tv The Five FOX News September 17, 2024 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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there are some democrats but also a lot of republicans and a lot of independents, and right now, and we have learned this over the last three cycles, there are some people who went trump and bernie in the different primary cycles, some went trump and then biden, so party identification can be very confusing. that is why they have their members just scanning a qr code so they can get something back to home base, okay, this percentage of our members want harris, this percentage of our members want trump and they can decide if they are going to endorse. it's possible they don't. >> neil: that's right, that could happen. peter, thank you very much beard peter doocy come his own walking qr code if you think about whatt means. sean o'brien, head of the teamsters, my guest tomorrow terrain in on to weigh in. "the five" now. ♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: hello,
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everyone. i'm judge jeanine pirro along with harold ford jr., jesse watters, dana perino, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ fox news alert. some huge developments regarding the second assassination attempt on donald trump. our reaction to that is coming up in just moments but first to this. sean "diddy" combs has been denied bail after appearing in a manhattan courtroom on charges of sex trafficking. the rap mogul has pleaded not guilty. let's go right to alexis mcadams be it alexis, what can you tell us? >> hi, judge. that went on for hours today inside the federal courtroom in new york city, and puff daddy thought he was going to get out possibly but tonight he is spending the night here in new york city in a federal lock up after a judge and federal prosecutors went through details today talking about how he
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abused several women spanning more than ten years, and we are talking about physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, although we heard about all of those allegations, his attorney today saying he is not happy and diddy should have been let go. watch. >> the government didn't want him to turn himself in pure he came here to turn himself indian why doesn't the government wanted to turn himself in? because then they can't ask for detention. they go and arrest a guy who came to new york to turn himself in. >> the stems back to 2016, you guys remember, video surfaced of p. diddy with his then-girlfriend, singer and woman cassie ventura, okay? he beat her in that hotel room. take a look at this. it is hard to watch. he is leaving this hotel room wrapped in his towel and she is just trying to get away from him according to prosecutors he grabs her by the hair, throws her to the ground, kicks are not once, not twice, and then the abuse according to prosecutors went on for hours. it is a pattern the feds say they found for years. listen to this.
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victims believe they cannot refuse to be 20 to his demands without risking their financial or job security or without repercussions in the form of physical or emotional abuse like you just saw. diddy has been at the center of a federal investigation for months, they raided his house back in march in l.a. and miami beach. diddy was spotted as you see here in central park relax and just hours before he was busted in new york city. his lawyers said he knew this was all coming. back here live come his attorney says they're going to fight this, they want him out of federal lockup even though there is all of those disturbing allegations with those women coming forward, judge, and giving their stories. they say he is not a criminal, he has just made some bad decisions. judge? >> judge jeanine: [laughs] okay, alexis, thanks so much. switching gears now, despite nationwide please do cool things down after the second assassination attempt on trump, democrats and the liberal media are right back at it, treating the former president like he is some kind of unique threat. hillary clinton never one to miss the spotlight argues that
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the media isn't doing enough to paint trump as a danger. >> i don't understand why it is so difficult for the press to have a consistent narrative about how dangerous trump is. the object in this case is donald trump. his demagoguery, his danger to our country and the world. americans need to understand that they have to take trump both seriously and literally. he has said what he wants to do. he and his allies with proj project 2025. his desire to be a dictator. >> judge jeanine: hillary's friends in the media couldn't wait to jump in, quick to twist the story and pin the blame on the g.o.p. and trump himself for the assassination attempt. >> the trump campaign is seizing on this apparent assassination attempt as a way to rile up his base. >> violent rhetoric in america and presidential campaigns has
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been unprecedented since donald trump first came onto the scene in 2016. >> the violence is coming from them. >> for the former president certainly could do a lot to make himself safer. >> of donald trump wants people, wants kamala harris and others to stop saying he is a threat to democracy than he should stop threatening democracy. >> quit blaming folks until you decide to take a look at what is coming out of your mouth. >> right now you have a former president who yes has been the target of apparent assassinations twice, but is also an instigator of political violence. >> judge jeanine: all right, jesse, they call him hitler, say he is dangerous, he is an existential threat. and hillary doesn't understand why it is so difficult to have a consistent narrative about how dangerous trump is, what does she want to come a bounty on his head? >> jesse: she does. fidel castro, we tried to assassinate him, dictator mao,
