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tv   The Five  FOX News  January 7, 2025 2:00pm-3:00pm PST

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been touched by his life and his legacy, and the history that he leaves behind here in the united states of america. growing up in georgia and making his way through the naval academy to the white house. the country will remember the 39th president of the united states of america. we are going to watch and our coverage will continue right here on the fox news channel. the 39th president, jimmy carter. we say our final farewells there at the u.s. capital. let's watch together.
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>> the state funeral for president jimmy carter's happening at the capitol. you can see the full service streaming right now on foxnews.com. i'm. >> greg: along with rosanna scotto, harold ford jr., jesse watters, and she calls and anthill a hill, dana perino. "the five." because she's small. ♪ ♪ donald trump plotting global domination. holding his second news conference at mar-a-lago since wiping the floor with the dems back in november, harold. he kicked things off by blasting biden for trying to sabotage his administration. after joe announced a ban on new offshore drilling. take it away, donnie. >> we are inheriting a difficult situation from the outgoing administration, and they're trying everything they can to make it more difficult. inflation is continuing to rage, and interest rates are far too high. president biden's actions
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yesterday on offshore drilling, banning offshore drilling, will not stand. i will reverse it immediately. they told me that we are going to do everything possible to make this transition to the new administration very smooth. it's not smooth. >> greg: trump been outlining his plans to export maga globally. he is eyeing a panama canal take back, scheming to make greenland great again. today he sent his son, don jr., to scope out the property. trump also twisting canada's arm for a merger with the u.s., and he wants to give the gulf of mexico a new name. >> we are going to be changing the name of the gulf of mexico to the gulf of america, which has a beautiful ring. >> your references to greenland and the panama canal and so forth, can you assure the world, as you try to get in control of these areas, you are not going
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to use military or economic coercion? >> no. we need them for economic security. the panama canal was built for our military. we need to greenland for national security purposes. >> are you also considering military force to annex and acquire? >> no. economic force, because canada and the united states, that would really be something. you get rid of that artificially drawn line, and you take a look at what that looks like, and it would also be much better for national security. >> greg: a man, a plan, panama. but canada's outgoing prime minister and blackface enthusiast disagrees. justin trudeau quoting on x, "there isn't a snowball's chance in hell that canada would be part of the u.s.." and other canucks are mad. >> on making a counter offer. how about if we buy alaska? and we will throw in minnesota and minneapolis at the same time. >> hey, donald, have we got a deal for you. you think we want to be the 51st
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state? no, but maybe california would like to be the 11th province. how about it? california? oregon? washington? >> greg: i think i saw her in an insurance commercial. so, jesse, this renaming stuff is largely symbolic, but at least he is renaming something on behalf of america. when the dems rename things, whether it is columbus day or schools, it is to reduce america's patriotism. it's like, we can't name it after president. we can't name it after christopher columbus. we have to denigrate america. gulf of mexico? nah, gulf of america. >> jesse: how are you going to disagree with that? come out against america? what are you, for the mexicans? permission to make an analogy? >> greg: permission granted. >> jesse: this is like tyrus. tyrus' neighborhood. tyrus is kind of like the neighborhood watch. the one man neighborhood watch.
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and he happens to also have the biggest house in the neighborhood, and he also happens to be a trillion or. one day tyrus takes a stroll in the neighborhood. looking around, he sees a house next door that he likes. he knocks on the door. knock, knock. "how much?" "this house is not for sale." "of course it is. how much?" i can take it by force, or you guys can sleep on it and maybe tomorrow you can tell me what the price is." that's where we are with trump. he's america's real estate tycoon. he's testing the waters, he's flexing his muscle. he is seeing what's possible out there and trying to find out the new contours of the new world order. ultimately trying to get a better deal for america. i think the ground down that grand strategy is to create a north american trade, energy, and security network that gets the best terms for us.
