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tv   The Five  FOX News  April 11, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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prepping for events this week that include remarks at a cathedral. we are awaiting details. >> neil: speaking of that trip, liz truss, former prime minister of great britain, will be my guest tomorrow on this show peter get her thoughts on all of that. "the five" is now. ♪ ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody. i'm jesse watters, judge pulley norma jeanine pirro, geraldo rivera, dana perino, and greg gutfeld. 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ hard work is a thing of the past in joe biden's america peered under democrats, we have turned into a bunch of lazy, entitled, snotty nosed brats, except for me, of course. americans are working fewer hours in before the pandemic thanks to a shift in attitudes
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towards work. with more people reevaluating their work-life balance. our next generation of great americans are embracing things like bare minimum mondays, where people just ease into the work week by prioritizing self-care over productivity. they are also quiet quitting, where they just do enough to get five. call me crazy, but it seems like this is the work force you to expect after years of liberal leaders brainwashing people into thinking they deserve everything without lifting a finger. >> it's simply not fair. if you can make a hundred million dollars, go at it. pay your fair share. >> we deserve to be able to retire with dignity and not bankruptcy. >> we can't overlook the role that concentrated corporate power has played in creating the conditions for price gouging. >> the american people know that we are being ripped off. >> jesse: the poor work ethic showing up in gen z. it's forcing bosses all across
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the country to hire seniors instead of workers fresh out of school. companies are now recruiting older americans on the premise that age equals a better employee. >> the phone has to be in their hand. they have to consistently look at it. i'm trying to get them to engage customers, and, you know, just be personable. i think the older population, because cell phones are the newer thing, just they never were brought up with it. it's refreshing. they start at 9:00, they get here i tend to. they leave at five, the stories busy, they will put the extra time in without having to ask. it is something i really wish i explored years ago. >> jesse: okay, dana, i never heard of -- what do they call monday's? to ease work mondays? bare minimum mondays. what is wrong with a little self-care on monday? >> dana: i love mondays. get going. get up and get going. that's me, i'm weird. >> jesse: you're old, dana.
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>> dana: that's true. i read the statistics. i read all the articles. and i still feel like maybe this is not -- i feel like it is overblown. i reached out to several of my friends who are now working in different industries and they are managing younger people and hiring younger people. and they said before the pandemic and after the pandemic, the only thing that has changed a little bit on this front is you have work from home. and that has become a real challenge because it is hard to mentor or to make sure that people are getting the types of opportunities that they might have gotten before the whole phenomenon. they said sometimes you will have great workers and sometimes you don't. the social media issue is one they said they are just going to have to live with because it's not going away. the other thing i believe this younger generation is looking out, which is the government. they want the government to do more. if they want -- they want that cradle to grave sort of socialism that they have in europe, which if you look at the
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cost, look what is happening in france right now. he's trying to ask people to work -- go from 62 to 64 in terms of retirement age, and absolutely freak out. i do think this is a little overblown. however, i am encouraged that there are people who are older, that if they want to work, if they can get hired, i think that is great because they were some of the first to lose their jobs during covid when a lot of companies used that as a reason to downsize. they lost their jobs, and many of them were not ready for retirement yet, and they were digging into their savings, having to maybe move in with family. they didn't want to do that. hire anybody you can that does a lot of hard work. >> jesse: are we becoming france, judge jeanine? >> jeanine: i hope not. i can't imagine americans burning places down because they're asked to hold off retirement until 64, from 62b of a mean, it's really ridiculous. i think we are becoming more like other countries. i think it is starting to level off a little bit.
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you know, the whole idea of generation z, you know, being the laziest of all, and that is it, 19-29, or something like that, there are always exceptions to that. there are always people who are going to be self motivated, self initiated, who make a lot of money, and who just are people who want to work and succeed. one of the most important stats that i saw in this whole thing was that covid changed a lot. people can say it hasn't, but covid has changed a lot, and for workaholics, we, i include myself in that, are working three hours less in terms of, you know, significant difference in terms of hours. high earners decreased their hours by one and a half hours. so, there is like this trend, it is not a movement, but kind of a trend. i think, as with most things, people are starting to find a lifework balance.
