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tv   Red Eye  FOX News  March 2, 2012 12:00am-1:00am PST

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captioned by closed captioning services, inc welcome to a special edition of "red eye." and no -- and now a man who has been on this show more times than i can remember. andrew breitbart died of natural causes causes in los angeles early thursday. he was a wonderful, glorious maniac. and i still think this might be a hoax. i do, i really do. he was just 43. to me though it is like a fiery planet going dark. his last wish for "red eye" i hear was not to have pinch at the table. so we had the newspaper removed. let's welcome our remaining guests. i am here with kurt loder and columnist and author, tv's andy levy.
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he still wanted the title. bill schulz who will not be my repulsive sidekick. and next to me is michigan congressman thadius mcconnor who should have been our next presidential nominee, but he failed. just kidding. anne, i go to you first. i wouldn't have met you if it wasn't for andrew breitbart. he introduced you to me trying to convince you to do this show. by the way, this show would not exist without breitbart. it was him who talked to fox to get this show -- or to get me a job. i was living in england and he talked to people at fox. i met with the people at fox and the next thing it was "red eye" and everybody here sitting here with the exception of bill because i knew bill, we never would have met. we never would have met if it wasn't for andrew breitbart bringing us together because that's what breitbart does or did and probably still will
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talking to somebody on his cell phone constantly. >> yes, and your introduction reminds me that not only would "red eye" not exist, but acorn would exist and representative anthony wiener would exist. i have been amazed today listening to how many people knew breitbart and talked to him in the past 24 hours. man he had a lot of friends. he told me so much about you before i met you. he was following you on huffington post and there was one he demanded i go and look up, which sorry i didn't, but it was about an ice cream truck. >> right. >> and he said there are all of these left wingers posting on the huffington post, and this guy i have never heard of before has this long piece on an ice cream truck. he was like that with a lot of people. he never claimed credit for himself, but he looked back and he was the flew or the
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instigator, for ends from of aide and for "red eye" and for the huffington post he helps drudge when i first met the drudge report and that was 1996 and 1997. for james o'keefe doing the acorn videos he was always promoting especially fantastic talents like you, greg gutfeld. >> you mentioned this one thing, he had no problems being behind the scenes. he did a lot of work for a lot of famous people who took that work and did well with it and andrew didn't get a lot of credit for it. i want to show real quick before i go to you, andy. if it wasn't for breitbart we wouldn't have "red eye" and we wouldn't have met him. he was the first guest. he is a clip. >> i don't know what else to say about neil cavudo.
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>> what i want to say is about you. you said you won't have a lot of viewers. but you represent a lot of viewers like myself who have no expertise -- >> i have no expertise. >> i think people hillary late to you on that. >> so i look like a raving drunk. he looks like the base player of a swedish rock band. he has the long hair. they haven't gotten famous yet so he hasn't lost the weight. >> i said that to him once in half time i said, you are -- he looked like a wandering minstral. he should be talking in verse. >> yes, he should be talking and dancing. that was the interesting thing about breitbart. there was nothing like him in the conservative move meant. i look at him as an
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evolutionary step from the merry pranksters doing and making change and almost creating or publishing events through action. not writing things, but making things happen. how did you meet him, congressman? >> i think i met him through patina incline who is at the republican national committee who knew about this blogger and activist named andrew breitbart and he retweeted something i put out, and she said that was a good thing. having gone through his twitter stream lately, no. i feel like everybody else he would be warm and inviting and you get to meet him. my wife and kids took our family out there and sat down and ate pizza with his. they loved him. the man was just -- he was what you said. he was a magnetic personality that was humble in his basic understanding of how things worked.