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now, i looked into greenland. >> greg: no, you didn't. >> jesse: i did. the pros of greenland, a lot of minerals, you can project a lot of force to counter russia through there. but it's also a very poor country, and we basically do whatever we want there anyway. it would really piss off denmark and all of scandinavia and ruin our access to the north sea and the baltic sea. i did study, greg. in terms of panama, yes, i think you need to reduce the transit rates because we are getting ripped off every time we sail through there, but i don't want to occupy that stupid country. it's run by cartels. it would be a mess. canada. at first i wanted it, and i tried to divide it into two states. then i realized we would be adding montana basically for the republicans, and electorally, texas for the democrats. i don't like that. but the fact that they don't want us to take them over makes me want to invade. i want to quench my imperialist thirst.
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>> greg: and good for you. you know, harold, donald trump was talking about the transition. it is serving as rachel levine's. it's such a contrast, because i've never seen this kind of overlap before in the transition we have this competent president who is doing things the voters asked, and this cardboard construct that is joe biden basically crapping on what's left of the country. kind of like a bitter ex taking all your belongings and throwing them out on the lawn because you dumped her. isn't that true, harold? >> harold: it's good to be with you. i was looking forward to in-your-face. i think -- i try to view this in its most favorable light. i think it strange what he's doing. but in the most favorable light, as he's talking about the goals of america are talking about canada and greenland, i want to
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think he's trying to send a message to president xi saying, if you're talking about taiwan, if you're going to invade ukraine, we can do this perhaps by using economic sanctions. i think the other way to look at it, which i think people who are versed in foreign policy will say, it's almost the equivalent in some ways of saying, it's an artificial line separating us and canada. it sounds a lot like what putin talked about with ukraine. can you imagine if the chinese said lower manhattan is chinatown, so we will just annex that? because there's a lot of chinese there and they speak our language there. or little italy. italians are going to take little italy because there are a lot of italians. it is silly. so i understand -- i think i understand with the president is trying to do. listening to the canadian leaders, and almost sounds like a sports conference. they want oregon and california and washington to include in the canadian conference, and we want something else. i'm looking forward -- i saw gerry baker on one of the shows
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early who said, i'm looking forward to the president getting to the governing phase. to your point, this is a time where he's been dominant and president biden has not really been seen. i'm looking forward to him having to govern and really having to get more serious. because i think this notion of buying greenland from denmark when denmark says no, or annexing canada -- again, i get the most favorable part of it, but we've got serious issues here and i'm looking forward to and rooting for the president to deal with the serious issues in a successful way. >> greg: well said, whatever that was. [laughter] so, rosanna, what i love about this whole situation is that trump can just bring something up and say, well, let's just see what happens. can we buy this? how much does that cost? and people have come but then you go, wait a minute, it's actually happening. >> rosanna: it actually is not the first time this has hap happened. they are calling the president-elect bananas and crazy for coming up with this idea. by the way, this is not the
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first time that america has tried to buy greenland. back in 1867, democratic president harry truman tried to buy greenland for $100 million, which would be about a billion in our day and age. $1 billion. it didn't happen, obviously. still very important. as you mentioned, jesse, has a lot of minerals. very important for our country. i think the president may be onto something. >> greg: what do you say, dana? i feel like the trump effect has moved beyond our borders, and people are kind of getting into it. >> dana: well, i think that he -- this is happening all over the western world. name a government that is doing well under the left's socialist policies. not germany. not england. none of them are actually
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thriving. now, don't at me with your gdp. but trump has a wind at his back and he won. look at trudeau. if you look at the gdp for trudeau and america, it has separated. there is no wonder he has sunk like a stone when it comes to his popularity. the other thing i think about is richard nixon, they said he had that madman theory. this is sort of this, as well. there's no way anybody would actually be talking about america buying greenland or canada or changing the name of the gulf of mexico to the gulf of america if trump didn't have the wind at his back. in all these other countries are going, is he serious? are being asked? and are keeping everyone on their toes. it reminds me of one quick story about david remnick, a writer for the new yorker. he had an opportunity to meet these north koreans who worked at the u.n. but they had to stay in a little office, and they're supposed to report back every day. so the reporter got granted access to go and do this interview. he was going to go to north korea, maybe get to see the leader. but the whole time during the
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interview the only thing these north korean diplomats did was say, what do you think trump means? when he says this, what does this mean? because they didn't know how to translate it back to the reader they thought they might get executed. >> greg: zelenskyy says that when he talks with trump, other world leaders will ask him what trump said. and that nobody ever does that with anybody else he talks too. joe biden also has the wind at his back, but that's from the fiber. [laughter] >> dana: it's really good for you. >> greg: try it, kids. ahead, the zuck does a rebrand that doesn't suck. facebook getting rid of fact-checkers. ♪ ♪ can neuriva support your brain health? mary. janet. hey! eddie. no! fraser. frank. frank. fred. how are you?