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i don't want to hear you want to work from home. because the last person i spoke to who was working from home was at the gym. oh, i signed on this morning but i am at the gym. i mean, that is a bunch of hogwash. i also found it very objectionable the way some of these hearings were conducted. you have bernie sanders and everyone trashing billionaires. and i found it very -- i thought, significant quote fromo owns -- howard schultz, who owns starbucks. moniker of billionaire, let's just get to that, okay? i grew up in federally subsidized housing. my parents never owned a home. i came from nothing. i thought my entire life was based on the achievement of the american dream. yes, i have billions now, but i earned it, no one gave it to me, and i shared constantly with the people of starbucks. i mean, stop trashing these billionaires are somehow they didn't work for what they got. >> jesse: no one gave it to you, geraldo. you had to go out and take it.
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>> geraldo: true, i did take it. as i get older, jesse, now that i approach my 80th year, i think you only live once, and i wonder if, you know, i did too much. too many little silly little worky things, and i could have relaxed, bent on the boat. >> jesse: what do you mean? meetings? >> geraldo: you know, i think the thing about gen z, let's just take the kids for a second, yesterday, you recall, we were talking about the most important, most consequential election, 2023, the supreme court in wisconsin. that election was turned by the kids vote, kids coming out, voting, organizing, so i think that dana is right, it is overblown. this notion, oh, these kids, they can't figure out life. they are lazy. you know, they get left behind. you know, the kids recognizing there is more to life than work, i think maybe we have something to learn from them. >> jesse: greg has a very beautiful work-life balance.
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i admire it. >> greg: that is true. to be when i say that sarcastically. all you do is work. >> greg: that is true. that is true. what else? >> jesse: what else is there? >> greg: i love young people and i am against generalities. i have had the hardest working young people, and i have also had slouches. there is more than one variable of age. we just have this tendency of one generation looking -- this is what is hilarious, right, you always have one older generation that has to look at another one and say, they are different, they're going to hell. welcome if they are going to zaporizhzhia, it is your fault, boomers, right, i blame the boos because they are the ones that trashed any kind of traditional life, whether it was in marriage, whether it was religion, going to church, whether it was having a family, and then all of a sudden you realize, you have nothing to replace it with, so what do you do, you replace it with identity, right, and what does identity bring you?
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some kind of tribal warfare where you are miserable all the time. then the shutdown, covid accelerates everything that was going to happen anyway, including expiration date. if you're going to die in 2027, he died in 2022, that is what covid did. covid also is caused a spike in drug addition. that is worse than this. you should see the obesity epidemic among kids bureau every video kids fighting, they are fat. i mean, they are huge. it is scary how big they are. kids are just plain huge, you have spikes in crime, suicide, spectacle shootings, tribalism, social media inspired contagions that turn a confused young girl into a he-male killer. drugs and hormones. it's a weird life. and what's missing? meaning, purpose, and connection. you wonder why people can't sleep at night. it is because they are not doing anything worthwhile during the day and it drives them crazy. you used to be able to go to sleep because you were exhausted. now you can't sleep because you are thinking about what am i
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doing? i think i had nothing really important to say except that i think it is bigger than a few hours of not working. i think it is a larger issue, it is a larger issue about meaning in life. it is by jordan peterson is so popular among young men, right? it is why so many women are miserable, it is why women are happy with the guys and why guys don't hang around with women -- it is why pornography is so huge, all of this is coming from a loss of meaning, and like you said, not being able to actually deal with people. >> geraldo: what about the '60s? >> greg: i don't know, i was before. >> geraldo: you read history. it was a time of complete rejection of traditional values, experimentation, total self-involvement. and the world was going to hell and a handbasket, and guess what? the world recovered fearful and i think the same thing is going to happen now. i think social media has done a
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lot. negative and positive. >> jesse: all right, geraldo defends the boomers come away to go, geraldo. i'm teasing. >> geraldo: i'm preboomer. >> greg: he's a proomer. >> jesse: stop it. now you've gone too far. is that the guy you bring over to the house? >> dana: elmer. >> j>> dana: not everyone has an in-house -- coming up, seriously, brings the edge -- coming up, who is really in charge of the democrats? while joe biden hides from the media, top democrats taking his spot. ♪ ♪ lomita feed is 101 years old this year and counting. i'm bill lockwood, current caretaker and owner. when covid hit, we had some challenges like a lot of businesses did.
