Transcripts For FOXNEWSW The Five 20180622

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>> juan: much more on that later in the show. first, we want to remember a legend and a friend. dr. charles krauthammer who passed away yesterday at the age of 68 after a battle with cancer. >> the big estherer that we make is to lose the damn war because we refuse to recognize who the enemy is and what it requires. for god's sake why do you have to talk about that. the mourning is over, the chiva is done. if you are a conservative you should be optimistic. >> i think it will snow in hell before the doj is going to go after her. we all were expecting it. it didn't happen. that was the dog that didn't bark. >> juan: charles was the leading conservative thinker of his generation to many. he touched some of our lives right here at the fox news channel. i got to tell you, i often found myself on the opposite end of the opinion fence from krauthammer. that was the case for just about a decade on "special report." charles was also, like me, a huge baseball fan. and last night charles was honored at nationals park in d.c. you know, people outside of fox ask me about charles. i think it's very hard sometimes to explain to them how he touched so many of us. how could all you guys know him? but jesse had a very special relationship. jesse, explain. >> well, i was the producer for the o'reilly factor for many years and it was my great honor to produce exrawt for about five of those years. so once a week i would get on the phone with dr. krauthammer and i would tribtranscribe points about bill topics for that night. i would absorb the talking points and go to the bar later and repeat them as if they were my own. [laughter] to sound smart. i loved doing it i also remember for years i would dvr "special report." and then i would fast forward to the all-star panel at the end. fast forward through you, no offense. [laughter] and then i would just listen to champlets the difference with charles compared to any other commentator when he spoke, everything went quiet. and you listened. and you never interrupted charles. not even o'reilly interrupted charles. and that's a pretty tall order. even my liberal mother liked charles krauthammer because he had a way about him. he was so rational and respectful. he was never disagreeable. you could always kind of as a liberal disagree with him but not hate him and he was never ever attacked if you ever realized from the left. and it shows the kind of the depth of his power because he was honored by george w. bush, the nationals, benjamin netanyahu. i had friends texting me randomly i'm so sorry to hear about charles. he had such a great impact. i remember the first time i met him face to face. i was in the d.c. bureau and just come back from one of those crazy watters worlds i was cocky and rolled into the green room and charles in that low tone jesse, thank you so much for allowing my to be in your world. and he said it with a wink and a smile. it just really made me laugh. >> juan: kennedy, we were in the green room and you said something about what charles meant to you that really caught me by surprise. i was taken by it. it was wonderful. >> there is something so incredibly positive about what he did which was he opened a window of mourning and let people in on the knowledge that he did not have long left in this world. and there's something so sweet and honorable about that because if you think about it, the only time we really talk about people in these glowing terms is after they pass. if you actually allow someone in to the end of your life, so they can celebrate you, and let you know what have you meant to them while you are still living, that is so incredibly profound and it is such an amazing gift that very few people are capable of giving so many people and he was able to do that. he had the confidence and he had enough respect for himself, his audience and his very close friends and colleagues here at fox. and i think we will be forever grateful for that. not only for so many people having the opportunity to reach out to him, but also as an example to other people that you can take this on with a degree of pot of and comportment that we really see and i hope that people see that as an example and not ashamed to passing onto the next realm. as people of faith and there are a lot of people of faith here, we embrace the after life. we are terrified of dying. such bravery and strength that charles showed going into that. >> juan: i always thought and the reason your words touched me is i always thought the idea of someone who was paralyzed and living in a wheelchair, for him to do just what we do to come and be commentators on television, to write a column, boy, he was terrific about it. he never was self-pitying. >> greg: he had to face something every day that was beyond his own disability. it was people that he met that weren't aware that he was disabled until they met him. and because he always when he was shot at fox you could tell he wasn' was in a wheelcha. when you meet him maybe you didn't know and i remember one of my -- one of my buddies