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: donald trump's blowout victory was also a big victory for free speech. mark zuckerberg says the days of censorship are over at facebook. meta will end its fact-checking program that silenced conservative voices, instead borrowing a page from elon musk and ex-style community notes and rely on facebook users to correct posts. >> we tried in good faith to address those concerns about becoming the arbiters of truth. but the fact-checkers have just been too politically biased and have destroyed more trust than they have created, especially in the last periods over the next couple of months, we are going to phase in a more comprehensive community note system. it's gone too far. >> jesse: president-elect trump is thrilled by the news of facebook standing for his free speech.
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>> i think they have come a long way, meta. facebook. i think they've come a long way. it was very impressive. >> do you think they've directly responded to the threats he made in the past? >> probably. >> jesse: meta is also improving ties with trump by tapping his ally and ufc ceo dana white to join its board. and fox & friends getting an interview with the global affairs officer who praises trump's commitment to free speech. watch. >> we've got a new administration and a new president coming in. we are big defenders of free expression. that makes a difference. when you have a u.s. president administration is pushing for censorship, it just makes it open season for other governments around the world they don't even have the protections of the first amendment to really put pressure on u.s. companies. >> jesse: what do you think is going on here? >> dana: i believe this is mark zuckerberg getting back to his roots and what he actually really believes and not listening to people inside the company who are on the board or
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whoever it was, trying to push them into a different direction. i think that he does believe in free speech and that they got so wrapped around the axle and they were really slow and timid to do with, and then it got to be entirely too much. and all they were doing was basically taking the complaints all day long from covid and trans and what her issue. another saying, you got to respect that elon musk is to get out community notes works really well for x, and that people want more free speech. mark zuckerberg certainly knows that donald trump won the election decisively, and i think this is a way for him to say, okay, i'm getting back to what i actually truly believe and what i want to do. plus, they want to be on the right side of where the country is going. there's a little bit of people saying, well, facebook or meta has a big case in front of the government in april, maybe that's why they're doing it. i don't think so. i think they were tired of getting all these complaints
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that he wants to get back to doing this. they don't want to be all things to all people, and often corporate america is very timid, and donald trump is showing them that they don't have to be. >> jesse: if donald trump and kamala harris would be president-elect, would he be doing it? >> greg: absolutely not. this is the trump effect. dana white is on the board. he's friends with zuckerberg but this never would have happened if it wasn't for trump. then you have a new version of community notes, it wouldn't have happened if it wasn't for trump and musk. it feels like -- what do you call it, harold? animal spirits? it is economic. when animal spirits are high, people are more likely to be optimistic, spend, invest, make decisions. it comes from the latin phrase, jesse, the breath that it weakens the human mind. i feel like we are in a shared moment where a country as a whole, a shared moment went from
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wanting to deciding. so you see all these things happen, and it doesn't feel like a coincidence. i learned something. it took me 5-6 years to learn it. the trump effect is a two-way street. what were supporters expected to do for trump as a supporter in 2015 and on? you had to defend and explain him. and it was a lot of work, because the tweeting and stuff. but what did you get in return? what did you hope in return? this is the payoff, the reciprocity. he is the conduit for your wants and desires. all that explaining and defending, you end up with the return. this is the return. you're seeing all these things happen. again, compare that to this cardboard corpse who is commuting terrorists and murderers. >> jesse: maybe you learn how to change a diaper faster. >> greg: i changed one last night. yes, i did. i was shamed into it.
