dana, along with >> dana: president biden pushing for a pause, hamas rockets from gaza are raining down on the jewish state. trey yingst was live on the air, a rocket landing near him. >> a rocket just slammed into the building next to where we are at. >> in terms of a ceasefire, it's challenging to have a ceasefire while rockets are still raining down on israel and that's what's being called for here, and part of the reason that the prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, says he won't have any sort of ceasefire because the fire still continues into israel, plus you have the issue of the hostages. 241 israelis held and some are foreign nationals, but the majority of them are israelis, held inside the gaza strip. >> dana: the leader of hezbollah is signalling a second front could break out in the north. escalating missile strikes on israel and the chief is now threatening america. >> america is a fully responsible for the war prevailing in gaza against its people. israel is merely the executive arm. america is preventing a ceasefire in gaza. it is the great satan. it is guilty party number one. it is the united states directing the war in gaza. it must pay the price. >> dana: tensions ramp up, the biden administration is sending secretary of state antony blinken back to israel to meet with that country's cabinet this morning. blinken echoing biden's call for humanitarian pause. >> we remain relentlessly focused on securing the release of hostages including american citizens. we believe each of these efforts would be facilitated by humanitarian pauses, arrangements on the ground to increase security for civilians and permit the more effective and sustained delivery of humanitarian assistance. >> dana: harold ford, jr., what do you think of the idea of a pause if hamas is not going to pause. >> you can't pause if there is not going to be an agreement for a pause. that's the whole purpose as i listen to secretary blinken and i feel for him, my sense is they don't want to pause either but understand the global -- some of the geopolitical pressures they are facing and we understand israel is going to militarily dismantle and decapitate hamas. question for the administration and others is after that happens, what is our role, what is the israelis' role in gaza and in outside of israel. these are questions that have to be answered. i know they are trying their hardest to answer them. i'm not an unapologetic and unconditional fan of netanyahu but i think he's right. i think a pause without being agreement on both sides doesn't allow us to achieve any constructive end. again, those who want to pause on the other side, and i wish we did not show the hamas leader but i guess we have to. >> dana: made big news today. >> i think the fact that that voice is out there just, and we see it, it only inflames and perhaps generates a kind of support that we don't want. i'm not blaming anybody for doing it, but just saying it is a tough thing. but no one, no one, you hear more and more people, no one is calling for the release of the hostages on that side. no arab leaders are calling for release of the hostages. if the hostages were released, my voice might change, and i think others may at least reconsider whether a pause or even a cessation for a period of time would be the right thing to do. imagine if someone took 6500 americans hostage, equivalent, when you look at 235, we are 35 times bigger than we are, and killed 50,000 of us. no american president, no united states congress, perhaps with the exception of a small minority would be saying don't go in with great force. >> dana: the other thing is, the speech that nasrallah gave, kayleigh, the speech was like preparing for the super bowl with the pre-game show, they show soleimani and brought up the marine base barracks in the 1980s and taunted america and blamed it on the united states but then said we didn't have anything to do with it. >> kayleigh: it's ridiculous. leader of hezbollah saying the attacks will continue. we need resolve, clarity, strategic clarity and we are not getting any from the biden administration. i spoke with a former colleague of mine, general keith kellogg, back in 2019, 1 american troop who died because of an iranian proxy attack. he said that was met with force within two days. then at the u.s. embassy, they were worried it was coming under attack, they were burning documents, he got president trump on the phone at 3:00 a.m., president trump said get soleimani. within two days, he was dead, trump got out, said 52 iranian targets will be hit and back channelled through the secretary of state, mike pompeo, through the swiss, next up was kohlmeini. and within ten days, the entire situation deescalated. we need strength, we need action. >> dana: humanitarian pause, a ceasefire, will in hamas brokered in 2003, 2007, 2008, 201 several times, they broke it, so it's difficult for the israelis to harold's point, in terms of the atrocities, the grief and the resolve they are feeling to have the united states be saying well, you really need to be careful about civilians. as if the israelis didn't know that. they know that. >> backdrop of the reality that war is hell, and i think, i'm certainly not suggesting i would be alone