tv The Five FOX News November 14, 2024 2:00pm-3:00pm PST
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short-term angst and great names with fundamental story doesn't change. that doesn't mean you have to do something every day or there is an opportunity every single day. but it does mean that in times like this, i think long-term investors need to be nimble enough that they are able to react, right, what they see an opportunity present itself that for no other reason sees weakness because anxiety, nothing else, no fundamental change to the story. for me, we remain fully invested. we have some cash on the side, and waiting for a pullback which we are starting to see. i like to see the market actually fill the gap that it created on november 6th when we gapped open by about 80 points on the s&p. >> neil: got it, my friend. kenny polcari on the markets, by and large in good shape, even with a mild sell-off today, looking forward to what is coming up. now "the five." ♪ ♪ >> greg: hi, i'm greg gutfeld
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along with judge jeanine pirro, richard fowler, jesse watters, and she just got nominated to be ambassador to candyland, dana perino. "the five." ♪ ♪ the incoming trump wrecking ball taking another swing at the washington elite. president-elect donald trump nominating robert f. kennedy jr. to lead the department of health and human services, trump making the announcement of truth social saying, "mr. kennedy will restore these agencies to the gold standard of scientific research and beacons of transparency to end a chronic disease epidemic and make america great and healthy again." here is a flashback to what rfk jr. promised to do. >> don't you want a president who is going to end the corruption at the federal agencies? [applause] at the fda. at nih.
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at cdc. and at the cia. and don't you want a president who's going to make america healthy again? [applause] >> greg: there you go. that personnel moves comes as trump scores the coveted for trifecta fox news can project republican majority in the house of reps, the g.o.p. control of the house, senate, and white house, and a clear path to push his agenda. the incoming director of national intelligence tulsi gabbard lays out how trump is already leading. >> i think president trump has already shown how active he has been in not waiting around for day one on january 20th or 21st, but he's already leading, he's already engaging with so many of these world leaders around the world. on the phone constantly. and he is showing the kind of leadership the american people voted for. >> greg: dana, there's a great meme going around where they took a montage of all of these media hacks saying threat to democracy, threat to democracy,
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and they replaced democracy with bureaucracy. and when you hear it, it seems like that is actually the reality, whether it is pete hegseth, tulsi, vivek and elon and now rfk jr., it feels like there truly is a team of avengers focusing on the excesses of government. >> dana: i love it. i want to see that meme. >> greg: i will send it to you after the show. focus, dana. >> dana: so this morning i was getting ready for "newsroom," what do i think about these nominations? you know what, i'm not going to worry about it because 5:00 there will be something else. guess what? now we are back on trump time, to news cycles, three may be, by the time you're in jesse's show, there will be something else. i'm just rolling with it and i think, what do you think? we will see. i like liam donovan on twitter, on x, excuse me, he said, there is some 40 rushing nesting dolls
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of nominations happening. you have one, oh, my gosh, you like that one? how about this one. and they keep on coming. i am taking one thing, maybe there will be a big to-do about this, voters said the number one issue was the economy. inflation. bringing prices down. and since the election, which was only a week and a couple of days ago, but we have all of these teams. we don't have an economic team announced yet, so i'm waiting to hear that. where his treasury, commerce, where are the prices coming down? who is the national economic council director at the white house? what are we doing? i also very much want to know who is going to be the secretary for the usda. and for rfk jr., that's a very important position because if you don't get to school lunches from health and human services, that is all through usda, has a lot to do with the things he cares about, so finding out who rounds out that package to me is what i'm waiting for peered. >> greg: those were a lot of words i'm someone who said we will see. >> dana: we will see peered. >> greg: all right, jesse, ,
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a person who was put on a list, tailed by intel services through the airport, now in charge of all of the people that were following her, is that a course correction or a reckoning? >> jesse: i love it. it's like being at a party all week and all of your best friends keep coming. tulsi! vivek! good to see you! it's crazy. i can't wait to see who comes through the door tomorrow. maybe it will be dana perino. >> dana: stop. >> jesse: keeping her options open, dana peered you said we will see. >> dana: only ambassador to tanzania. >> jesse: tulsi, like her because she is cynical and that is what you need someone managing the intel because let's be honest, greg, the intel people have not been great over the last, i don't know, 80 years. we missed the missiles going to cuba. we missed the collapse of the soviet union. reagan got burned. bush got burned. it hasn't been great. they have been in bed with fauci. they saw a russia building up on