made joke about should charles go on "dancing with the stars." i said you were such an a-hole. he had no idea. is he a huge fan. it was after tucker was on. he had no idea that charles krauthammer was in a wheelchair. sea very serious dude. is he very funny. one thing that was interesting about him is that he never let this -- whatever happened to him in his life actually affect him and in a weird way it turned into an asset for him because it made him a man of ideas because he was limited -- he was in a chair for his entire life. and he made his achievement come from here. everything was about ideas. and the other thing i would just mention is we do live in a time where more people are healthy and live longer and less disease and less poverty. we have an increase in suicides. we see people that are dealing with inner demons. i think that's why he is so inspirational because he has every excuse to hate life. he embraced it i do not think i could that man. i honestly do not think i could be 10% of charles krauthammer. >> juan: that's the definition of courage when people stand up in dire circumstances. candace, what do you think? can can exactly everything that you said here, despite his disability he will be remembered as a man of great fortitude. virtue. people on both sides of the political aisle coming forward and honoring this man shows you he was pattern of tremendous character. look, he was happy with his life. i think that that's the most wonderful thing. the wonderful take away here is how happy and content he was with the life that he lived. >> interesting for me because i knew him for so long. i knew him before fox even. i will say two things about charles. one is that the sense of spirit and human kindness that came from charles krauthammer was no pretend. you introduce him to people at fox. oh, charles krauthammer. and he would be like cracking jokes and open with so many folks, just very warm. by the way, jesse, going to a baseball game with charles was, literally people coming up to him. because he gave structure to so much conservative thought. a lot of conservatives felt hey, this is the guy. this is the intellectual that is able to frame conservative thought in such a way that the liberals and the left has trouble with it that they finally feel that here is an intellectual of the right. some people call them neo conservatives. it was charles who talked about the reagan doctrine in terms of america globally standing up for freedom. for security. he talked about a bush doctrine in terms of going in to war. he gave the framework. and going to baseball, jesse, with him, not only did you see the people were thanking him, conservatives thanking him for doing that you learn that the learners who own the washington nationals love charles. here we are you go in charles specially made van going down south capital street and here we are. i want you to take a look at that picture again, that's charles on the big screen over the stadium last night as the nats were playing the orioles and there was a moment of silence. if you drove and you think oh my god is this guy going to crash this van? but you get to nationals park and he had the best parking lot, jesse because the learners had a parking spot for him in the stadium. i always thought gee, how's come i can't get this. >> greg: jesse wants to give a van. i know a few people who have driven with charles and it was one of the most frightening. >> charles driving? i don't think people are aware of that say a van. assumption maybe somebody is driving. no, no. he is driving it. >> juan: specially equipped van. i used to joke the most expensive car in the fox parking lot didn't belong to bret or brit hume or anybody it belonged to charles krauthammer. kennedy though, you really think he was a man of personification of courage. >> kennedy: absolutely. what an incredible example. and i do hope that in addition to some of the writing and the philosophy that he enviewed in his writing people also take await incredible lesson at the end of his life and internalize that for their own in the future. >> juan: that's so sweet. thank you, kennedy. for more on the incredible life and legacy of charles please tune in tonight for a fox news report charles krauthammer, in his words, at 9:00 p.m. eastern. the latest on immigration next on "the five." ahh. where are mom and dad? 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[ hiss ] [ gasps ] [ birds chirping] ♪ no matter what you are they're a perfect match. the new ipad and xfinity stream app. hey guys, i'm home! surprise! i got a puppy. add an ipad to select packages for just $5 a month for 24 months. upgrade online now. ♪ end of the world ♪ as we know it >> jesse: immigration battle something heating up in washington as crumble before our eyes. the crying 2-year-old migrant girl featured on the cover of "time" magazine wasn't actually separated from her mother according to the father. meanwhile president trump holding an event with angel families whose loved ones were killed by illegal immigrants. >> we're gathered today to hear directly from the american victims of illegal