tv The Five FOX News December 10, 2024 9:00pm-10:00pm PST
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>> i'm jesse watters with judge jeanine pirro, jessica tarlov, a dana perino and joey jones. 5:00 in new york city and that this is the five. >> ♪ ♪s daniel penny breaking his silence in an exclusive interview with judge jeanine pirro that streams tomorrow on fox nation a day after a jury cleared him in the choke holdcl death ofea jordan neely.veal he revealed what was racing in r his mind on the moment he was on the subway floor subduing neely schizophrenic homeless man a high on k2 rallying violently at passengers. >> he was threatening to kill people and threatening to go to jail for the rest of his lives.o and now where i'w,m on the groud with him him on my back a vulnerable position.
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>> why is it a vulnerable>> position. >> that let them go upon my bac he can turn around and start doing what he said to me right. >> killing. >> the former marine enduredou years of vicious left-wing attacks who vilified them as a racist but he has no regrets and here's why.re >> what caused youts to want toh atget involved? >> i'm not confrontational ion don't extend myself this kind of thing is very uncomfortable.un i would prefer without it i didn't want any type of attention or praise and i still don't.l the guilt i would've felt if somebody did get hurt if he did do what he was threatening to dr
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i would never be able to live with myself they will take a million court appearances and people calling me names and whatever. people hating me.eo to keeplp people from getting ht or killed. >> daniel penny sending a message to liberal city paulicie leaders whose policies led to what happened on the subway. >> these public officials would do something so self-serving. >> but how does it serve them to hurt you? >> political gain these are there policies. i don't meanr to get politicali don't want to make any enemies although i already have. but these are there policies that clearly have not worked that the general population is
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not in support of but their egos are too big to admit that they are wrong. >> an excellent job with the interview judge because i feel like i almost know him the waye he came across with you how would you feel about him? >> like danny penny and i think a lot of people you watched how stoic he was how in spite i yelled to him and i watched him in the courtroom also. nothing changed his demeanor. he was very much sitting there and letting everything fall off his back. b but today what i saw was one ofa the most amazing human beings i've ever met. and i think that america will fall in love with this man. he is not just a hero the kind
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of guy that every mother and every husband and the kid inwife their wife is on that train. he was compassionate and firm. he was somebody who it didn't matter what they threw at himin because they kept going to thea subway kari and heard it himself he can never forgive himself.ai he said,d it really was who he was. he is a zen guy and it doesn't want this attention or want to be here doesn't want any of that. he was a string symphony and studied classical music. he is not a thug. he is a guy who talked about how the manhattan d.a. weapon noised his military experience againstt him that'sal what he talked aboi
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with thecs politics and i talked to him about the medical examiner who said one thing in the grand jury and delighted to make it look better at trial hou do you feel about the fact they were coming in doing what they could not to mention theismi manslaughter they dismissed in order to send the jury back. he knew they wanted him d kept saying i would not have done anything differently and it reinforces my confidence. i believe when americai be seess man their confidence in real mel who believe in this country who gave up four years of his life because of his belief in this country was going to stand up and take slings and arrows and he was ready, ready to go to prison. he said he couldn't let them be killed and he was 100% sure.oing
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he was sure jordan neely wouldan kill someone and utes been writing that subway since he was a kid and is somebody who recognized that jordan neely was on k2 he said to the police within minutes of this that he was on k2 or something and what he meant with that was he incredible strength he picked me up i swim every day a memory an i'm strong this guy was even stronger. you have to watch the interviewe he is a phenomenal human being and i congratulate his motherr and his father god bless you fo what you raised. >> i got chills watching the interview. >> i've been obsessed with the case from the beginning and ihi pray he goes on to how the lifeo he wants with no attention if that's no attention if that's possible. yo possible. architect. i hope he builds whatever he
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wants to build. it's interesting that you used the word stoic. i listened to something yesterday and it was an interview about a man who has written about the stoics. the right thing right now. so what i heard, what daniel penny is saying, is that the principle was to do the right thing in the moment regardless. and it's so important that we have people like this that are willing to do that and i think about the people like hawk newsom, who was just significanting there should be racist riots, and i do think the most insulting thing you can be called is a racist. again, he sat there. he said, i'll take the court appearance over having to look myself in the mirror and know i could have done something and didn't do i. i'm sure you can relate, joey, to all of that. i do hope he's able to go on and have a great life with full support, and whatever he wants. family, children, whatever it is, but to be able to move on
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from this. but i'm concerned about the civil suit. i don't know how that plays into this. >> judge pirro: the father of jordan neely, jordan neely, of course, was on the list of the worst 50 mentally ill homeless people in a city of eight million. he's already sued danny. of course, burden of proof is less based on a preponderance of evidence. this is not over. >> a real man of principle. >> i've thought about this especially watching him, i've thought about this since it happened, i would be willing to do the same thing? would i act the same way, have that type of courage in that moment? he was a marine so i feel like i know him, i feel like i went to war with guys just like him. we have three tenants, honor, courage -- commitment. people confuse courage and bravery. a stupid person can be brave for a monument but a thoughtful moment can be courageous. when you're courageous you're