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♪ ♪ >> greg: president biden taking a backseat and letting one greasy haired governor take the wheel of a democratic clown car. grandpa joe was supposed to be the face of the party, but lately he has been more than happy to go to bed early and let the young whippersnappers do all the fighting. president biden is avoiding press conferences like hunter avoids -- with the white house insists joe is in control. >> is the administration trying to protect the president from our questions? please -- >> absolutely not be of absolutely not. >> any interaction in a formal setting to have a press conference. >> i mean, the president takes shouted questions, certainly, the president, many times, has stood in front of all of you come has taken questions on his own, because he wanted to see what was all on your mind spirit is also unprecedented that a president takes as many shouted
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questions as this president has. >> greg: and while joe hides away, california governor gavin newsom is stepping up to fill the biden void fearful he has been ramping up appearances in red states and trying to attack republicans. >> i tell him to pack up and wait a few years. and actually do some of the hard work, which actually includes governing, not just identity and culture war. come back as a more seasoned and capable leader, with a little humility. [laughs] which, by the way, he could use a little of. no, i am not running, and i know it is the perfunctory question, we have to ask any time someone puts out a pac. i get it. you know what else to do with the money? this is a way of amplifying good people all across this country and supporting our president in the process. >> greg: all right, that reminds me of a scene out of "the office," it is where they were, you know, anybody trying to explain how great they are. everybody can hear the ego
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talking. but biden goes to belfast for five days, won't take any questions, i bet you are steamed. >> dana: i am pretty steamed. >> greg: like a potato. >> dana: it is ridiculous. i don't think for one second the press secretary believes this is good munication from a president of united states. again, the president of the united states, the leader of the free world. why are the reporters showed in question? well, that is because they never have an opportunity to actually ask him questions. al roker, i'm sorry, that is not going to cut it. i think they also don't want him to take questions because, one, i think they're afraid of what he is going to say. i've avoided saying that up until now but i believe the white house has correctly decided that the media is going to give them process stories, we wish you would take really more questions. they prefer to have those negative stories then deal with the consequences of the stories he might say on the other end. also, what happened to a return to norms? i thought we were returning to norms fearful of a normal thing
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is when a president was overseas, he does a press conference. one of the reasons you do that is because you are the leader of the free world. that is why you do it. they announced yesterday, they preannounced that the president is going away for five days to belfast, will not take any questions from the press vehicle at this point, why is the white house press corps going? why would you go? just with the pool camera go and don't starve him of attention, but the media, this morning on npr, they had this report about him going to belfast that was so -- it was like, oh, my gosh, he is going home and it is going to be better than john f. kennedy. i couldn't believe what i was actually hearing because why would you pay, as a news organization, to go to belfast, to sit there for five days and act like state tv? i think they should band together and say, we will starve you of attention until you actually talk to us. i know he is not wanting to announce he is running for president yet or if at all, but that doesn't mean we don't have some serious questions, especially foreign policy questions. we are in dire straits. what are we doing as a country?
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i would love to know from the president of the united states. at the press secretary or the spokesperson for the national security council, what he thinks about the dod leaks. they are absolutely giving him a pass. >> greg: it is like they are on autopilot, judge, but i guess that is better than having him around. >> jeanine: there is no question. joe biden starts talking, they have to come out and clean it up. and that the question is, who is cleaning it up? so, it is the smart move on their part. but i've got to tell you, this gavin newsom running around and he is building a national profile, and i remember it was a couple of months ago, he was the stronger -- this was in a national poll -- a stronger 2024 presidential candidate and kamala harris. and he was writing very well in national politics and, you know, for those of us who thought, how dare he run these ads in florida and go to these red states, it is benefiting him.
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it is definitely benefiting him. and so, as he, you know, in spite of the fact -- think about it. we came out of covid in 2022. they made fun of him at the french laundry. he was there and he was eating without a mask and he is here without a mask, yet the people in california love the guy. the state is a mess, people are leaving california, they can barely afford it there, yet people like him. why do they like him? i don't know, maybe they just like the way he looks and he is really taking ron desantis, which means he believes to santos is going to be the guy. who knows whether that is true? but i find it interesting that he says, even desantis should wait, you know, like he wants to run against someone like trump. he doesn't want to run against desantis. yeah, he is a smart guy. that slicked back hair, he is shining a lot. >> greg: what do you think, geraldo? are starting to think maybe it might not be biden? >> geraldo: well, you know, i changed my mind in the 2 minutes since we spoke off-camera.