immigration. you know, you hear the other side. you never hear this side. these are the american citizens permanently separated from their loved ones. these are permanently separated. because they were killed by criminal illegal aliens. these are the families the media ignores. these are the stories that democrats and people that are weak on immigration they don't want to discuss. >> jesse: rhetoric from the left continues. cynthia nixon has some harsh words for ice. >> ice has strayed so far from its mission. it's supposed to be here to keep americans safe what it has turned into a terrorist organization of its own. terrorizing people that are coming to this country. >> jesse: we will get to that in a minute, greg. this 2-year-old migrant girl who was featured by the media for about a week as the standard bearer of a child separated from her mother. was not actually separated from the mother. separated from the father in central america for not any asylum reason but to have a better economic life. brought her here, was never separated at all all of a sudden "time" magazine is defending this. >> greg: they believe if you attack them for being dishonest that you are politicizing it. yeah, we lied but how dare you accuse us of lying you are making this into a political event. they tried to create a poster child for hate. this is all about demonization bias steered the media into lying over and over. no one trusts them. "time" is thinner than donnie deutsche's spine. he said all trump supporters are no different than nazi prison guards if you support him on immigration. so now he has deemed everybody evil. you have to understanding when you call somebody a nazi, you are giving other people license to hurt them. i have not heard a peep from msnbc on this. that's dangerous stuff. >> jesse: comparing them to isis, to al qaeda. that, again, gives license to people who know what is they are going to do. >> i feel they are missing the point of trump's presidency, this america-first concept that we're talking about. what he did here is really tremendous bringing out these angel families. we never hear the left's outrage we never hear the names of the families separated permanently as he said permanently from their children because of illegal immigration. this is why their outrage is never taken seriously. look, let me say on behalf of all conservatives. nobody wants to see a parent separated from their child. that is awful across the board. that's not what we are saying here whatsoever. the selective outrage here is what needs to end. >> jesse: there is selective outrage to the kate steinle point and border agent killed by gun that eric holder's team allowed to walk across into mexico. you don't hear the similar type of outrage when americans die at the hands of illegals when you have people separated at the border temporarily. >> juan: i think you do. i think the problem here is the context, jesse, which is that, in fact, the crime rate among illegal immigrants is lower than crime rate among people who are born natives of our country. there is selective attention, i think, by president trump on illegals and crime he has made them whipping boards. that's unfortunate. >> jesse: i don't know about that. want the law respected. they don't want people coming across and harming american citizens because those types of crimes can be prevented because they shouldn't be here in the first place. >> kennedy: it's also -- i'm going to defend ice a little bit. i think they have the toughest job. they really do. they are the ones who are torn. and when you have zero tolerance policy there is really no discretion that they can use. they have to become very good like instant in the field psychologists trying to discern if people are coming to this country because they are compared. they are hurt and they are desperate or if they really mean to do people harm. you know, we have so many layers of bureaucracy that are completely damaged that are not functioning properly and a lot of that rests on the shoulders of these ice agents. so for cynthia nixon to say they are a bunch of terrorists i think is incredibly shortsighted and naive. torn between an administration having a tough time messaging and department of justice saying the opposite of what they are told to do by homeland security. so i -- they really are between a rock and a hard place because they are the front line. and we have to find a better way of allowing people into this country who want to work and if that means changing the immigration laws, democrats that are stopping hysterical about this whole thing and craft some immigration policy that makes things less chaotic. >> jesse: let the republicans work cooperatively on a bipartisan basis. >> we did not elect president trump to defend mexican illegal immigrants to come into this country for a better opportunity. we elected him to defend americans. that's exactly what he is doing. >> kennedy: he has also said he has stood at campaign rallies and said we need more people working in this country. we need to allow people from other countries to come into this country. >> legally. >> kennedy: if that's