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ukraine's border. she will do a great job, and pete, i love, because he is going to root out the dei and the crt. and he's also going to make sure all of these weapons systems aren't just being built by members of congress and defense contractors because we need to invest in things that can win wars, not make people rich. i love rfk jr. in this position because greg we should be the healthiest country in the world. but we are the sickest country in the world. why is america the sickest country? it shouldn't be like that. we should have the freshest food, freshest water, and people should be excited about this. you have people right now, i think 30% of teens are prediabetic. our life expectancy is like six years less than europe because right now they poison you with the food and then they just feed you pills to cure you and we just have to route out that corruption. i'm looking forward to people losing weight. if anybody has been at the beach recently, it's not a good look. never used to be like this and
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it's because of what they're doing to the food. >> greg: should his first target be trump? and get trump to let go of the big macs? >> jesse: if trump can do it, we all can do it. >> greg: exactly, his first project should be donald trump. so judge, jesse brings up pete, good friend of ours. that can't make china and russia happy because they bank on us, you know, using dei to further cripple our military. >> judge jeanine: well, you know, the great part about it is if you remember when biden first came in and biden went to the u.n. i think it was antony blinken, went to the u.n., we need to know how actually racist we are, the united states. and then we have our first meeting with china. and you remember china made all of these comments like you people are racist and you want to criticize us for the uighurs or whatever? it's kind of interesting. i think the selection of pete is phenomenal, not just because i
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know him, but because he is an individual who was so deep rooted his beliefs, there is no one who is going to shake him off the train that he is on. it is about america first. it's about freedom. and it's about making sure people are protected. all of these people, and unlike jesse, i'm so excited, i heard rfk, i'm dancing upstairs. the truth is we are so sick and there's so much food we eat in this country that we give to our children in terms of serial that they don't allow in europe. why is it that they don't allow this stop in europe? something they are using in candy and some of the garbage in cereal, because of corruption, the familial relationship some of these people in congress have with the lobbyists. so, i mean, i am absolutely thrilled, the cdc, the fda, the nih, especially after what we went through with fauci. one more thing. when it comes to all of these
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people, they are going to blow things up, and matt gaetz is another one who is going to blow up the department of justice. where the stench is so deep they have no choice but to blow it up. >> greg: richard, how is your week been? [laughter] >> richard: that's a great question after all of these comments. >> greg: rfk was once a, he might still be for all i know. is this more about a party that became so focused on one thing which i would say his identity politics, you might disagree, that they no longer had any room for a member of an iconic democratic family peered when you lose a kennedy, that's a statement. >> richard: i think there is a couple of things to the rfk thing. one, you want someone at hhs, no matter the political party, that is experienced in public health, whether agree or disagree. judge is right that there's a lot of food as we should be focused on. i'm not sure what rfk will do because i'm not sure of his qualifications. someone who knows all of the
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agencies and all of the things that happen and i think yes you can go and say you want reforms but you also need someone who knows how the government functions. that's the same way i feel about the appointment of attorney -- a potential attorney general, see what the senate does, matt gaetz, somebody who has been chaotic in the house of representatives, most in his caucus don't like him including the former speaker of the house kevin mccarthy who he ousted, right? is this the person you want leading or justice department in a moment when yes you want to make reforms, yes you want to make it better, but the problem with matt gaetz, he's an eyesore for the not sit congress which makes them almost likely not to get confirmed. >> dana: we will see. >> greg: i don't know, you know, i don't know, i would say the desire to be popular should not enter the picture. you know, if you are going to be in congress, you should make -- >> richard: maybe you should be popular. >> greg: i made it this far being unpopular. >> richard: i don't think we were invited to the party, greg
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peered. >> greg: up next, liberals catching onto what we have been telling them for years. their policies on the border and crime are crap. ♪ ♪ when you're in the military you're really close with your brothers and your sisters that are in the military with you. and when you get out of the military, you kind of lose that until you find a new family. we can talk about our struggles and the things that we did overseas and not everybody can do that. adam! how's it going, brother? we live pretty close to each other. so he's always coming over. when i go to jack's house, we watch a lot of football, hang out. we go outside the friendship has kind of grown into a family i was overseas on a deployment. i got separated from my marines and i got hit in the neck, and it broke my neck and paralyzed me.