at this table or anyone watching as well, don't feel for the citizens of gaza, but again, the reality is war is hell, so what would a pause, what would a ceasefire accomplish? hamas has not put forth terms or conditions, have not set forth demands. what do you hope to do? allow more from gaza escape the area, that's also not happening outside of a trickle today, like 800 people were let into egypt today. so if you took a pause, you took a cessation, you know how many demands are on the table to meet, you don't have refugees to escape gaza, what would be different at the end of the ceasefire. only thing different is a victory for hamas. greg gutfeld. >> greg: kill the peace of [bleep], the first question i asked you when this all began, how should the viewer digest this overwhelming and relentless barrage of news about one horrible despicable act. you have to keep it simple. this is -- this is to help the viewer. do not let the media confuse or complicate what is a very, very simple story. despicable act took place that requires decisive action. that's the end of the story. and we need to be reminded of that every single day. this attack on october 7th crossed the line that exists apart from anything before it. so context is no excuse for terror. history is no excuse for terror. the media has become contaminated. there is no proportion -- think of the catch phrases you are hearing, there is no proportionality when it comes to mutilating children and raping women in masses, what the other side keeps saying. collective punishment, talking about the history of unrest or calling gaza open air prison, the goal to use the phrases is to preserve the free punch against israel. your goal is to -- your goal as a viewer is to keep it simple, don't think about this other than what happened on october 7th. you wanted epiphany, tom was on the show last night, both in high school around the same time in the 80s or 90s, you never heard about the israeli-palestine conflict in high school, and then you got to college and that was all you heard. that was where this package was delivered. it suddenly became everybody's problem. you were made to believe that if you weren't the recipient of this information from the shouting activists, there was something wrong with you. you had to be, you had to take a stand. you had to be part of this conflict. you have to realize the media comes from the same place that amplifies the conflict. they are being groomed for the historical justification of terror, which is why you have to ignore them. they are not reliable. bring up another point, related to this. look at all the major problems today, all have one thing in common. the journalists don't understand it. you talk about the debt, the middle east, the border, you talk about crime, seems like all the issues are way too hard for them to understand. so instead what they do, they overcomplicate it, that's their job. that's -- so, and they rely on other people's opinions. again, one simple thing. for you at home, keep it simple. all that matters is what happened october 7th, and what israel is going to do as a decisive action, all this other stuff, if a protestor is yelling at you on the street you can say i don't care, that's not my issue. have a lousy day. >> dana: decent people know who the good guys are. >> greg: people at home are seeing this every day and adding it like a game of jenga, am i supposed to care about this, about that, oh, here, what about iran, what about hezbollah. no, no, no, no, no, no, october 7th, decisive action, get on with your day. >> dana: do democrats have secret plans to replace president biden in 2024? ♪ i wannabe your friday night sweet ride summer 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(music ends) >> looks like some neek -- sneaky democrats are working behind the scenes to send joe biden to a retirement home of his choice. members of his party are quietly jockeying to succeed biden in 2024, if he does bow out. some are beefing up political organizations going to early presidential primary states and embarking on resume building foreign trips. probably explains why gavin newsom was in china and plowing into children. this was a charge, not a block, and it was embarrassing. you would think kamala is the shoe-in to replace biden, check out this headline from the messenger, she tries another reboot to win over a skeptical public. like what, the millionth reboot, and it ends once she gets in front of a microphone. >> one of the greatest threats to democracy is mis and disinformation. the fact of mis and disinformation is not new but what has happened with the evolution of technology is mis and disinformation can spread quickly and with a.i. in particular can take on a form that makes it very difficult for the receiver of that information to distinguish between fact or fiction. >> i don't know what we just heard. i think it was about a.i. harold, newsom, ro khanna, cory booker, dean phillips, what are they going for 2024? >> harold: anyone to do a quiet campaign for his or her political party will win. best campaigns are bold, loud, engaging, strategic, substantive. these kinds of things happen on both sides. it gets a lot more attention rightly so over the last 1 or 2 cycles because we