tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News February 15, 2012 2:00am-3:00am PST
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baier. thanks for inviting us into your home. that's it for this special report, fair, balanced and unafraid. >> "the o'reilly factor" is on. tonight, for the president of the united states to offer tknowing how dire our situation is is truly scandalous. >> bill: charles krauthammer talk about this barack obama budget. but is the doctor overstating the situation? is the president really harming the nation with the proposed budget? charles krauthammer will be here. >> what was your drug of choice? >> cocaine. cocaine, marijuana. >> bill: after whitney houston's death in los angeles, attention is turning to the doctor who prescribed the drugs found in her hotel room. is this michael jackson redo? is it legal? we investigate.
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an amazing business story, a 19-year-old florida girl with no help markets herself onto the cover of sports illustrated. caution, you are about to enter the no-swin zone. "the o'reilly factor" begins right now. -- i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us. issue we a welfare nation now? that's the subject of our talking points memo. as we reported last night, president obama's new budget is financially outrageous, adding $1.3 trillion in new spending and doesn't cut very much anywhere. it is obvious the president not very concerned about the debt. doesn't seem to think it's a big deal. but it is. if you want more facts, i direct tout wall street journal lead editorial today. bottom line, he is spending far more than any other president ever has. and tax revenues now because the economy remains shaky.
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so let's all do the math. president obama continues incredible government spending yet tax revenues remain low. it is obvious that he is rolling the dice. he understands the situation. apparently believes that a massive federal debt's not going to harm the country any time soon and he's calculating that the american voter has changed into a person who wants free stuff from the government and is willing to sacrifice some freedoms in order to get the free stuff. you know what? the president might be right. so it's a question that many americans don't want to put in the hard work that it takes to succeed on a grand scale. they will rather just get by and have the government fill in the things they need. that's why entitlement spending is at the highest level in the nation's history. we don't want to sound cruel, but if you don't understand that dropping out of high school will doom you to poverty, you issue not smart enough to be in high
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school. if you don't understand the marketplace is changing, you will fail in this high-tech world, workers need to have skill, education and disciplined thinking. if you don't have those things and they're not easy to get, you will not prosper economically. so i believe some americans are simply saying, we don't want to pay the price. we would rather spend our time on the net, texting, tweeting, gaming, creating our own little worlds. we are not willing to study hard. we don't want to learn a trade. we don't want to go to a demanding college. no! it's far easier to devote our time to leisurely pursuits and let the government take care of us. that kind of mind-set has taken root in this country. that's why we are seeing the huge divide between the progressive party and the democrat and it is traditional party, the republicans. president obama wants voters to believe that massive federal
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spending will improve their lives and that he, the president, will tax the rich in order to make free stuff available. right now, the polls say half the country's buying that and it will take a very strong counter argument from mr. obama's opponent in order to defeat him. free stuff is a powerful lure. no question about it. that's a memo. now, the top story, charles krauthammer found the president's new budget, quote, scandalous. that's what he told bret baier last night, causing mr. bret baier to furrow his brow. charles is here from washington. scandalous? >> reporter: scandalous because he knows otherwise. if he didn't, he would be clueless. i don't think you are right in saying that he doesn't believe the debt is important. i think he knows it is. he said so in his first two years. he said so when he apoib -- pointed a commission on debt.
