tv The Five FOX News January 10, 2025 2:00pm-3:00pm PST
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again? >> yeah, so there is a list of things that i would like the city to do. one of them is the california fair plan only offers insurance for properties up to $3 million, so for most of the homes that burnt down in the palisades, they were never able to get california insurance. >> trace: yeah, altadena, f got to go. thank you so much for your analysis, we appreciate your time. that's it for us. i will see you back here on "fox news at night, we are going to go over all of this, brand-new information, brand-new guests. meantime, we are here in pacific palisades. it looks the same over at the eaton fire in pasadena and altadena. say a prayer for these people. we will see you back on "fox news @ night." ♪ ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody.
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i'm jesse watters, molly kayleigh mcenany, harold ford jr., sandra smith, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ more stupidity and stunning incompetence from california's democrat leaders as five devastating wildfires ravaged los angeles for a fourth day. officials somehow finding new ways to make the situation worse after a laundry list of blunders. from l.a. mayor karen bass, skipping town to africa despite knowing her town would burn, to greasy gavin newsom faking a phone call with biden when confronted over wi-fi or hydrants were running out of water. >> harold: need to now calling for an investigation into the water pressure loss. you should also look into this disturbing report from the "l.a. times" that claims a major pacific palisades reservoir was off-line and empty when the fires broke out. the last thing people in l.a. needed was a false panic. but thousands of their phone started buzzing last night with
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this emergency evacuation alert. turns out it was an error. and meant for people in a different fire warning zone. top officials than acting totally clueless on how it happened, and like kamala, they promised to find out the root causes. watch. >> i want to clarify. this is not human-driven. there is no one sitting at a desk right now initiating emergency alerts. as these alerts are being issued, they are not being activated or initiated by a person. we have every technical specialist working to resolve this issue and to find the root cause. >> jesse: and after that screw up, gavin newsom had the gall to lecture people about misinformation. >> i ask you, we've got to deal with this miss information. their hurricane-force winds of myths and disinformation. people want to divide this country. we have to address that, as
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well, and it breaks my heart, as people are suffering and struggling. >> jesse: end of californians were traumatized enough by all of this, marauding kings of scooter looters taking advantage. one l.a. resident claims 100 people on scooters are ransacking and losing homes. the national california guard on the ground. and a curfew at 6:00 local time. kayleigh, just when you think it can't get any worse, they are scaring the crap out of people with these emergency evacuation order. what if this thing might offer the entire county. >> kayleigh: it went off apparently once and then it went off again and again for many people according to reports, and people don't know who to trust and at this point how can you trust the government? in, we have learned the modus operandi of democrats, and what is that?
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deborah responsibility. gavin newsom asked by cooper two days ago while the fire hydrants running dry? i will ask a local official. could you imagine desantis doing that in a hurricane? gavin newsom just differs. i'm demanding answers. you are the leader of california. you are the chief executive. then he goes on with biden and talks about misinformation. this blew my mind. i remembered "the washington post" story that came about a week ago. de want to know biden's biggest regret? not afghanistan, not inflation, not all of his failures, it is not combating misinformation, the same line they used after hurricane helene when he sat there with kamala harris after their failed response and he said misinformation, disinformation. that is the same playbook. say misinformation. hard truth, progressive leadership fails during times of crisis. east palestine,
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hurricane helene, this wildfire. >> jesse: now scooter looters, sandra. to think they can do anything about that when they have this on their hands, it's ludicrous. >> sandra: this is crazy. there are people dead, okay, they are displaced, they are distraught. there are two major images that stood out to me covering this for hours and hours and hours this week coming up two of them were from today. the video that we played of gavin newsom standing in his aviators taking it from that resident come asking him, governor, why are the fire hydrants empty? why were the empty? why were we know more prepared, knowing that these wins were predicted? and then there was the wheelchair that was abandoned along the side of the sidewalk and you think about that, think about whoever was taking care of that person or wherever that person was living, they got bad evacuation orders or no evacuation orders at all, nobody led them to know or understand that this was predicted, that there could be danger coming your way, and that of course the failed response to the fires. those images are going to stick -- perry weiss was with