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none of us would be here without him. i think our thoughts and prayers go out to the family. i know he will never be replaced. >> that's the weird thing. i measure people by the void they leave. it is a bizarre, massive void -- that sounds a bit weird. but, kurt, -- i didn't meet you until perhaps a year and a half ago through breitbart. again this is something he did. he said "you should meet kurt loder." we go to a restaurant -- >> no reason. >> no, just meet kurt loder. he is the legend from mtv, and the guy i grew up watching. no offense. he is only three years apart from me. this is weird. we are smoking cigarettes and we find out breitbart knew who the like minds were. he knew we would hit it off. there was something he understood about people like you and me. >> he was a charming guy. i have a friend in l.a. that
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is a down the road left winger who met breitbart and was so charmed they were pals. he was that kind of guy. if he were here today he would be outraged being dead. "i can't be dead. i have projects on the burner. i have things to reveal. i have government bureaucrats to fry. i want my time back." >> like charl ton these stone, you will have to ply the blackberry out of his old, dead hands. before i get to you, i want to go with one of the feathers in breitbart's cap. this is something like who does this sort of thing. it is the whole anthony wiener phenomenon which i believe -- i believe breitbart liked wiener -- anthony wiener. and it was not a personal thing. it was about honesty. it was about this is not true. i need to find the truth. so he co-opted a press conference. you know the story. >> she can talk to you more
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specifically about the ways with which she received this -- these photos. she is the one who is attesting to the fact that it came from congressman wiener. i have seen it. i have seen a lot of this congressman's body at this -- and he is in very good shape. >> this is what made breitbart special. he understood, bill, to step away and look at this as a circus. he knew it was thr was a circus. the big story was, there is a cover up and there is dishonesty, but he makes a comment about the guy's physique. >> and there was a rumor that he was in the works with a network that rhymes with cnn to co-host a show with anthony wiener. cnn denied it, but i have to say he could probably make that happen. low and behold, i would watch the show on cnn. >> i would watch that show if it was possible few muss
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breitbart because his soul and spirit would still be there. do we have another clip from the press conference? it is my favorite. >> you know what i would be accused of if i released this photo? i am toking this to save -- i am doing this to save his family. if this guy wants to start fighting with me again i have this photo, but i absolutely -- i am not doing this for gnaw fare yous purposes. i would like an apology from him for allowing for his political protectors which this was his strategy was to blame me, to blame me for hacking. oh don't worry breitbart is our regular whipping boy. we can accuse him of anything and the press will not hold those journalists to account no matter what they say. i am here for some vindication. >> anne, the one thing that struck me is he could take a sentence and turn it into the longest sentence ever. i mean, the thing is, you know, being on the phone with us, --
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>> yes, i have rearranged my shoe closet in conversations with him. they are always delightfully funny. you know, that press conference -- you were saying he was new for the conservative movement. he is new for america, for the world, the merry pranksters, yes they were fun, but they weren't getting institutions shot down. they were not getting congressmen to resign. they weren't exposing the mainstream media. he was both a prankster and an amazing rock on tour, but moving things forward and changing the world. >> i'm glad you said that because i could never pronounce it, and now i can. we have all been on the other end of a breitbart phone call. >> anybody who knew breitbart knows this. you would be sit agent home and the phone would ring and see it was him and literally half the time you would not pick up because andrew didn't understand that he was a freak
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of nature. he had this energy that like the energy of a two-year-old, and you would just -- you knew if you picked up the phone that was two hours of your life gone, and it was always interesting and always fascinating, but this high energy nonstop thing until finally he would just say he got off the phone, okay, bye. and then click he was gone. >> the best phone calls with breitbart is when he is doing three other things. he has four kids in the background and he is holding a big iced coffee and on the phone and he is like, yeah, yeah, great. here is what we have to do. i will be sending you the pictures -- hold on. $35, okay. have i to get $35. the kids are screaming. and you are like, i'm at work. i'm at work. i want to show -- i know this is out of order, but it involves roller blading to give our producers a hint. the one thing i love is how breitbart would engage his
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adversaries. he showed up at like an anti-capitalist protest. he came with love and with roller blades, and then later he invited all of the people that hated him to an appleby's and they went. i think we have tape of this. >> ♪ i have a brand-new pair of rollerskates. ♪ >> who does this? who will do this? >> you can't get mad at somebody on a roller blade and you can't get mad while enjoying appleby's. >> it goes back to the people that run into him and end up liking him no matter what. >> i used to tell all of my liberal friends if the subject of breitbart would come up, i said if you met this guy within five minutes you would like him within a half hour. you would want him to be your best friend.
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he had that affect on everybody. i honestly think it was impossible if you met him in a nonpolitical setting it was absolutely 100% impossible to dislike him. you had no choice. he was so infectious not in the waybill is, but in a good way. >> they are coming for you. >> there was just no way to not enjoy him. >> he really knew a lot about pop culture. he knew a lot about technology and media. he was excited about everything. it was infectious to be around him. >> i would give him cd's and we would talk about music and we were both frustrated by the fact that we were the few people that did that. andy has bizarre musical tastes. congressman you were on the floor today -- also you were in congress -- a little joke there to lighten the mood. you had eloquent words about
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our dear, departed friend, andrew breitbart, and i am talking slow to make sure you have it ready now. >> in indeferring to you low. -s no more eloquent test meant to their family. to his wife, susie, and their four beautiful children, our prayers, our thoughts and our acts are with you. professionally, in andrew's genius that was his life's work, he tirelessly fought the good fight, and in the end gave his all with every fiber of his soul to serve his fellow human beings and his country. >> you know, congressman, you have to cut back on the smoking. >> i i wanted to make sure they got it for the clip.
