tv The Five FOX News August 27, 2024 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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decisions that really drove up costs. neil, beyond the new ceo, they are looking to close 23 stores, restaurants rather, by saturday. that's in addition to the 100 they already closed. the good news is the one behind me in times square is staying open so you and i, we are good and can still get our cheddar biscuit fix and we need to. >> neil: that is to die for. but the endless shrimp thing they're going to put a stop to that because that cost them dearly, right? >> that's right, yes. could you imagine 200 trim, who would do that? >> neil: the whole thing might sound fishy but they might find their soul in all of this. might find their soul. okay, the best i could do on very short notice. kelly o'grady on all of that. an iconic name that might get a come back. we shall see. iconic names like "the five" now. ♪ ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody. i'm jesse watters on the
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judge jeanine pirro, jessica tarlov, dana perino, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ mark zuckerberg is coming clean on joe and kamala censorship regime. the meta ceo revealing in a damning letter to congress how he caved to white house demands to censor the free speech of millions of americans beards or explain how back and play 21 facebook folded giving in to pressure from the biden-harris administration to take down covid-19 content during the pandemic. including posts with humor and satire. the white house got angry, expressing frustration when the company don't meet their demands. zuckerberg now feeling shame about his role in censorship, saying "i believe the government pressure was wrong and i regret we were not outspoken about it." mark also cops to election interference, censoring the bombshell "new york post"
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hunter biden laptop story by demoting it. just last month, zuckerberg was telling joe rogan about the pressure the feds put on his company. listen. >> the fbi basically came to us, some folks on our team, hey, just so you know, like, you should be on high alert. we thought that there was a lot of russian propaganda in the 2016 election. we just kind of thought hey, look, if the fbi, which i still view as a legitimate institution in this country, it's very professional law enforcement, if they come to us and tell us we need to be on guard about something, that i want to take that seriously. >> jesse: all right, jessica, do you feel that the white house and the fbi did the right thing or the wrong thing with censorship? >> jessica: well, i think it is a little bit more complicated than the way that mark zuckerberg was explaining this or the way that you are question implies. so all governments, republican or democrat come have relationships with social media companies and ask them to take down information that they feel
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is a risk to the public. and that happened before 2021. i don't know why mark zuckerberg only want to do single out the biden-harris administration because there was covid disinformation out there like when trump said it isn't airborne, it was airborne, for instance. not going to get into the bleek bleach hoax, greg, but when trump talked of -- we talked about the bleach hoax a e weeks ago -- he said disinfectant and uv light treatment, that was something people had to tell the public, no, actually, don't do that and ended up getting censored. and the timeline on the hunter biden story continues to be completely wonky, so that story happened under the trump administration, right? it was taken down for 24 hours. everybody knew about it. it went right back up. and there is no legitimate reason to think this election would have swung in a different direction had everyone seen the contents of hunter biden's laptop. the case of that has been proven by the fact that jim comey has been trying for years to be able to impeach them for something and hasn't been able to find it. now even republicans like axios
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is reporting today have said they really don't want to be forced to take a vote on impeachment before biden goes out because there is nothing to this. that's how i feel about it. and mark zuckerberg clearly things that trump is going to win and he is tractor curry favor with him, and he is not being aboveboard with how the "censorship" works beards be one so you agree with the censorship, got it. judge jeanine? >> judge jeanine: first of all the bottom line here is our government in the biden-harris and administration was playing a lead role in the suppression of tthe free speech of american people, and you can say both sides do it but there was only one side that was being suppressed, so let's not kid ourselves on this. you can say there was no way this election would have been changed with the polls show that people who voted who are question, 10% said they would have changed their vote had they know hunter biden was getting money -- >> jessica: but that hasn't been proven p or. >> judge jeanine: let me finish. the money was going to the big guy. don't make like it would have
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made a difference, it would have made a difference. number three is james comer does not run the department of justice. merrick garland, the one who calls parents thomistic terrorists, is the one running that a primitive justice and james comer does not have the authority to indict. let's not mess the two of them up. my question right now is why ny now. the skeptic in me believes the only reason zuckerberg is doing this is he think's trump is going to win a big tech is going to the republicans. spoke to congress in 2023 about. did he have a thought at that time to discuss this? or is the arrest of this telegram guy, whatever his name is, is that causing him to be a little concerned about what's going on? and, you know, it's just too convenient right now, but the bottom line is this confirmation that the biden administration suppressed free speech of