have third parties and you are able to raise money differently. but i don't suspect that any one will quietly beat joe biden. you have to loudly beat the incumbent in a -- we have not had an incumbent president defeated in a primary, they have been challenged and those challengers have i think weakened them in the general. but i think they are probably -- i'm not naive about this, they are probably believing if something -- if president biden decides not to run for some reason they want to be prepared and looks as if that's what they are doing. >> and dana, the option is, it's not just the primary, there is the outside option as well replacing him at the convention. >> dana: messy, then you have to figure out how to get them on the ballot, also very difficult. dean phillips is the minnesota congressman challenging biden, his first town hall. that did not do well, his first town hall. i encourage you to read up on that, seemed like a doozy. i would like to imagine the democratic governor group chat on text and hey, you go to new hampshire, i'm going to go to south carolina, you go to -- like we have to figure out a way to do this but they are also plotting against each other so like the sub text under the text messages, a fun thing to see. and i think the white house uses the kamala reboots as a distraction for conservative media so you don't focus on the other things. like the economy, or the border, or crime. even though voters are paying attention to all those things. conservative media, you watch kamala's speech, and oh, i got to comment on that, because what was she talking about in terms of a.i. so end on this. biden team says the fundamentals of the race show we are still in a strong position. in my experience, if you are saying the fundamentals of the race are strong, you are really worried about what's happening. romney used to say that, mccain used to say that, they both lost. >> and that's the entirety of the issue, greg. i mean, joe biden will be pressured to leave the race whether it's the convention or beat in a primary, if it's seen that he will lose at a general election. and right now, i mean, to your point, dana, that language being used. >> greg: feels like the plot of succession with the kids jockeying because the dad has a heart problem, they are waiting for the right time. they have to do it all at once. i think you'll use an analogy using air travel to describe joe's presidency. if you are on a short puddle jumper of a flight you never really settle in, right, you keep your jacket on, don't grab a thick book, it's over soon so don't get too interested in the experience, that's joe, right. you need a young president who is going to be on the plane for a while because then he makes sure the experience is livable. my problem with joe for the last three years. your problems he doesn't see as part of your life. he sees them as part of his life and he's nearing the end of it. he doesn't sweat the small stuff, right. i've had a good life. he takes everything in stride, whether it's the border, whether it's crime, whether it's inflation, because all of those consequences, it's, you know, i'm not going to be around for this. we need a president who actually is going to feel the consequences of their policies. we need somebody young in there. >> kayleigh, not just the list of names i read off, kennedy is out there, and a lot of things in the way of joe biden winning the election and republican nominee. >> kayleigh: my goodness, to your point, rfk, jr., if he gets on enough ballots in the right states that, is a deal breaker potentially. look, 6% was the amount of voters who went third party in 2016, when hillary clinton ran. it was 2% in 2020. and 2-1, those voters broke for joe biden. hillary clinton undoing, and enthusiasm, 38% of people say we are voting on joe biden because we like joe biden. 58% say we are voting on joe biden because we hate trump and it flips for trump. nearly 60% say we are voting on trump because we like trump. he is an enthusiasm problem, potentially a third party problem. for all with trump, look at joe biden. a lot of trouble in 2024. >> and nancy pelosi said a threat to our democracy, a threat to our power is threat to democracy. up next, high school students in virginia walking out of class and talking about woke transgender bathrooms. ♪ rain down and wash everything away ♪ the chase ink business premier card is made for people like 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kicked off the fight for parental rights, we all remember, the father of a girl assaulted in a unisex bathroom by a boy wearing a skirt, it was twice he engaged in that behavior. and he was facing jail time for his protest at a board meeting until virginia governor youngkin pardoned him. earlier, youngkin offered support to the students. >> all students must be ensured dignity, safety, privacy, respect, and we have a large group of students standing up saying you are not respecting our privacy and safety. and again, this is a school system that has demonstrated they are willing to hide things when bad things happen. and that is just unacceptable. >> kayleigh: dana, one of the protestors said half the girls feel the same way and they hold the need to go to the bathroom