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martha at the top of the 3:00 hour and martha simply asked her what she was thinking, there is no way gavin newsom can run for president come at this point. obviously these have been his ambitions, but to point to the local officials for the problems that those residents are having on the ground right now when he is the governor of the state is a huge problem for californians. >> jesse: harold, you know a lot of people out in california. are they proud of their government? >> harold: it's good to be with you. i think people are deeply concerned. the take on whether it is democrat or republican, i don't subscribe to quite as much, but i do subscribe to this has been a failure in many ways. on the part of leaders. i think two things, three things. you are always going to have those who want to real-time say the accountability and meeting notes and blame, and that is fine. if you are serious about being elected official and an emergency official in these moments, there are two things you do every time you stand
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before the public the two or three times a day you do it. the first is you are forthright and candid. two come in a situation like this, we are running on the bottom of the screen showing this throughout the day how contained these fires are across the los angeles area. the leadership there in los angeles ought to be sharing that with us, as well, and sharing everything that the fire department is doing, everything that emergency officials are doing to give people confidence that their elected officials and leaders are working to do things, even when information is bad, you have to share with people in cities of the things we're doing to correct it. two, they are all of the resources that people have and where people can find -- where they can find support, where they can find help. greg, we laugh and we are very serious in the last day or so about what people can stay and greg was serious about asking come are people opening their homes, these are the kinds of things that i think residents are looking for and leaders are looking for. the real-time accountability, except it. it is worse when elected
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officials try to divert planum or for that matter try to amplify something that may make themselves look better during a time of crisis like this. the only focus should be on people and meeting the needs of people during an incredible, incredibly devastating time. now i also don't blame -- i think the wind speed got up to higher levels than they thought, but they've got to assure people even over the next several days that they are able to protect and defend people and take care of people because the winds are forecasted to pick up over the next several days, and that is what i am not hearing from the leaders there on the ground. >> jesse: yeah, i think we are all struck by how enormous this is an it gets worse and worse, greg. >> greg: it's a catastrophe, and there is nothing worse than people who exploit it, except for the scooter looters because i read they are just looking for bread. because they are hungry. i think it is sad, it is laughable when leaders say if you loot, you will be arrested, the mobs that were reading department stores. don't you think looters kind of
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factor into their life choices the chance of arrest? that's part of the game, especially when the word illegal no longer means anything. what a leader has to say is if you'd, we will shoot you. we will shoot you. and we might come back and pick you up. we are in the midst of a crisp catastrophe, suspends your usual compassion for criminals. shoot them, hang them, show the criminals that this will not be tolerated. that's how it's done. you know, kayleigh brought this up, in a crisis, democrats, the modern democrat seems to be useless because when there is no crisis, they don't prepare for a crisis. instead they spent eight years on silliness. for eight years they had their hair on fire about nonexistent threats. trump, climate change, transphobia. and when you have a real fire, when your hair is really on fire, i'm off to gone or i am
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faking a phone call with the president. you think about these alarms, do you think there will be any accountability for that? you cannot hold people accountable when everybody is incompetent. there is a crisis of competence in this country. it is not just l.a. it is new york city with crime, new orleans with terror, san francisco, los angeles. and they all have something in common. they replaced real priorities with phony ones. you know, which is, again, fine in a noncrisis world, you can do that stuff. but when a crisis hit, everybody gets -- everybody gets punished because you are in incompetent. when they say it is dei -- when i say it is dei, let's say i say it is dei -- it's not my fault. you know, i can blame the policy because you put the policy forward. you put it into my head. you posted about it. you talked about equity and inclusion until you were blue in the face. and now when incompetence comes into question after pushing it