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putting yourself at risk. you're foregoingal of your tomorrows today so somebody else may have one. you're accepting the risk coming to you in order to do something that needs to be done. that's for the better good. i believe he acted with honor, courage and commitment. i believe he's stoic now. one of the criticisms is that he isn't showing remorse. when i watch that i still think he believes that jordan neely was there to do harm and would have had he not and that's part of the problem here is they painted jordan neely as a victim beyond the person that was killed in this incident, they paint him as a victim of the system, a victim of his affliction and a victim of all these things. you know what? evil and bad people, there is a story behind everybody. i hate that jordan neely's life turned out the way did it and ended the way it did but in that moment on that subway, he was evil, and danny penny was there to stop it. and one more point i want to make that i think is really important. the marine corps should be saying, this is our guy. this is who we train. this is why we train you that
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way. i didn't leave the marine corps with the united states government telling me you've lost your responsibility. they said you don't get to call yourself a former marine, you have to call yourself a marine for the rest of your life because honor, courage, and commitment, doing the right thing even when no one is looking, putting yourself in danger to save others, that's the responsibility you have for the relevant of your life because now you know it. civilians, they are nasty, but you are different and i hope, when the secretary of defense -- he creates a marine corps culture that would stand up and say that's our guy. that's what we told him to do and we appreciate him for it. >> jesse: we had not heard him talk at all, and we just watch him with his mouth closed and his eyes straightforward throughout this whole thing. how did it change your opinion when you heard him talk to the judge? >> it didn't change my opinion. it buttressed what i thought of him already. i've had a high opinion of this young man since this happened. i think that people who are criticizing him and criticizing
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the verdict haven't paid much attention to the details of it and they are going with an overarching narrative just because the system has failed in other instances doesn't mean that the system failed this time and the fact that there are words like lynching being thrown around, i saw jamal boman, who thankfully lost his primary over the summer to george latimer posted a dear white people post on x. it is not the time for that, and you want the system to work this way. you want -- i'm sorry for the trauma that he endured but he sat before a jury of his peers, a diverse jury, they heard him. they were deadlocked on the manslaughter charge and they were able to come to this agreement and people were saying, across the political spectrum, when this case was being brought, that alvin bragg had a duty to bring it because someone had tragically passed away. >> that's wrong.
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>> go ahead. >> i just meant from the coverage i consumed and i would love to hear why that was wrong from you. but i can't stand that he's in a conversation in anyone's mind with like a derek chauvin or someone who takes life ruthlessly like that, that there was an exchange during a trial. the question was, why do you think that people were in danger? because he explicitly said it. jordan neely said i'm here to kill people and i'll go to breast. >> for the rest of my life, i'll go to prison. >> as a subway rider myself, twice a day, who has a lot of complaints about the experience on almost a daily basis there are a lot of people like me who have the same politics as me, who are very happy to know that there are people like daniel penny who are riding those trains with us because it is very scary, and we all just, especially if you're weaker than someone who is having an episode, move to another car or move down the car out of the
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way, you know, i took my kids in the subway for the first time since she was born, she's three years old tomorrow. >> wow. >> yes, no one helped me with the stroller. but -- >> penny would have helped with the stroller, too. >> and he would have carried teddy as. >> judge pirro: there is one more thing i want to say, i asked him if he would do it again, having gone through what he went through. you've got to watch it. joe juke watch the full interview with daniel opiniony streaming exclusively tomorrow on "fox nation." coming up next, failed president joe biden is taking a victory lap on the economy he drove into a ditch. ♪
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♪ >> you know you love that song, joey. the lame duck is fighting to define his legacy or whatever is left of it. biden giving a speech and doing his best to put a positive spin on the economic record, one which most folks will remember for sky high inflation. >> next month, my administration will end and a new administration will begin. mo economists agree he'll inherit a strong economy. >> it looks like kathy didn't get the meme on the spending and how it caused inflation. the new york state governor hitting the grocery store as she promotes a plan to hand out $300
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checks for anyone making up to $150,000. >> they will send you a check to buy groceries for a month or whatever you want to spend it on, i say it's your money, it belongs in your pocket and it's coming your way. >> lots to get to. is there any better reputation of biden, he's talking about rural broadband and how great it is and then he was pressed for numbers. how many people, mr. president, have been connected? >> zero. >> zero. >> you know how much they spent? $42 billion. just one example. >> as the residenident historia the table, i have a bachelor's degree in history. >> i do, too. >> i didn't know that. >> i'll give you a nonbiased legacy assessment of joe biden.