the case, that's fine. the immigration system is broken. and when you put more restrictions on legal immigration, it makes it much harder for the president to fulfill that promise of delivering labor. >> greg: kennedy you are such a miranda. >> kennedy: i'm such a charlotte. >> jesse: going wild over the first lady's fashion choices. we will break it down next on the "the five." ♪ don't stop me now ♪ i'm having such good time ♪ i'm having a ball ♪ ooh-wee, grab an umbrella kids 'cause dad's gonna make it rain "tre tres". he's saying he's gonna score a bunch of three-pointers on you. yeah, we ball til we fall. there are multiples on the table: one is cash, three are fha, one is va. so what can you do? she's saying a whole lotta people want to buy this house. but you got this! rocket mortgage by quicken loans makes the complex simple. understand the details and get approved in as few as eight minutes. by america's largest mortgage lender. >> kennedy: first lady melania trump under fire from critics for wearing this jacket with the lettering on the back that reads i really don't care. do you. she wore this on her way to greet migrant children separated from their parents at the border. the media went frenzy. watch. >> that she would go down there and do this tells us everything we need to know. she is officially the marie antoinette of this administration. let them eat cake. >> "the washington times" wrote a piece saying never before has there been as beautiful or graceful a first lady as melania trump. i guess she wanted to flush that down the toilet. >> a moment of true candor from her. this administration doesn't care about these kids. >> i will guess this is one message she did not steal from michelle obama. >> kennedy: chelsea handler tweeting mrs. president trump is speaking broken english in a dumb jacket at the border. first lady knew what she was doing while, of course, dropping explicative. candace, you love this story. >> candace: the jacket was out of stock when i went to buy it i do feel her responsibility is to make sure if she is going to a jacket that causes an earthquake we can at least go and buy it. >> jesse: how much is it? >> kennedy: $39. >> candace: talks about selective outrage that they have. same week that peter fonda insinuated there should be a pedophiles in a cage. silenced in a land of celebrities that she puts on a zara jacket and they absolutely lose their mind. contend kent the zara jacket was saying something, doesn't it it? >> candace: she wanted to be comfortable on the plane. >> juan: why didn't her staff say mrs. trump, this is not good. you are going to visit children and open you up to a lot of incoming criticism from people who don't like you or don't like the president, whatever. certainly don't like a policy of separating children from parents. so i was kind of like well, why didn't -- not only that kennedy, she wore it a second time. she wears it going down there and then she wears it going back. >> kennedy: she didn't wear it at texas. >> juan: right, at either end. stephen colbert said when his staff saw it this is a fake. it can't be real. when it's real oh my god, what do we do with this because people are going to attack oh it's left wing media. i think this is really -- i mean, i just don't stand how you can be that lacking in sensitivity or sensibility to think that's an appropriate message. >> kennedy: it is an odd look. jesse, there was an obsession when mrs. trump was out of sight for several weeks. and now that they have found her, they can't stop disparaging her. why is there such an obsession over her? >> jesse: one the reasons is that melania doesn't speak a lot in public. she doesn't give the media a lot to chew on. when she is quiet or laying low for a while, you know, things start spinning and they start, you know, flushing out all these conspiracy theories. the jacket would have been easier if she had explained it she didn't. it's obviously a provocative statement. there is no way melania wore that to say i don't care about migrant kids. and for the media to impugn her motives and her character is ridiculous. everybody knows melania cares about the migrant families. everybody knows she has a heart and she is going down there to show she has heart. and to check in on how these migrant kids are being treated. with that said, you know what? she could have done without the message on the back of the jacket and that would have been fine. it was a little distraction. the media is always going to try to harm her because they don't like her husband. >> kennedy: also, her husband often leads the media where he wants to go. perhaps, the first lady is doing the exact same thing. >> greg: you hit the nail on the head miranda. >> kennedy: it's charlotte, miranda. >> greg: you are miranda, i'm charlotte. that very message on the jacket created the eruption in which the response is the jacket. it was perfect performance art. the message is i really don't care. do you? is the message and somebody goes look what you have on your jacket. i really don't care. and that's it. because her actions are actually counter to the message. she