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so openly, it's our fault they had that thought in our head? dei is credibility ozempic. you know when you see an overweight friend? suddenly they lose a ton of weight. do you attribute it to a gym routine or a low-carb diet? no, you go, that person is on ozempic. now you may be wrong. but because ozempic is everywhere and talked about, you assume it is ozempic. the same with diversity hires. you see an incompetent minority in a leadership position, you think dei hire because that is what was sold to you. and it is unfair to that leader because that leader might actually have the qualif qualifications. they might have done it the hard way. but you don't know that because of dei. the difference between dei and ozempic is at least ozempic works. >> jesse: well said, greg. >> greg: in your face, harold! >> jesse: and those scooter
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looters better watch out. >> greg: shoot them! >> jesse: join fox's support of those impacted by the wildfires. your donation helps the red cross enable people to recover from this disaster. visit go.foxforward/redcross to help. up next, president trump in his sham sentencing here in new york. ♪ ♪ on medicare? living with diabetes? progress is having your coffee like you like it without an audience. ♪ [silence] the freestyle libre 3 plus sensor can help lower your a1c over time. covered by medicare for more people managing diabetes with insulin. ♪ this is progress. ask your doctor about the freestyle libre 3 plus sensor. ♪
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an end to the yearslong taxpayer-funded case brought by manhattan d.a. alvin bragg and after being under a gag order the entire case, the incoming president finally got his chance to speak his mind in court today. watch. >> it's been a political witch hunt. it was done to damage my reputation so that i would lose the election. i think it is an embarrassment to new york and new york has a lot of problems, but this is a great embarrassment. doj is very much involved in this case because it is the political opponent they are talking about. i won the election in a massive landslide and the people of this country understand what has gone on. this is benny weaponization of government. >> sandra: juan merchan went on to say trump's trial was no different than all of the other criminal trials in the building while indulging the fact that trump won the presidency and how it is in fact different. he also wished the president-elect could lock on his second term. take a look. >> at this time, i impose that
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sentence to cover all 34 counts. sir, i wish you godspeed as you assumed second term in office. >> sandra: so jesse, the president-elect called tremendous setback for the american court system. what say you? >> jesse: that judge's voice is exactly how i thought it was going to be. and everybody knows exactly what i'm talking about. and if he wished me good luck, godspeed come i would say i don't need it. what a phony thing to say after you put this guy through this. i'm having a hard time focusing right now because of greg's shirt. he looks like a beautiful little lamb. >> greg: i feel like one. >> jesse: i want to stroke him -- not him, the shirt come and we are going to get the name of the company afterwards so i can buy six of them because on sunday you rest. now he is a convict -- donald trump come in some states, can't vote. he can't own a weapon. so a two-term u.s. president has
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less rights than most of the other people in this country. all because he put on a drop-down on a computer legal expense when he paid a lawyer to have a woman sign an nda. this is a travesty that you get no jail for 34 felony's. ridiculous. >> sandra: kayleigh, the president-elect said the people saw this trial first-hand. he went on to say they have been watching your trial and they voted decisively. >> kayleigh: that was the line of the entire sentencing. 77 million people plus voted on president trump, won all seven swing states, more raw votes total of any republic and president in terms of raw count than anyone in history of republicans. there was the american people who watch this, they thought it was a sham and thought . today was the last vestige of lawfare, the final nail in the coffin at all because it was a talking point sentencing. they just wanted to be able to
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say convicted felon ahead of inauguration day. cnn rode a brilliant piece in "new york" magazine, and he laid out what was wrong all of this, a judge, this judge donated $35 to a pro-biden group, not only that he earmarked it to resisting the r. the d.a. ran on the fact that i assume donald trump. you have a politically motivated d.a., politically motivated judge, resurrecting a zombie case. this isn't a zombie case, it is a frankenstein case because it turned on its creator, and that is what we saw on november 5th, 2024. it turned. >> sandra: greg, what did you think of the judge wishing the president-elect godspeed in his second term? >> greg: i don't know. trump is a convicted felon. just like nelson mandela. bill gates. justin bieber. martha stewart.