throughout the school day out of fear what will happen. >> dana: i did it in 7th grade the first day and i didn't know where they were and i ran home, i had to go so bad, we lived in rural america, gosh, i'll never forget it. girls, don't do that. trans bathroom policies are wildly unpopular, like 80/20 issue, 80% against having bathrooms that the students are protesting today, and what governor youngkin said when he came in, students will use the bathroom of their school registration. so if you are registered as a boy, registered as a girl, you use those bathrooms. in addition, he said, there are single use bathrooms throughout the schools that other people can use. to me it sounds like a very reasonable compromise. just listen to him. he's a very reasonable person and the left called him today bigotted and hateful, which i think is only going to continue the same. it's like an 80/20 issue, it's not going to change. >> you didn't even have an accident. >> i had a red shirt on and the pants were horrible, i thought they were cute, red -- like junior high, i never want to do it again. i feel for the students that are adding this kind of stress to their day. >> kayleigh: greg, i know you love the word pee on the show, a protestor said, we hold our pee until we can't. >> greg: ultimate irony, activist use invasion of privacy what's poured into their kids' heads by woke educators but then privacy by sending boys into girls bathrooms, and minus -- trans kids are not born, they are made. and why are they made? because they aren't born. it's a combination of zealous activists and parents, enlightened guardian, imprinted on a children going through a temporary phase. we are going to look back on this, and the surgeons who participated in this, and look at those people that are making money off this, as monsters. and it's also about the parents participation. here is another analogy. the parent leaves the big bowl of halloween candy out because they are not going to be home and assume it will all work out, right. no, it doesn't. left unaintended, three jerks, bad actor, if you will, will empty out the entire bowl into their sacks and why, because no one was watching. that's education. if you don't participate in your child's school experience, other people will. it's why they created the fake right to privacy for kids so parents could not participate in one of the most intimate conversations you could have with your child. i'm hoping we are seeing a swing back to sanity. for so long we assumed the crazed left would not go after the kids. we even mocked right wingers for predicting that would happen. we laughed at them. now, a lot of them were nutty, but maybe they were on to something. i mean, the fact this is being discussed would be hilarious if it wasn't so damaging in the long-term. >> kayleigh: i will say i left the halloween candy out and the kids did not steal it. maybe they saw my ring cameras. >> the thing you say there, greg, in some cases, it's not just external sources, it's the parents themselves. not all the time. but there are some parents who are using this as a way to almost project their own virtue through their children. which is even more sick. >> greg: virtue mundhausen syndrome. and 500 kids staged the walkout for the sane bathroom policies, the adults, the school district and others, involved into pure insanity. >> kayleigh: and tuesday's election and youngkin wants to take the senate and he won on education. republicans don't win on education, he did. >> harold: i don't know what's going to happen, it could have some success. this issue here, i can't imagine my daughter who is 9 having a little boy come in the bathroom who according to the policy because he feels like he's a woman or a little girl that day comes in the bathroom, and maybe in the bathroom, realizes he's a little boy. the safety of risk and invasion of privacy, there's an answer to this, a much better answer. i believe in people's right in the freedom to be who they want to be and express yourself. you can't put kids in danger and the invasion of privacy, the safety to me is more important than anything else, and for the life of me, i -- i can't quite figure out where adults are in trying to help. i can't solve dana's problem when she was in 7th grade, this is a solveable problem here, and mature adults, put aside your party. solve the problem. we shouldn't be talking about this. >> kayleigh: in wisconsin an 18-year-old biological male is in the bathroom with three girls under age, it's illegal. >> greg: hysteria, and hysteria a contagion. this did not exist five years ago, and all of a sudden it starts, that's hysteria. so delusion. >> kayleigh: bingo. the fastest, up next. ♪ take the tractor another round, pulls the plow across the ground ♪ ♪ sends up another prayer ♪ sometimes, the lows of bipolar depression feel darkest before dawn. with caplyta, there's a chance to let in the lyte. caplyta is proven to deliver significant relief across bipolar depression. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i, caplyta treats both bipolar i and ii depression. and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. call your 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(david jeremiah) when the rapture occurs, the world will capture the moment. the world will reel with concern from watching the strange, mind-boggling, and unbelievable video footage that goes viral across the globe. "then we who are alive and remain "shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the lord in the air." (david jeremiah) when christ comes for his people, it will be in the twinkling of an eye. billions of people will exit this planet in an instant, but billions will be left behind. it will be chaos on our globe but incredible, glorious joy in the skies. (male announcer) capture a thrilling glimpse of the rapture in "the great disappearance." in 31 short, easy-to-read chapters, dr. jeremiah answers questions about the next event on god's prophetic calendar. "the great disappearance" by david jeremiah is available now everywhere fine books are sold. ♪♪ >> harold: welcome back. ill fate attempt to snap a selfie with a deer while on vacation in greece. a painful reminder of the importance of wildlife respect and safety. deer ramming his back side and breaking multiple ribs but the fellow did not go to the hospital. he says i just recovered by myself with lots of medication and ice. kayleigh, what kind of medication do you think that guy was using to recover on his own? >> kayleigh: something, look at those -- those should be illegal, the tiny male swimsuits he has on. my husband who is a hunter, said don't take a picture of a deer, with a deer during rutting season, that's mating season. you have to expect -- >> you see the two -- those are called brow tines right there, he's lucky he's not stabbed. broken ribs, ok. that looks like a brow tine right into the liver. >> harold: kayleigh is right, you have shorts like that? >> i don't, harold. it's not the length, it's the color and pattern. >> dana: i think we see this over and over again, people don't respect wildlife and they should, i want to know what the picture looked like. >> greg: it is funny how you would never walk up to a hairy large stranger in the woods or a subway and take a selfie, yet you would with a tiny brain, huge antlers, weighing 600 pounds could kill you. >> too much bambi. >> $50 check at a restaurant, a bad parenting fee if the kids misbehave. >> i get all of my advice from kennedy, and she has a podcast "kennedy saves the world," she did a monologue what you need to know as a parent at restaurants and tipping at restaurants and clean up after your children at restaurants, and if you are somebody who has ever made a living trying to get tips, you know how hard it is and so she was -- she was for this. >> she was for this. >> in restaurants, you want to see this? >> i don't have kids i'm not really qualified to opine on the matter because i don't know the challenges of eating with children, i avoid that. >> you and jesse go to dinner often. >> it's disgusting. he can barely gets things into his mouth. it's about being a bad parent. we have seen a decline, i'm going to sound old, decline of normal discipline and parental obligations, that has to stop. >> this doesn't offend me, this charge, unless it's my kids. i'm against the ipad at the table for dinner. you do this? socialize your children, yours are young, kayleigh. they need to learn how to be adults. >> i have a 3-year-old and 10-month-old, they sit through through, mass is an hour, i take them to lunch on their own, they are behaved. i read reviews, one was watching a tablet and got charged, that's all the kid was doing, and one mother rocked her 4-month-old baby that's it and got hit with the charge. that's ridiculous, overkill. >> charge $100 when adults don't act right in the restaurant. and finally, something that will knock your socks off. australian podcaster says she can tell what generation people are just by looking at their feet. >> this is exactly how you can tell the difference between a millennial and a gen z by looking at their feet. are their socks up or hidden ankle socks. gen z wears socks up and millennials wear ankle socks. >> i love this, an excuse for foot fetishes. you know what you are doing. this is clever, let me see your socks. anybody who asks you that, they have a foot fetish. like doocy. >> which doocy. >> i have different types of socks for different types of shoes and i hate socks, especially in the winter, socks that fall down, i hate that, i hate socks that are too tight. i like ankle socks but if you have where the tongue of the shoe hits your leg where you are walking, that's annoying, you need a longer sock for that. >> especially if you have to pee. >> and run home from the bus. >> now you know what it's like to be a 50-year-old man. >> the podcaster is right. i have one teenager, and it's true, they wear their socks up and he'll make fun of me if i have no show socks on with shorts or something like that, you know, what we used to think of as dad, dad and old like a sock is pulled up, is actually cool and young now. >> you know what it is, they have -- they are ankle shaming, terrible esteem about their ankles. be proud of your ankles. let 'em rip. >> i'm a millennial and i only own ankle socks. i was told if your socks cover your ankles you are not cool. well done. >> what is a millennial? >> my sister is, too. up until 25ish, currently. >> harold, what