be held accountable. >> tyrus: 17 time they did their job from. banninggas stoves to cracking down on washing machines. cracking down on your appliances but maybe not theirs ♪ you can't make it run
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>> kennedy: democrats had a busy year declaring war on appliances in the name of green energy. but one liberal leader got a pass on her gaffe. kamala is getting burned online, get it? for posting this photo of her and the second hubby doug emhoff cooking up christmas beef wellington, sounds kinky, on gas stove. which regulating and obsessed the biden administration considered banning over health concerns. it's not just gas stoves. biden's anti-crusade is targeting four more types of appliances dishwashers, air conditioners, washing machines and furnaces. had enough nanny state? i have been telling you.
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how about mayor pete going after your wheels? >> the share of evs has been dramatically increasing every single year. and that's continuing. now, our goal is by the end of this decade to be about half and half. i don't know a lot of people who think that americans in 2050 are still going to be driving that old technology, that combustion technology that we inherited from the 20th century. >> americans like it. americans like it. >> you are not going to meet a lot of people who ever go back after they have gone electric. i think that really tells you something. >> kennedy: it tells me that you are an elitist, secretary pete. let's talk about this a little bit. there are people in this country who are still quite fond of the combustion engine. >> joey: nascar got fuel injection in like the last five years. and what i mean by that the reach why nascar all technology waited that long for fuel injection because people at home had spent some time in their life tinkering with a carburetor and they wanted that connection
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with those people. people care about things they can put their hands on and fix. you can't do that with electronic vehicle. you can't do that with a gas powered vehicle that has too many computers running everything else about it. i know that because i have got one that's been in the shop too many times because it has more computers than it docile ders. so the idea that this technology is to the place where people want to abandon something that makes sense to them for something that spontaneously combusts or something that they can't run on e for five miles and get to the gas station they have to wait two hours. evs don't match up with how americans live their lives. if they ever get there, it's a different conversation. but they are not there and not going to be there at 2050. the idea they will take away something like a stove. i mean, fire departments can't make you put out a fire during a burn ban if you need it for heat. so if they are going to make you get rid of your stove that you need to cook with until power goes out? >> kennedy: can't cook on electric stow if there is power
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outage with all this climate change we have seen in texas and california, they have brownouts and blackouts. and there is a weather catastrophe, you want feel die? tyrus that sounds cruel. >> tyrus: it sounds like well they are full of it politely ascii say during the 5 p.m. hour. hustle pete. 20002000 50. you have no idea. enough to idea to figure out how to get the trains point a to point b. >> joey: or the planes. >> tyrus: now 2050. they say these names. pete was smart enough to do it from cubicle. went to husband house there would be a stove n it. the things with the cars. the more the stuff happen. effect people are completely dependent on the government. libertarians and no. i'm going to got other way. i'm currently shopping for like a 57 cheviy. i'm looking for something that worst-case scenario i can take that moon shiny made from the summer and pour it in my tank
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and get away. without worrying about my car freezing up or being tracked or have a little voice tell me you said you are going to cvs why are you making a left at the gas station. you have allotted 15 miles today left on 100 for the week. >> joey: all about control. >> tyrus: they are not going to do it. when the president turns in his corvette and trades it in for an ev, then i will be like let's pay attention. again, the evs just the fact you are making us dependent on china which should be the last thing we would want to do. owns the entire world. money making hustle. combustibles because they know that they at least can hold on. >> jessica: total technology shift. the problem is with the evs sitting on showroom floors.
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>> tyrus: you said word of mouth. most people get the evs come up to and talk down to you. i'm going electric. we call it flossen. the -- they are flossen about their ev call you up it's really cool can i catch a ride? because my ev won't start. >> kennedy: if they were so great people would be snapping them up with all the credit the federal government is offering. climate change and total scam. electric vehicles are not climate neutral, they are not carbon neutral. they take mining in places where you don't want to look because it is so severe for the people getting that cobalt and everything out of the ground with their slave labor and then what do they do? put it on ships that use diesel fuel to get it here. and then they go away or sit in lots like they are because it's costing ford $36,000 per vehicle that they're making with the government subsidy and the government is going to tax us more to subsidize this transfer because it's about control.
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and when it comes to the consequences of this, how do you think that gets out of the ground with diesel. not getting out. ground with electric vehicles. you have these proposals to go after things like gas stoves, that seems silly. in new york. they passed a ban for gas stove hookups for most residential buildings starting in 2026 there are exceptions to hospitals and industrial buildings, why are there exceptions? because fossil fuels work. we have our modern lifestyle as a result of fossil fuels and to take it away and aspect like this is going to cause a lot of human suffering they are not telling you about. >> it's not just gas stoves. dishwashers, washing machines, furnaces, air conditioners, i do not want to be a sticking you're that i know. >> kennedy: contend. >> jessica: just proposals. new york 1 construction.
