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tv   The Five  FOX News  September 19, 2024 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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so-called blue wall that crumbled for hillary clinton but held up for biden, it is so important. but the races so close. i think trump would be a wise to revisit his decision not to have a rematch with harris. at the same time i think harris is playing it too cautious. democrats have said this as well. if she needs to be out there. you can't be cautious and become president. you've got to be aggressive, you've got to go for it and she's not doing that yet and that's why democrats say don't try to coast. that's what hillary clinton did in 2016 and th you know how that ended. >> it's interesting to see if they'll buy her flip flop on fracking. bob, good to see you. all right, things are joining us, everybody, check me and john roberts weekdays 5:00 p.m. eastern time but right now "the five" is next. ♪ ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody,
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i'm jesse watters along with jujohn jeanine pirro, greg gutfeld, dana perino, and jessica tarlov. this is "the five." campaigning like a madman well kamala cowards from the media. during a packed rally in deep blue new york. watch. >> if you vote for me, i'm going to reduce your taxes, reduce your crime, and reduce your levels of stress. of the only thing i will increase are your incomes and your love for your state will come roaring back again. see, the people of new york with crime at record levels, with terrorists and criminals pouring in and with inflation eating your hearts out, vote for donald trump. what the hell do you have to lose? >> jesse: president trump's
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all about the fine details while kamala's focused on boring you to death about her life and middle-class origin story. meanwhile it turns out she's more elusive than bigfoot. of by her own cult, the harris-walz ticket has done 13 formal interview since becoming the nominee well trump and vance have done 44 formal sitdown spirit of the media is trying to warn speed and being vague might hurt her campaign. to speak at this point in the camping we have an idea of what's the big thing they're going to do, right? i wonder if that's going to hurt her at some point. a border czar going, yeah, i don't like what he's doing but what are you going to do? it's a lot of vagueness. >> you listen to kamala harris on what she will do, you can almost start a drinking game every time she says small businesses. >> jesse: you said something yesterday, dana, i've been thinking about. it's not the other thing you said. [laughter] something you said on air. trump and vance are out there,
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they are in there, playing, they are doing well and making mistakes. i mean they're making mistakes. kamala is not even playing. what effect will that have -- >> dana: that was my previous defense analogy i believe. one campaigns running not to lose and the other campaign is running to win. this has very strong to me 2016 vibes because 2020 i think we'll look back and say what a strange election? the pandemic, the hiding in the basement, the hiding in the basement in 2020. i don't feel like it's working right now. one of the things from last night is give a total of 80% of people saying they want change and 34% of those want drastic change. what is he doing? he's out there saying i will give you change. we are going to have a lot more to talk about like i'll go on the show, do this podcast, i want to win and i'll talk to anybody. one of the things he said last night is something he said in 2016 which is what you have to
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lose? i can imagine the harris campaign oh good, yet another thing he said. you have your reproductive rights to lose. but i think one of the things you start to hear from some of the democratic pendants who are saying it anonymously but saying it in the background and on the record and i don't know if it's a smart strategy because she's starting to lose altitude. air speed she's going on. do you know what happens when that occurs. last thing i want to mentioned before all this my people talk, the internet tally for harris-walz is incredible. the coverage about the strategy is for the media to go interesting strategy. imagine if that were trump. claws out like how dear you? not doing interviews. because it's her like maybe she can get away with it. >> jesse: right, not looking at it as generalists, they're looking at it as political people.
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>> greg: we've already ordered the wind. by the way i realized you are the human highlighter. you are. you highlight what's in the news and your address to -- it's incredible. by the way, people talk to anybody including me, thanks, dana. so, i have a weird comparison. you look at trump and he's talking about what we call the fine details. he talks about what you're going to do about crime, taxes, incomes. he's addressing real problems with specific solutions because he lives like almost all of us in the real world. the world of action and consequences, incentives and disincentives. it's easy to figure out the solutions. it you just have to roll back the destruction that had divorced action from consequence. he's just reconnecting cause and effect like no one would have ever done no cash bail if you actually thought of the consequences. you would have had a strong border if you thought of the consequences. he's reconnecting it.