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the debt commission was a report i'm sure he read. said it's a mortal danger to the country. you don't have to make a theoretical proposition out of this. look across the atlantic at the meltdown of the entire social democratic experiment in europe, which is the -- the perfect example of the entitlement state athens is in flames. this is what happens when you pile on debt. what does he do in this budget? he adds another $1.3 trillion, four years in a row. this is a man who will have added $5 trillion to the debt in one term. >> bill: okay. but he says he has to do it because of the economy and that there was no other way out. we would have been in a great depression if he didn't do it. and he also says that by this massive spending that down the road, down the road, the economy will rise so high and the
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revenue from the tax because he's going to tax you and me and the rich guys, all right? and all the debt will come down to a very manageable position and that's what he is telling the folks. >> down the road? in the sunny uplands of the future, down the road. and the first two years of his presidency, he says we can't cut anything. we have to spend like crazy because the economy is in bad shape and there is high unemployment. now he said, in fact, he said it yesterday in the speech he gave, the economy is strengthening, unemployment is improving so now we can't cut, we have to keep spending. he will always say that we need to keep spend ago. >> bill: why, though? >> reporter: because the project of the liberal idea is to infantilize the population with all kinds of benefits. the conservative idea is the safety net for those who can't
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do it on their own, for all kinds of reasons and to make sure there is no destitution in the country. the european idea, which obama is a believer in, is that the state should provide for the middle class, provide free education. look, what has he been offering in the last couple of weeks? if you bought a mortgage you can't afford, we will help you out with a lot of money. if you have a student loan you can't afford but you did anyway, we will help you out with a lot of money. they want an entitlement state. free health care. we will give you contraception, not only as a right, but it will be without a co-pay-- all right. so they see themselves-- >> reporter: this is all for the middle class-- but the president sees himself -- president sees himself as a compassionate man, a man of the people, helping struggling families in the middle class. that's how he sees himself. do you agree with me that there is a shift in american society
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that it is too hard to succeed now, because it is. we live in an ultra-competitive world. much more than it was even 20 years ago. to really have to work hard, you really have to get educated, develop a skill. all right. some people say, you know what? i don't want to pay the price. i have no own little world, right here on the p.c., on my machines that i carry around all day. that means more to me because it's easy, it's fun, it takes me away. it means more to me than going out there and making my way in the world, coms brutally hard. i see this as a psychological shift that is playing to mr. obama's electoral advantage. >> reporter: well, i am not sure it's a massive or significant psychological shift in the nation. i think ever since the new deal, there has been a segment of the population that is very happy to live off the teat of the giant
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state. there is always a segment of the population that wants to be independent. so what happened when obama started with the giveaways, the trillion-dollar stim scplus obamacare, you have the spontaneous, without any leadership from the tea party movement, ordinary americans saying, this is not how i want to live. that's europe. that's not us. i think that remains a dominant instinct-- but why then are the polls so divided? 50% think he's doing a good job. everybody knows he's a massive spender. if what you are saying is true, his approval rating would be 35. most people say we don't want to be europe. but half the country's saying we. to be europe. wrap it up? >> reporter: we had a test of that in the real election twasn't a poll nnovember 2010, where obamacare, the big state-- they took it on the chin then. the economy was worse then. >> reporter: it wasn't on the chin, it was a shellacking. right now, we are going to have a test of your proposition in
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november. i think that will determine if we are a passive populist or if we want to maintain -- what is at stake. but the problem is that we don't have a republican in the field for the presidency who can articulate-- right now. they might get better at it. if president obama wins in november, we have to learn french and i am assuming the government will pay for our lessons. charles, thanks very much. next, rick santorum and mitt romney tied in the national polls. can the senator keep up the momentum? laura ingraham will tell us. a 19-year-old model explodes onto the national scene with business-savvy skills far bey
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>> bill: three new national polls show rom and rick santorum just about tied. and rick santorum is pulling ahead in michigan, in a primary in two weeks. rick santorum has taken some support from newt gingrich who has bottomed out in the polls. but can he keep up with the better fnsd mitt romney? laura ingraham is here. no question that santorum is the ideological candidate. purely conservative. some say they are not enough conservative votes to elect him if he does get the nomination and president obammal win, like lbj defeated the very
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conservative bare goldwater, in 1964. >> i think that mitt romney has campaigned as mr. fix-it, the turnaround guy, the crisis manager and has stayed away from social issues, right? until recently. now we are seeing mitt romney deliver entire speeches that are grounded and rooted in social conserveatism. you saw that in the cpac speech last week. he talked about his fight on the marriage question in massachusetts, spoke about his commitment to other social issues in a way you hadn't heard him before am so if rick is mr., you know, ideology, i think you are seeing mitt romney become a little bit more -- i would say mainstream conservative. i think-- well, he has to by necessity. let's face it. the reason these polls are all over the place is because the conservative voting block, which is about 40% of america,