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i think the one thing i tried to convey about him, and i think everybody here has said and anne has said, he knew politics was part of life. politics was not life. if you disagreed with him, he did not hate you. that's the way normal rational human beings are supposed to approach this. and it is such a dye cot me with the way he has been treated in his passing by others. i find that to me to be frustrating, but in the end, you take from his example one of the best things is if you disagree with somebody it doesn't mean they are a bad cat. >> anne, one of the things we talked about what he does at events, he is electrifing, but my wife always calls him -- you know my wife is russian and calls him the wizzard. wherever he goes he conjures up something. you could be in a restaurant and it is a normal restaurant, but then like five minutes later there is a group of people do -- doing a dance. she is like, what did the wizzard do?
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you must have seen this. >> oh yes. and i have cornered him at boring parties so he would startling us all stories, and there usually would be a crowd. i think you are selling him short by saying he didn't hate liberals, he just wasn't angry. he said "i now understand you" but he took it to a much higher level. he said it is like crack. i am addicted to irritating liberals. i must do it every morning. and one other thing -- you know if you have lots of liberal friends he could entertain anyone, and people love to listen to him. but that would also lead to him introducing you to an astonishing cast of characters. he was entertaining at the bar. andrea, you just introduced me to a pimp. that actually happened. >> bill, you don't agree with him on 90%, but that never mattered. >> the second to last time i was hanging out with him we were at a bar more late than
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we should have. and we -- >> no, you? >> breitbart might have been there. i was home doing my prayers. i didn't notice it until the -- halfway through the conversation. we were talking about something like the dodgers. he finished his point and he would just go, socialist. socialist. he did it for like five minutes. i was like, what are you doing? he said. nothing, socialist. you have to love him. >> that's fun. if you can call somebody a commi pinky it is -- pinko, you like them. if you don't call them that, they don't deserve to know. >> especially with bad music from the 1980s which you never expect to find. he knew every madonna track that came out. >> there was good music in the 1980s ? >> yes, there was. >> he liked a lot of duran-duran.
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>> a couple years ago he used to get on twitter some nights when clearly he only had 29 other things going on and needed a 30th and would start playing twitter dj and linking to videos and songs. it was like pet shop boys, crowded house, echo and the bunny men. it was all of this 80s, mostly brit stuff. it was hilarious. >> his favorite band was the the. he loved the the. he was also a smiths fan, but he loved that kind of new romantic, new wave music. i was more into heavier stuff, but i will cut him some slack now that he is gone. i would have yelled at him about it if he was alive. >> he got lost -- >> go ahead. >> i was going to say, he drove an hour out of his way once because he was in a car by himself drew ifg to a speech and that 80s pop music came on the radio he loved so much. so he calls his wife, susie, so for one hour she could stay on the phone and they could
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sing the songs together on the phone at the top of their lungs. and then he realized an hour later he had taken a wrong turn and was going in the wrong direction. >> coming up, more stuff about breitbart. >> andrew, what do you make of this? is this the policy california needs right now? >> can you do me a favor? >> what do you need? >> tell me more about what happens in the prison. you have no idea. >> oh my gosh. >> oh my god.