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i was listening to harris and like you know what she is? she's the first ai candidate. you know how current ai is, it's repurchasing existing content all the that is there. it shifts it around, it uses conventional phrases and platitudes and creates new content. but you never get a specific answer. instead you get like it's important that we have this conversation as well as the values and the diversity of a person's experience. it's why all those dei scholars caught plagiarizing sound the same. they mimic the same jargon jell-o and she has lived in that jell-o for so long. if she's like a little marshmallow inside a jell-o salad. it's like a human algorithm that creates the salad and the intent is not to answer but to evade answering. when you sit there and go why is she being so vague? that's exactly what we want. >> jesse: have you ever made
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jell-o salad, judge jeanine pirro? >> judge jeanine: no, have i? i never have. it is a delicious? you can give me that later, d dana. i love seeing donald trump in new york yesterday. obviously i love seeing him h here. i thought it was great, happy for you, but what american saw was something i think that you and i had argued about like real trump is like. he's a regular guy with a sense of humor who can talk to anybody. and who can respond to every question. what we have seen with kamala harris is a woman that before the debate at 28% of the people had no idea what she stands for and post debate 5 percent don't know what she stands for. she got 3% in there, i don't know what they figured out. but she has to rely on the left
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wing media, even cnn is criticizing abc and her friendly oprah winfrey to get out her message. but the truth is donald trump is going to energize blue cities because he is a new yorker. he is born and bred in new york. he loves this city. he helped to build the skyline of the city. and in america, he moved on from there to palm beach los angeles and then he went to ireland and scotland and oman and dubai and all these other places. what has this woman done? what has she built other than a few platitudes. she keeps saying we need change. change is exactly why you are not winning because you changed donald trump's closing border securing the border relying on american energy and getting rid of law and order. those are all the things i
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donald trump was supporting. so when he gets out there, he can gather a crowd. he can rally a crowd and he can keep that crowd. we are going to see him going after blue states continuously. she can talk and platitudes and she's not going to win that. it did her policies help rather than hurt? trump, 17% of people said his policies helped. biden, negative 24%. you keep talking platitudes because you got nothing to say. >> jesse: jessica, i'm going to give you the last word but i reserve the right to interrupt. >> jessica: i reject your reservation and judge needs a karl rove whiteboard that you can write that all down. as is the case, i see the race dramatically differently than my loving and lovely colleagues. so in just the last 24 hours, there has been cold hard
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evidence of debate balance for kamala harris and national polling, fox bowling has a three-point shift in her direction. what i thought was important is donald trump's advantage on the economy is down to five points. she's tied with him on the economy in morning consults. he cannot win the race unless people think he's going to be dramatically better for the economy. two-point shift in her favor, four in pennsylvania. her favorite abilities prime to 15 points which is unheard of. the ap has a poll out and she's rounding him on tough enough to be president that she changed country for the better and she will fight for people like you. people know that kamala harris is for the people and donald trump's for donald trump. mourn and consult had the swing state tracker, she's up everywhere except arizona where he's up one. an interesting state and there is north carolina which is a big target for the democrats. we found out an hour ago that the lieutenant governor there mark robinson's running for
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governor who donald trump called martin luther king on steroids posted on a forum that he's a black nazi, detailed his arousal through memories of peeping on women in public gyms and he still fantasizes about it. >> greg: how dare you king shame. >> jessica: that's a great reaction. he was likely to win that race anyway. getting robins or drop out, his name is still on the ballot but that makes north carolina even more in play for democrats. this again is evidence of the type of candidate that donald trump thinks are good for the country. martin luther king on steroids, someone who says he's a black nazi. >> greg: do you think trump knew this guy was on sites? >> jessica: donald trump likes anybody who likes him.