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14 years ago, i was on a training mission. did a military freefall, and i had some faulty equipment. i hit the ground. going, 30 to 40 knots and was instantly paralyzed. i met jack fanning when he invited us to park city, utah, through his foundation. i was able to actually get on the mountain and ski with my family, i can't put into words what that meant. i got paid in the military to do crazy fun stuff. and after my accident, i'm still that same guy. and when i was able to jump out of a perfectly good, helicopter, at 10,000 feet, i did it. i was talking to some vets last week amazing how we have these houses where they can come over because they■re in chairs too. carpet and wheelchairs don't mix very well. tunnel to towers, they got rid of all that. they redid my whole bathroom. that's probably the favorite part of my house. i thought they were just going to do the upgrades. but the surprise to me was they paid off the entire mortgage.
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♪ ♪ [laughter] >> jesse: are liberals finally starting to wise up on why they got crushed in the election? probably not but there are some flashes of common sense popping up. "new york times" columnist ezra klein putting his fellow democrats on blast for having their heads buried in the sands overreaching crime and illegal immigrants sucking up resources, taxpayer money in blue cities.
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he's encouraging democrats to burst their bubble and get out and talk to some people. >> the thing that surprised me the least about the election was the sharp red shift in his big cities. because if you just talk to anybody who lives in them, they are furious. in this idea, oh, no, the economy is good a crime is actually down or this is all just fox news, like shut the [bleep] up with that. like talk to some people who live near you. the rage i just hear from people in new york, sense of disorder rising, right, not just crime, but homeless encampments, trash on the streets, people jumping term styles and subways, crazy people on the streets, it feels different than it used to be. >> jesse: san francisco voters have finally had enough of the full-blown homelessness and chaos and spiraling and do moving, tossed out the altar progressive mayor london breed and the new guy they put in actually sounds like they might tackle the city dumpster fire problems. >> there is nothing progressive to have 806 people die of drug
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overdose in our city, property crime is rampant, our small businesses are struggling each and every day. this is not a liberal, progressive, conservative, people want to feel safe walking down the street. >> jesse: greg, ezra klein sounds like a know what all after-the-fact. >> greg: you know what, the thing is, if somebody comes late to the party you have to welcome them -- >> jesse: ezra! >> greg: nice for showing up, we've been talking about this for years. politicians alone didn't fail their cities. who protected and enabled them? and activist media and their industry of deception. the media refused to listen to the public. this was a media, by the way, that would come to their work and complained to their friends about the streets come about the homelessness, the junkies, and then they wouldn't report it publicly. for them, all of the cities had drivers and security so it didn't really matter.
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all of these fallacies came from legacy media. no wonder cnn is for sale, msnbc is for sale. you can buy them with kohl's cash or your grandmother's s and h green stand. what they did was chose their narrative over their profession and the biggest chalk outline will be the industry they themselves have murdered. a victory over gaslighting, murders down, rapes down, chose not to report those figures. theft is down on that you locked up the toothpaste and deodorant and people can't steal it, i guess that is a victory. it is a victory locked everything up. policy should drive politics, not the reverse. crime was never a political issue. the left chose to ignore the communities because of politics. that allowed more theft. more looting and rioting after george floyd because they chose politics over policy. has to be the reverse. you create the policies, that drives your politics.