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stalin, fought a cold war, mussolini, hitler, world war ii, qaddafi, saddam hussein, violent dictators we overthrew. when you have a media industrial complex, it goes deep into the american subconscious, that sees a dictator asked someone that needs to be eliminated. and it is in our dna as americans, whether it is a king, and autocrat, or a dictator, to want to push them out of power because of what happened in the revolutionary war, and you are inviting lost souls looking for a reason to live to want to be a hero, to want to be a savior, to save democracy. and look at how the media is characterizing this guy, ryan routh. they have called him a crusader for causes. they have called him a super citizen. they have said he had a sense of duty that apparently drove him. those are the things you call an
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assassin. those are crazy things that should never be associated with a guy. after the first assassination attempt, guy was a little opaque, so trump said let's have a moment of unity for this country and even joe biden said let's calm things down. and then they went right back to it. than a second assassination attempt. and donald trump has had it. he had two shots, that's enough, and he laid the blame squarely on the left. and instead of having a little bit of self-reflection the left got defensive and they said no, you are responsible for people trying to kill yourself, and then don lemon says basically trump needs to stop running or else he's going to get more bullets. that's crazy. we are in a danger zone right now, judge jeanine, and i'm really, really praying for the health and safety of this president. >> judge jeanine: you know, harold, donald trump's rhetoric is to be blamed for his own assassination attempts, if someone tried to assassinate,
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god forbid, kamala, blaming trump would be off the table, wouldn't it? i mean, he would be responsible for that too would he? >> harold: a good to be with you. i don't blame any specific person. i tried to say over and over again that we live in a time where all of this seems to be being catalyzed and empowered, kind of a circle reinforcing media and social media here i think we live in a time where people are able to say things and hide behind pseudo-names, hide behind social media. things that would not have been said. people might have thought ten, 20, 30, 40 years ago, but now people feel empowered to say them. we all unfortunately around this table had things said about us and even things that sound like the person wanted to be violent against us. this is a moment for everyone to take account for all of their words. i think there is a difference between tough, spirited, even
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critical narratives and language in campaigns. greg said something yesterday, how he didn't want to police -- i may be paraphrasing -- he didn't want to police what people said or how they said it appeared we shou should be ablet in public life. we have reached a point where it is emboldening people and radicalizing people. i read some things come i agree with you, this guy tried to kill someone and happen to be a president of the united states. he seemed to over a period of time disagree with president trump on some serious issues and there is nothing wrong with that, but when you're radicalized to the point where you think it is okay to act on it, even this kid in butler, pennsylvania, something is wrong and we all i think have to step back and try to understand what's happening here at if there are things we can all do individually, we should all commit ourselves to trying to do that. but i'm with you. this guy tried to kill the president of the united states and anyone it tries to
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characterize it any differently is lying to themselves, is lying to our political system, and is doing a disservice to the conversation, a massive disservice, fatal disservice to the conversation we are trying to have about what indeed is a danger to our country pure it. >> judge jeanine: speaking of a disservice, dana, wolf blitzer says that the trump camp is actually seizing on the assassination attempt as a way to riley's own base. >> dana: goes back to that "politico" headline, the republicans are outraged about the second assassination attempt, as if nobody else is, that if you are a democrat, you wouldn't be outraged by it, which i hope is not true but the victim blaming here is really off the charts. donald trump wore a really short skirt to the putting green, therefore he deserved to get assassinated? where we heard that before? people will be outraged by it. i heard it described today as a civilizational crossroads, and there are many people on the left who have said it would be better if he just didn't exist. be careful if you get your wish because your problems are not
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going to go away, and you need to try to beat him and the policies on the merits, and they are actually not trying to do that come, we will get into more of that later in the show. >> judge jeanine: how do you explain the fact, greg, that the left is so nonchalant about this? that there are people who think america would be better off without donald trump. >> greg: well, i would like to step back and take a look at the mentality because i think harold is right. this is like an endless game of rhetorical ping-pong. trump gets attacked, they say he is bad, he gets attacked again, they say he is worse, it's not going to change. i think it goes back, two things, one it is the sunk cost of your investment. why continue with the rhetoric when you know there are destructive consequences? because you have already invested so much time and effort in that. you've come too far in this mentality to stop now. how do you reconcile all those years of emotional and career investment in hating one person? why do people stay at a lousy job?