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according to the polls. they shift. they shifted to bachmann and then they went -- away from bachmann and then they went to cain -- tim herman cain. and perry when he got in. and now gingrich is almost below 10%, so the people who did support him after south carolina have shifted to santorum. so it's an ideological play. >> i don't agree with you to this extent. i think that rick santorum's appeal right now is seen largely in kind of that blue-collar, working-class vote in the republican party, which is not insignificant the. a lot of people feel like they have been left behind in this economy. they might like some things about mitt romney, he is smart, he can fix things. they like that. but what santorum has done really smartly, bill, he has driven home that message about reviving manufacturing in the
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country and stressing his own blue-collar roots, his grandfathering, a coal miner-- ats all genuine by the way. we know rick santorum very well. he's a genuine guy. when you see rick santorum say and do is who rick santorum is. but i am telling you that the republican party big wig it's karl scproaf these kinds of people, all right? they basically look at the landscape and they go, if it is santorum who gets the nomination, in august, in tampa. all right? then what they are up against is an ideological conservative against a populist liberal, with all of that implication for -- right. >> bill: the independent voters. >> i think that's the way a lot of the establishment wants to see the election. but i would submit-- no, they want someone more moderate like romney to get the independent votes. >> yeah, that's my point. romney's a safer bet. >> bill: right. >> but that might be a little
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bit too safe by half because you are seeing in a lot of these favorability polls is very interesting. rick santorum actually has very high favorability. and romney has done better in the favor acts, but the new abc poll that came out hours ago shows that santorum has been able to build his strength among a broader range of people-- look, i am saying with the prevailing wisdom, you know the media will brand him as -- here's santorum, against women, against blacks -- >> yeah, well, if you buy into that narrative, you can run no mainstream conservative candidate ever. >> bill: that's why conservative candidates have trouble i. no, no. bill! that's why moderate republicans have had trouble from bob dole to john mccain, these guys have trouble. and george h.w. buck was a more moderate republican and he lost the bid for re-election. >> bill: i think we are in a shifting country, even than four
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years ago. >> a lot of hispanics are very conservative socially. they are not as middle of the road as a lot of people would think. >> bill: last question, real quick. do you believe that the country is shifting to a more accepting of entitlements and it's too hard to make it on my own and i want to get the stuff? >> yes. i do think it's going on. i think that charles is exactly right. that's part of the president's re-election strategy. the more people have to depend on subsidies or other types of programs, loan guarantees, tuition break, the more likely they will go with the guy who gives them the stuff. that's a very cynical play. but it might be the only play obama has. >> bill: the stuff factor. all right, laura. we move along for you. whitney houston's doctor may face charges, the same charges that michael jackson's doctor did after giving powerful narcotics to a drug-involved person. how does a 19-year-old florida woman become the hottest model in america? hint -- her business skills helped a lot.
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>> bill: we have a family budget to illustrate what kind of troubling america's really in financially. family budget. like that. we are going to put it up on the screen so everyone can see the family budget. you will explain it to us. >> so suppose you make $24,700, but you spend $37,900, so you are $13,000 in disebt. you already have $153,000 in old credit card balance. so you say, i have to make cuts. so i am going to tilten my belt now. i am going to save $385. but -- >> who has $150,000 credit card
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debt? who would do that? >> well, if you add eight zeros to this, what you get for america. >> bill: so no family dolled that, but that's what the country is doing -- put that chart up again. so this is clever. >> we stole it from the internet. >> bill: so you stole it. you wouldn't do that. that's insane. that's what the country's doing! correct?! >> and they are bragging, look how much we are cutting, like that's going to make any difference. but they are not cutting anything. >> at one point, they said-- i am going on fire larry, but i am hiring shirley for 5 times as much. it's insane. >> it's insane. that's what they're doing. we are going over the cliff,
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just like greece. >> bill: but the folks are not convinced of that. so you went out -- it was you, right? not off the internet? >> i went out. >> bill: you talk to the folks about this. go. >> this is the federal budget. >> doesn't make any sense. oh, my god! i don't know -- i -- i -- i don't know what to say to that. is that really do true? >> that's crazy. the numbers are completely off and backwards. >> wow. these numbers are scary. >> bill: okay. so everyone, when you show it to them, as you did, they agree. now, you live on the upper west side of manhattan. correct? >> sadly so. >> bill: that's primo territory for barack obama. >> everyone votes for obama where i live. >> bill: do you think you would get the same reaction with the chart up there? if you said, look, this is what the president is doing, what do you think? i would like to see you do that. go up to the hardest-core liberal. you know them, you hang around with them. you are in a bowling league with them, i understand.