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this is what history will remember joe biden for. covid got him in office. oldest president of all time. afghanistan withdrawal. ukraine. illegal immigration. inflation. industrial policy, lawfare, coup, pardon. that's it. that's it. he'll just be a sleepy little intermission between donald trump's terms. because this isn't the roaring '20's. you had all-time highs in suicides, homelessness, drug overdoses under joe biden. the only bright spot, because i'm so fair as a historian, the stock market and bitcoin. but for the rest of the country, the american dream was out of reach. not my words. those are the words of kamala harris. it's because no one could afford to buy a house. no one got a raise in four years and everybody was saddled with credit card debt.
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the job gains which i'm sure jessica will bring up, are a mirage. most of those job gains were snap back jobs from the pandemic and 1/3 of those jobs were from foreigners. we talked the other day, joe biden may not even get a presidential library, he might not even get speaking gigs afterwards. >> who will pay him? >> he reads this off a teleprompter. his people wrote it, it's meaningless. i want to see the final press conference that all presidents do at the end of their presidency so i can see our very own stupid son of a b-tangle one last time. >> let me turn it over to you to say how great the jobs are. >> don't knock on my doors, it's still sensitive. >> the legacy of joe biden will be obviously complicated by how
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they ended with kamala ending. he oversaw the best recovery in the g-7 by far and away. inflation in this country is lower. unemployment in this country is lower. he extended the number of people who got access to affordable healthcare, medicaid expansion. we're producing more oil than any other time in world history under joe biden. the stock market, it was generous of you to give it. donald trump is out there trying to pretend it's because he's coming back, why everyone is so hyped about this. we're hitting record after record. in terms of jobs, being mir rages, we can talk about the other presidents as well but even if you removed all the jobs we lost during covid the snap back jobs, i think you called them, under the biden-harris administration we still got more jobs at a faster clip than we did under the trump administration. it's just a fact. historian number three at the table. >> all right. >> joey? >> that's because people have to work work two or three more jobs
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than under trump. comparing the number of jobs to the number of people working everybody is working two jobs just to make it through. i gave $67,000 per truck in 2020. it's $120,000 now. i sold my house in 2023 for 120% more than i gave for it and i just moved that money into another house that's way overpriced so i love when d.c. -- you love to talk about how inflation has come down but if you're spending all of your money to get somewhere and live somewhere it doesn't matter if eggs even out. you're still broke and that's the problem. i'm not going to sit here and give you a million reasons why joe biden created the worst economy because i don't know that i'm not an economist but i live in calhoun, georgia. i live in a small town, a rural town, i've got more cows and corn for neighbors than people and everyone felt the economy in many ways, i appreciate the fact that he didn't take over from covid and just drive us so far in the ground that now we're a
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socialist. but man, he sure tried. thanks to that trickle down economics, thanks that this country is incredibly resilient we've hung around and now reelected president trump at a time when almost every election across the country from texas to georgia to new york, looks 50-50 and it looks like it's won in the margins. trump won in a resounding victory, all the swing states and a popular vote. to me that's bearing move that if the democrat won it because the republicans haven't been winning it. those people didn't vote because they think the economy might be bad they voted that way because they have not had money in their pockets. i don't know if president trump can fix that but joe biden didn't fix it. there is no evidence that joe biden fixed it. >> judge, a lot of people will never forget when they couldn't afford gas and groceries, biden was out there doling out green energy subsidies to his friends and asking taxpayers to bail out
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the student loans of doctors and lawyers. >> judge pirro: yep. honestly, i hope the next administration looks at the billions that went into green energy, who got the money, why did they get the money, was there any success? maybe we ought to start suing them if they weren't successful. i believe in that. i'm a lawyer, and by the way, you're in georgia, you have more corn and cows for neighbors, can you bring corn the next time you come back from georgia? all right. now i think it's ironic that joe biden is taking a victory lap on economics, which was the issue that he lost on. i mean, that makes absolutely no sense but the man is a loser. i mean, i'm not surprised. when trump was leaving unemployment was coming down. by the way, when you talk about unemployment, you talk about more jobs, did you discount the 800,000 jobs that they overcounted and lied about? i just want to make sure we're on the same page. >> i did a revision. >> you did, good. >> judge pirro: seven trillion in taxpayer money went into the
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economy and that was only because of the $1.9 trillion i should say that they never conceded and they won't acknowledge, that created the inflation, which peaked 17 months into the biden administration term. it peaked because of their policies. finally, you know, i mean, she's an idiot, i'm sorry. that's not very nice but you are. i mean, now you want to give away money, i mean, you know, you just figured this out. she's like slow on the draw, very slow. that's it. >> all right. coming up, a shocking moment in pennsylvania when the suspected killer of united healthcare ceo, thompson snapped at reporters. ♪ big news for mahomes! i'm switching to iphone 16 pro at t-mobile! it's built for apple intelligence. that's like peanut butter on jelly... on gold. get four iphone 16 pro on us, plus four lines for $25 bucks. what a deal.