really doesn't care about this. actually she tweeted she didn't like the separation and she went down there to visit. her actual actions are not what the deed is. so, i think it was some kind of manufactured intention trying tore set off the mind readers in the media, what kind of evil person would do this, you know. there she is, doing good. smart lady. i like her. she is not a miranda, kennedy. >> jesse: no leaks from her side. maybe people should start running things from the white house. >> kennedy: exactly right. if she made a statement she could probably squash the whole thing. her office has not leaked. it's very impressive in that regard. >> greg: maybe that jacket prevents leaking. >> juan: the president tried to explain and it didn't work. it didn't match what she was telling. >> candace: he likes to troll the media and the media falls for it every single time. >> greg: amazed only 39 bucks. >> juan: most of her stuff is a little pricer. >> kennedy: $51,000 coat. i would nic it from her if i could. >> greg: typical miranda. >> candace: out of stock. >> kennedy: end of free speech may be upon us. shocking memo reveals the aclu could be wavering in its support for the first amendment. details next. ♪ ♪ -here comes the rain. 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>> greg: i love the word problematic. the most popular word among people who are about to destroy you. what you just said was problematic. you are expelled. this is scary, the last free speech is falling. the aclu. they are the guys that are supposed to stick next to the worse people. they defended nazis, right? i think this. >> kennedy: illinois nazis. >> greg: the worst kind? dave reuben had a good tweet today the democratic party being eaten by the left. liberals need to find a new home. the home right now oppressor vs. oppressed ideology is making almost everybody an oppressor except for a precious few who will now then turn on each other in this identity politics world. and it's frightening to see this happening on campuses by young people. young people. >> candace: i agree. jesse, this document was marked confidential attorney-client work product. they went through great lengths to hide. this. >> jesse: it's true. i would think that it seems like they care more about feelings than about rights. and it's a rights-driven organization. and it's scary because they are so concerned about equality of feelings. not equality of rights. and they are also worried about the marginalized people. now, these people who are marginalized. if you probably add them all up, there is moammar jimmizeed people than non-marginalized people. if you keep treating marginalized people like children they are going to remain marginalized. every adult in this country can hear something and be okay and not have to run to mommy. like you say, they have defended the kkk the westboro baptist church. the worst people in the world. they protest at military funerals. the washington redskins logo, juan, they have defended and even terrorists in guantanamo bay. the core mission is still there. i think they are getting caught up in, you know, these identity politics word games and it's destroying their credibility. >> candace: absolutely. juan, do you think this memo goes into effect it will disproportionately affect one political party over the other? do you think there could be a little bias in there. >> juan: wait a minute you associate neo nazis which party might that be? >> candace: i'm talking about free speech. >> juan: when you look back at something like charlottesville and coming up on a year after that candace. you can understand why people are starting to think gosh, historically the aclu has had people drop off the board. complain about them because they have done exactly what have you heard, defend the kkk, defend people who were nazis and people said well, that's the aclu. they have to stand up for the first amendment rights of free speech. but in the current environment, people are now having second thoughts. wait a second. is you are really standing up for hate speech and guess what hate speech is a legitimate part of speech. we know you are not allowed to yell fire in a crowded theater. i don't think they have ever tried to defend that. so the question becomes at what point are they simply becoming an arm of people who are acting in an unamerican and in fact an ethical to american values way and should the aclu be putting money into defending that kind of speech. that's a good question. >> greg: i once shouted theater in the middle of a fire. >> candace: could it inflict harm and should they be doing more to certain kinds of speech. >> kennedy: can you feel harmed by someone's type of speech that does not mean that someone has harmed you. the aclu in defending the first amendment was objectively defending something that was an umbrella that covered everyone. but now there are groups that take these slights subjectively and say regardless of intension, this has hurt me. and i internalize it this way. it becomes the application of subjective group think. and that becomes the marginalizing principle now. because if