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just say, do you care at all -- because the reason i'm doing this, i talked to bob beckles, the guy on "the five"? i. >> i saw that. he doesn't care you? are saying, the country's going over a cliff, financially. charles krauthammer believes that, stuart varny believes that. beckle doesn't believe that and i don't think the pinheads on the upper west side believe that. >> and they will say, just tax the rich. >> bill: right! that's a way out of it. you are one of the rich guys. >> right. >> bill: but if you took every penny beyond what they have paid in taxes from every million scpear billionaire twould be only a third and people would stop working and they wouldn't generate the jobs. >> bill: if you gut the small businessern owners and the jobs go away, so the money you get, the other tax goes away because they don't work. you go to upon upper west side to do that? >> if you want me to--
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>> bill: i want you to. >> i will do it for you. >> bill: plenty more ahead on "the o'reilly factor." whitney houston was a drug addict many years. did she have a deceased? or was it a personal choice? is it legal when a doctor prescribes legal narcotics to miss houston -- drugs that may have killed her. should that person be charged with a crime? stay tuned.
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>> bill: whitney houston's newschannel will be in newark, new jersey, on saturday, the ceremony will be private. the singer was found dead in a hotel room with prescription narcotics in her room. this is the same old story. is substance, addiction to drugs and alcohol a disease or an addiction? author of the book, "weekends at
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bellevue." and dr. brian russell. dr. russell, you believe it's a free-will situation, mostly on the substaps abuse? >> yes. here's why the disease label doesn't work. three reasons. it's an insult to people with breast cancer. it doesn't help addicts because when you absolve someone of personal responsibility for starting a problem, you simultaneously disempower to stop the problem. and third, it doesn't distinguish between desire and behavior. if you want to call the desire to keep doing something that is destroying you a mental illness, then fine. but it doesn't force anyone to pick up a substance and ingest it. when the person does that, that is volition at work, not a disease process. >> bill: okay. but studies have shown that certain people in their family histories and dna, whatever it may be, have a more intense physiological makeup toward
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addiction. whereas -- >> that's all it is. >> bill: right. >> that's all it is. >> bill: they dpoapt become alcoholibs, they toke on pot and don't become emotionally or mentally addicted and even take harder drugs once in a while. some people can't. some people do it and it's in their dna, that if they get involved -- bang! it gets ahold of them. shouldn't we take that into consideration? >> it doesn't force them to do anything. >> bill: it doesn't force them. but it becomes a compulsion. you know how hard those are to break. >> it just makes it harder t. makes something that most people can take or leave be captivating overwhelmingly pleasurable for some subset of the population, but it doesn't force anybody to do anything. >> bill: i agree thatw that. everyone has free will. i know you disagree, dr. holland. i don't believe anybody is enslaved. you know it's killing you. whitney houston knew this was killing her. she lost $100 million.