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i didn't say it was my baby's, though. [laughter] >> jesse: you sicko. let's not go ahead, rosanna. >> rosanna: i disagree a little bit with dana. >> greg: you can't do that when you just a guest. >> rosanna: am i not allowed to do that? >> greg: who do you think you are? >> dana: what do you think this is, facebook? >> rosanna: i saw the rules and regulations, i thought there was room to do this! i feel like mark zuckerberg needs to stay alive for the next four years. he didn't know what else to do. he went to mar-a-lago. he kissed the ring. he donated a million dollars to the inauguration coming up. but listen, you cannot forget those moments with dana white walking with donald trump into those wrestling events. it took your breath away to see everybody there cheering on dana and donald trump. mark zuckerberg wants in. he's not a fool. he wants meta to stay alive for the next four years. you don't know what the trump effect could be.
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>> jesse: harold, do you dare disagree with dana? [laughter] >> harold: rosanna's a brave woman. [laughter] i think a couple things. this is a long history of business leaders, when you have any president or new leadership in congress. i remember in '94 when newt gingrich and republicans gained control of the majority. it was a long time coming and they were business leaders who went to see him. this is not unlike anything else. i think the tech community, the most dominant way think about our stock market, they're not the biggest employers necessarily but they are the drivers of so much growth and innovation. so it makes a lot of sense. i would differ -- i think dana white is uniquely qualified. i'm going to go out on a limb here. some people are talking about dei. this is not a d j t appointee. this guy is qualified for this board for so many reasons, and he will be a great addition. did he probably get a better look because trump is president? probably so.
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finally, i hope that the president -- i watched the press conference today and i was pleased with the $20 billion investment, other investment announcements. i hope that cities and mayors and governors are thinking about how to position their hiring and budget and posturing inner cities to track some of this. the meta stuff is very important, no doubt about it, but prices, border, culture, that's why the president won. that's what people are looking for. i hope the president -- when he don't make these next 13-14 days go by, i hope he gets to that. that is where the engine will rise up a bit and the rubber will meet the road in terms of what people are expecting. >> rosanna: did you see that analogy? >> harold: djt, dei. >> harold: i have three at home. >> jesse: sock stands united in support of the victims and
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families impacted by the terrort attack in new orleans. you can help by donating at go.foxforward/nola. james carville with some common sense on why they lost. ♪ ♪
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blood pressure support soft chews. today. look at 'em, streaming directv without a satellite dish. did you see how fast that guy found the game — he hardly struggled at all! every day is a struggle for us pigeons... and he's flipping through channels faster than a falcon! ya know, i dated a falcon once. ♪ ♪ >> dana: longtime democratic strategist james carville is raging against what he calls npr language that members of his party use as he once again evaluates why kamala harris l lost. >> don't talk in that jargonistic language. if you remember when i said "the economy, stupid," i was talking to all the geniuses in the campaign and telling them who were all educated and smarter than i was, don't be too smart,
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here. let's be authentic and to the point. don't use that idiotic npr jargon when you're talking to voters. >> dana: but those lessons are lost on some folks in liberal hollywood. bill maher and actor jon cryer getting into a heated debate over how lokesque cost election. >> the trans people in my life feel at this point really frightened. not only was this the average cycle of this particular election targeting them -- >> i see no reason why the democrats shouldn't have blown it. >> again -- >> you can blame them all you want. >> i believe there is a worldwide reaction to the inflation bump after covid. >> you keep telling yourself and you lose the next one, too.
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>> dana: a couple people trying to tell it like it is. >> greg: again, trump effect. all. all of a sudden it's okay to say what you think, see, and feel, and not pair it with people told you. both of these guys, james carville and bill maher, they did predict trump would lose and kamala would win. i believe they were saying what they were told as opposed to what they saw. they put too much faith in their political allies even though it ran counter to their own common sense. it's kind of weird, because you seeing this everywhere. it is weird that the mass rape story is now suddenly everywhere. it's been around for ten years, but it's everywhere. it's almost as if people aren't scared anymore of talking about things. the trump effect is simple, the freedom to believe what you see as opposed to what people tell you. no, a man cannot be a woman. kamala harris, not qualified to run. the biden, cognitively a rack. the streets aren't safe, the border is a security threat.