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americans. whether it is truthful or not, the issue is the freedom of speech. >> jesse: we knew a lot of this, dana, but what about the timing? >> dana: when you testify in front of congress, often they will say can we send you follow-up questions? they send the witness follow-up questions and the questioner, or the person answering the questions, since in the document -- that is considered testimony. to me the timing is you had a deadline to respond. it's not necessarily about the election. the republicans are smart, had the hearing in a time when this would come out and so mark zuckerberg is actually, to me, a letter like this is testimony, and i think about what the supreme court ruled. was it the supreme court, judge? this question about whether the biden administration had participated in this kind of thing. and i just look back, we didn't really have social media when i was press secretary, right? facebook and twitter was coming on board, but it wasn't like it is today. you didn't have fact-checkers that could demonetize people and basically take people's
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livelihood away or their speech away. but i cannot imagine somebody saying hey, dana, can you go and make this company tell people they are not allowed to say something? i don't know what the pressure was like for the people who were asked to carry out these orders but i have to believe i would absolutely not do that. >> jesse: it was even more than you can't say something, it was you can't say jokes. >> greg: that was the amazing thing. we always knew, we predicted this, that the umbrella term of misinformation was going to be another kind of version of hate language, and you could just use it whenever you wanted and it would capture dissent, not disinformation, but dissent. if a joke hurt your feelings or it was an opinion that hurt your feelings, that could be viewed as misinformation. a joke is, to them, misinformation. i'm kind of glad that he came out and said this.
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it probably should have been sooner, but at least he said it. it's kind of funny. he said he could have fought back. if only he knew someone in charge. it's a contrast to musk. the difference is so glaring. facebook right now is basically a toothless vehicle for your sisters sorority pictures from the late '80s. meanwhile you go to twitter, basically free speech met. you get on there and suddenly go nuts, oh, my god, what is happening? but really wouldn't have it any other way because that is the weight is going to be. if musk had not purchased x, it would have been much like meta or facebook in that iconic picture of trump getting shot was censored on facebook. they say by accident. but was not censored on x. makes you wonder what other stories would we have missed? for example, do you think the
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biden seen the lady dementia story, we would have known about musk had and bought twitter? there is a lot of stories like that that you wouldn't have known about but now you do. then it kind of bugs me because who does the media hate more? musk. why do you hate that guy that is guaranteeing or free speech, but is making these stories roam free, that is challenging you to chase the story? but what is it going to take for everybody to finally believe us that we are right everything? no, seriously. think about the canaries in the coal mine when it came to borders and crime, covid corruption, hunter's laptop, influence peddling, government censorship -- we talked about this. people laughed. the creeps in the media, the don lemons, chris cuomos, brian stelters, rachel maddows, thought we were nuts. they were saying it is republicans during the censorship, republicans --
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conspiracies. they were accusing the right of doing the stuff that they've always doing. and now they expect you, when they say donald trump wants to ban abortion. no. the elections are perfect. no. did you see what happened in texas? they had to remove 1 million voters from the rolls. when are you going to just listen to us, america? listen to me. don't listen to jesse. this into me. >> jesse: on that note, may be listen to this. there has been some attention to comments made on the show yesterday about vp harris. people are misconstruing my comments to mean something inappropriate. i wasn't suggesting anything of a sexual nature. i was accessing an opinion that vice president harasses leadership style could be an issue if elected. coming up, some breaking news on "the five." we just learned, you will get that first interview with vp harris and tim walz. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: it took her more than a month but kamala harris will no longer be in hiding this thursday. we have just learned that the vice president at her vp pig tim walz will sit down with a joint interview with cnn. it comes as charlamagne tha god has been calling out harris for dodging the press. the popular radio host was responding to a rapper who said that the vice president didn't oh black voters and ask the nation of her policies and that they should just settle. charlamagne strongly disagrees. >> votes are earned, not given, and they are earned by you going
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out there and explain in yourself. vice president kamala harris us to go out and it's plain her agenda and why she is the person for the job. former president donald trump has to go out there next point his agenda. by the way, should be explaining without us asking. >> judge jeanine: tim walz gave an early scoop to a tik tiktoker. speak what your take? >> my take is the most neglected part of home ownership is the gutters. it's personal for me. >> how 2% agree. >> i have had problems with gutters before, you get your basement wet, caused a lot of problems. >> it's not good. >> judge jeanine: wow. dana, we find out there is going to be a debate on thursday, this interview with kamala and walz on cnn but thursday night before the friday of labor day weekend. nobody is coming back until tuesday. do they plan to say so everyone can forget. >> dana: a couple things. great we're going to have an interview, good choice, dana bash, cnn, great.