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she looks terrible, in approximate out of rehab, but she close to go back and back and back. i don't that the disease is untreatable. do you? >> i don't think it's untreatable. but the idea of a disease doesn't necessarily relieve someone of responsibility. if you have diabetes, you have a responsibility to eat right and exercise. it doesn't take you off the hook. but there is a genetic predisposition and there are real physiologic changes. some people can take it or leave it and some people can't ?ie. i am very concerned about the medical marijuana ruse. you wrote a book i. i edited a book. it's not a ruse. medicinal cannabis is very real-- but here's the problem. medicinal marijuana may be very real, but the way you acquire it by a phony back injury or stress and pay a $250 payment to a doctor who gives you a skrip and you can smoke as much as you want, leads to addiction. pot is psychologically
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addicting. we all know it. it's like alcoholism. once you get involved in tparticularly for children, your personality changes, your perspective on life changes, am i wrong? >> i don't know where to start with being right or wrong. you know, look at cigarettes, look at alcohol, cocaine. there are things that are more addictive than cannabis that are less medicinal. >> bill: but doesn't all of this stuff, with the except whereon of tobacco change your perspective? >> i think that drugs can change your perspective. >> bill: you say can and i believe they do. >> some can change your perspective for the better. >> bill: like what? >> like silosibin-- we are talking recreational. i am going to give you the last word dr. russell. the prevailing wisdom in the medical community is that you treat drug and alcohol addiction as a disease. whitney houston had the money to get the best treatment. she didn't want it. she went back and back and back and finally, her body gave out.
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so you say, what? if you are addicted or on that road, what's your advice to people? >> this is going to sound simple. but unless you are going to put steel bars between a person and an addiction, which by the way is not a bad idea for someone with an intractable addiction, then what begins as a personal choice ends with a personal choice, which is why rehab is so ineffective, you can't talk someone into quitting, but when they decide haywant to, they need help dealing-- who about whitney houston who, decides i'm not going to quit. what about them? do we have a responsibility to them at all? >> i think the only thing you can do is literally separate them from the substance. >> this is a public health issue. you don't criminalize behavior. this is about health. >> bill: if they want to kill themselves, have you to let them? >> half cigarette smokers die-- on intoxication, the
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unintended consequences on the dependent it is, particularly the children, aft momical -- astronomical. unlike having a beer. when we come back, whitney houston's doctor apparently prescribed hard drollings for her. could that person be charged? is it legal on the case? and a 19-year-old model on the cover of sports illustrated. how did she get there? an amazing business story, upcoming.
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abilitiable if drugs were found to have contributed to her death? obviously, this is like the michael jackson situation. >> right. >> bill: and the broader question is -- every doctor who knew michael jackson or whitney houston had to know they were drug involved because everyone in the world knows that. >> right, right, right? so whitney houston walks in, says, i am anxious, i can't sleep, whatever, i need a prescription. and the doctor, obviously, gives it to her. >> well, not just one prescription. >> bill: she had three or four. >> six prescription drugs found there in the hotel room. if it is shown that one doctor prescribed six prescription drugs, knowing she was an alcoholic and a drug abuser and still a drug abuser and gave her those pills, he or she could be looking at potential manslaughter charges. >> bill: just like jackson's doctor. >> no-- jackson's there with the etheght, whatever. >> the purple ball. >> bill: but the overriding question is this -- what is a physician's responsibility when a patient comes in to them, all
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right? should they have to drug test the patient? you go to the doctor and you say, listen, doc, i have a massive migraine headache here, i need oxycontin to kill this pain. does the doctor have your medical history? can he drug test you? >> that's ridiculous. that is given and prescribed for people suffering from a cancer diagnosis. however, a doctor has a moral and ethical responsibility, especially with an individual like miss houston, where it is well documented that she has had a consistent-- moral and ethical. >> legal is going to be different. i think this is distinguishable from dr. conrad murray-- what if it's the same doctor and six pills? >> you are looking at amoxicillan, morazipan, xanax. >> bill: these are tranquilizers -- >> valium and the xanax and the alcohol? if you were a doctor, you would give somebody valium who was a
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cocaine addict? >> no. vimorality and -- [overlapping dialogue] >> but is it incumbent upon threm to investigate-- yes! i think it is! first do no harm, right?! >> that's their code of ethics. >> bill: right! >> the hippocratic oath. >> bill: there's something called malpractice. >> i agree. but is the attorney general going to bring a case? >> bill: i would. >> the question is whether or not the doctor was reckless. if so, that's manslaughter. >> if it's one doctor, yes! >> i don't think one doctor is going to go to jail. i think they set up a national database so you know who is getting what and doctors should check it because people are dying? this is interesting. you know this kim kardashian, this woman, we don't know why she's on television, but she is. she marries a basketball player, chris humphreys, plays for the new jersey nets.