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stopped using activists over citizens. most activists do not live in those neighborhoods. most activists don't go to the colleges that they, you know, vandalize. it is time to listen to the people and not allow loudest voices that scare the hell out of you. >> jesse: jeanine, are you going to be visiting san francisco anytime soon, maybe on fox business, luxury spas? >> judge jeanine: no. one of the interesting stats i saw today was that in, i think it was 2014, 35% of the democrats were unsatisfied with their crime policies. and in 2024, 58% are unsat unsatisfied. so the democrats, the working people, the ordinary people know what is going on. and it is the leaders who are just not listening. they don't care. all they care about is getting reelected. and it shouldn't be a shot right now donald trump won the trifecta of the house and the
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senate and the oval. it is because the average working person wants their family to be safe, and they don't want to be lied to, and the democrats constantly lie. they said we were told that crime was down and you mentioned this, greg, but the fbi told us that crime was down, with a footnote saying we didn't include new york, l.a., and a lot of other cities, 33% of the cities in the united states, and we, the democrats, we had an amazing job report, and oh, by the way, we overshot the number by 818,000 and then all of the migrants, they are just coming here to work, forget about the fact that we are letting in ms-13 and tren de aragua and all of the murders and victimization we are seeing and no one is sending them, they lied when they said the border was secure and they are betting these people. the american people don't want to be lied to. and if the democrat leaders consistently stick to this resistance to donald trump, they are going to keep losing the midterm, as well, because they
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are not listening to ordinary people, and they are saying basically they are going to double down. i spent the day today, one more thing, at the danny penny trial, okay? this is a guy who is charged with homicide because he was on a moving train underground where some guy comes on and says somebody is going to effing die today, i'm going to kill someone, and i don't care if i go to jail for the rest of my life. this case isn't about the law. it's about what new yorkers were feeling when the mayor and the governor were saying oh, it's all in your mind. it wasn't in their minds. >> jesse: dana perino? >> dana: i agree with everything that has been said. and i am wondering also about we haven't mentioned a lot about the afghan withdrawal and the chaotic nature of that because biden's approval ratings plummeted at that point and it never recovered. than they said that inflation was a high-class problem. and right around then is when you had the baby formula crisis and remember the white house was
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like oh, there is a crisis, and then biden said, first i heard of it. no one ever took responsibility for anything. susan rice was the head of the domestic policy council. she was pointing the fingers at hhs. all they did was point fingers. they didn't want to actually solve problems. i have a feeling, for example, let's say the judge was in charge and she found out there is a baby formula crisis. you think everybody wouldn't be called at 7:00 in the morning, we have to figure this out and by noon i want a plan and 5:00 it is going to be solved. i don't understand all of these things with a new there were problems and they decided not to do anything. but i will add one other in addition to that. the afghan withdrawal. the age of biden and his capabilities and the fact that at the white house karine jean-pierre would constantly say biden's running circles around us, more energy than all of us put together and it just wasn't believable and it got terrible. i will say however for president trump, expectations are really high. and there is a good amount of
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runway, but it is not endless, so people are going to start itching for something. they want prices to come down or at least they wanted to know there is a plan to try to get them down. >> jesse: everyone wants to be skinny and rich within the next four years, richard. >> richard: if you say so. [laughter] i agree with dana. moments over the past four years the white house has been caught flat-footed whether immigration, the baby formula, even on crime, but with that being said i think for us -- to your point, because expectations on the trump team in this moment are so high you have to zoom out and figure out how did america get here? it wasn't just four years of biden that got us here, there was also a global pandemic we had to figure out, what happened when we locked people away, what happens when a lot of folks die, how does that affect the general public? and i think it is important to remember that voters are fickle. i think a lot of voters made a decision about what they were seeing, to greg's point, cvs and
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everything locked up, they blamed whoever was in charge at the moment. now with that being said, many of the crises we are dealing with in this country, the housing crisis, created in 2008 when a lot of small small home buyers and the government didn't do a thing to create incentives for small businesses to get back in the housing market to build more houses, so now the problem is we have a housing shortage. it is not because migrants are coming to the country. they don't qualify for mortgages are probably to get rent at this particular time. there is not enough supply. so how do you create supply and how do you do it fast enough that by the next election americans are saying i feel better -- >> dana: i could go all the way back and blame democrats for all of that for decades. >> richard: could blame democrats about blame republicans about that -- >> dana: end up with a housing crisis in four years. can't -- why can't you build a pipeline? why can't you build a refinery? why can't you do anything on energy?