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♪ >> my music? >> yes. the ceo brian thompson -- the killer of ceo brian thompson had to be dragged into his extradition hearing in pennsylvania. take a look. [indecipherable] >> judge pirro: luigi mangione was denied bail and is fighting extradition, as the nypd worked to get him back to new york and face charges of second-degree murder for the cold bloodied slaying of brian thompson on the streets of midtown manhattan. okay. it's very interesting, right
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now, new york is attempting to extradite him which is a very simple process, joey, where they basically say, we have criminal charges of murder two, and the d.a. goes to the governor. the governor signs it, and then they take it to the governor in pennsylvania. and they say, this is the guy and these are the charges. it's very simple and they are not agreeing to do it. they want to fight. but he'll be extradited and brought back to new york. do you think he should be charged by alvin bragg, the progressive manhattan d.a. or to the feds to prosecute under
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donald trump. >> that's a good point. i hadn't thought about it until you asked the question. thank you for putting me on the spot with minot law degree. i would love to see the federal government prosecute because i think it needs to be a case to set a precedent. even i see in my life, the vulnerability of people in the public eye is huge. our own president was almost shot. that's one of the unique, amazing things about this country, you can go to l.a. and see a celebrity in a coffee shop or go to new york and find the ceo of a company coming out of the hotel. none of us are secure so i they people like this need to be made an example of. for that reason i would love to see it go to the federal level.
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two things can be true at one time, he can be completely crazy and also a cold-bloodied killer and he should be treated as one. >> it's interesting, dana, on the one hand they said he was very quiet but once he saw the press he started screaming about how unjust it was like he's got some kind of a message. >> i don't know what his mental health status is, and that will be something that's part of. this i also agree that it should be charged federally because we see what happens here, and i think know that healthcare is a right, okay, if you believe that, how are you paying for it? let's just have the discussion. have the debate. you just have the slogan, and then you don't do anything about it and then you sit there behind people like taylor lorenz, who should never be interviewed again.