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>> jesse: what did bill gates do? >> greg: driving without a license in the '70s. he was arrested twice. dana perino killed a drifter in the '80s. we don't care! this is like the end of "die hard" after bruce willis saves the day, and there is that reporter twerp, remember he runs up to get one more, you know, jabbed at the hero, and bruce's wife comes up and decks him. trump wins and this was like the extra seen. you are still here? in your face, judge! they kicked him in the balls, but they don't have any. they could have listened to us. why am i mopped at airports, jesse? because i'm a bad boy and america loves bad boys. trump's enemies elevated him to legendary bad boy status, created a pirate ship, a political version of the 1979 oakland raiders, a motley but effective gang of action heroes,
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emphasis on action, not on words. think america cares of the captain of the ship is called a felon by some bloated managerial? no, they embrace it, they would walk a plank for the guy, the public is so ready for this they went from wanting to deciding, please bring back the adults, who cares if he banged a porn star? so be it. sure beats willie brown. by the way, there were no victims when it comes to whatever they were charging him with. in fact, everybody lies about sex, including larry kudlow, still denies that one weekend we shared in monaco. >> sandra: harold, do you see this as any other way than unfair treatment? >> harold: oh, my gosh. just listening to my friends take on this peered. >> sandra: trying to move on. >> greg: if you are thinking about kudlow. >> jesse: thought you were exclusive. >> sandra: we all are. >> harold: two things. this decision for the sentencing was appealed by president trump
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to the supreme court. the supreme court in a 5-4 decision said the process will move forward, including john roberts and amy coney barrett siding with the majority. it was a one-page decision. two, i thought president trump's reaction to that decision was pretty remarkable. i thought he showed incredible restraint, and i think showed the comp confidence of someone o believes all of this will be overturned on appeal's. i'm sure he does not want to be sworn in with this hanging over him, but our process works, and if you believe andy mccarthy, jonathan turley, and some of the other great legal experts, including shannon bream, on our network, so many reversible errors, the president will see this reversed. i thought his restraint was the right kind of restraint. i actually give the judge merchan come i take people what they say. i believe that he is honest. weird way to wish him godspeed, but wish him godspeed. >> jesse: i would reject it, catch it and throw it down and
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then do something which would cause a pixel is asian on zoom. >> greg: what is the origin of godspeed? >> kayleigh: ask juan merchan. >> harold: is not that other thing you were saying earlier. [laughter] >> sandra: okay. [laughter] thank you for that. coming up, john fetterman is mar-a-lago-bound to meet with president-elect trump. could it spark a new trend among democrats? ♪ ♪ progressive makes it easy to see if you can save money with a commercial auto quote online so you can get back to your monster to-do list. super helpful. see if you can save money at progressivecommercial.com. thank you. what the biggest companies deliver is an exceptional customer experience. what makes it possible is unmatched connectivity and 5g solutions from t-mobile for business. t-mobile connects 100,000 delta airlines employees,
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his return. that would be huge. could john fetterman is at least willing to hear out what those s are. the pennsylvania democratic senator accepted an invitation to mar-a-lago to meet with president trump and to find out what areas of common ground they can work on. well, fetterman's even joking that there's a position he wants in the administration. >> what do you plan on talking about with the president-elect? >> i am asking to be named the pope of greenland. [laughter] >> do you have a specific -- >> just having a conversation. this is going to be the president, and i am not just the senator for democrats in pennsylvania. i am a senator for everyone in pennsylvania. and my state picked donald trump as president, and if i have the opportunity to have that conversation, i bet we are going to find things to work together for a better pennsylvania and a better nation, and that is why i am engaging in this. >> kayleigh: well, good for him. so could fetterman's meeting signal to other democrats that
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it is okay to ditch their trump derangement syndrome? i mean, how bad can he really be when he and former president obama appeared to be hitting it off while sitting next to one another jimmy carter's funeral. everyone was curious to know what exactly they were talking about, and here's what trump said. >> he did look very friendly, i must say. [laughter] i didn't realize it -- i didn't realize it, how friendly it looked. i saw it on your wonderful network just a little while ago before i came in and i said boy, they look like to people that like each other. >> kayleigh: so i was mesmerized watching this interaction because it went on for quite some time. they were laughing. they look like boys. what was interesting, jesse, i want to play this quickly, this is what obama said just about a month, two months, maybe three ago. >> general john kelly, donald trump's former chief of staff, said that trump told him he wanted his generals to be
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like hitler's generals. now, don't boo. vote! now i want to explain that in politics a good rule of thumb is don't say you want to do anything like hitler. >> kayleigh: hitler wasn't so bad. >> jesse: it's all politics. everybody knows it is all politics, and that is the game. donald trump can't not talk, so he at a funeral, probably the longest time he has ever gone without saying anything, who you put next to him, he is going to talk to you, and michelle is not happy about that conversation, sources in hawaii say she is livid, but what are you going to do? they are both former president, both two-termers at this point and they share a lot of commonality, it is fine come everybody relax, everyone should be like fetterman. fetterman has the kind of sentimentality that they used to have, you know, going to represent your state, meet the president, get things done for our state, who cares about the party? they have broken the fever,