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a couple of things. they had a very good convention and then they have a little bit of a lead in some of the swing states. and then they sat on their lead. and you didn't see them for five days. and now the stakes for this interview, for everybody, for the anchor, that is doing the interview, for both harris and walz, all the way up here. why would you do that? just a quick interview, i don't understand. i think the strategy is interesting. we have a little bit of a clue as to why they are doing it together. today end political playbook, a piece this morning said the campaign is reluctant to put tim walz out to do interviews on his own because even he doesn't know what her policies are, or at least they don't have the same policies. they are not on the same page. if there is one thing the media can do, they can expose daylight between two candidates. there is a smidgen of daylight between them, that will be exacerbated in the press, so that is why i think they have to do it together.
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i'm glad they are doing it. >> judge jeanine: yeah, it's a good idea, jesse, that they are doing it, but together. it's almost as if she is signaling she can't do it alone, that she can't do a thorough, long interview. >> jesse: you do the joint interview after the convention. that is when trump and vance did, that's what happened with the ticket. she waited, though, way too long, and walz's are a security blanket. i expect him to talk most of the time. the power has shifted from the politicians and the people in the age of information. we are sitting with all of this power and we don't know what to do with it. we can mobilize and donate and communicate, we can mobilize. with this thing on our phones. we don't even need to do anything. get people at town hall's going crazy, flood the phone banks and congress but we don't, we sit around and complain. and i say this a someone who gets paid to sit around and complain. but we used to have a lot more than action-oriented country and look around. you got cities that don't look
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great, border open, jails open, prices are too high and everybody agrees with me but we don't do anything about it p at why? because we don't demand our politicians do anything about it. we have such low expectations for politicians and they like that because then they don't have to do anything because not doing something is easier than doing something, and they can just run on the same problems that have always been around instead of fixing them. but all of these politicians have to do is submit themselves to questioning because they are public servants, and usually the media acts as kind of the conduit for the questions that the people have. all of the people, not just some people, and that tension is healthy when you have to say all right, you know, i'm not about my selfish interests, i am for the public's interests. she won't do that. she's afraid of the risk that she might incur by saying the wrong thing or saying something unpopular. donald trump is not afraid of that risk. we want somebody who is not
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afraid of getting to know who they are or knowing what their vision is. and you don't accept that for your wife, you don't accept it from a ceo for a company, why would be accepted from a president? >> judge jeanine: okay, jessica -- >> jesse: that was a rhetorical question. >> judge jeanine: good idea. this rapper who said harris doesn't owe the voters of explanation, there are a lot of people who think that way, and people in the democrat party, i'm sure, would prefer kamala not say anything. even her economic plan was panned by both sides, the price gouging, gauging she called it. >> jessica: it was. but it was out there and you could go and read the policies and the website will be filled out to completion. i land somewhere between what charlamagne was saying and what that rapper was saying. i think doing interviews and is important and anyone criticizing her doing this with dana bash it being an honest broker, no offense, jesse, they would've complain about anything. dana bash is a wonderful
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interviewers, good job moderating the debate, even trump said that. going out there with vp walz, soon to be vp walz, i hope, lets you get to know the ticket in full. if you are listening to kamala talk about her experience at the convention and the thursday night speech, can't really say she is afraid of anything. this doesn't seem like a woman who is cowering in the corner about this. she might be concerned about the kind of coverage that she is going to get of these things and people who are again not being honest brokers and will be detractors no matter what she does, but i don't think it's because she's afraid. i do want the viewers come of the voters come all of them, to be able to see her and get to know her because we know this election will be decided by 2000 people over a smattering of stat feel really strongly about this and there is an argument, as well, for doing a bunch of many interviews instead of these really big ones where it is so h states.