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it's because they said no, no, no, no, no, no. you try to get something done you end up in litigation -- >> richard: with housing, after we repealed the glass-steagall -- >> dana: i love -- let's go -- >> richard: we could go! >> greg: i still don't know what baby formula is. i thought that was sex. >> jesse: i thought you were going to say you didn't know what glass-steagall was. ahead, whiny woke staffers killed kamala's interview with joe rogan right back. ♪ ♪
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progressive staffers shot it down. a harris aid explains how "there was a backlash with some of our progressive staff that didn't want her to be on it and how there would be a backlash." joe rogan himself is weighing in on the interview that never was. >> i'll ask her a question, but i think they have requirements on things she didn't want to talk about. she didn't want to talk about marijuana legalization, which i thought was hilarious. >> why? >> because of a prosecuting record. >> i mean, that was her old job, though. >> she put a lot of people in jail for weed. >> judge jeanine: and there is another huge mistake harris made: sunny hostin is now blaming herself for asking the softball question that many say cost, the election. >> i followed up because i was surprised at the answer. look, i think it wasn't so much about the question. it was really more about the answer. >> not a thing comes to mind.
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>> not a thing comes to mind. that's why i followed up with is there anything you would do differently? and the reason i followed up is that wasn't a gotcha question, that was a layup. >> it was an important question and i think when she should have expected. >> that's what i thought. [laughter] >> judge jeanine: you know, it's not only a question, jesse, that she should have expected. it's a question that she had been asked before. and she kept saying that she was bringing change, but she never quite explained the change. >> jesse: sunny just called kamala an idiot. she said it was a layup. she said she had after that before, and who would have thought that kamala ruined her campaign in the treacherous terrain of "the view." no one would have thought that would have mocked her up. the rogan interview i did research for the first time all week. number one podcast for black
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americans. 80% male and 35% independent. all of those people she needed to win. and she didn't do it. and she was in texas at the time. and then she wanted it edited. she wanted no cannabis questions. and she only wanted to do it for an hour. now she had presented herself as the boss, this queen bee, this tough prosecutor is going to kick down doors. she was a care scaredy-cat. she was having and hauling, nail-biting, afraid of not only her boss, but afraid of people who worked for her. imagine that, we were going to give this woman the nuclear football, not saying all women are indecisive. i would never say that. but i know a lot of women on this table, they'll make a decision like that and go with it, not afraid. and i'm not talking about greg. [laughter] >> judge jeanine: you know, dana, do you think she made the decision -- look, vita staff and they told me don't deal with the liberals, first of all, why do they cater to it -- shows something, didn't she know
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she was good to be the one in charge? >> dana: they catered to them from the beginning which is how they ended up in this position in the first place after president biden took office. if i were advising kamala harris i probably would have told her not to do it as well because it had so many risks for her, like talking, and that would end up in a bad place. after weeks of calling people misogynist and racist, now sunny hostin, she had some weaknesses. wait, what about all of the people you called misogynist? i think also all of this comes from your first question, it comes from the top, all of it. look at trump's nominees, who did you think he was going to be? he is who he is. you know that these decisions are coming from him. with her, up until election day, you had large swaths of the voters saying i still don't know enough about her, and that was a decision that her team made, but her team makes it at her direction. the last thing i would point out is you don't want to take questions about the legalization of marijuana? first of all, it's on pallets
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across the country come on people's minds because of prosecution, and on a lot of people's minds because we are dealing with it, everywhere you walk, you can't get away from it, opened this pandora's box -- maybe it was the right thing to do initially, but i don't know how we put the smoke back in the box. can we make smokeless marijuana? can we just hand those out? >> judge jeanine: you know, greg, the dems are worried about the backlash. to me, they are being hoisted on their own petard since they started the cancel culture, the politically correct way of saying things. they have no one to blame but themselves. >> greg: i just love they thought they could tell rogan not to bring up pot. that's like telling jesse he can't talk about himself. [laughter] i think it was a poison pill so the interview would never happen. they weren't worried about that topic at all. they were worried about every topic. it could have been crime, immigration, trans. the problem with kamala is the concept of time.