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why do people stay in a lousy marriage? why do people persist in a bad political idea? it is because if you let it go, you feel like your life has been a waste, so you have people like "morning joe" can look positively embarrassing when he makes a statement and the next day he will double down on it because he can't let go. so you state in it and you sink lower into the sunk cost, instead of being smart, cutting your losses, and chalking this wasted time up to experience. if you chalk it up to experience it is not a waste of time. but also i do think this rhetoric is born from an evolutionary byproduct that has been turned on its head. normal people when they protect themselves and their loved ones, there are no ethical restraints. there are legal ones. but there are no ethical ones. you will break the law to protect your family, your children. you will even break the law for your pet. the left turn this upside down. so there is no ethical
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restraints to protecting your ideas, your political ideas. it is not about how you feel about your kid or your parents, it's how you feel about climate, trans rights, a patch of land in the middle east. these are not important issues to your family life or home life, but somehow it has been reversed. it is an inversion of concerns. so the most important issues in your life are pushed aside and you replaced it with these ideas that take over your life. you see this with activists. they are estranged from their family. their friend circle is tiny. they struggle with jobs. they can't pay their rent. they can't pay their bills. because this bigger mission has taken over their lives and let's glue myself to the freeway, i must splatter paint on art, i must threaten to kill the president. as though they've taken the idea of no ethical restraint and applied it to larger ideas. i see hitler everywhere. therefore i can kill hitler.
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: donald trump shaking the hands of the heroic florida cops who stop would be assassin ryan routh before he could flee. the former president also breaking his silence on his second rush with death in just two months. >> everything was beautiful pure nice place to be. and all of a sudden we heard shots. in fired the air.
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and i guess probably four or five. and it sounded like bullets but what do i know about that? but secret service knew immediately it was bullets. and they grabbed me, it's quite something, but it worked out well and secret service did an excellent job. and they have the man behind bars and hopefully he is going to be there for a long time, dangerous person, very, very dangerous person. >> jesse: meanwhile the secret service wants to act like they've done a great job but they will admit one shocking security lapse on their part. they didn't check the golf course perimeter before trump hit the links and according to "the new york post" agent told donald trump they can't keep him safe on his golf courses without significantly enhancing his security arrangement. with scrubs like that for to governor ron desantis is not taking any chances and lodging his own probe. you have obviously played golf a few times, harold ford jr. come i don't want to ask what your
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handicap is come i'm sure you will live. [laughter] when you are saying you can't protect trump at a golf course, that is like saying you can't protect biden at the beach. of course you can. you just have to do it. why don't they do it? >> harold: i interpret it differently, what he was saying, i thought they are understaffed and undermanned here so they have more of that they wouldn't be able to do it, but i agree with you president of the united states wants you to do something that people normally do, be it ski or play golf or go to the beach, the secret service needs the resources to be able to do that. i've said all along come i don't understand, you saw today earlier that senator blumenthal has been critical of the department of homeland security, saying you guys are not responded to our subpoenas, we want more answers, we want more information, we need to understand better what happened in butler, pennsylvania. i give the acting director some
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credit here for saying we don't have the resources to be able to protect him on all of his golf courses be it i read it where he said some of the goal courses lend themselves better for that protection, but when you are on public roads we are going to need more to be able to do it. i would much rather hear him say that, if that is honest, and hear him say something different if indeed the opposite is true. so if they can protect him -- the beach is a little different than a golf course on public land. you and i have both played many golf courses before. an 18 hole golf course spans trump international, and i played trump international -- >> greg: you play minigolf? can you hide behind the windmill? >> harold: with my son. >> jesse: i understand but it is not really a matter of manpower. jeanine, the president of the nonstate gave the secret service more manpower after butler. so they have the manpower. they did not sweep the perimeter before the round. >> judge jeanine: i'm so sick and tired of this guy routh come i didn't like in the first time he showed up and anything has