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she seeks the attention. she's got a problem. it's not right. so it's despicable what happened, and you had people on cnn comparing daniel penny to this guy? that's disgusting to me. >> judge pirro: obviously they don't know what they are talking about. jesse, macho man over here who is yelling, yesterday when they picked him up at mcdonalds, he started shaking and this morning, it looks like he peaked in his pants after being arrested. is he a tough guy or what? >> no, i saw the wet spot in the groin and i immediately thought he soiled himself. we'll have a follow up on that tonight at 8:00. >> judge pirro: where is the
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picture? >> it looks like he wet himself. >> judge pirro: he's in blue. >> not that picture, that picture, if you zoom in you can see he wet himself, or spilled a coke but that's not a good look. i spoke to some sources in the psychiatric community who says why people like this are praising this guy. one, the bad boy factor. women are coming out of the woodwork saying -- oh, i want to be your bonnie and clyde. you look for damaged guys, that's kind of a sick fantasy that women have. >> some. >> i heard you giggle, some women, they also say there is an empathy that's misfiring, like when dana said daniel penny is the bad guy and luigi mangione is the good guy that's also a
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problem. there is also this underdog situation where people root for high status individuals to be taken down. humiliated, remember we used to laugh at trump when he was on trial or the king of england got the pie in the face. people like to see that but there is a sicker fashion of that group who wants people hurt. dead. that's probably because they have been so desensitized and isolated with social media they have gone totally wacko. i had emergency back surgery, and i was lucky enough to get into the operating room within 48 hours, and the recovery was not easy. but because i was so mentally tough, i'm hearing giggles again -- >> and humble. >> i pushed all of my feelings down below, and then i stuck to these habits. i redefined my entire life because it can dominate you mentally. if you have pain in your life,
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it can totally destroy you. and i think maybe what happened, this guy was going through something like that and might have taken a hallucinogenic drug and completely lost minds and he became homicidal. >> judge pirro: thank you for that. he lost touched with his family, gave him a privileged life, went to u penn, he clearly wasn't someone who came up with a difficult upbringing. >> -- a very fancy school, did very well at penn, when you almost to testimonials from people who knew him, this is a big shock to all of them but his mother recorded him missing on november 18 and he had a few years ago, i think a surfing accident, had back surgery that obviously didn't work. his x-ray was found on his social media and you can see the screws going in, and he never recovered, and pain can radicalize you. but this man, a murderer is no folk hero. i haven't understood, i understand memes are fun and people are bored and he has incredible abs, but this is -- it's gross, and what it does to
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the family, brian thompson's family, this man who is a father of two kids, that people are out here talking about how they never would have snitched on him if he had gone to burger king, or the girls from "sex in the city" would have said about him, diminishes a life that was taken and also it diminishes the debate about the healthcare system which we should all be willing to have but obviously you don't take action in this type of way, and i think it's really sad if he's as schizophrenic as people are speculating. i think it's very sad and i hope he gets the treatment and the sentence that he deserves. >> judge pirro: he's going to realize what serious trouble he's in. there was a part of
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i love that he put it in there twice. just drove that point home. dana, is this funny like maybe it's an inside joke from the dinner or is he trolling him and what's the larger message? >> i think it's funny and i imagine trudeau that was it was funny. if he teases back a little bit, we usually do predictions at the end of the year on a show and we'll have that coming up and i usually am pretty good at them but i'm going to make a prediction before that show, i actually think that the united states might make some sort of purchase, i don't know, not canada, but there might be some sort of like -- >> green land. >> big real estate purchase in the next four years. >> we do have a real estate president coming in. judge what we're trying to get from the threat of tariffs, is it just about the border with
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canada or what it about canada that he wants to push the point? >> judge pirro: apparently we're subsidizing them to the tune of a hundred billion per year and donald trump doesn't like the way that looks. trudeau vows apparently to retaliate if donald trump imposes the 25% tariff. what is he going to do? it's like, with the truckers, if he going to stop them or go into their bank accounts and all of that? trudeau, you can blow him over with a feather. i don't see him as a tough guy. >> jesse, is this a good idea to put these tariffs up? >> when you say i look like a big tariff guy what exactly about my looks? >> if you weren't here you would probably be downtown trading stocks and making money. >> jesse: no, that's why i'm here because i can't trade stocks. i can't do math. i'm enthralled with pulitzering canada in two, gobbling them up and adding two stars. i think about it before i go to bed at night. >> and you pray. >> we can have two states, the
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red and the blue. >> exactly. western is the republican, eastern is the libs, fine, split it down the middle. he'll go down in history as the most expansionist president of all time over polk or jefferson. i talked about all the economic benefits last time but i have two new benefits i would like to share with the audience. we think we have a housing crisis now, the rate is too high, go to canada, you can get a thousand acres for $50. you can hunt, fish, build, hike, build yourself a log cabin. problem solved. you know how global warming is getting worse, i've even noticed it myself, it can become nice and temperate in canada. we'll all move north. just enjoy the weather. [laughter] >> jessica, this is hard hitting question. trump's way of posturing is --
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hit him with socks, how is it working out? >> not that well. he's really unpopular and i think trump is seizing upon that he did the weird handshake in france. he's, you know, he's a fire hydranting, all over the world. and i don't think it's a cute look. also, tariffs are really bad. consumers will pay the price. >> we'll see how it goes. the fastest is up next. ♪
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♪someone's trying to take advantage of you.♪ learn more at cisa.gov/secureourworld ♪that's how we can secure our world!♪ ♪ >> welcome back. do you have one of those beds? have you ever wanted to smell like a tomato for christmas? now is your chance. food fragrances are all the rage this holiday season, including basil, carrot, steamed rice and coffee. joey, you wanted to do this topic. tell us about your tomato fragrance. >> listen, i don't wear cologne because i think my pheromones are powerful and -- >> jesse: i want want to mask my powerful pheromones. >> but if you wear it you've got to do the man thing, you've got to smell like you've been
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working. >> dana? >> that takes me way back. if you ever go to the ronald reagan library they sell ronald reagan's cologne. it's not very fashion forward. >> it's not on trend. >> i think this is gross, if anyone came in smelling like -- i might throw up. i can't take the smell. >> are you buying fight, fight, fight cologne? >> i'll give to it johnny and stick it in his stocking. i'm with joey. stetson, but if they are running out of stetson, if they can bottle the smell of a roast. >> oh. >> like a lamb roast? >> like a nice lamb roast with mike carrots. >> you like the smell of lamb? [laughter] >> ba-a-a. >> i've heard it's not bad. >> the only thing i would tolerate is basil.