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not going into people's homes and telling you you have to do it. there are a lot of carveouts. no one is mentioned conversation about getting rid of gas stoves it's because of childhood asthma. gas stoves is responsible for 12 hers of the childhood asthma cases in the america. >> katie: that's not true. >> jessica: 21% of the cases in california. it's a health and safety risk more than it's just about liberals wanting to exert maximum control over the populous that we think we are smarter than. and it's not going to be implemented on a federal level so, yes, in new york city, if you have a problem with it, i'm sure restaurants are going to carveouts too. you go a steakhouse and they are not going to have a gas stove, that's not going to happen for people. but you can't forget the difference between what is actually happening and what could happen. >> regulations and air conditioning units absolutely someone put in and they're not
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necessarily they are certainly not more cost efficient. they are almost 50% more a year for electricity whether it comes fully renewable. >> whether it becomes. >> jessica: no one is coming into your house. >> just wait. >> jessica: temperature gauge is at 68. >> try getting a certificate of occupancy in california. they are coming into your house, they are nitpicking everything and they are making damn sure that you are living up to every overregulated letter and then they will give you the occupancy and then you are squatting. thank god libertarians believe in squatter's rights. >> tyrus: living in louisiana. >> kennedy: with james carville which is odd. >> kennedy: quiet quitting. brand new way new workers are phoning it in. ♪
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>> jessica: quiet quitting, bare minimum mondays and coffee. new ways to put in the least possible effort and avoid return-to-office mandates. the latest is the aforementioned coffee bandaging. workers go into the office long enough to drink a cup of coffee only to slip out of the building. it's apparently a way to comply with the minimum inoffice. 58% of hybrid employees said they were joining the trend. i didn't think this was real. a little shocking. >> katie: i'm a proponent of people working in the environment they are most efficient. you look at these statistics, 22% want to be in office full
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time. 31% hybrid and 41% full remote a lot of jobs where you use a lot of efficiency by commuting to and from the office a lot of waste and time people in the office space people coding or doing work that doesn't require that you be in a collaborative space. but, if this is the rule where your boss wants you to come to the office and they want you to be involved in the office community and the work that you are doing, this kind of cutting corners is pretty infuriating and if this is the job that you are in, the leadership of these offices has the opportunity to say if we see you bandaging in and out and coming for a cup of coffee and not actually doing your job, that's a problem. at the same time they are having trouble keeping workers. the workers have the advantage in a lot of these situations. >> jessica: tyrus, in your book have you advice for millennials. >> kennedy: why not gen z? >> tyrus: what can we say to them? i'm a gen xer. we are boots on the ground. we work. you know, but you work hard in the beginning so you can chill
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out at the end. what somehow got mixed up is they think it's chill in the beginning and turning on at some point at the end. kids, when it's the end, it's the end. okay? this isn't fashion choice. wirthering. >> joey: i feel that tie identify this is the time when i should be looking for my exit strategy. but i dilly dalyed to be polite and now i have to work forever the point is first of all what job is this because i would love a job where i could just -- could i just check none the gutfeld show. call in the middle what it is tyrus is checking in. how are we doing? all right. knock knock, who is there? click, i told my joke i'm good for the month. i have never had a job like this other than sound like computer jobs, coding because i have never had a computer job. i have had a lot of jobs. but what job can you just show up, grab a cup of joe and go? i want to know what that job is
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i might want to fluff up my resume and slide in there to just have a cup of joe and go. like that's an amazing job. i'm with jessica. i refuse to believe that this is a real. >> jessica: or at least 50%. >> tyrus: if you are working your way up, trying to get somewhere and you start at the bottom, that's the last time you don't get to show up. you have to be present. especially if you work hands on, supermarkets, construction. you can't just coffee badge. you got to get your little fingernails got to get stuff called dirt underneath them and work, america. >> jessica: there is this other career career cushioning keep your resume updated for networking events that actually seems what you should be doing. >> kennedy: this the problem with millennials and gen zers. >> katie: not gen z. >> kennedy: absolutely not gen
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zers. i birthed some of them. i know the difference. they think they invented everything. they think they invented leggings. they probably think they invented coffee and all the. >> jessica: scrunchies. >> kennedy: junkies were around in the 80's. they did not invent fanny packs and florescent collars. they did not invent idea of keeping one eye on the bulletin board and figuring out if there is a better job around the corner and making sure you have got your resume all built up and fluffed so if this is your jumping off point you go and leap to a new opportunity. everyone has been doing that forever and i'm sick of people on tiktok trying to take credit for things that have been happening for decades. >> tyrus: human debauchery has been around forever. each group thinks they invented it. you didn't. >> jessica: joey, what do you think? >> joey: i didn't invent anything. i work for a living mailbox