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come out of his mouth since then pure to me he is no better than cheatle. whatever his name is pure are you telling me -- >> harold: the acting director is rowe. >> judge jeanine: the acting director comes out, never had trump in the line of sight. he said he didn't fire a shot. and he acted alone. well isn't that great? you figured that all out and we still don't have any answers on what happened in butler. that's number one. number two, that he actually says, because it's not on the schedule, we didn't conduct a security sweep. and i went back to double check that. are you kidding me? you've got a former president, who there has been one assassination attempt, and you are saying because it is not on the schedule, you are not responsible for making sure that there is a security sweep on his own golf course when everybody knows he plays golf on sundays? and everybody knows you can get a photo through that open area
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between the fifth and the sixth hole? this guy should not be there. he should be gone, okay? where is mayorkas and all of this peer why haven't we heard from mayorkas? he is the one in charge. why don't they stick to their mission which is to protect the president and not go out and compete with state and local law enforcement to try to get great press and counterfeiting and economic crimes and on about other stuff, and get rid of the dei, go to the military come and get those people. and i want to say one more thing. i'm glad that ron desantis in florida is taking the bull by the horns and saying you know what? just because you filed two gun charges doesn't mean i can't do my own investigation. ashley moody is going to do it. they are going to do it. what they are going to try to figure out is whether or not there are additional crimes or more informational they can get because on the one hand you don't want the agency that's been trying to put trump in jail for the last year and a half to
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be the agency that's responsible for investigating whether or not the secret service acted appropriately on whether or not people should be charged with trying to kill him. >> jesse: dana, you know how these things work. if there is a vulnerability at a course, the secret service will alert it and pay for it. >> dana: i think every human need some sort of outlet to deal with stress and pent up things. everybody does it in a different way, right? loves the peloton, some people play tennis, some people play golf. this president loves to play golf and we need him to be able to do that. kamala harris apparently loves to cook. it's pretty easy to secure the kitchen. >> greg: cook. >> dana: cooked, break an egg with one hand. so the hole in the fence issue to me if you know he is staying the night there and you know he plays on sundays, then one guy can go by the hole in the fence. just one guy by the hole in the fence. and a low-cost way to help is
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the drone. so that's one guy with the drone. it seems to me that's something that could be done pretty easily without having to overhaul the whole thing. and just take a little bit of initiative. and on mayorkas i've never seen anyone less willing to lead. why do you want this job? don't you want to solve prob problems? >> jesse: from the border to this, the man is totally awol. >> judge jeanine: he's in charge of the secret service, thus the whole point. >> jesse: we saw shots of barack obama playing golf at the vineyard or whatever he was staying. that wasn't made out to be some sort of huge security threat. >> greg: i don't think it's about confidence. i think there is a different professional obligation of a government that no longer sees professionalism as necessary when the other side is being protected. that is what worries me, they just don't take it as seriously
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because it is them. what i find amusing in this whole thing, it's incredible to me what bothers trump and what doesn't bother him, he handles assassination attempts the way most people handle a flat tire. or bad weather. it interrupted his golf game. meanwhile he will tweet "i hate taylor swift." you would think it would be the opposite, he would treat swifts endorsement of harris is nothing but then tweet "i hate it when people try to kill me," that we make sense. instead he did tweet that great 0-2, which was amazing, but maybe that makes him a better leader than most, that the big stuff, he kind of shrugs off. the little stuff kind of -- >> harold: rattles him. >> greg: rattles him peer thank you, harold pitts before but your handicap, harold. >> jesse: what is your handicap, harold? >> greg: he is too good looking. >> jesse: ahead, what could go wrong, kamala finally comes
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♪ ♪ >> greg: kamala harris taking her ready to ramble tour to philly. she took questions from the association of black journalists the vp offered plenty of platitudes. >> do we have work to do? yes. i offer a new generation of leadership for our country that is about, in particular, turning the page on an era that sadly has shown us attempts by some to