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kayleigh. schumer has lost all control over his caucus. how many democrats voted for the laken riley act? a year ago they said they are going to vote for detaining and deporting people that steal who are illegals, no way, they would have gone back to their sides. the country is moving forward. big tech, democrats, fetterman is leading the charge. it is a beautiful thing. should have happened a long time ago. >> kayleigh: to that end, there were 3036 democrats that voted for the laken riley act, wait to 48, do you think kyiv's democrats will say let's play ball with this popular president? >> harold: again, this is something that ordinarily happens, whether they are popular or not popular, people want to figure how to get things done. in the sense, president trump has come in with a pretty pigmented with the house and senate, house maintaining a narrow margin for the republicans and senate winning a majority by a couple of seats. i am not surprised by it.
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it was great for the country to see at the funeral for the 39th president come a president who people talk about jimmy carter, for those who don't know a lot about politics in particular, and even those in politics today, probably have a different view of jimmy carter, a negative view of jimmy carter's presidency, and to see all of the living presence there at a time when there is political division in the country and some animosity and some certain back-and-forth, to see probably the two best symbols of the republican and democratic party respectively talking and laughing and seeming to have a light moment and a very serious setting and then to see people talk about president carter -- i hope a lot of people watched it because i felt better about the country and felt better about being an american, just watching the whole two hours as we celebrated the life of the 39th president. >> kayleigh: i like seeing it, but greg, the problem with the cognitive dissidents, joanne meek of brezinski.
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it doesn't make sense to people. >> greg: i can't believe harold said he was happy jimmy carter was dead. by the way, i disagree with you, jesse, and kayleigh brings it up, everybody knows it is politics, no, they were saying this wasn't politics, they were saying this was bigger than politics, this was an existential threat. this had nothing to do with left or right, this was the end of democracy. and now it is like, just kidding. >> jesse: well, they knew. they knew they were selling american people goods. and a lot of their voters -- >> greg: stop interrupting me. this isn't your show, jesse. >> jesse: i'm going to rip this shirt off your body. >> greg: wait until after the show. i think people get red tilled when they see this come i guess trump wasn't so bad. harold was ready couple days ago, it feels like 1980 come in a way, when carter left, reagan came in, you always see this, though, when the country goes through too much liberalism.
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we are a great country. there is no question. but there is only so much leftism we can take. i think republicans, they rely on practical solutions which create a tranquil foundation which then allows the future folly of progressivism to exploit. so how did new york city get bill de blasio? after the incredible unfettered success of giuliani and bloomberg. so what you see is this cycle. the country goes through hell, then republicans pull them out of it, the public and the media forget what hell was like, leftism gets another chance to create hell, they will change the names of it, politically correct movement became the woke movement. i'm hoping trump will nail the coffin lid shot on this cycle because it is a downward cycle, even though when you get back to republican, the iterations get worse and worse. trump has already killed the media. it is incapable of reanimation. the democratic party has to
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amputate this necrotic limb that is woke-is somewhere else that necrotic limb is going to spread to somewhere else, the only way to save their party. >> kayleigh: tandra, trump has big plans, day one, 100 executie orders. that would beat biden's record. >> sandra: the most important thing fetterman said -- there was a moment at the white house correspondents' dinner, people were taking notes, he was talking to everyone, and he was like a star at that party, for those who chose to go. i will say this. he said he is going to meet with trump and he said i'm not just a senator for democrats in my state, i'm a senator to all, and that is important. he said also to his fellow democrats, stop rooting for trump to fail. you are rooting against the nation. this is a leader, okay, and these are words that are important in this time. he also met with trump's
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appointees and nominees, pete hegseth, he publicly backed stefanik for the u.n., marco rubio's confirmation, this is a really important example in this moment. the arrival jimmy carter's service, i watched it twice yesterday because i've up at was an incredible middle school, high school drama, like who snubbed who? who fist pump who? bush, it wasn't a fist pump, a smack on the chest of obama. i think it is healthy to see this. this is good. >> harold: i agree with you. >> kayleigh: it was like "real housewives: presidency version." even democrats are starting to admit biden's presidency was mediocre. the shocking report on biden's tarnished legacy. ♪ ♪ touch can mean so many things. even for people with moderate-to-severe eczema. touch can make two feel like one. or simply be a helping hand.