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i think newsom and desantis will be returned to normals. that will go back to regular politics, where trump isn't the colossus that alters the whole reality. i think right now, trump is the only one -- trump can beat all of the republicans and biden is the only democrat that can beat trump, that is my deal. i think that may be why that inertia is why there will be a biden/trump redo. in terms of gavin newsom, though -- in a way, desantis also, although he is not quite as charming -- newsom is glib, his eloquent, he is very handsome. he has very popular in california, and he is popular with a lot of guys that i know that have considerable resources, high rollers, that like him and say he is definitely the future of the democratic party. i have no beef with him. nor desantis. i don't agree with desantis politics and some of the other stuff he does in schools and so
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forth, but i see that he is an admirable person who has achieved a lot, and i think newsom would be a good match for him, and get back to politics as normal. >> greg: that's an interesting thing, jesse. i don't know gavin newsom's track record at all. like, i know california is wealthy and beautiful, and it's hard to leave. that has nothing to do with him. he is not responsible for how good that supermodel looks. he is just dating it. >> jesse: yeah, you cannot go to other governors and tell them to get their act together when he doesn't have his own act together. >> greg: i don't know what he has done. >> jesse: look at california, san francisco, the stories about crime, sanctuary policies. gavin newsom is being groomed by the deep state to be the next president. this is what he is doing. he is going after the entire country and networking with donors. he is testing out lines. he is being asked questions by nbc comcast, oh, and he has to deny that he is considering a presidential run. that is what you do when you are considering a presidential run.
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so come he is staying loose in the bullpen, while everybody kind of weights and see with biden. biden has always said, i'm running, but fate may get in the way. i've noticed this year, he doesn't have it. he didn't have it before, but this year, he really doesn't have it. i haven't seen him smile this wide since he went to belfast. he hasn't looked this alive ever. he touches down, and all of a sudden, the guy all of a sudden has a pulse, but then he gets back to this country, and he hangs out with the easter bunny and al roker. >> greg: it makes no sense periods view when it is a fraud from his presidency, and the press is in bed with joe biden,. we say we have a free press, we don't, they are the ones that through the gag fall down their own throats. you don't ask the president about the former president being indicted. you know what they asked him before taking off to ireland? who are you bring to ireland?
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you can't pretend to ask what the president things and when you get a shot at the president, ask who he is bringing. you know who he is bringing? he is bringing hunter. this is a family trip. and he has never had to answer about the laptop, never had to answer about lying about his mom family taking money from china, he has never answered what he popped a $20 balloon with a $2 million missile. he has not asked about the cartels, asked about jack, and that is not fair to the american people. >> geraldo: what about jack? >> greg: just correction, it is a ball gag, not to gag ball. >> jesse: thank you, greg. >> greg: i don't want to get the letters, we have a large demographic. >> dana: that was that reference. >> jesse: if that is the only mistake i make today, i'll take it. >> jeanine: it's a good day. >> greg: can be a big mistake in certain places. >> geraldo: that greg knows is also very suspicious. >> greg: up next, the liberals favorite grocery stores forced to shut its doors in san francisco. ♪ ♪
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thieves in previous years, where it is shameless, going in, five, 10, 15 of them, roughing up innocent storekeepers, but stealing something away, i mean, there was always shoplifting and this and that, but they just reject the rules utterly of civilization. >> jeanine: you know, i think the operative word was "shame," and it is shameful. they have no shame. they have no dignity, they have no shame, they are not worried about it, there is a sense of entitlement. that work ethic that we had in a generation before, whatever one you want to attribute to, is gone. i am entitled, and you've got to pay me. it is like during the obama years. the government comes in and takes care of you but look, in terms of this particular seg segment, i've been saying for years, law enforcement determines the success of a particular area. if you've got crime running rampant, whether in the '90s
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when i was a d.a. come in at 2000s when i was ada, then it is impossible for you to maintain a business for the value of your home, forget about the safety of your children. that is where we are right now. most people believe that we did, but everything is upside down there if it is like this evil is running across the country and it is like this, you know, social justice, woke warriors. the bottom line is people have been shot, stabbed, beaten, brutalized, thieves are taking whatever they want, and nobody is doing anything about it. that is why this store, the whole foods in san francisco, was closing. if they were too stupid to figure that out, and they opened a year ago, well, shame on them. they sold the baskets. stealing the baskets from the store. all in all, a society where there are no consequences, you can thank the democrats for it. i don't care what anybody says. it is in the big democrat cities, san francisco, they've