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she dwrs divorces him after 15 minutes, after she gets the show and the gown -- >> 72 days. >> bill: humphreys' people are threatening a lawsuit, fraud, right? >> she files for a divorce on october 31 in california, citing irrecognizable difference, the basic standard for no-fault divorce. he came back and said, not only does he want a divorce, he wants an annulment. there are a few grounds. one, it is not consumated and was there fraud. he is not so finish the innocent, this is a guy who profited. the one thing he has is a conservation they aired on this show about the kardashians that he says, was filmed subsequent and added in. >> bill: his contention is that kardashian, his wife, never intended to be his wife -- just wanted to use him for commercial
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purposes and then when it was over said, see ya. >> it's fraud and inducement. going into a marriage contract -- he has a case. going to a marriage contract, knowing -- if they can prove it. that's the hard part. knowing she had no intention. >> bill: this hasn't been filed yet? >> no, no. >> let me tell you, that's not going to happen. >> bill: he's doing the same thing. >> he's a big cry baby. >> bill: he's a big cry baby! ah. >> there is fraud on both of them. >> bill: he's a big cry baby. throw that out! we can't have them here! get outta here. we don't have time for this. but i want to say a judge dismissed p.e.t.a.'s lawsuit against sea world, saying the whales were slaves, but they couldn't find a whale small enough to go into a courtroom and the water tank was too big and the judge said look, there is no jury of your peers. >> having a whale of a time.
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>> bill: 19-year-old kate upton is the sports illustrated cover girl, which in the modeling world is a big deal. last year, she was sitting isn't stands of a los angeles clippers basketball game and she danced to a song and a camera caught did. it was put on the net and millions of people checked it out.
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and that led her to a sports illustrated cover. >> essentially, you posted the video of yourself dancing and all -- you -- this is paving a new road to becoming a super model? >> well, in my opinion, you know, everyone talks about lou the age of the super model is dead. but i don't think it's dead. i think people want more. you know, we have new technology. so people want to see personalities, not just someone walking down a runway or just a face. >> bill: yes, personality. joining us from chicago, marion salsman and a former model and author of the book, "model student." this is an internet business story. that's what i think this is, correct? >> exactlyim. >> bill: this woman does this little distance -- not extraordinarily special, would you say? >> well--
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she -- >> she is very beautiful. >> bill: she's a beautiful girl. the camera gets it. it gets on the internet. people look at it and all of a sudden, she's a -- attracts modeling agencies. >> she put the video on the internet, herself. >> bill: of course! >> she's been very savvy. and the most important aspect is not that she did that. a lot of women want to be a model, young girls and they are probably putting their videos on the internet t. works for justin bieber. but who received that message? and who received that message and decided to sign her was ivan bart-- a big model guy at i.m.g., a big agency. he see its and discovers her. but the point of the story is that no longer do individuals, whether they are singers or dancers or models, have to go through the traditional way to
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get famous. they don't have to do that -- >> well, yeah. >> bill: you get lucky enough to get yourself on -- you know, youtube and people -- as robin pointed out, a guy in a modeling agency sees it, bing! you can go and go fast! >> it's a matter of how many friends, fans and followers and do you have the innate talent or something unique? because as she said, there are dozens and dozens and dozens of fabulous people out there doing just the same thing. why did this one click? she had "it." the real question is the trajectory of finding success and fame. if you have the right stuff, you will find it-- this was almost a year ago that she did this. but with all due respect to this woman, this isn't anything extraordinary. a lot of women who are as pretty as she is and can do the dopey dance as well as she. so what is different here? >> right, exactly. she's an "it" girl it is and
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isn't about her. this is partially about her and the modeling industry has been in the doldrums and not doing well. you know, this girl kate talked about going back to the era of the super model. it's been dead. maybe she can revive it. and everyone wants to go back to that era-- i don't want to go back there. that frightens me. those people weighed 82 pounds. >> well, everyone wants to go back to that in the modeling industry-- oh, in the modeling industry. >> it was a big success. >> bill: my contention is, miss salsman, is that the world has changed. individual people with talent or good looks, if they are smart like this woman was, miss upton, and they can get themselves on the worldwide internet in the context of a very specific thing, all right? this -- i don't understand this dance. to me, this is not ginger rogers
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out there. all right? i am not the audience. but if you can do that, you can build your own career without these big agencies and without talent scouts and all of that. give you the last word? >> you can find your way to the right talent scout, the right agency, the right person who will buy your services very quickly. it's about speed to market. you can become the accelerator, that's the big difference. >> bill: okay. we have a woman that we use once in a while, marine athe hot for words lady. she is not with an agency. she is from russia. she figured it out. she has a very successful web site and business. she figured it out, got herself on "the view." people liked it. there it is. ladies, thank you very much. we appreciate it. and pinheads & patriots, starring justin bieber. i don't know about this guy. i don't know about the tie or the hair or any of it. but p&p, as the factor continues, all across the usa and all around the world.