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the achilles' heel for her, and a lot of dems, was something we like to call follow-up question, which occurs when you have time. it's just the basic, what do you mean by that? you know, i would have loved to have seen her on rogan and he asks her a question, and she'll go, she'll have that escape hatch that the left always uses, you know, we really need to have a conversation about that, and he'll say great, we have three hours. no, i mean at some other time, not now, because that's how they always end a conversation. or want to end one, by saying we need to have a conversation. by the way, i don't know if it was a good move, me finding out there is a tv show about "the view," behind the table, and that is a producer doing it. that means now i have two buckets of stupidity to choose from. to know what she is thinking about behind the table is amazing. behind behind the table, look at
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that. >> judge jeanine: all right, richard, would you like to wrap up? >> richard: i would love to wrap this up. one, the vice president should have done joe rogan, number one. number two, my previous life, i did labor organizing, back when there was a show called justice with judge jeanine. >> judge jeanine: great show. >> richard: here is what i know to be true. first you rally the troops. then you recruit. and i don't think that she was -- if it was wokeness, i don't think wokeness, liz cheney, i don't think that's how you get -- the fact that kamala harris, to only show up on msnbc twice in a 13-week campaign where i can't count how many times donald trump called in, phoned in, texted, tweeted come always here, might have an office upstairs, how much he was here, so the fact she didn't go on joel read, how we want to talk about the american people. well i think it is a 13-week
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presidential campaign but i blame the team around her for who are we going after, who is her audience and how do we get them? remember you rally the troops first, then recruit new troops but if the troops inside aren't rallied, you have a problem. you look at the vote totals, you realize she got millions of votes less than joe biden which means the team was not paying attention. maybe we could ask for a refund. >> judge jeanine: all right. up next, the liberal celebrity exodus begins. eva longoria is fleeing america after trump's victory. ♪ ♪
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trump scary victory, opting to n and mexico, she says this: whether it is the homelessness of the taxes, not that i want to leap on california, it just feels like this chapter in my life is done now, i am privileged, get to escape and go somewhere, most americans aren't so lucky. they are going to be stuck in this dystopian country and my anxiety and sadness is for them. oh, wow, a kind of you, marie and annette. joy reid fleeing x. >> but it is time for me to leave the platform. >> my 1.9 million followers over there because i hadn't been posting for a long time, i just didn't want to contribute content once it was purchased by its present owner. i just realized it's not really worth it. >> dana: 1.9 million bots are going to miss her. >> greg: that's so weird. there is an assumption when you are telling people you are leaving that you are going to be missed. no one knew you were there. imagine being eva longoria or cher or mark ruffalo or
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george clooney and waking up to the realization that you don't matter. not only does no one go to your movies, clooney, they don't take you seriously, either. hollywood has learned a message. a lot of people have learned the message that they are not in the majority and that has destroyed their egos. so the metaphor isn't about left versus right or facts versus feelings, it is -- their ego was always bolstered by an outsized view of their importance which was enhanced by identity politics, and now the world outside just punctured it and they have to admit they are wrong, but they can't because their ego won't allow them. if trump were a pharmaceutical drug, it would be considered safe and effective, no wars, good economy, sensible laws, but there is a side effect. it affects a small percentage of highly emotional people, causes anxiety, depression, suicidal thoughts, and a pension to vote for kamala harris. but you don't ban the drug.