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and. >> greg: that's called being human. >> jessica: no it's not! >> greg: go ahead, let's start with fox & friends. >> jesse: i didn't interrupt, i want that to be known. >> jessica: the shaming was kind of funny. >> jesse: up next, kamala just got humiliated. ♪ ♪
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as a prosecutor, i never asked a victim or a witness: 'are you a republican or a democrat?' the only thing i ever asked them: 'are you ok?' and that's the kind of president we need right now — someone who cares about you and is not putting themselves first. i intend to be a president for all americans,
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and focus on investing right now in you, the american people. and we can chart a new way forward. i'm kamala harris and i approve this message. ichi, ni, san, shi... (1,2,3,4 . . ) ruri never thought she would live out her dream. then one day, she did. you were made to chase your passions. we were made to put them in a package. (vo) if you have graves' disease... ...and itchy eyes, the truth may be even more uncomfortable. people with graves' could also get thyroid eye disease, or t-e-d, which may need a different doctor. find a t-e-d eye specialist at isitted.com.
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key democratic heavyweights, the unions. vice president harris becoming the first democrat in decades not to get the teamsters endorsement. with the influential union refusing to back any candidate for president and here's why. polling shows nearly 60% of its members support former president trump. of the former president is more than eager to have their sup support. >> earlier today i was honored to receive the endorsement of the rank-and-file members of the teamsters. if this hasn't happened in so many decades, we moan back the overwhelming majority of the local chapters and the members. and as a result, the national organization has refused to endorse the democratic candidate for the first time in many, many decades. >> judge jeanine: how will harris back the working class men fleeing her campaign in droves? check out this door will be added dudes for harris. >> no lectures, no b.s., just
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protecting our freedoms and helping us take care of people who matter. >> judge jeanine: okay, jessica, joe biden's one of the most prounion presidents that we've ever had. how is it that kamala has not been able to benefit and the teamsters actually turned from her? >> jessica: i don't think it's a complete picture of what happens. it's better to have gotten the endorsement and it seems a lot to be about sean o'brien because if you look into how the poll was conducted. they poll 21,000 members and 1.3 million members overall. that's about 1.5% sample size. right after sean o'brien set we are not endorsing, all the chapter started in endorsing h her. the black caucus, michigan, northern p.a., wisconsin, northern nevada, southern nevada, billy. et cetera. she has the auto workers
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endorsement, union endorsement. >> judge jeanine: the teamsters. >> jessica: i'm just saying a million -- no, it's over 1 million people. i lead with that she had gotten the endorsement. there is work to do but you can in good conscience argue if i told you they pulled 21,000 people and that 1 million pe people -- >> judge jeanine: what about the fact that 60% support trump? >> judge jeanine: you have a sample of 21000 out of 1.3 million members and endorsements from 1 million teamsters after that, does that not indicate that the poll might not be the greatest representation? again, it's not good to not get it. if sean o'brien seems to be playing a little bit of politics with all this but there's heavy union support for her not just in the teamsters but all the other unions i just mentioned. >> judge jeanine: teamsters had the ability to endorse according to their own number
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supported trump. it is in the union board's job to basically represent the members that they pulled and support trump? >> jesse: it is buried they don't like kamala harris personally because she doesn't connect with people. they don't like the policies. they don't like the ev stuff, the regulations. and it's more significant and i would spend too if i didn't get the endorsement but it's significant and it shows you in the midwest they have a huge problem. these people also are on the ground, they are politicking, knocking on doors, organizing, that's not going to be there for kamala harris like it would have. i told you a couple days ago i would tell you when i get nervous about the election. not there yet, but it's getting closer. and i'm going to be honest with you, it has tightened, jessica, and that shows you what an honest bloke i am. to acknowledge the race has