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>> harold: president biden is about to take a victory lap on the economy with a speech from the white house. he will be delivering a farewell address to the nation next wednesday at 8:00 p.m. this comes as america delivers another brutal review of his legacy. a dimmer viewed then the end of donald trump's first term or barack obama second. only six 2% of americans say joe biden was a great present at the end of his term compared to 17% for trump and 23% for president obama. >> jesse: i think this calls for an "in-your-face, harold." we have been saying it before he was elected, the whole time. you were insisting everything was great, the inflation reduction act and all the other silly things he was spending money on, only reason he got elected was covid, slipped right in there, no one even knows if it was a clean election, gets in and face plants and breaks the
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bank, the border, and everybody is crying do something, help us, and he keeps talking about windmills. the man was a disaster, and then he laughed and pardon his son. the whole party hates him. he is more unpopular than trump was after january 6th. think about that. think about that, harold. >> harold: kayleigh, your reaction to this? >> kayleigh: imagine being president biden. there have been many reports they kept posters away from him. so when you are sitting in the oval office, you are very isolated. the information that was brought to him was not the real polling. one man who came in and kind of summarized it for him. they would keep certain information away from him, so he is walking around thinking i am doing great. his staff is still telling people, historians say i am the 14th best president, and imagine waking up to gallup saying you are tied with richard nixon, who had a negative 42 net approval
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rating, i mean, wake up and smell the roses. you have been lied to. i blame his staff. his staff put him in a cocoon and a dearth of information. wow, to learn you are richard nixon. >> harold: sandra, what are your thoughts on this? do you share jesse's view? >> sandra: i think one of the biggest statistics that was happening right around the election was anytime you asked voters if their family was better off or worse off than they were prior to joe biden taking office, the number was consistently four in ten said their family was somewhat or much worse off than when biden took office. i think you have to go back to the early days of this administration. first ignoring inflation, right, then downplaying, saying it was just the way you feel, and imagine you are the person in your household who goes to the grocery store and you see historic inflation, bread, butter, eggs go up 20%, 30%, 40%, and being told it is just the way you feel.
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people remember that, and it stays with you, and that was brutal. i think -- you see biden, you think about that economy, the economic perils that everyone in this country live through during this presidency and that will stay with him. >> harold: mr. exclamation point, bring it home for us. >> greg: kayleigh brought up a gallup poll, about biden being the least popular president since carter, that really means he is the least liked ever because you are asking people, not historians, so that means it is their lived experience under these presidents. it is not asking historians, who can tell you about millard fillmore's third nipple. these are people that lived in understand. >> jesse: no way! >> greg: that's how he got his nickname. anyway. >> jesse: millard fillmore? >> greg: yes. biden was rated the worst president of our lifetime, which means he is the worst ever,
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which is a beautiful parting gift for james earl carter at the funeral that harold was so glad happened. what's even more amazing, given joe's true infirmary and ineptitude was covered up by 90% of the media, and still he rated this poorly. >> jesse: just like fillmore's. >> greg: exactly, they covered up his nipple. imagine if the press had done their job and reported on the real joe biden, not the fake joe biden. he probably wouldn't be in the poll, wouldn't be elected. but for now, he is clearly the worst president in the history of the united states, and jimmy carter from heaven thanks you. >> harold: five years from now, ten years from now, he will be viewed very differently. i contend much, much better. "fan mail friday" is up next. ♪ ♪
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what would you sell and what would it be called? that's a good idea. what would you sell, kayleigh? >> sandra: probably baby clothes, and i would say diapers but you finally changed a diaper and i'm so proud of him. >> greg: i did change a diaper. you are welcome, kudlow. [laughter] what is your problem, sandra? >> sandra: that's just not funny. [laughter] do you have a question, greg? >> jesse: that was a question. >> greg: yes, i just asked it! >> sandra: breakfast. >> greg: so it would be a diner? >> jesse: and you are on the business channel? >> greg: just have a store that sells breakfast in a box? >> sandra: quick breakfast. i don't think anyone wants to sit down -- >> greg: i don't think -- that's called a 7-eleven. here is your breakfast, and it is in a box. where do you live, sandra?