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there is a very solid record especially when it comes to black voters for kamala harris to be running on based on what the accomplishments of the biden-harris and administration from 2.5 million jobs were black people, lowest unemployment in american history for black americans and also the smallest gap between white on employment and black unemployment. $16 billion for hbcus. all of the high-speed internet access, et cetera come investing all of his money into infrastructure to make sure black americans have access to economic opportunities like the transportation to get to their jobs. those are all things i hope she will talk about in this interview. and i think that it would show charlamagne that she is ready to play, ready to earn those votes. we are not taking anything for granted. >> judge jeanine: okay, greg, do you agree with that? >> greg: no. i mean come i don't believe it. all of that stuff you just said -- >> jessica: all of the facts? >> greg: no, you talked about the historical low unemployment. that was under trump -- >> jessica: no, it wasn't. it was lower under biden men
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trump. >> greg: no, it wasn't spirit. >> jessica: yes, it was. >> greg: i could do this all day. >> jessica: so could i. yes, it was. >> greg: no, it wasn't. charlamagne, he it seems he is debating himself half the time. i think he does it so he can get on the show. i love the fact that kamala is shopping. she is curating the campaign -- actually somebody is doing it for her. it's not a campaign, it's a coming-out party and she is the debutante. they are going to send out the evite's, tell you what to wear. it is frustrating to see the candidate having their way with the media. i find it absolutely offensive. the rolling around like she is a rare panda, no. and by the way, why are we the ones who are micromanaging this stuff. i don't care how they do it. it is just so stupid, this stuff is stupid, and it's weird,
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though, to see everybody in agreement about their candidate. the less you seal her, the better, you know what i mean, it's hilarious. they are not even hiding the fact that they need to hide her. and they need to have her with somebody else because one plus one just equals one. >> jesse: i need to make another clarification. yesterday on the show i said pandas have a similar thumbprint that humans, it is actually koala bears. again, i am deeply sorry. >> judge jeanine: jesse, thank you. anything else you want to say? >> jesse: not for now. >> judge jeanine: all right, head, donald trump ai czar on how america can win the artificial intelligence race. ♪ ♪
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the vice president kamala harris is supposed to be the white house's point person on ai but it is former president trump who keeps owning the issue on the campaign trail and explaining how america can beat china in the ai race. >> we have to produce massive electricity that we don't have. but the environmental impact statements won't allow us to do that. if i'm president, we'll be able to do it. and we'll do it their natural gas, which is clean, and we'll do it through primarily natural gas and nuclear. we will create tremendous electricity for our company, for our country, and that will allow ai to compete. and you're right, whoever gets that, it's going to be a big advantage. that is going to be sort of the oil of the future, and we have to be the main player. >> dana: greg, i'm fascinated by this because he has been spending some time with the tech brose who know what is needed, and the electricity point of this is a good fawn because of
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it is one thing to have regulations on shackles but another thing if you actually don't have the power to do what you need to do you can't beat anybody. >> greg: some states can't have ai yet because they don't have the grid to supply the power for ai. you think all of this fast stuff just comes out of the sky like those liberal pie-in-the-sky programs they promise you? how is that for red meat? you think harris understands ai? because you need natural intelligence to get artificial intelligence and she gets thrown for a loop on venn diagram's. i saw her once trying to explain ai and it sounded like a substitute teacher explaining virus safety to middle schoolers. it was tragic. i think that is the difference between these two candidates, is that trump can hang with these people because he's always genuinely interested in anything that is big. more makes a profit. just to he's interested in it. but this is the blind spot for
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democrats. they actually ironically don't like progress because they never see anything ahead of time. they are too busy looking backward at our horrible past. they spent the last 10-20 years just obsessing over america's eternal stain, and so they missed everything about the future. you can't really talk to liberals about aip or you can't talk to them about automation, can't talk to them about robotics because the only way they see tomorrow is as an apocalypse. and because it isn't apocalypse, it is all government programs, everybody, we've got to make sure they can sleep on the street, that is their progress. don't move these people but they don't have any solutions for the future, and i think jessica would agree with me on that. >> dana: jessica, do you agree with greg on that? >> jessica: hard no. well, the people in charge of openai are liberals. the people in charge at microsoft are liberals, so i
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don't understand -- >> greg: are they? >> dana: liberals hoping this is true. their business depends on the private sector being able to thrive. >> jessica: totally, but the biden administration, so there was an executive order that came out in 2023 to address ai issues and the threats to society and also the benefits, they have a commission on it where they brought in tech luminaries from a wide range of ideological backgrounds, and then to trump's point about how much nuclear energy you are going to need from this, the biden-harris administers and got the advance act passed, bipartisan come all republicans signed on, the first piece of nuclear legislation ino decades that is going to make the permitting process a lot easier and the dollars into rehabbing nuclear plants across the country. there is one in michigan that will be reopened in 2025 because they gave them $1.5 billion to be able to do that. i would say the biden folks which includes harris --
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>> dana: now -- >> jessica: saw what i did -- >> greg: now she can take credit for being at the white house. >> dana: executive orders and commissions don't unleash innovation, judge. >> judge jeanine: look, there are two people here. both of them come i am hoping come understand the importance of ai. now kamala harris is supposed to be the ai czar. the only thing i ever heard her say about ai was that ai was two letters, a and i. i haven't heard about anything that she has done, haven't heard about her policy, while she had the bully pulpit and the ai czar much like the border czar, it was like she was either hiding or wasn't doing anything. what you do when you want to compete is you put us in a position where we actually can compete. the solution is recognizing our own limitation and our limitation is the electric grid. which is a vulcanized system of grades in this country, the level of third world countries.