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money. go car washes and mailbox money. already i hear about it past its prime. never got in front of anything. the people who can coffee badge work for the federal government. 20% does all the work. other 80% have been coffee bandaging since the 1990s since bandaging was able to be a thing. maybe that's where this is happening. i don't know much about corporate america. this is the closest thing to corporate america i have ever worked in. this is a very different job here. but, when it comes to gen zer's specifically. i understand the argument of work from wherever you are most efficient. but efficiency is only part of it. if you have three tasks some form working from home that's great efficient my son is 1 years old absolutely brilliant. compared to where we were. it's easy for us to say yeah, can you work from home. in our 20's and 30's we were
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going to college and work. learning to, i don't know, take an insult. learning to, i don't know, not be upset by being misgenderred something like that. we now have a generation of adults, that came to adulthood. before during covid. they are four or five years into it now. they haven't seen the world the way we did and learned from the other people in it the way we did. they learned from it here. we learned how different of a version of yourself so we have a generation be as vulnerable as they are in some way. can't walk into a drive-thru without having interaction with someone that english is their second language. that's the problem with not having people come to work and interact with each other. not learning the idea of we are only as strong as our weakest link or everybody last something worth investing in so even if they annoy you, maybe you should see what it is they do well and
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learn how to work with them. we don't get that anymore. that's the problem. it. >> katie: i grew up in a car wash. there was no mailbox money. i was shoveling mud in a blizzard, okay? taking out the trash. so just to clarify there is no mailbox money coming at the car wash. >> jessica: all right. the fastest is up next. ♪ (♪) sam! hey little brother! make this december one to remember. happy holidays from lexus. we come from people we can be proud of. seeing all the places i come from, i know. if it's a serrano, it's something to be proud of. give the gift of family heritage with ancestry.
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>> tyrus: time for the fastest. first up, this is plain rude, an unfortunate passenger filming every window passenger's nightmare is someone filming over your shoulder. check this out. ♪ >> okay. that dude is getting way too close to comfort so he can take photos of the outside of the plane. you know what in the more i watch it, the more -- you no, no, no. just so happens she has the camera in perfect position to
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catch him like enough of this. this is the -- you are going to have to take heat on this one just like when dx messes up we have to own it. this is the problem with the group. they try to create random acts of oh, i can't believe this is happening to me looking clearly asked to take a picture. >> take this back to the last segment. she doesn't have the skills to have a conversation with him to go hey, maybe don't do that how about, you know, take three pictures or interact with him enough decent person. cute old man wants to take pictures and stand up and say don't do it. i do take issue with the characterization. every window seat nightmare is watching the engine fall off. >> tyrus: person next to you giving birth something way more stickier. >> kennedy: i'm a window seat
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flier so if a guy reaches over me repeatedly, do you know what i'm going to do. latch on to his arm and go and just hold ton his arm and not let it go the whole flight. >> tyrus: counter his creep with a much higher creep. >> kennedy: much higher creep. only way to do it. >> jessica: i don't get people that like the window seat. i also go to the bathroom like 700 times on a flight i feel so guilty even asking one time to get out that i wouldn't do it. i like the stage analysis. as an elder, elder millennial i'm terrible with my phone. i would have never been able to capture it perfectly. >> tyrus: explain on behalf of all gen z. i don't have to be a scientist. millennial. >> i will show myself out. >> miss generationing me. >> tyrus: this is made up. please don't reach across me.
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>> katie: people lean in before. if i were in her position i would say do you want me take it for him that way he would know it's inappropriate. >> i feel like this might be a parent. that's how i feel. >> that's her dad now? >> i feel like this is a parent. we are done with this segment. i'm so upset with it. one more thing is next. ♪ i'm going back some day ♪ com (dad) it's our phone bill... we pay for things that we don't need. (mom) that's a bit dramatic. (dad) we must tighten our belts! (mom) a better plan to save is verizon! (vo) that's right! plans start at $25 per line guaranteed for 3 years. only on verizon.
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some facts here. i've got here. we got up to go in. o it's already sold out. espositoi, california. so we're doing a an extra nightr and encore performance, so we're going to add more dates as the year goes, dependinmy cog on my coffee badging at the old fox news and of course, tonight, i'm hosting the gutfeld show. and i pretty much have half the cast of kennedy. >> katie, we're just doingmy big things, so check us out if you get a chance. check out my new book. , joey >> there you go. all right. oey: chey. e awa yeah. check this out. so this truck driver had nightiont nightmare kind of fruition. >> my worst nightmare looks like something out of a he wer-man. sometf movie. that's insane. thankfully, the fireman, above all the firemen level, they rescued him. >> he just is not gonna be able to have insurance to drive anymore. probably. firefiall righghterst.nd first . well, thank you. firefighters always and first responders. that's it for us. see you tomorrow
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