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incite fear, to do the work that is about bringing some level of optimism, and dare i say ambition. people are deeply troubled. by what is happening to that community in springfield. ohio. and it's got to stop. it's a crying shame. i grew up a middle-class kid. i know that so many people work so hard and should have the opportunity to just get their foot in the door. >> greg: move over, woodward and bernstein, the journalist came to win pulitzers. with questions like this. >> your opponent and republicans have at times weaponized you laughing. why is joy important to you to insert into this election? >> there is sometimes when your adversaries will try to turn your strength into a weakness. don't you let them pure don't you let them. i find joy in the american
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people. >> greg: it's almost like she's making fun of everybody in this personality in which nothing she says is actually original, it's just a platitude followed by another platitude followed by another platitude. that was the na bj, dana. and bill clinton went there it stood for black journalists. >> dana: oh, really come is that what happened there? i can see what you are trained to do there and i'm going to gloss right over it. i didn't mind her second answer to the question about joy. >> greg: really? >> dana: yeah. >> greg: what's your problem question works before there was a poll last week, naacp poll, some flashing lights are kamala harris. here's one of them pete only 51% of black voters that they would vote for her if the election wet 63% of black voters kermit say they are planning to vote for her peer obama won 95% of the bk vote. and with black men under 50 come
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only 49% said they would vote for her and only 66% of black men over 50 said they were votig for her. she had some work to do today to try to convince them she is the one they would want to vote for. the problem is on the policies. on the first answer come i didn't like, for example, she's got this thing where she memorized some lines from the debate prep and then has used them in the other interviews that she has appeared we all do it, recycle things and not when we are doing interviews -- >> greg: not me. >> dana: this one, she talks about the need to lower prices but all the ideas she talks about would spend more which would increase prices. she said she is not taking anyone's guns but all of the ideas are about how she is going to take everyone's guns when she talks about it. she wants to take it easier to buy houses but having the government take over building houses and flooding the market with government loans is going to drive up costs peer on policy after policy, she's actually not answering the mail for the very undecided voters or these black voters who told naacp that they
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are not that enthusiastic. >> greg: harold, you are a black man, and congratulations. >> harold: thank you for that. >> greg: dana brings up a good point. >> dana: wow. >> greg: there are black men voting for trump and then there are black men saying to their wives they are voting for kamala, but no man can vote for kamala, harold, be honest. after listening to that, come on. >> harold: a lot of us to come and thank you for acknowledging my race. [laughter] i think one of the things, she's getting there, still not the answer i would have given. everyday challenges people are facing, particularly for the national association of black journalists, could have talked about the number of businesses that have started over the last four years that were formed by women at african americans and what that means for communities. the investment they have made in infrastructure and the chips act, investments in cities across the country the last three or four years that have not seen the levels of investment and some of the
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coastal cities in boston and new york, san francisco, even to texas where you have the great hub in austin, talk about where we are investing in the sun belt, where we are investing in the southeast, these are the things i would have talked about, and even how the tax cut plan, you mentioned yesterday, $50,000 for small business and $25,000 for homeownership come i don't i'm crazy about those ideas would give a sense of how those fit into a larger plan to reduce cost and make america more competitive. she's getting there but i was still give her a b- on the specifics, but i agree with you, like the joy peace come i don't think there's anything wrong with you believe in american are joyful about our future. >> greg: judge, that was billed as an in person educational conversation, so it wasn't meant to be that penetrating, would you think the questions were tough? >> judge jeanine: when they interviewed donald trump, the first question they put to him was, and a lot of people did not think it was appropriate for you
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to be here today. you have pushed false claims about some of your rivals, from nikki haley to former president barack obama, about things that are not true, and they go on and on, and then their first question to kamala, thank you so much for doing this and making time, i know you are busy right now, we want to start with an issue that americans across the issue say is the number one concern which is the economy. how we are better off now than y times is that woman gotten that question? she still hasn't answered it. it is still aspirational and inspirational stuff. her answer here was, we have more work to do peer well, tell us, what is the work! what do you want to do? and then finally, you know, the association of black journalists, two of them work on msnbc. the third guy is with npr. they are all left-leaning. at least trump was willing to go into the lion's den.