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and every time there is a move to try to modernize it, the lobbyists come out and they stop the legislation. it is a nightmare, the grid in this country. the biden administration, a.k.a. kamala, were interested in improving the grid, then they would have done something about the grid and imposing some regulations on it. donald trump has the discipline. he understands the economy, he understands the energy, he understands technology, he understands it is not just nuclear, which 49% of democrats are in favor of now, but it is also drill, baby, drill. >> jessica: which we have been doing. >> judge jeanine: yeah, so what we've got now is america is running on the power at a time when the dems are actually trying to transition to a different kind of power, so you have to back up the source before you can go out and think you are going to start a new source. >> dana: president trump trust the private sector. >> jesse: he does and i trust
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my energy expert who i called before this segment. first he said stop interrupting jessica so much. then he told me we are going to have to more than double our energy production capacity in the next couple decades or we are going to go kaput. jessica, you right now have 50-year-old nuclear power plants about to go kaput in about ten years. might have to do maintenance but also replace them because 20% of our electricity comes from nukes. also, we've got to compete against china, and we have these huge data centers we are going to compete against and if you want to do the green new deal io you are going to have to create a lot more energy. good thing the u.s. military is researching micro reactors. that is where they get these little jeep sized micro reactors right in the middle of the front lines. and they have anti-melt on technology so if a bomb hits them, they don't cause a fall out. how great is the u.s. military -- >> jessica: usa.
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>> [chanting "usa"] >> dana: as we go to break, we will chant it. tech addicted students going nuts, a school banning smartphones. ♪ ♪ ya know, if you were cashbacking you could earn on everything with just one card. chase freedom unlimited. so, if you're off the racking... ...or crab cracking, you're cashbacking. cashback on flapjacks, baby backs, or tacos at the taco shack. nah, i'm working on my six pack. switch to a king suite- or book a silent retreat. silent retreat? hold up - yeeerp? i can't talk right now, i'm at a silent retreat. cashback on everything you buy with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what's yours.
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♪ ♪ >> jessica: students glued to their screens are having a meltdown this year as schools go smartphone free. several states passing laws to stop kids from endless tiktok scrolling. the district hope it will help improve the teen mental health crisis but parents are worried about staying in touch during emergencies. jesse come i want to come to you first on this. the twins have phones and do they go to school with them? >> jesse: yes ab no. what kind of emergency would it be where you couldn't just call the school? >> judge jeanine: oh, my god. >> jesse: why do you need to phone your child in math class? >> jessica: school shooter? >> judge jeanine: are you
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kidding? >> jesse: get them a beeper, all right? they don't need to be on their phones. they also can be prevented from being on their phones. if there's an emergency, you deal with it. i know this thing rewires jesse jr's brain. he watches come he calls them car videos, and we have noticed that after 10 or 15 minutes of him watching car video, if you try to take the car video away, meltdown. meltdown. that's the problem. we don't know what it's doing. >> jessica: judge? >> judge jeanine: i feel very strongly about this. kids need to have a phone. they need to have a phone in school because of emergencies. and it's not about, i've got to pick up my kid early, can you let them know? it's about if there is a school shooting or several years back it was 9/11. my kids were at school. my daughter was at the pentagon at the time. of 9/11. and then you've got issues like in new york city, about 20 years ago, everything went black. nothing worked. none of the phones, landline's were working. you've got to get in touch with family members.