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got open air drug markets and they and they and they do everything in front of our kids. i'm sorry. >> geraldo: you know, the difference is caught on tape, also. like the bob lee, the app guy. >> jeanine: stabbed. >> geraldo: he's diane, he's dead on his feet, and you watch him come and then you watch and finally come ultimately collapse. i mean, my god. how can this be where we are at now? >> jesse: san francisco voters don't care, geraldo. they can control their own destiny. they vote for this garbage. the election after election after election. >> geraldo: they did throw out the d.a. >> jesse: so what? they still have this stupid board of supervisors who want to fund reparations instead of the police, and the media is broken, too. the media doesn't even ask gavin newsom, the flagship, whole foods store has shut down in san francisco, and instead ask him about some city in
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florida. i mean, what about nancy? no one asks nancy from her own city is falling apart, and no one asks her about that. they ask about trump. this city is disgusting. but the voters -- >> greg: new york city? >> jesse: we are talking about san francisco. they cannot have organic rhubarb, fair trade coconuts, that is what they wanted and now they can't have it. i don't feel bad for them. >> geraldo: what they can have, dana, is fentanyl. i think that has changed and aggravated everything. >> dana: jesse brings up newsom and that is what i was going to say. he was the mayor there and governor now, from a legal, i would imagine, you are the governor and watch one of the jewels of america going into a death spiral, and you go to mississippi to campaign for your democratic governor? >> jesse: it's weird. >> dana: or sit in florida and clap your hands like this while your city is deteriorating to businesses like whole foods a we moved in here a year ago -- imagine what sort of incentives they were given by the city, please come, we need you, and
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they decide probably against their better judgment they went ahead and did it and now you have how many jobs does that take with them? a continuation of the problem. where is gavin newsom? why isn't there a takeover of san francisco? why is that something -- >> geraldo: it may come to that. >> dana: well, at what point? after all of the businesses and taxpayers leave? you have this city we all you still love that is now just take terrible place for all of this is happening? >> geraldo: in that regard, greg, you have one of the worst aspects is you have the kids destroying the services, their moms and dads now are the ones deprived. they are the ones who have to come and you know, exert extra time and energy and money to do the necessary. i look at minneapolis. i mean, once -- baltimore, we covered freddie gray in 2015. the cities are losing their
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essence. and we are watching it happen. >> greg: there is a big difference with san francisco because whole foods is not in a bad neighborhood. it is on market street. that is their main street. the cash app guy, what was his name? bob lee, that was pelosi's district. remember, her own husband was stabbed or beaten in her house. i mean, she knows crime. she knows this intimately, right? and it still -- it doesn't resonate. this is not like chicago, where all of the crime is concentrated in one area. it is all over san francisco. >> jeanine: so why is nancy pelosi not saying anything? >> geraldo: i have no idea. all i know it is the fault of the city, the city's politicians, the fault of the media who look at this kind of crime as a local issue. summit is watching this right now, what do i care about san francisco? why do i care about that? you know what is a national story? the reparations story or trance,
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but crime -- you talk to other producers of other networks have said as much, that crime is a local story. so you don't hear about it. and suddenly explodes. we were talking about it for years and nobody else talked about it. many insurance companies basically telling you to stay out of it, let these people rip you off. i think the solution is what you said come geraldo come in the previous segment coming have to let these cities die so they cae lunatics running the asylum have not exhausted their lunacy. the people, the elites, their fortress. >> geraldo: briefly, the problem, they can't find cops. they can get cops. >> jeanine: she defined in them, $120 million she cut and they are being trashed. anyway. >> geraldo: coming up, soccer star megan rapinoe and other top athletes getting blasted for siding with the trans community over women. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> dana: top female sports star under fire for supporting gender equity in women's sports. house republicans pushing a bill that would ban biological boys from competing against girls, and that has brought outrage from top talent like soccer player megan rapinoe and basketball player sue bird. they signed on to a letter that says this, in part: "we believe that gender equity in sports is critical. women athletes have been fighting for decades, including equal pay, and into abuse and make mistreatment, implementation of title ix, and it makes me sick to actually read that. i'm so mad about this, judge. i can't believe it. imagine a megan rapinoe fought for girls sports like she fought to get paid like the men. that was an actual movement. they showed they could do it pair up on this one, they just walk away. >> jeanine: they can't because everything is about ideology.