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she could have turned people around, but she doesn't have the mental ability to do it. the only thing she could do is pull back to the memorization she had when she was prepping for the debate with trump and trying to pull those sentences out i don't think she even understands what she is saying. >> greg: jesse come i think what i noticed as she doesn't have to try because the david muirs and lindsey davises of the world aren't going to fact-check her so i put in the work? if you could show up and get a passing grade, you would do the same pit. >> jesse: like you on the sh show, i cut you off. and please recognize my race. >> greg: 1% -- >> jesse: i thought you were going to acknowledge my white half. only proud of the black. >> harold: let's move on. >> jesse: this woman is like a liberal algorithm they concocted
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in california, the perfect gender, racial mix up, and think about the words she's been repeating for the last three months, new generation, turn the page, optimism, ambition, no class come opportunity, she just strings those buzzwords that have been poll tested together and then she just runs out the clock on the interview. it's easy because they let her get away with it and meanwhile trump has to basically hit 3-pointers with his hands in his face in front of a hostile crowd. they lower the rim for her to about 4 feet and she gets three shots, no one is in the arena and she still can't make the shot. the american people see how they are rigging it, so she doesn't have to compete, and they know it and they don't trust her. >> greg: how can you turn the page if you are in the book? i mean, she is turning the page on herself? that make no sense. up next, howard stern attacking trump voters. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> dana: and howard stern is no fan of donald trump. that might be news but yesterday he may be clear that he is not hate the former president, just the people who vote for him. watch this. >> this whole idea that you come if you like me, you are good and if you don't you are bad beer i've been the victim of this. i don't hate the guy. i hate the people who vote for him come i thing they are stupid. i do. i'll be honest with you. i have no respect for you. >> dana: deplorables take five, jesse come i'm going to our expert on howard stern. >> jesse: am i? i haven't listen to him in a while, but for many, many years. he is going the route my mother went. you get to a certain age, you get radicalized, it happened to her, it's happening to him. he doesn't care anymore. he's rich, he hates trump. he really hates trump. he hates people that vote for trump. he does think they are stupid.
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but i still love howard and i don't care greg looks at me like i'm going to get on his show because i'm not because he'll never have me on. and i don't have a new book out but i will one day. and that's all i have to say. >> dana: strange thing about going after the voters and not the candidate. >> greg: it is weird because he criticizes trump for dividing the country and then he hates his supporters so he's not learning from his own analysis. i think he might have turned into the thing he hated. he needs to go back and watch the movie "private parts" and focus on how he portrayed don imus because he has kind of turned into don imus in a way, a mix of ego and resentment. also a weird attack because the trump voters are a lot like his listeners, especially if you think about his listeners of old come of the blue-collar truck drivers, cops, salesmen, people on the road, it is like a divorce. in the divorce he married to a younger wife and left the whole thing behind. now he has new friends.
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jackie the joke man, can't compete with jimmy kimmel, so he has adopted this whole new lifestyle, traded in his old lie for the hamptons, new friends, and he just, he's ashamed of that world. a psychologist. >> dana: in pop culture, why go after the voters? harold? >> harold: i haven't listens to howard stern in a while, used to listen to him and liked him, found him entertaining. this stuff happens in life come i think jesse is right, people get a little older. >> greg: they usually get smarter, though. >> harold: he probably things he has gotten smarter. >> greg: that's not intelligent. >> harold: i read some of the stuff and he was playing a little on the fact that president trump said he hates taylor swift. so i think he was trying -- but look, this is what happens in this world. i can assure you the fact we're talking about him right now is not going to hurt his wallet. >> dana: judge, last word do
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you. >> judge jeanine: did you say he never invites you on his show? >> jesse: no, i didn't say that and i've never asked and i don't think he would. [laughter] >> judge jeanine: i'm not on his show, either, so we should do our own show. >> jesse: what do you want to call it? >> harold: we have it. >> judge jeanine: here is the thing that doesn't make sense. trump says he hates one person. so howard stern says because trump said that, i hate 75 million people. like trump. even the numbers don't make sense. he criticizes trump, trump has no filter. howard stern has had no filter for 100 years. and in the end, i am mean, that's my people like you come howard stern, because you didn't have a filter. that's it. >> dana: having no filter was the shtick. a head, who is the messiest host at the table? i know the answer to that one. find out next. ♪ ♪ here's to getting better with age.
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that plagues us all: clutter appeared several studies they having a messy home can be damaging to your health, resulting in decreased productivity and a compulsion t. so jesse, are you finally going to clean out the garage this week? >> jesse: my garage is spick-and-span, harold, how dare you. yours isn't, jeanine? >> judge jeanine: of course. >> jesse: keeps an immaculate garage, i'm sure. clean surface, clean house, and that is why greg is such a cluttered mess. if you've ever seen his office here at fox, you understand how disgraceful and despicable this man is. the fact he is so successful, no one can understand, he does it despite his organization. imagine how good you would be if you had a clean office. >> harold: do you care to respond? >> greg: i tuned him out in the a block. look, if you ever think you are messy, just watch one episode of "hoarders." we are fine. right? >> jesse: context.