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if you want to put a phone in one of those yondr packs that only opens if it's an emergency, those kids have the phone, if i can't get in touch with my kid then i won't send my kid that school. >> jesse: got in touch just fine, judge, don't be a helicopter parent. got to live free. >> jessica: greg, what do you think? >> greg: well come i think there is a midpoint there. the kids can have a phone, but the phones are taken away from them and they can't see them at all during school. i think you are seeing, at the same time you are seeing all of this progress, you are seeing all of this regress. as we get more advanced with technology, we retreat as people, right? computers get faster. we get slower and fatter. they are having troubles feeling -- having troubles filling jobs that require physical fitness among young people. not adults, but young people. do you know, dana, we have lost the equine skills due to the automobile age. so what are we going to lose in
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the information age, right? can't read faces. we can't empathize. we can't even take action. we are losing our physical prowess. we are getting lazy. i actually think that this is bad that we have to separate the phone from the kid because the more it gets connected to their brains, the less likely they are going to use their brains. and they are going to end up just being dumb, lifeless sacks of crap. >> jesse: trained them with sean hannity sensei. >> greg: it's irreversible come i hate to say it. >> jesse: i think we can reverse it. i have jesse jr. in tae kwon do training six days a week. >> dana: go to the mat. i think teachers are begging for this, parents are begging for this because if you look at the test scores, they are terrible. and look come as a taxpayer, i don't want to be paying for kids to be in school all day and they can't learn to read or write and they get an average of 247 text messages a day, and let's go
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back to passing notes in class on hard copy. i was really good at it. hello, pat. >> greg: make it a challenge to hook up with your teacher. >> dana: exactly. >> greg: yeah! >> dana: what i was thinking. >> greg: you lock up your phones when you go to a three hour concert. >> judge jeanine: yondr packet. >> jesse: what's a yondr -- >> judge jeanine: go to a concert. >> jessica: or a comedienne. >> judge jeanine: when you go in, they literally lock it. >> jesse: so the phone is over yonder. >> judge jeanine: so to speak. >> jessica: coming up, have you ever wanted to know what saucy things we talk about on the commercial break? find out in a brand-new fox nation special. ♪ ♪ ♪ when the sawdust settles and the engine finally roars the thing you care about most is a job well done. ♪ but when you get your tools from harbor freight
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no clothes behind the scene, streaming right now on fox nation and answers all of your burning questions about this burning show liquid as jesse get his hair plugs done? he takes them from refugees. and how many shoes does the judge really have? depends on how many feet she has. and is dana a mini cyborg in disguise? and as jessica really a liberal? here is a sneak peek. >> no one expected it to be this successful. >> this show is wildly popular. >> the ratings are great. >> it is complete the unpredictable. >> it is this crazy roundtable show, and the viewers are in the mood for that, too. >> what happens on the commercial break stays in the commercial break spirit. >> we will make fun of each other or we will be sarcastic or someone will crack a joke. it's just good humor. >> you are the average of the five people you spend the most time with, so i guess i am "the five." everybody else is "the five" p. >> the show was originally going to be called "the one" and i
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said you guys need for more people and i gave some suggestions and that is how "the five" started. >> greg: a lot of people don't know that story, dana. so are you excited about this? >> dana: i don't know that made the cut but i revealed the story of why you and i are seated next to each other. do you remember why? >> greg: yes, i do, it begins with a letter l. >> dana: the lighting, we are the shortest. >> greg: gave that one away p or its before still going to watch it, great content, good idea and fun way to watch -- >> jesse: i'm about to get undressed, bring you in the room and get totally nude. >> greg: a cameo from pete hegseth where he comes in shirtless and comparing tattoos. >> jesse: that's how we get people to watch. hegseth is shirtless. >> greg: this is an actual little office. if people might imagine that fox is like an office where everybody works but it really
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isn't, no, it really is, we all have offices at all see each other every day, hello, how are you, it kind of weird. >> judge jeanine: yeah. that's it. >> greg: good for you. jessica? >> jessica: way to help out, judge. >> jesse: usually judge is walking around with huge curling irons in her hair. barefoot. >> judge jeanine: dana, your office looks so much cleaner than mine. >> dana: that is because caroline cleaned it before. i've got a lot of dog art in there. >> greg: jessica, you were pregnant when they were filming -- >> jessica: i hope so because i am enormous. >> judge jeanine: no come are you kidding? >> jessica: beautiful goddess, whatever. not my favorite moment to enshrine in history on fox nation. >> judge jeanine: it's cute. >> greg: i love the speed up walking thing. it's so good. you should do that in all of your documentaries. i really enjoy it. >> dana: i love it. it is pretty amazing the show has been on this long and we have not done a behind-the-scenes, but now we have one and we will see what