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you just know that if the drug affects you, you stay away from it. they couldn't. >> dana: the other thing is that she says, jesse, eva longoria says she is leaving because of homelessness and taxes, and she doesn't want to bleep on california, trump did not cause homelessness and taxes in california peered. >> jesse: she is not leaving the united states, she is leaving california. you can find places with low taxes and no homeless -- it's true. also, it's like when wealthy people brag during the pandemic, we are quarantining -- >> dana: yes, nantucket. >> jesse: we are going to winter in palm beach, it is too chilly here. no one splits their time between spain and mexico that lives a middle-class life. and that's kind of, she's a little out of touch. very attractive, greg, i don't know why you are saying that in
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the commercial, that aoc was prettier than she was. >> greg: aoc. i love that you lost your pronouns, very good. >> jesse: do not listen to him, filthy animal. >> dana: richard, is anyone going to miss them on x? >> richard: i don't think so. when i think about x, the artist previously known as twitter, it's like an apple with a black spot and then you come back next week and the whole apple is rotten. twitter had been going downhill for a very long time. i had stopped tweeting, i lifted everybody at thible, most of you all post clips, like a dead barren land where people on tv post clips, and i think now, oh, there is no real conversation happening -- >> greg: it's finally free speech. >> richard: all you are posting is clips, greg. >> greg: we talk about x. no come on x, there were people that could not talk until musk bought it. it has actually saved civilization. >> richard: x is not a place,
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it's an app on a phone -- >> dana: i thought it was a black spot on an apple. >> greg: hate to tell you. >> dana: do you think joy reid really had 1.9 million followers? >> judge jeanine: you know, i don't know. all i know is the things that she says are absolutely crazy. she said things like gabby petito is a classic missing white person syndrome. the g.o.p., she compares it to al qaeda. as if g.o.p. was taking people's heads off. i mean, she said some crazy things. but i think what's fascinating about this is elon musk got the twitter files. he showed us that twitter was not fair. he showed us that there was no free speech. and the fact that don lemon and joy reid are saying we are not going to be on x anymore, no
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democracy, isn't that the perfect place to test whether or not there is a democracy? you can see if what you are saying is being posted. is it being edited? is it being taken down? and remember these are the guys who all told us that we are going to be deplatforms when trump comes in, he's going to take us off all of these sites, whilst our jobs, he didn't, lost your fantasy so they are taking themselves off and deplatforming themselves. i think there is a method to this so they can say that x is now a right-wing echo chamber. >> dana: but there is nowhere else for people to go. they are trying to come up with, there is a new one -- i don't know, the marketing they are doing is obviously terrible because i can't think of the name of it. they are trying to create one for the left. tried talk radio, it always fails. >> richard: didn't trump keep one, too? everyone is creating one. >> dana: you are up next,
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richard. create yours and i will remember the name of it. "the fastest" is up next. ♪ ♪ jorge has always put the ones he loves first. but when it comes to caring for his teeth he's let his own maintenance take a back seat. well maybe it's time to shift gears on that. aspen dental has complete, affordable care all under one roof. plus $29 exams and x-rays for new patients without insurance and 20% off treatment plans for everyone. making it easier to get started with quality care. it's one more way aspen dental is in your corner.