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before, if he said that, the media would have done something to you. they would have put you in the pro-trump camp, and that was really scary for people, especially celebrities. so that fear no longer carries weight. because who's been proven right? now people are saying things they normally wouldn't have said. by the way, james carville looks like a turtle that left his shell somewhere in the beach. >> dana: but he's out there. harold, james carville has had things similar to you. you say that more elegantly. >> harold: he says that more effectively. >> dana: well, i don't know that's true, because he didn't listen to them. the democrats listening to him now? >> harold: i hope so. i think bill maher said it best. i think that's pal on a youtube show with him. if you don't listen to this you lose again. the house, the senate, the white house, this win was pretty major. you think about 1980, the wins
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that republicans had paid even with reagan, they didn't get -- they didn't keep the chambers. this one here was significant because the cultural issues were really important and democrats didn't want to acknowledge it. that doesn't mean that we are wrong, it means you got to listen to voters. i said yesterday when we were talking about the fella at the mta, he seems like a nice and well-intentioned guy, he can't tell people about the subways and say that things are safe when people are saying things and hearing things that are diametrically opposed to that. we've got to make it safe. in this instance here, our message didn't resonate with people. that commercial on transgender procedures was as powerful a commercial that president trump ran throughout the campaign. friends of mine said it was not a powerful commercial, but it was not a good thing. it may not have been, but it was powerful and effective. so i hope people are listening to him. i like how he says it. idiotic npr jargon. i don't know if it's necessarily
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the right way to talk about it, but i know exactly what he's saying and i hope my party listens. >> dana: i thought it was interesting that james carville chose to hit npr and it wasn't us. like, you guys actually have a problem here. >> rosanna: i think he's looking in the mirror and really feeling what went wrong. he's exploring what went wrong. a lot of democrats are still in la-la land, not facing the facts. the fact that he is talking about the economy, we all know when we went into the supermarket how much things cost. eggs, bread. forget about bounty. i'm still confused. four towels equal eight? i have no understanding of how that really works anymore. but donald trump, from the very beginning, he embraced everything. even hanging out at the fast food restaurants, whether it was on the line giving out food, whether it was hugging the people behind the counter, eating mcdonald's, he embraced the average man. he looks like he had his finger on the pulse.
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even the other day at the golden globe awards, nikki glaser, a very funny comedian who was the host, she looked at this roomful of celebrities, probably a roomful of democrats, and said to them basically, you are famous, talented, and powerful. you can do anything except tell the country how to vote. >> dana: yeah, nobody listen. jesse, at some points the democrats will find their footing. but it feels like it could be a long time. >> jesse: god, i hope it's a long time. newt predicted 12 years, and pbd predicted 12. i'm surprised, the one person you don't know. you said something really poignant, to use some npr jargon. harold is so elegant and carville is effective. that's the difference. you can be elegant when you speak. lord knows i can be elegant. you said you are so elegant and
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you go, carville is effective. i'd rather be effective. that's the point. in politics, you don't want to be too elegant. when you are so elegant, you trying to impress somebody else. >> harold: you will never have this problem. [laughter] >> jesse: i could have that problem, but i choose not to, harold. i'll have you know, i grew up in the streets of philadelphia. i know how to talk like a regular person. and everybody knows that. i've been raised by people with master's degrees and doctorates and went to a very prestigious schools, and i'll have you know that my library has a lot of fine leather bound books, some of which i have read. [laughter] >> greg: what street did you go up on in philadelphia? it. >> jesse: i'm not going to disclose that. >> dana: he said the streets of philadelphia! >> jesse: prove me wrong! >> dana: we will see. tomorrow night on "the five" we will have it for you. coming up, a self-driving
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they didn't charge him for the car, okay? they are blaming a looping tech issue that has now been addressed by the software update. dana, i'm just wondering, are you leaning into the self-driving cars? >> dana: and excited about the future of it. i'm not excited about the right now of it. i do wish it had been greg gutfeld in the car, because the story would have been so great. >> greg: i'm actually driving the car. you just can't see me. [laughter] >> rosanna: harold, i'm wondering, who do you think might be a better driver? waymo, jesse, or greg? >> harold: we can talk about it during the break. can you imagine if greg and the judge had been in that car? >> dana: that would have been a good one, too. >> harold: this is what i can't wrap my head around. there's no way and the world i would get into a driverless car. i say this to my wife and kids and they think i'm nuts. this is just one example. first off, i love driving. i love being able to talk to someone. if i'm in a car in someone's driving, i love being able to talk to them. then you have an issue like