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[ rosa ] i'm rosa and i quit smoking with chantix. when the doctor told me that i could smoke for the first wee.. i'm like...yeah, ok... little did i know that one week later i wasn't smoking. [ male announcer ] along with support, chantix is proven to help people quit smoking. it reduces the urge to smoke. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these stop taking chantix and call your doctor right away.
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tell your doctor about any history of depression or other mental health problems, which could get worse while taking chantix. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you develop these stop taking chantix and see your doctor right away as some can be life-threatening. if you have a history of heart or blood vessel problems, tell your doctor if you have new or worse symptoms. get medical help rightway if you have symptoms of a heart attack. use caution when driving or operati machinery. common side effects include nausea, trouble sleeping and unusual dreams. it helps to have people around you... they say, you're much bigger than this. and you are. [ male announcer ] ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. >> we're going to have a new announcement on the factor. in the light of the tremendous success of "killing lincoln". as i may know there are one and a half million copies of "killing lincoln". it was the fourth highest non-fiction shone selling book
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>> bill: by the way, we have my comments on whitney houston posted on billoreilly.com. lou... >> bill: sometimes they change their minds, lou. >> bill: i guess by you people you mean the democratic party, matt. they control both houses of congress in the first two years of the obama presidency. >> the white house uses them joe while they use some in the media. that is the difference.
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>> bill: in new york city we don't have roads. can't even see them. there is so much traffic. >> bill: go, ryan! when i lived in denver, the hockey team was the rockies which is the name of the baseball team. i don't know why i'm telling everyone this. but loved the mile high city, i spent two years there. finally pinheads and patriots, we zero in 17-year-old justin beiber, but very successful, funny hair cut. but what kind of guy is justin? one six-year-old massachusetts
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girl found out. >> she has aggressive brain cancer and she comes to the spa after treatments. when the staff found out how badly she wanted to meet justin beiber, they started a media campaign. the pop star spent two hours with her. they played candy land and ate sour patch kids and got in few kisses. they hope the meeting will become more aware of the type of cancer he is a has and the need for funding. >> bill: is that very nice story. mr. beiber is a patriot. that is it for us tonight. check out fox news website, my comments on whitney houston are posted on billoreilly.com. spout any time if you wish to opine. word of the day, no hornswaggle
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when writing to the factor. hornswoggle. please remember the spin stops >> one of my favorite words, hornswaggled. love it. good one, o'reilly. good morning. it's almost as good as kittywampus. thanks for sharing your time with us today. republicans and democrats on the same page now? what? both agreeing on a plan to keep your paycheck from shrinking next month. but there's one small problem. we have no way to pay for it as a nation. we'll explain. >> we've been hornswaggled. >> i think. >> yeah, exactly. i got to look that up. the president's hometown making headline for all the wrong reasons and this one does not look good for his particular resume. we'll tell you what's happening
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