BRIAN KILMEADE (CO-HOST): That younger generation seems to show up for rallies but doesn't show up to vote. How do you figure that?
TOMI LAHREN (FOX NATION HOST): Well, they show up to rallies, they show up for the fun events, of course, they show up on Twitter to support the revolution, but as many of us suspected, it's very different to support a revolution from Twitter when there's crowds involved, when you can have your moment in the sun and you can be part of a movement, and when you actually have to go to the polls on Bachelor finale night, the two are very different things. One of them takes effort. Which, we know that the Bernie Sanders crowd that maybe is looking for a freebie or a handout might not be the most reliable when it comes to voter turnout. Just a thought.
AINSLEY EARHARDT (CO-HOST): Think about that, because it's interesting you said The Bachelor. I called my dad; my dad was watching The Bachelor last night and we started talking about next Tuesday. Next Tuesday is St. Patrick's Day. The young voters might not show up on that day either.
LAHREN: You know, Ainsley, I have a feeling that you may be right about that. Again, it's just showing that the social media activism that's really propped up people like Bernie Sanders, AOC, and others is not the same as showing up in real life.
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LAHREN: I'm not saying Bernie Sanders supporters or Joe Biden supporters are not necessarily hard-working Americans. But there is a big difference between those who scream and yell and have signs and tweet and get angry over things on Twitter, and those who are actually going to be the type of Americans that want to waste their time on a Tuesday night to go do this thing called voting. It's a very different thing, especially for young people.
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LAHREN: These people that show up to the rallies, it's like showing up for a concert. It's showing up for something that you can put on your social media and say, “I was here." But it's not the same as just going to vote. The two are very different. One is a lot more glitzy and glamorous and the other just takes a little bit of effort on a Bachelor night, on a St. Patrick's Day, something that a lot of young people quite frankly aren't just -- not willing to do.
KILMEADE: I can't wait to tell the young generation they didn't have to make a choice, because the polls will probably close by the time the Bachelor finale got underway. We're not asking you to give up 12 hours, just 12 minutes.
EARHARDT: They were making guacamole in the hours before. They were shopping for their Coca-Cola.
KILMEADE: You're right. They were crushing some guac.