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>> greg: do you ever watch one of those? there are a few people on fox i saw on "hoarders." >> jesse: emily compagno, her office is like that. >> harold: if people watch the show i think they would likely say, no disrespect to any of us, dana would be the least messy. >> dana: i do like order. imagine that. i like clean the closet. i listen to a podcast and i do it because i feel like it is clarifying for my mind but it is sometimes hard to get rid of things where you are like wow, i only wore one time or i bought that. i have something i bought with my sister right nordstrom. it is some sort of face or neck cream. it was ridiculously expensive. i never once open dead. it's probably not even good anymore and i cannot make myself throw it away. what do you recommend? >> harold: people watching the show would think you have an enormous shoe collection. how do you keep them so organized? >> dana: it's impressive. >> judge jeanine: a lot of shelves. >> harold: if you want people to help you, you yell at them?
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>> judge jeanine: i don't yell at them. i take care -- here's the thing. if i am to do something important, there can be nothing on my desk, forget my house. i can't think if there are things on my desk. when i used to try a case, if it wasn't clean, that was the end of it. now my closet is clean, my shoes are organized. everything is organized from my garage. you know why? the kids, they keep coming back. mom come i have an apartment in the city, can i leave it here? so it's a mess. >> harold: you have a notepad when you try cases? you didn't have a notepad? >> judge jeanine: a yellow pad, a legal pad, harold, you know those legal pads. the yellow ones. >> harold: the yellow ones pure yellow! "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ disease for a long time. and you've lived with the damage it caused. but even after all these years, restoration is still possible. learn how at tedhelp.com. everywhere but the seat. the seat is leather.
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alan, we get it. you love your bike. we do, too. that's why we're america's number-one motorcycle insurer. but do you have to wedge it into everything? what? i don't do that. this reminds me of my bike. the wolf was about the size of my new motorcycle. have you seen it, by the way? happy birthday, grandma! really? look how the brushstrokes follow the line of the gas tank. -hey! -hey! brought my plus-one. jamie?
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call rosland capital at 800-630-8900 to receive your free rosland guide to gold, gold & precious metals ira, and silver brochures. with rosland, there are no hassles, no gimmicks, 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. you. >> judge jeanine: it's time for "one more thing" now. and i go first. now, check out this incredible save as a carnival worker
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catches rider's dropped phone from upside down ride in virginia it. looks like this carney is in the wrong career field. see it? caught it. the chiefs need to sign this guy immediately. look out, travis. you've got some competition. that's what they tell me to say. anyway i'm on "the ingraham angle" tonight. so watch me. greg? >> greg: tonight jamie lissow, erin perrine, kat timpf and tyrus tonight at 10:00. greg's absolutely disgusting news. do you want to see something repulsive? check out this creature. uyk. that's a baby pork could you pet. a baby porcupine. born to mom mazi at the san diego zoo. disgustingly cute. >> dana: giving c section. >> judge jeanine: how do they know? jesse?
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>> jesse: assassination of donald trump new special dropping on fox nation. how a 20-year-old nursing home worker came within millimeters of killing the former president. a murder that would have plunged the nation into unspeakable political crisis and then just two months later another attempt. >> greg: way to blame it on the nursing homes, jesse. tonight, "jesse watters primetime," donald trump jr. at 8:00 p.m. don't miss it. >> judge jeanine: fantastic. harold? >> harold: alexei set the friday monday champion 410 feet into the mediterranean sea with restrictive stuff around him so he couldn't use his hands or his arms. he set a record. he owns 35 world records. congrats to the guy. >> judge jeanine: dana? >> dana: dallas-fort worth think is 100 years old. when she was 70, she took up belly dancing. she wanted some attention. now she is 100 years old. never going to stop showing off her moves. >> judge jeanine: all right there she goes. that's it for us tonight. have a great night, everyone. >> bret: there she goes. all right, judge. thank you. good evening, welcome to
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