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tightened. >> jessica: what a big man you are. >> jesse: i look at the last four polls in pennsylvania. donald trump is either winning or tides. i look at the last four polls in georgia. donald trump is winning. i look at the last four polls in arizona. donald trump is winning. 3 of 4 in north carolina. if he loses pennsylvania, she will lose the election. right now it's a toss-up. every time you go into the races, jessica, hillary was up 5, biden up 9, it ends up being this close. if trump going into the election tied or down one or two, he's going to win and that's what makes you nervous. me, not so much. >> judge jeanine: okay, great, according to teamsters they had an agreement that if kamala had a majority of those numbers that they would have endorsed her. but they were only endorsing
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trump if there was what they call universal endorsement or you're now. >> greg: when you get 100% endorsement. me on tender, but i'm kidding, i'm married. but this is about men, you know? this is an amplified version of what is going on in many homes across america. there is a husband or a boyfriend that likes trump. wants to vote for him but he can't say it. the nonendorsement is a endorsement. he just says you know, when thtn donald trump is, he just goes into the garage and drinks a. what's the teamsters? its truckers, construction workers. these are not solely boys who shave their chest. these guys -- this is trump's people. i've said this before. people made this about race. it's about gender. if men don't want to be in a
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place where they aren't wanted and that's a democrat party. we are the leaders cannot define a woman and redefine men as tim walz which is hilarious. mostly dudes, they are tough, productive, sensible believers in self-defense for their family, for their friends, for their property. all these traits, you know, because of the infiltration of the woke have been branded as toxic. the democrats have forgotten the evolutionary traits of men is to protect the things they love which include women and the woke agenda has undermined that the area to look at the attack on women sports, look at the attacks on police and bailed here to protect women. that's due to the democrats. going after parental rights. these are things that men hate because in their genes, in their blood they want to protect. at the democrat party is saying if you want to protect, there is something wrong with you. >> jesse: i do disagree with
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one thing. in some real men do shave their chest. >> greg: swimmers? >> jesse: not all over their chest but some. >> greg: thomas. >> jesse: real men. >> judge jeanine: dana. swing states have very often specifically michigan, nevada, pennsylvania, they are relying on more of the union support candidates. especially with the teamsters, they come out and put up the signs, they built the stages, these are real workers. the nonendorsement it seems will hurt kamala harris more in the swing states. >> dana: possibly but maybe help trump in places like georgia, north carolina because a lot of the businesses decided to leave the blue states and go to more red states where they have more favorable conditions like for example the right-to-work states where other places are not.
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i think the media tends to view unions as a monolith. for example, planned parenthood and the sierra glenn, they've been organs of the democrat party. you're in the middle of a political realignment and he continues which is why jessica can have the number she has. if then you can also have the numbers of all the other teamsters saying i'm not for that. they listen to brad paisley's i'm still a guy and think that's me, that's what i'm going for. if you mention self-defense and something i haven't mentioned on the show but it's getting more attention right now and that's kamala harris' position on guns and buybacks or even from 2007 that's going back a ways i get it. but she talks about going into a home and taking your guns. do the crossover, how many people on the teamsters are gun owners who might not be registered to vote? joey jones this morning on ameron"america's newsroom" had n amazing statistics of how many gun owners are not registered to vote. because the race is so tight,
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you got to figure out a way to get all those people out and there's different motivations pushing people to vote. i think the rank and files of unions has been different. my last point is that aoc yesterday said every time they call and they need help, who helps them? the democrats help them. it's not that much about jobs anymore even though they've seen the jobs go away because of the electric vehicle mandate which has been a total flop, but it's also cultural. i think that's what she's missing. it's all about the things with their family, self-defense, be able to make sure their kids are going to school, have school choice, make sure their girls don't have to compete against guys when they go for the volleyball scholarship at the university. all those things are happening at the same time with political realignment. it's not about jobs anymore. >> jessica: 350,000 teamsters out the pension. >> judge jeanine: all right, i had terrorists all across the
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middle east are freaking out over what will explode next. ♪ ♪ with a commercial auto quote online so you can get back to your monster to-do list. super helpful. see if you can save money at progressivecommercial.com. thank you.