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>> richard: welcome back. is the american attention spans shrinking? some people are speed watching their favorite show, skip through the dramatic pauses and confessions of reality shows. dana, are you skipping through your favorite shows? >> dana: i didn't even know this was possible. i don't know how to watch tv without my husband giving a detailed instruction list while he's away. i do listen to most podcasts on either 1.2 or 1.5. >> richard: really? how about you, greg? are you skipping through your favorite reality show confessionals? >> greg: that's not my problem. if netflix where my refrigerator it would be packed full of partially eating foods. there is nothing on netflix i have finished. because there is no expiration date, it just sits there and it stinks. there is nothing on netflix that is worth watching. nothing. everybody knows this. you turn it on, within 10 minutes you are going why the hell of anna watching this? i'm only on this planet for if i'm lucky maybe 90 years, and it
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is nicole kidman again. why is nicole kidman in everything? what is she doing to her face, nicole kidman? >> richard: thank you, greg, that is a great advertisement for netflix. >> judge jeanine: they are going to be happy. >> greg: why do i care? >> jesse: so the other day i exit only watched a really good movie. it was called "far from the maddening crowd," based off a thomas hardy book, and it was said in the english countryside, came out in 1967 and the dialogue was very slow, and it was very romantic, and the score was wonderful. i believe it was nominated for best original score, and i felt so sophisticated. >> greg: you are and 88. [laughter] >> jesse: you watch -- everything is happening so fast, put that movie on and just and ball mere self and culture. >> richard: everything in english countryside is show
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slow. >> judge jeanine: not in a million years would i watch that. first of all, i never thought about making netflix faster. going to do that because there is not enough time in life. plus you get to a certain age, there is even less time in life. i was taking a podcast, dana, i listen to ben shapiro when i can come he speaks so fast i have to slow him down. anyway, love the ideas i get from the show. >> richard: we have just enough time for "one more thing," which is up next. ♪ ♪
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(dr. david jeremiah) our world is not getting better. in our hearts we know that. and the bible says, "we groan for the coming of this new world." i'm not talking about heaven. i'm talking about a better world on planet earth. this is a world tainted with the sin of mankind, but there's a coming world when there'll be no more crime, when there'll be no more poverty, when there'll be no sickness, when death will happen only very seldom. one of these days, when jesus comes back,
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and the tribulation is over, christ will set up his kingdom on this earth. "the wolf will lie down with the lamb, "and the leopard will lie down with the young goat, "and they shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain." the millennium is where we will begin to experience our true destiny. (male announcer) "the coming golden age" by david jeremiah, available now at goldenageprophecy.com and everywhere fine books are sold.
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♪ >> greg: one more thing, jesse. >> jesse: so you think things are crazy in the united states. >> greg: they are, jesse. vets jess nothing like new zealand. look what they are doing in the new zealand parliament. >> judge jeanine: nancy pelosi. [shouting] se: they are screaming. they are chanting. they are fired up over there. us, we are like matt gaetz?
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whatever. tonight "jesse watters primetime" elizabeth pit co. jillian michaels and justine bateman. >> greg: jillian, amazing. look at that lineup. that's a slot machine of delight. all right, dana. >> dana: i would like to go down under to australia as well. >> greg: excuse me. >> dana: saying it dang it i know i'm going to get caught. i wanted to talk them about them all week the bird traveled 200 miles from native home antarctica. land down under. being cared for local sea bird. decide if he should be returned to antarctica. >> judge jeanine: how did he get there? >> dana: he swam. >> greg: do you have a podcast? [laughter] me? tonight, i thought it was 4. kat timpf, jim breuer, emily, tyrus and it's time for greg's
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fox news breaking news. wandering around portland only good thing left in oregon took her in and left him as a pet safely in the zoo system top shave. having a blast. what an adorable artic fox. very balanced and unafraid. judge, you got 30 seconds. >> judge jeanine: panicked. okay, it's time for ♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: okay. check out this very very unique fashion trend. this designer took build a bear to a whole new level sewing over 200 mini stuffed animals to a pair of jeans. if you don't think these pants are real and you apt pair they are real and they sell for $650. no need to suck your pants -- stuff yourpants anymore. get. >> greg: out of time go to bret who is back at work. >> bret: i'm back at
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