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i like the smell of basil. >> fresh. >> fresh, but other than that, it's disgusting. >> if i smelled like lamb you wouldn't be able to resist me. >> test me. >> all right. [laughter] >> for more than a decade farxiga has been trusted again and again, and again. ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ask your doctor about farxiga. the holidays are a time for making lists. but the most special list of all is the list of children with critical illnesses who are waiting for you to grant their wishes. 5-year-old brantley knows what it's like to wait for hope. he has spent his holidays in the hospital listening to beeping monitors instead of jingle bells. any time he's in a room, he'll make you smile. a lot of people can't tell from the outside that he has a heart condition.
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brantley's wish was to see snow for the very first time. so make-a-wish brought him and his family to their own winter wonderland. snowmans are my favorite. but for every wish we grant, three more children like brantley are waiting for someone just like you. call or go online right now. for $20 a month, just 67 cents a day, you can grant wishes for waiting kids. brantley went from imagining a snowman to building one. his wish snowballed into a life changing holiday experience. this is so cool. call or go online right now. the wishes you grant today can replace sadness with joy and be a turning point in a child's recovery. every 20 minutes, another child is diagnosed with a critical illness. for as little as 67 cents a day,
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you can grant wishes and give waiting children hope and strength. and when you use your credit card to make your monthly gift of $20, we'll send you this free make-a-wish t-shirt to show you are transforming lives one wish at a time™. any time you can help a child out that has an illness, they deserve it. please add waiting wish kids to your holiday list. call or go online to grantwishes.org to grant wishes and give joy today. here's something you don't see very often... elves not working and why not? i gave them the day off. thanks to weathertech. with so many gifts for everyone they won't have to work as hard. there's laser measured floorliners and cargo liner. plus the child car seat protector. and cupfone to secure any phone while driving. or get a gift card instantly at wt.com ♪
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languages and putting her through a rigorous workout routine. she is already very observant and has asked if jessi wears the toupee. i told her that he definitely wears a wig. as you can understand, we value our privacy and we thank everyone for the good wishes. and now i have to go stop gus from licking her face. congratulations, greg, elena and mira. welcome to the world. we are excited for you and enjoy this time together. we miss you, but we are there in spirit. that's not changing diapers. >> some of us miss you, some a little bit. others are enjoying the time without you. take as long as you want, but it is great. >> it's important that you connect with the baby. yeah, connect. >> connect with mira all the way into the new year. >> greg, i'm happy for all of you. and jessica. let me turn it over to you for a either a comment or your own. one more thing. >> well, my comment is i'm obsessed with this for you, greg. and i knew you would fall to baby fever at some point. i'm glad to have you on the
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squad and we can do walks together with with the little babes. also, caitlin clark, time magazine's basketball superstar athlete of the year, 22 year old indiana fever player, set record after record. she was the rookie of the year as well. first rookie to get a triple double and set an all time wnba league record for assists in a single season. i could go on forever. she's incredible. >> the happiest person at fox today is charlie herron, who is the executive producer of america's newsroom and loves caitlin clark. jesse, do you have anything? >> i don't have enough time left, but i just want to say congratulations again to greg and elena. just so proud and happy for you. and it's really going to change you, greg. yeah. >> you know what, greg? >> in ways we hope it does. because we don't like the way you are already. seriously though, congrats my man, and you are really going to love women, greg, because you're going to be protect them. >> have a great night. jeff bezos called me. we're having dinner. mark zucg
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