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this, can you imagine being worried about getting hacked by china and north korea? they said this was a looping issue. now they want flying taxis. can you imagine? >> rosanna: not in new york city, please. >> harold: nothing against taxi drivers, i can't imagine them flying up and down sixth avenue and fifth avenue to take anybody home. not my thing. i am for people driving. >> rosanna: greg, the data is this is safer than humans driving. >> greg: the latest data has self-driving cars ten times safer than human drivers. that is a reduction of 90% and physical injury, harold. so i'm going to cure you of your resistance. >> harold: please. >> greg: imagine 120 years ago we had the internet. cable news, instagram, tiktok, x. the automobile industry was coming out paid every 30 seconds he would see an atrocity. there's like 50,000 deaths, maybe 70,000 deaths every year, and these are new deaths. these are deaths people haven't seen before. think about 1925, being a cop or
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in the fire brigade, coming across a car accident for the first time. you probably never saw anything like this unless you are in war or maybe working on a farm and uncle steve falls into the thresher. i'm telling you, it's like you would see body parts, you would see dismemberment. and yet, the automotive industry exploded while all this carnage was going on. and why? it took off before the internet was invented beer there are no visual stories, no reels, nothing. my point is self-driving cars will be the future and we will like it just like we like seat belts. it'll save tens of thousands of american lives and probably, globally, millions more. but if we let videos like this freaking out, it's not going to happen pay think about it, could you imagine -- doesn't it kind of blow your mind? we were driving around 1 ton metal objects with no seat belts on roads that weren't even, and
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people were just destroyed, and we kept doing it. because there was no tiktok. >> harold: my only answer, you didn't have that many cars on the road that many years ago. now you have more and more cars on the road and more and more drivers so it becomes more common fit i don't disagree with your assertion. i may be old-fashioned and perhaps have to be dragged into the future on the of the types of videos certainly affect me. he couldn't even get out of the car. >> dana: i like it there's no one to talk to. >> rosanna: he can't even get into the front seat and try to stop this. >> jesse: look at it this way. if the cops pull that car over, he's in the back, man. [laughter] look at it a little bit differently pray that's one way to look at it. he was late at night and i was driving myself home, from a very distinguished event. i was delivering to very well healed patrons. all the sudden a deer wanders across the car. what do i do?
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i don't slam on the brakes like a robot. i deftly come with dexterity, maneuver the car around, knowing it is a deer, and try not to hit bambi in front of my young children. a machine driven car could not have done that. it takes the human touch. some people say i have the greatest touch. some people also say i have no touch at all and i can't swing a golf club. those people have played golf with me. [laughter] >> rosanna: you digress, but i get what you're saying. >> dana: but the car can maneuver. >> jesse: they don't know it is a deer. they just see an object. >> dana: they know it is something. >> jesse: is it a human, is it a stick, is it a deer? you have to have human cognition to understand. not to stand on the brakes and maneuver around it. >> greg: you're driving down a winding road with a family and there's a pedestrian who walks out. should the carbon over the pedestrian or go off the road and kill your whole family? >> jesse: is the pedestrian is you, we run him over. >> rosanna: on that note, the
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>> harold: well, it's the office practice that drives our dear friend dp bonkers. all those "let's circle back in the new year" tasks have somehow become due and inbox have become bombarded with questions we've put off. do you really need to get everything done in the first week back? dp, how do you handle this? >> dana: i think what happened is the producers heard me complain a little bit. i know what it's like, starting in early november, people will say things like, "let's do that after the holidays." that's fine. but you don't have to do everything on the monday after the holiday. i don't need to know that you are applying to an internship so you need me to put your name in. i don't need to know that you have a new book deal that you wanted to try to help you get. >> rosanna: that sounds personal. >> dana: and that was more than one person, by the way. if you want people's attention, just be a little mindful that
quote
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the monday is not the best time. and it's not just office stuff. how about all these people who have moved away? >> greg: i hate them. >> dana: because they went to live in better tax places, and what do they say? >> greg: "can i stay with you?" >> dana: "any some states when you can come visit." now have and everything on my to do this because i have to look at my calendar and look for dates, and i don't have any! >> harold: jesse, how do you feel about it? >> jesse: dana has made me feel bad because nobody's asking me anything. nobody asked me to come visit, no one is asking help, book deal. god, i just feel so insecure sitting next to you. >> dana: maybe i need to be more like he was a people don't ask me. >> jesse: aloof, standoffish, standoffish >> rosanna: will have a holiday hangover. i think you need to set boundaries. >> dana: oh, i do. i do.