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and advocacy, we're proving anything is possible. learn more at wounded warriorproject.org/connect ♪ ♪ >> greg: hundreds of terrorists across lebanon are being blown to bits by the 90s aerotech they are carrying around. first the pagers went boom and the next day the walkie-talkie started detonating in the strongholds of israeli backed has below. it's cal causing the jihadi to k out over what can explode next. the fridge, massager, the neck massager they got for their birthday. naturally, aoc is upset. >> why is it wrong to blow up a
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terrorist pager? >> well, currently u.s. department of defense guidelines explicitly prohibits the use of booby-traps. they fired a rocket on the soccer field, 12 kids died playing soccer. when you compare that to blowing up they are pager, is that a disproportionate response. >> it's important to identify the has blood as a terrorist organization and that there are rules of war. >> greg: jessica, you are jewish. i just wanted to say that. you've got to admit, this is like a compassionate response to october 7th. they won out -- >> jessica: this is like making them a home cooked meal. not only is it so tactically precise that people who study this have said we have never seen anything like this carried
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out in real life. but the casually count of innocence is a deeply sad thing that any children were harmed in this. if bernie sanders wants an investigation into it, do it. i don't think anyone who wasn't involved in supporting terrorism should die for this. but in this particular circumstance and you know i've been critical of benjamin netanyahu, i think they completely nailed it. it was just a week and a half ago, two weeks ago, they shot six hostages at point-blank range including an american. the assumption was that israel was just going to roll over and continue to take this? people need to be resettled in their homes, they have to send the message that none of this is excusable. they will not rest until everyone is returned and you know what? we are so much smarter than you
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that we are going to throw it in your face and humiliate you on a global scale. i continued to be flabbergasted by how incredible this operation was. i can't wait for more details. >> greg: dana, it must be terrible to read 72 virgins. >> dana: at least get the message out there. it's a tactical marvel and a digital trojan horse that will live up to the original trojan horse i believe going forward. i think it's also an incredible amount of emotional and psychological warfare because now you have to think now they all know who you are friends with and who you were talking to and -- it's also -- they built the company. they built list. just an incredible marvel. i also don't love that our
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administration, the biden-harris administration said it wasn't us. is it bad to be fearing to? the whole point of this was to push back but also to say we are going to put our people back in our country. you will not be allowed to hit us over and over again in the northern part of israel. they are going on offense and what a relief to have the type of brilliance. the last thing i want to say is as it relates to the election, one of the surprises of the pennsylvania senate race is the reminder that bob casey is the current senator. he prides himself on being the deciding vote that helped obama get the iran nuclear deal. that was the whole thing. at that ended up giving around millions of dollars and we can play that back. at dave mccormick and the race brings it up and why does it matter? well, there's a jewish-american vote to be thought of.
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the siena college poll of jewish new yorkers that came out, they support trump 54-46 over harris. that's a significant number in new york politics, right? >> judge jeanine: especially in new york. >> jessica: that's >> dana: that' another angle of these things. in. >> judge jeanine: one of the saddest part about this, greg, israel felt that it had to singularly confront their enemies. okay? we come in the united states and israel has been close for decades. and now because of this administration, mossad doesn't trust us. mossad did this with the brits but not the united states. and they were rights because immediately joe biden and antony blinken are frustrated with what the israelis did. i concur with both jessica and
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danna. it was a brilliant move by mossad because it not only identifies who they are, when they go to the hospitals, they can get the numbers of who they are in case they didn't know who they were. but look, they knew israel was in on their communications. israel -- we told everybody get rid of their phone and now they are doing the walkie-talkies on the pagers. aoc wants an investigation. rest assured, israel did in all of the united states to be a part of it. that's why they are doing it alone. in the end, 7500 missiles launched in israel from hezbollah. i'm lebanese, lebanese christian. the sad part about all of this is the lebanese people are under hezbollah. ultimately they'll be able to see by what's going on what hezbollah is doing and they're nothing but a terrorist organization. there is a wedge now between them and the lebanese civilians.
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i think that's it. >> greg: jesse, if anybody thinks this is somehow wrong, the type of warfare of october 7th. it mass murder indiscriminate. this was the most precise thing you'll ever see and it's forcing them now to go back to phones where now they can go on cell towers and find them that way. >> jesse: do you mean operation green beaver? operation below the belt, operation hot pocket. i thought you were italian this whole time. lebanese? i'm worried this is why i don't get an electric car because our enemies can probably put a little bomb in it and goodbye waters. [laughter] ththey are laughing at me as i y i'm about to die. everybody is still in intensive care. these people are getting eye surgeries, face reconstructive
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surgeries, their hands are blown off. this is going to take may be years for them to get back together. everybody knows the membership because they are very secretive and they are all suspicious because they are suspicious of their supplying chain and suspicious of their communication. can't do walkie-talkie, beaver, can't do a cell phone. i don't know how they're going to communicate. probably pictures and posted notes. >> greg: pigeons with bird f flu. >> jesse: god, you should be in mossad. >> dana: hospitals are overrun, because they're full of terrorist doctors. >> jesse: we should bomb the hospitals. [yelling] >> jessica: take it back! >> greg: i just ahead, the dawn as g gutfeld comes back.