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the rest, maybe it will be on for another 13 years. >> greg: just go to fox nation and check it out. it's eight hours long. >> dana: it's amazing. >> judge jeanine: it is not. >> greg: it is eight hours long. >> judge jeanine: they got eight hours out of -- >> dana: it is come eight episodes. >> greg: they might do a second season. it depends, though. >> dana: going to go along with "naked and afraid." >> greg: underrated show. all right, "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ beth wants to get back to eating the food she loves. so she's been thinking about getting dental implants, but the cost seems like it's out of her budget. at clearchoice we specialize in permanent teeth replacement. offering a range of solutions to fit your budget so you don't have to wait any longer. finance your new smile for as low as $304 a month per arch
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for more than a decade farxiga has been trusted again and again, and again. ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ask your doctor about farxiga. ♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: time now for "one more thing." >> gr >> dana: i picked this one for greg. unsuspected surprise minor league baseball game. check this out. lucy may the new bat dog for the
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clearwater camper. as you can see the very excited for the debut. she didn't pick up the bat. she decided to, you know. >> judge jeanine: whoa. >> dana: gosh darn it. relieved herself behind the pitcher's mound prompting cheers and applause. they can't get mad at her. when you got to go. you got to go. >> greg: i cost if that caused any infield flies. >> jesse: very good. that's why we keep you around. >> greg: thank you. can you pat me on the head? >> jesse: i can't reach. the merch drop is now. fox news shop got a gifts for grandparents collection. this line cute baby onesie with a phrase i watch fox news with grandma or grandpa. be sure to check out the mug, the t-shirt. especially grandma and grandpa or any sort of trans grandparent. go to fox news shop. [laughter] >> jesse: just in time for
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grandparents' day on september 8th. who knews it with a grandparents day. nicole shanahan, r.f.k. jr.'s running mate at 8:00. greg next. >> greg: you should just stop by the fox news restaurant which is where we have all of this stuff laid out. they have soup, they have steak. >> jesse: early bird special. >> greg: it's fantastic. do you know what else is fantastic? tonight's show. who do i have on? joe devito, kennedy, comedian jim florentine, he talks like this. tyrus that's tonight at 10:00. let's do this. greg's weather alert. well, if you are out and about the city tonight, there's a 100 percent chance of flying trampolines. take a look at this thing. that is a trampoline, flying out of an alabama backyard. smashing on the roof of a neighboring house. and then landed on the front lawn. the trampoline then moved over and parked itself in the driveway. >> dana: how does that happen?
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>> greg: it's called the wind, jessica. you should be experienced. you certainly produce a lot of it. [laughter] >> jesse: oh. >> jessica: so awful. >> jesse: that is terrible. >> greg: oh, i would like to clarify. >> jessica: i have never farthfartedat work. >> greg: i was not talking about that. i was talking about the air coming out of your mouth? >> judge jeanine: skip it. >> jesse: make a tramp joke. jessica? >> jessica: i have a tall story, too. camper danny januaryson first player in major league history to play on both teams on the same game. the 29-year-old was playing for the toronto blue jays against the boston red sox june 26th. the game got rained out. he was traded to boston. jansen joined his former opponent's team. red sox ended up losing 7-3.
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he had a role in the blue jay's win, also, he wore two jerseys for it and sending them to the baseball hall of fame. >> greg: i like it when sports. >> jesse: i like it when guys play for both teams. >> greg: i would like to clarify. >> judge jeanine: get a load of these dopes. wannabe thieves trying to break into a store in broad daylight with sledge hammers failed miserably. they seemed to get too tired after multiple blows and they couldn't break the glass so they eventually gave gave up and ran away. tonight i will be hosting "the ingraham angle" as i did last night but i forgot to tell you about last night but we can't go back because it's tonight. >> dana: we're not going back. >> jesse: we're not going back. never. even though i wish i could. that's it for us. have great night, everybody. >> bret: i really liked dana's dog baseball story. that was a crappy game. all right,
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