you have certain aspects that you no longer defend, because you are worried that they are going to offend certain people, that means that it is an unbalanced application of what your charter is meant to do and what the aclu was meant to do in the first place. that means if they really do apply these new standards. these new politically correct standards and there are a lot of people who despise some of the things that the aclu has defended in the past, but defending is not condoning but if they give that up it just means that we are in such a hyper polarized world. >> kennedy: i think the slope gets especially slippery college campuses having safe spaces from free speech. hate speech is toll. everything will start to go in this box. don't go anywhere. fan mail friday is up next. ♪ ♪ your insurance rates skyrocket after a scratch so small you could fix it with a pen. how about using that pen to sign up for new insurance instead. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. liberty stands with you. liberty mutual insurance. >> greg: what? enough out of you b, kennedy. if you were to sell something door to door, what would it be? yuan? >> juan: i think i feel failure. i always think how do people do cold calls? i don't know. how do you show up at somebody's door? especially today. there used to be a day of door-to-door sales men. today that doesn't exist today you would be like dude, get out of here. >> greg: you should sell hugs then. i'm just here to hug and give them away for free. why sell them? >> candace? >> candace: that's day and age door-to-door or sell something. >something. >> greg: question is something you really really like. >> jesse: i would sell guns. >> juan: oh my god, help us, lord. >> jesse: knock on the door look i have all these weapons. need to buy some weapons. >> greg: jeesh louise. >> kennedy: without violating federal law. don't get me wrong. i would sell either chocolate because everyone loves chocolate. >> candace: i don't like chocolate. >> candace: i do not like chocolate. i genuinely do not know what i would sell. >> jesse: that's not how this works. >> greg: i would sell a book healing back pain. i bet people at home know what that is. >> kennedy: and howard stern. >> greg: every time i give that book to somebody they would get rid of their back pain. >> jesse: selmon logs. >> greg: by the way, i would sell the gutfeld monologue which are available now by the way. >> jesse: yoway.jess. >> juan: you know that guy you mock on fox news channel that has catheters. >> kennedy: he just sells gold catheters. >> greg: this is from j.p. adams instagram. what song puts you in a good mood? kennedy? >> kennedy: instantly, it's fergie glamorous. something about the positivity of that song and the bglam. i know it's not punk rock. she feels it therefore i feel it i run so fast i break my foot. >> greg: jesse? >> jesse: i like the last song you pumped in with. can we get that again. candace and i were rocking to that beat. >> greg: that was pollca. pock a forgotten. >> juan: friday night just got paid. bruno mars tends to be upbeat type stuff. uptown funk. i like that kind of thing. i like oh happy day it's a very positive song. >> greg: how about you candace. >> bruno mars uptown funk or-kanye -- the album is amazing. it actually is number one 83 countries. >> greg: i'm torn either honey bucket or it's raining men. joke. >> kennedy: very dangerous but still quite fun. >> greg: i don't condone raining men. all right, kate l. facebook question. what is your favorite ride at amusement parks. candace? >> candace: absolutely whatever roller coaster is high. i hate it but i make this really bad face and i like to be tortured on these roller coasters. >> greg: that is weird. >> candace: it is weird i don't like it. >> greg: you don't like it but you get excited. >> jesse: i will go roller coaster, too. and i like when they get the photo of you. look at the photo and your face looks all mangled like that. >> greg: i was going to make a joke about your face and then i thought. >> jesse: that's not nice. >> greg: kennedy? >> kennedy: anything at cedar point. it is a fantastic amusement park. steepest, fastest roller coaster in the country and parts of the world. i like superman at six flags. shot up 600 feet. instantly shot up. >> jesse: not allow you had on that ride because height limit there. >> greg: i realized i made a face joke. >> greg: all right, juan, amusement park ride? >> juan: bumper car rides. remember when we went to hershey park and boom, boom, boom. you have find out who is aggressive. >> greg: dana was an animal. i can't call her an animal. [laughter] she was very aggressive. i will say the tea cups. >> jesse: i knew it. >> greg: i love the tea cups. tilt awheel, yeah. >> juan: wait a second i don't want to be tilting in the wrong direction. >> greg: time for one more question sherka burqa. what would your personalized license plate say. >> jesse: h2o f waters. >> kennedy: you thought about that. >> jesse: my dad. >> greg: kennedy? >> kennedy: probably say candy because i would have to lose some letters because someone has already got kennedy