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♪ ♪ >> dana: donald trump making his big come back to late night tv and what better place to do it than the number one show in the world, "gutfeld"! >> greg: he hates diet coke but hates the woke, choosing this insanity over sean hannity. >> a drug getting a drug-free country? you can't have that unless you have the death penalty. governor walz, his brother and his whole family. they want to make contributions to my campaign. >> the carolina brothers are supporting president trump. >> dana: there are many funny moments. congratulations, great show, you love that? >> greg: yeah, it's
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probably -- i can't remember a time where everybody i knew watched the same thing. it was very strange so that was surreal. the best part about it was nobody knowing about it and having the studio audience in there that did not know. then you know, gabby, one of our production people goes down to tell them and it was like a surreal thing. imagine that, you expect to see jesse or something like that and actually a real person. we have more of the interview tonight. we got extra stuff because we went over. we talked about whether his heart was ever broken and also what was the other thing he had to talk about that? growing up. it just going to high school, what high school was like. could you imagine him in high school? strange. >> jesse: he would have kicked your in high school. >> greg: he would have believed me but you know me, i would've enjoyed it. >> dana: this is the moment he gave him a championship wrestling belt.
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>> you are the people's champion, mr. trump. [cheers and applause] >> dana: i mean, great venue for him. >> jesse: i have never seen him on late nights for like ten years. and he is to do late nights in the '80s and 90s all the time. carson, letterman, jay leno, even his skin and hair and the color blue in a late night setting like that. it just works with the red tie. he looks very comfortable there. it's nice to see the pressure off where he didn't have to speak the whole time. usually he just kind of bulldozers you if it's one on one but it was very relaxed. i didn't watch any of it except for that. everybody else in the country did. and so it was good, congrats. >> dana: i felt like the show warmed up to have a great rally in his home state.
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>> judge jeanine: it's interesting, dinner, i thought about that. he clearly had a good time on the show. did you see how he was smiling, greg, when he was smiling when you were reading your open. he was comfortable, it was easy, it was fun. kat asked him about area 51 and he answered honestly. it was a trump that i know. a regular guy. but i think it did boost him. because he's in long island last night, well, i'm going to do this, she can't do that. he was on his game last night. >> dana: did you feel it too, jessica? >> jessica: honestly, i reregistered. i was like this is the guy for me, but i do -- first of all, congratulations and i was texting you as this was going on. i think it is such a boon for your show and very deserved. two things that really stuck out to me that i felt were so generous of him. one, he really tried to appeal to cat.
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if somebody who he knows doesn't support him politically and feels differently to him. doesn't like a lot of his policies. and he was constantly seeking out her eye contact, trying to engage with her. i thought that was really kind of him and generous and also to some degree reverential. kat is a cohost on the show. he's on your terms. i thought that was really nice. what i want to say on the choice of venue versus coming on with sean or something like that, greg's audience is distinct from the rest of the prime time lineup. you probably have more low propensity voters. definitely more democrats. but people who might not necessarily vote a lot of the white men that we have been talking about or people who followed your career. and young people. so even though it was coming to a comfortable place, he's comfortable at fox, it was doing
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something different. speech of coming up, spoiler alert, people like having the end of movies ruins. ♪ ♪ i'm just a regular person. some people say, "why should i take prevagen? i don't have a problem with my memory." memory loss is, is not something that occurs overnight. i started noticing subtle lapses in memory. i want people to know that prevagen has worked for me. it's helped my memory. it's helped my cognitive qualities. give it a try. i want it to help you just like it has helped me. prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription.