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>> sandra: don't want mcdonald's but a quick breakfast. healthy. >> jesse: i would sell you. not in a sex trafficking way. i would be your manager. you would be more famous than you already are if that is possible. >> harold: i don't think that is possible. harold question rick. >> harold: a bookstore, i always wanted to. >> sandra: oh, like that. >> harold: i want a bookstore. i would have you there because we would learn american history and teach you things -- >> jesse: like about the third nipple? >> sandra: fillmore, who knew? >> harold: i love a bookstore. >> jesse: does he have a third nipple in his presidential library? >> sandra: they before they buried millard fillmore, they removed the third nipple from his -- >> harold: another question -- >> greg: a jar and you can see it in the national museum of
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famous nipples. open a sort of fuzzy sweaters. drive time for one more? >> jesse: one more! >> greg: who is your favorite celebrity that you have met? no country music stars. harold? >> harold: my favorite celebrity i have met? i don't call him a celebrity, and a young, gave the eulogy from one of my heroes -- >> greg: you are extra boring today. andrew young is not a celebrity! >> harold: in my book he is! >> greg: jesse? >> jesse: dr. jay. >> greg: i thought he was an actual doctor but one of my thinking. >> sandra: kelsey grammer having dinner out in the hamptons once. he came over to the birthday party. it was really fun. >> greg: i have deja vu you actually told the story once before, right? >> sandra: oh. >> jesse: you have a thing.
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>> greg: kayleigh? >> kayleigh: i met bradley cooper when i was a producer on the mike huckabee show. >> jesse: bradley cooper did huckabee? what? >> kayleigh: the mega producer. she got him. >> greg: go do something that we won't talk about. i have met so many famous people, it is hard to pick one. i'm going -- >> sandra: you just can't come up with one? >> greg: i'm going to go with king bozo from the melvin's. >> kayleigh: i don't even know who that is. i met him at hard rock casino at the sex pistols concert ten years ago and we became close friends. isn't that a nice story? >> harold: would you like to come to the bookstore -- >> greg: i would go to your bookstore any day especially if they had a section with a curtain. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ if you take or have taken humira for moderate to severe crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis and still have symptoms...
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>> jesse: time few for one more thing. quick promotion 8:00 tonight we have adam carolla. jillian michaels. tim rollins 8:00 p.m. eastern. g.? >> greg: tonight brand new show it might not -- anyway. charlie hurt, michael loftus, kat timpf, tyrus. that's tonight. let's do this. in your face, harold. check out that little fella not that fella this fellow. rhino iguana. look at that healthier. >> they're vegetarian. >> greg: looks a lot like liz cheney enjoying a big bowl of greens at the reptile zoo because she is also a rino prefers to eat leaves, berries, as the and fruits again like liz
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cheney. [laughter] >> jesse: i'm not even laughing at that. that's in appropriate. >> harold: a section on reptile books. a group of sarasota men has volunteered brain and manpower refurbishing laptops. get together three times a week. they have been able to save 70 tons of technology from landfills and donate to members of their community. thank you, guys, god bless you. what a good use of time by these fellows. >> the hershey bear's minor league team. collect stuffed animals. 100,000 smashing the previous record and raising all time collective number to 500,000. awesome, do you love it? >> quickly? >> i would just say there is a lady in airplane toilet paper watch it for greg gets sucked. in. >> jesse: bye-bye. >> yeah. bye. >> bret: i missed the whole toilet paper thing. all right. jesse, thank you. have a good ween
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