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political ideology. whether it is crime and sticking with the left or whether it is about, you know, women sports. the thing that infuriates me is that the trans are winning the trophies and they are winning the, and the biden administration is now saying if you do anything to keep the trans people from playing with the females, you are violating title ix and the federal law. the let me finish. and the women are supposed to be tolerant and they are supposed to accept it. i am sick and tired of that. women believe in inclusion. we believe in equality. but we have fought our tails off to where we are in this society today. and for someone to tell a woman, who has spent the last ten years of her life trying to be something in a sport that she believes in, that look, you are not going to have a chance because a guy who says he is a girl and identifies as a girl is going to beat you. i mean, it wasn't always like
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this. where is the me too movement? rapinoe or whatever she calls herself, she is not about women, she is about money when it comes down to that. trans should be allowed to have equity in their own channel, in their own lane. >> dana: and greg, a lot of these sports stars who have retired, they have already made their money and already had their time in the sun and now they walk away because they are afraid of the politics? >> greg: it is hilarious, she is enforcing a standard that she herself didn't have to face. if she was playing among trans females in her league, she would not be a top player. as you remember, her team lost when all-boys -- i think i school team. so now, she throws feature females under the bus because she is retired. she is like a reverse mentor fear of a mentor gets to a place of success and fame, stretches the hand, says let me help you up. but after making her wealth and her fame, she cuts the cord and tells the young athlete, if she said this, if you don't want to play against trans, maybe you
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shouldn't be playing at all. but this is all just -- this is all part of a performance. this is not really a belief. wokism is always a performance. everything where woke action is taking place, you have to ask why is it happening? they hired trans for bud light. that is a performance. drag queen story hour, why that is going -- that is a performance. here this is a performance. it is part of some kind of entertainment that makes you feel virtuous but it actually has no relevance. it is like when they forced the nhl ask the nhl to put on pride jerseys. do you think the players are going to feel differently? that doesn't matter. it is a performance. >> dana: jesse? >> jesse: men are supposed to protect women. people like rapinoe are making it very difficult for us to protect women. she is a gender trader. other men are coming to women sports and abusing them. they are beating them, they are winning, and -- >> dana: taking the money. >> jesse: they're taking the money, taking the fame, taking the attention.
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us other men are trying to protect women from being abused by these men. let us help you! >> dana: yes. >> jesse: megan rapinoe, or whatever you call yourself. >> geraldo: very briefly, let me give you a couple of facts here. the protection of girls in women's and sports act has zero chance of passing. it is unconstitutional, and it is a violation of title ix. but the biden administration, we have not spoken about their compromise, you can -- >> dana: it's not a compromise. >> geraldo: at home. trans can play as long as it does not undermine competitive fairness or make injuries more likely. >> dana: so good luck, everyone. >> geraldo: a 6-year-old, can play, anybody can play, boys, girls. >> dana: this is -- >> geraldo: but the 16-year-old, no. they are trying to -- >> jeanine: how do you read that into that? >> dana: it is not a compromise, it is a cop-out. >> geraldo: they are trying to satisfy a very contentious issue. you can't do it -- >> dana: you can't, it is not a compromise, it is a cop-out.