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♪ ♪ >> jessica: why do some people love spoilers? check it out. we have no time i guess. i don't like knowing the end. greg, you do, though. >> greg: sometimes i watch the movie and i like the movie a lot, i'll go to wikipedia and scan the plot summary. because the uncertainty creates anxiety also you know i don't want to invest a lot of time in a character that's going to be killed off. there is this trade-off. it you lose the surprise but you reduce the stress. >> judge jeanine: it's all about immediate gratification. it you want to be happy right away. >> jesse: i like the delayed gratification, it feels all the better. this always happens to me. i wanted to see this movie, it's a big blockbuster, i think
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leonardo dicaprio was in it. kate winslet or something like it. right before i get the dvd and slip it in, she tells me the boat sinks. titanic it was called. >> jessica: i like to know if it's going to be violence, then i don't typically like to watch the show. i don't like to watch the end. if it's a sad one like all say there is a good ending. i won't say happy, good ending, decent ending. like halfway and not be willing to talk. >> greg: you know what i like that i don't want to know the ending? date lines, dateline's are great. that they cover until you never know who's going to go to jail. it's just awesome. but everything else is great. >> jessica: like the perfect couple, i was surprised. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ at the tunnel to towers we made a commitment that commitment is to make sure,
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that the word homeless and the word veteran are never in the same sentence again. we're in bradenton right now because tunnel to towers has decided help homeless veterans who want to get out of homelessness, get into a better part of their life, it's a great partnership between the tunnel to towers and manatee county, to be able to provide housing for the veterans that need it most, not shelters, homes. it's not just a place to sleep it's actually wrap around services and that's what is so impressive. as someone who fought on the forward edge of freedom these are my people. these are my brothers, my sisters, the people we fought beside one of the hallmarks of military service is the only people behind it that sticks with me. i know that every veteran who raised their right hand and swore to support and defend our constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. we have things that we carry inside of us, what tunnel to towers is doing with this village is helping veterans that have mental health issues needs. we have veterans that suffer every day. and so to have this facility to service our veterans
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that are in so need it just the pride is just exploding. we want to make sure that when our veterans are coming home, that they're coming home to something that actually feels personalized and homey for them. that's a home. that's a home with dignity and walls and air conditioning. it's beautiful. i was able to walk through one of the comfort homes today. that moved my heart. i'm just telling you it did when i walked in. and it'll help the heart of that veteran. that's what's important. the care and the give and the love that tunnel to towers has for our veterans is amazing. the people that donate to tunnel to towers, they are amazing. that eleven dollars is changing your life because your giving and it's changing somebody else's to do it. it just an honor to be involved with it. this is all that is good in america. and i am incredibly proud to stand with them. they matter. they save lives. you should support them. i want to turn to the issue of abortion. for 52 years, they've been trying to get roe v wade into the states.
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i did a great service in doing it. it took courage to do it. and the supreme court had great courage in doing it. i have talked with women around our country. you want to talk about this is what people wanted. pregnant women who want to carry a pregnancy to term, suffering from a miscarriage. being denied care in an emergency room because the health care providers are afraid they might go to jail. and she's bleeding out in a car in the parking lot. she didn't want that. her husband didn't want that. a 12 or 13 year old survivor of incest being forced to carry a pregnancy to term. they don't want that. i think the american people believe that certain freedoms, in particular the freedom to make decisions about one's own body, should not be made by the government. i'm kamala harris, and i approved this message.
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♪ >> time for one more thing. dana? >> the judge and i were in arizona. might not have known that. we were at the arizona airport. we wanted to greet everybody and say thank you for coming. we are also known as kip and napoleon. we're friendly greeters. make people feel less stressed when coming to the airport. >> you can stroke them all you want. >> jesse! >> it's a psychological -- >> take a cold shower. >> i already did. >> doesn't work. all right. tonight on the show, we have more donald trump. we have a few more minutes to share. that's tim norton, tyrus, kat ti
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timpf. and john kong's song "fighter" hit number 1 on itunes. so anyway, this is a song that reflects what happened to president trump when he was shot. it's called "fighter." it's all over the place. it's number 1. listen to it. make it stay number 1. >> nice job. >> thank you. >> very nice job, greg. >> shut up! >> "jesse water investigates" the attempted assassinations of donald trump. it's on fox nation now. it's an app you can get on amazon where you download it. someone will help you out. isn't that where you -- the app store. i don't know how to do it. have a great night, everybody. that's it for me. >> sorry! >> if you don't know how to get fox nation, don't ask jesse. >> don't ask

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