it would be bastard bastardation. >> greg: watch your mouth. this is 5:00 hour. we have kids watching. >> juan: dr. black ice. slick and don't see it kind of thing. [laughter] >> candace: mine would be something cat related. i love cats so much. i think anything that would be cat related would make me happy. [laughter] >> candace: i should have made that plug, easy, yea. >> greg: r 2 b 547. a vanity plate. >> candace: sounds like "star wars." >> greg: now i have to change it i'm not a big fan of "star wars." >> kennedy: we will get a lot of hate mail. >> greg: one more thing is up next. ♪ i love polka ♪ when i'm dancing with my sweetheart ♪ i will always hi.i just wanted to tell you thdependability award for its midsize car-the chevy malibu. i forgot. chevy also won a j.d. power dependability award for its light-duty truck the chevy silverado. oh, and since the chevy equinox and traverse also won chevy is the only brand to earn the j.d. power dependability award across cars, trucks and suvs-three years in a row. phew. third time's the charm... . >> juan: time for fun and one more thing, jesse? >> jesse: i did the only thing i know how to do went back to the streets and asked some basic questions of average americans. here's a taste. who is the vice president? >> i don't know. and i really don't care. >> oh -- oh my god. >> oh, man. [crickets] >> can i give you a hint mike? >> bloomberg. >> jesse: 8:00 saturday night 8:00 eastern. check me out. >> kennedy: no shortage of dumb dumbs. >> jesse: makes me feel better about myself. >> juan: i got good news this weeks i won the society of journalist award for best weekly columnist. column appears on monday in the hill.com and i want to thank my editors bob cusack as well as the publisher jimmy fink kel stein. a lot of criticism of journalism in the news. fake news. we are lucky to live in a country where journalism and opinion are available to us all. that's the basis of informed american people. we are the basis of this great public. hats off to the first amendment. aclu watch yourself. [ laughter ] >> greg: my book. if you haven't purchased it yet you might be going to hell. go to amazon or barnes and mobile or simon and shuster. i do believe in hell. i'm in it right now. are you going gutfeld show 10:00 p.m. saturday. we are crushing it jesse and your little man on the streets are not going to stop me. emily come pagliano no, joe did he i have the toe, cat timple and tyrus. going to be a great show. >> juan: kennedy? >> kennedy: three things, you going gutfeld, ice tea, and fat food. unfortunately raising canes stirring the ice tea with her arm, including her hand inside the ice tea jug and poured it into the dispenser while a coworker filmed the whole thing. and laughed and then it went viral on social media. of course, 12 million people so far have scene this disgusting display. you don't know where that hand has been. rest assured it hasn't been washed in half a decade. >> juan: e >> juan: remember, i think she was a rock and roll star and she went and took a lick off of a -- >> kennedy: ariana grande. >> greg: these are not good one more things. do you have a cat jawp jawnel for a good one more thing go to candace. >> candace: make you give up on humanity it is amazing and should be discussed. a food vendor sold unusual product in vancouver british columbia. literally sold hot dog water $40 a bottle. he claimed that it increased brain function, makes you look younger, helps you lose weight. increases overall vitality. it was just a piece of performance art. >> jesse: that's what i would sell door to door. >> greg: it is water. >> candace: people bottom it at $40 a pop. hot dog water absurdity hopes to encourage critical thinking product marketing. >> greg: bottled water is a scam in and of itself. if our grandparents -- well, some of them are alive. if your great grandparents were alive and you are actually paying for water. they would be outraged. outraged, i tell you. >> candace: package it pretty americans will buy it. >> kennedy: it is hilarious. i think hot dog water sounds quite good. >> candace: i wonder if somebody drank it. >> greg: i would like hamburger water. water water. >> juan: sucker born every minute. >> greg: water water. jesse water water. >> jesse: black ice water. >> juan: i would be like a glacier. >> juan: see you guys monday. "special report" up next with bret baier. hey, bret. >> bret: hey, juan, thanks. president trump tells congressional republicans to stop wasting their time on immigration legislation until after the midterms. a major u.s. supreme court ruling about your privacy rights in the digital age. and charles krauthammer in his own words. this is "special report." ♪ good evening. i'm bret baier. we begin with mixed messages coming out of white house on immigration. president trump is advising his republican colleagues to wait until after the fall elections to push reform legislation casting democrats as obstructionists, bent on spreading what he calls phony stories of sadness and grief about children at the border. this comes just three

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