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>> jeanine: welcome back. we have all been there. you are in the elevator, the doors are about to close, and that annoying person is about to step in. do you push the door close button? turns out, 31% of people have tried to shut an elevator on someone's face. >> dana: liars. >> jeanine: so, would you shut an elevator on someone -- >> geraldo: never. i'm a gracious person. the great thing about having a team, if someone tries to shut the elevator -- >> jeanine: that is what that is, a prop. all right. jesse? would you push the button? >> jesse: no, someone comes in with their arm or a cane and doesn't acknowledge that they have slowed me down five seconds, that's rude. i need a "yes," i acknowledge i have showed you down nod, and then we are good. >> jeanine: is not an apology? >> jesse: it is an acknowledgment. >> jeanine: dano? >> dana: 100% of the 61% who said they have never done this are lying.
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>> jeanine: okay. greg, i'm not even going to ask you because i know you do it all the time. >> greg: what i do, when someone sticks their hand in and the door shuts, i grabbed the hand, right, and i hold onto it, and i drag them to their death, screams, the screams are ungodly. it's worth it. i don't believe this. i don't believe people actually do this. i think we assume other people do it. kilmeade comes at me, i will do it. >> jesse: they can't see you hit the button. >> dana: you got to be stealth, especially if it is someone with an annoying dog. >> greg: or someone says i really want to be on your show, i work on fox, and it's like -- >> jesse: i hate that. >> dana: the close button doesn't actually work. it is just there for your mental comfort. it doesn't actually work. >> jeanine: all right, "one more thing" "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ ♪ limu emu & doug ♪
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>> time now for "one more thing." so it's kind of strenuous being a parent. you know, these kids are running you ragged. this parent figured a good idea have kids out on the swing set. he doesn't have to get out and push them. he stays inside and pulls the string. that is what you call a smart dad. >> oh, wow. >> jesse: tonight on "jesse watters primetime." we have exclusive interview with the man who fell in love with his ai girlfriend. that's her. >> judge jeanine: i can't wait to meet that. >> jesse: geraldo? >> geraldo: lived in fear of fire but the rains have come and made a lush, beautiful jungle out of it. so you just saw my -- that's desmond my second oldest grandchild 8 years old. that was vincent. the little one. that is liam, is he five. he is here in new york. and ella in the middle. jace 9 years old. easter egg rolling and there is -- we start with desmond and
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end with liam. >> very stylish, geraldo. >> greg: mackey. michelle tafoya, kat timpf, tyrus. be there or die. let's do. this how many nuts? roll it. first and then we will guess. here he is. he comes up. stop. don't show them. how many nuts will he put in his mouth, judge? >> 7. >> search nuts. >> greg: geraldo? >> 12. jesse. >> six. >> greg: seven? all right. roll it. >> greg: 1, 2,. >> dana: 4, 5. wow. >> greg: isn't this amazing. >> dana: he has more than that 7. wow. nice. >> geraldo: i always. >> judge jeanine: oh my gosh. >> geraldo: come on kid, can you do it. >> dana: 11? >> greg: 111 nuts in the mouth.
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a movie i once watched in the 80's. >> dana: manny a french bulldog from australia, greg. not only does he fetch his ball he can throw it for himself, too. watch this. so he knows how to spit it out. and then he can go fetch it for himself. i need to teach -- >> geraldo: get together with that dad. >> judge jeanine: adorable. >> jesse: jeanine, take us home. >> judge jeanine: three officers involved in low speed foot pursuit up and down driveways for backyards for two hours chasing a suspect by the night kight. resisting arrest. great legal team. charges with dropped following the arrest. he was relocated to a nonprofit where he is now giving riding lessons and therapy for children adults with disabilities he has one hell of a turn around story tore for a criminal. national pet day do. we have that? national pet day? no? they didn't do it.
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>> geraldo: tell them. >> judge jeanine: my dogs. >> dana: and my dog and your dog and your dog. we all have dogs. >> jesse: i couldn't get pauly p.'s mugshot for three months. you get that stupid animal's mugshot day of? >> dana: that was nice horse. >> jesse: that's a horse? i thought it was a pony. is a pony a baby horse or is it a girl horse? that's it for us. "special report" suspect next with bret. he doesn't know. >> bret: i don't know, actually. small horse, pony. okay. jesse, thank you. >> bret: good evening, welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. breaking tonight, manhattan's district attorney is suing the chairman of the house judiciary committee over an investigation into his office. the move by alvin bragg comes as judiciary committee chairman jim jordan announced the probe of what he calls bragg's pro-crim

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