kind of socks do you wear? >> mine are up to my knee. >> he's got garters on. >> tennis shoes? >> ankle in my tennis shoes. and -- ♪ standing on shakey ground ♪ ♪ ever since you put down ♪ i'm. i'm also a library board trustee, a mother of two, and a grandmother of two. basically, i thought that my memory wasn't as good as it had been. i needed all the help i could get. i saw the commercials for prevagen. i started taking it. and it helped! i noticed my memory was better. there was definite improvement. i've been taking prevagen for a little over five years. prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription. ♪♪ >> greg: terrible, absolutely terrible. fan mail friday, answering your questions. this is a good one, from frenchy f, what type of neighbor are you? dana, you first. because i think you might be a difficult one. >> dana: why? what gives you that impression? >> greg: a lot of stuff pisses you off. >> i'm actually a very quiet neighbor, but i benefit from living in a building where i hear no one above, below, to the side, and i throw the ball down the hall, you can live on the same floor with 12 other apartments and never see anybody ever. it's a really strange thing. so i think i'm a pretty good neighbor. >> greg: you live in texas. do you borrow peoples like lawn supplies and not return them? >> and saws when i'm doing man stuff. >> greg: shirtless, sweat, in the sun. >> i introduce myself, and not a lot of interaction. i don't like the way it is in new york and i -- i wish i lived in a neighborhood where people met in back yards. that's the way it should be, america. >> greg: you are a creepy neighbor. >> harold: my son likes to play bounce balls and kick soccer balls in the house so i'm sure i'm louder than i was a year or two ago. but i'm friendly. >> greg: blame it on the kids, harold. >> kayleigh: halloween i realized i was a good neighbor, i go to the neighborhood party, hey, i know, i'm a chatty neighbor. >> greg: do people borrow like a cup of sugar? >> kayleigh: of course, come over. >> greg: i'll be described as he mostly kept to himself. >> you wrote the line in the obituary. >> greg: kept to himself, seemed like a nice guy, i was so shocked when i read the paper. what class would you want to take over again if given the chance? i often have dreams about this, harold, aside from dreams about you. >> harold: what class -- i almost didn't pass property in law school, i wish -- >> kayleigh: that's a fun one. eminent domain. >> greg: you guys are a barrel of laughs. property. a class called property? >> harold: there is. university of michigan law school. >> greg: michigan has a law school, good for them. >> kayleigh: i wish geometry. of course this little square will fit in the rectangle in the closet, i have terrible spatial awareness. >> greg: the theories are more than the application of it. >> sex ed. the way they do it now, no, that's not true, you can't change genders. hilarious. i love history, but i do it on my own. finance, i wish i knew more about finance. >> greg: everybody does, that's so true, dana. home ec. >> dana: i made a cupcake pillow, also in the 7th grade. >> greg: could cupcakes sleep? >> dana: no, out of this material, and then the egg white thing, the souffle, i spilled it on the oven door when it opened, yeah, i don't want to take that again, no thanks. i would take world lit again. so i could -- >> what would you take, greg? >> greg: calculus again because i got a d in it. yeah. yeah, and it was -- i don't understand -- like it still to this day, it keeps me up at night, you know, the nightmares, it's about the calculus final. >> kayleigh: i don't blame you. >> greg: and i'm always naked when i am taking it, what i did at berkeley. one more thing is up next. ♪ 'cuz we are the champions of the world ♪ businesses need 5g solutions today. that's why they choose t-mobile for business. las vegas grand prix chose t-mobile to help power operations for one of the world's largest racing events. mlb partners with t-mobile to advance how the game is played. and t-mobile's network helps aaa stay connected nationwide... to get their members back on the road. now's the time to see what america's largest and fastest 5g network can do for your business. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪) ♪ in the 63 years of that franchise. it was glorious. i was here. i wasn't at the parade, but i was. and starring in a very embarrassing cringe celebration video on your screen right now. congrats i love it. i love it when you're happy. and we played creed, by the way. that was the theme of the rain. no excuse for that. well, it is not 4th of july, but it's about to look like it here. although we are 52 days from christmas, no one's counting. this is in british columbia, a trailer on the back of a pickup truck was hit and set off an hour long fireworks display. thankfully, no one died in that. but one person had minor injuries. wow wow. yes, that is some sort of that was that's pretty amazing i hope they had insurance. >> i hope so. >> only dana would. >> for your finance class. that's it for us. have a great weekend, everyone. >> dana, i didn't think that the video, the will cain video was cringey. i thought it was really really happy. >> thank