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i just did. >> rosanna: give some dates when you want to get back into the swing of things. it's like a new year's resolution. one thing a month. >> dana: i like it. i'm going to work on it. >> harold: greg, you look like you have a lot of people asking you to do things. how do you manage the bombardment of influx you get there? >> greg: i solve it the moment it happens. when somebody says that, i go, let's do it right now. where are you? 170 because you and wants to get together, say "i'm free right now. i can meet you. where are you?" "i'd like to get prepared --" no, no, no. we have to do it now. "i can't wait to see you! i must see you now ask not" and then they freak out and it's on them. and they'll go, "can i get back to you?" "you have to get back to me. yet 48 hours." >> dana: that's a good idea. a lot of things done my people ask for mentoring. i want to be the mentor in
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chief. the thing is, like hemmer says, you did write a book on it. i wrote a book on it because anything you ask me about is in the book. >> rosanna: so read it. >> dana: exactly paid i can do because at 7:30 a.m. >> greg: that the other thing. always arrange -- they want to talk, pick the worst possible time. >> dana: right before lunch. >> greg: and then just make it torture. >> dana: or call for a meeting at 5:50 p.m. >> harold: these are examples of us being wonderful people. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ here's to getting better with age. here's to beating these two every thursday. help fuel today with boost high protein, complete nutrition you need, and the flavor you love. so, here's to now... now available: boost max!
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♪ >> greg: go. >> jesse: sean hannity like you have never seen him before. that's right. sitting down with news makers, celebrities from the world of entertainment, politics. beyond. new fox nation show sean.
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this week sean's long time friend stephen a. smith not to be confused with stephen smith. talks about show to upcoming career and wellness journey. interesting phrase tonight, "jesse watters primetime," doug ford, the premier of ontario says he doesn't want us to buy him but i'm going to give him an arthur he can't refuse. >> dana: i went to argentina. two hours went into a wine shop the this guy juan felix owns the store. 10-minute conversation he says are you who i think you are? he watches "the five" every day. always watches "the five." we salute you juan felix. thanks for watching. also perino on politics with collin reed. >> greg: sounds like the beginning of a hallmark. i'm in argentina celebrity trying to get away this man. >> dana: he says i even like
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jessica. >> jesse: oh. [laughter] >> greg: tonight, compagno. kat timpf, tyrus. all new for you. let's do this: in your face, harold. all right. my favorite, harold, sorry. it's back. the little frenchie that was having problems, he was the rescued frenchie. he had no hair for a while and then a foster family. he is a hairless frenchie but not by choice, unlike you, harold. [laughter] that is a real hero, harold. back to you. you got 15 seconds. >> harold: ricky pair sell the 49ers receive got shot before the season started forgives shooter, doesn't judge this guy. you got to watch this thing on twitter and x to preach the it. god bless him. >> judge jeanine: he got shot? >> greg: what are they talking about? that's it for us have. great night. hi, bret. >> bret: hi, greg. i even like jessica. >> greg: so do

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