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welcome back to this special "red eye" tribute to
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political commentator andrew breitbart. joining us is a close favorite of andrew. he is known for such legendary films such as "grandma's boy." by the way, again, how did i meet you? i met you through you andrew breitbart. >> andrew breitbart. he said, you have to read this guy at the huffington post. he is the only interesting writing there. i said are you kidding me? how can he compare to steven webber? >> poor steven webber. >> i felt bad, but he was pompous in his essays. >> he was. he said you have to go and watch "grandma's boy" which is one of the more under rated films in the elderly -- >> the movie is about a grandmother and a boy. it is probably top four. >> how did you meet breitbart? how did you run into this
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character? >> i actually as most conservatives in l.a. meet, someone from washington, d.c. had to introduce us. a friend of mine, katherine lopez, from national review said you have to meet andrew. you and him will hit it off so well. so she was out in l.a. one time and we met and that was it. we were just late night phone buddies. >> so you also experienced the breitbart phone phenomenon as well. >> yes, yes. one of my favorite things was i would love when i would call him, and he would just pick up and start talking and having a conversation, and then 10 minutes in he would be like, oh hold on, they just called me on stage. i am giving a speech. i would be like, what? >> tell me -- >> he was sitting in traffic is what i thought. >> i am guilty of this, and if
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he can hear me he will now know that there were times where i would put the phone down. i would get up and get something to drink and come back and he would be still going. i would just go -- i would go, andrew, recap. what are you trying to say? and then he would summarize everything. >> didn't you at least tell him where you left off? the other thing about andrew is something you guys were saying earlier, and it actually went from a story i read about what he was doing last night. it is so typical is when ever i would go to meet him somewhere i never walked in and found andrew alone. you are never like, meet me at the restaurant. you show up and he is just sitting there and waiting quietly. it was like, can these guys join us? >> exactly. >> who are they? i met them in the parking lot. >> the thing is, the only time
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he ever kind of got pissed off at me is when i said, what are these people doing here? it was somebody who we just met, and we were supposed to go out. and there were these two people there. i'm just like, what are these people doing here? he is like, why? >> they are my kids. i have to take care of them. >> he was the most inclusive person. he thought it was kind of like gross that i thought maybe we were just going to go off somewhere. >> you thought you were going to have some you and andrew time. >> yes. i was hurt that he split my time with two complete strangers. >> you know, the story that was in the hollywood reporter this morning was about the guy he spent two hours talking to. >> yes. >> it was a perfect stranger he sat down next to, and the guy was like, i kind of recognized him and the next
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thing you know we spent two hours talking about politics. we disagreed on everything. we exchanged numbers because he wanted to get together again. >> the great thing about the person in the bar, there is no way to prove how smart he was in the conversation. i read the article and the guy who was quoted always had a good response to breitbart. breitbart is not there to say, i didn't say that. >> and the fact that the guy actually said he got a word in. >> it might not have been breitbart. it could have been somebody else completely. i hate to ask this question, but how did you take the news? for me, for all of us here it was a pretty brutal shock. it is 12 hours, eight, 9 hours. >> i am like you. i literally sat there staring at one of the big sites with the thing that larry sullivan
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had written. i had gotten some e mails from the east coast when i woke up and i'm like, what? what are you talking about? and so i literally sat there staring at the computer just not believing it. it is like you said. i keep expecting to get a text from him that says, shhhh. >> i keep getting these e mails saying, i wanted a tribute show, thanks. and then the next thing was, that's all i wanted. we have to take a break. more stuff about andrew when we return. >> a 31-year-old duluth man -- what is that -- appeared in court. >> duluthian. >> and had bail set at $10,000 after he slashed exercise balls at a local hospital. the jerkness admitted it was part of a deeply rooted sexual fetish. breitbart tell me this is way beyond your idea of fetish.
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oh my goodness. thank you very much.
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welcome back to this special "red eye" tribute to andrew breitbart. joining us is the editor in chief, larry o'connor and editor at large ben shapiro. by law they have to share the same screen. one has to wear black and the other one has to wear a shirt without a tie.
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i don't know which one to go to first, but basically i am going to ask both of you what it was like to work with andrew who literally -- you know that stupid joke about something on meth? he is like crystal meth on crystal meth. he is a hard guy to pin down. >> he was a force of naff. you have really nailed it. by the way, he absolutely would have loved this show and he would have kicked your butts for the things you are saying. there was nothing like watching andrew when he woulds surf the giant wave of the news cycle like a champion surfer. he knew the media better than anyone else. his experience and the understanding of it, as you put it, greg, the circus, it was something to behold. it was like watching a master conductor with a symphony. >> he was an impressario, the way he could manipulate the media and throw a story out there. it is easy to -- the shear joy
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that was andrew. i met him when i was 16. >> that was like 12 years ago, right? >> and he asked me to a restaurant in westwood where he proceeded to regail me with whatever was on his mind that day. that is who andrew was. the way that he rolled out stories, the shear genius of how he rolled out the acorn story was something to behold. he played the media against itself so beautifully. >> if you 2 back and look at all of the clips it was rarely -- he would always talk in the group. we are doing this. our story is there. is this. he shared with all of the people that worked for him and with him. >> i am glossing over the point that andrew breitbart took a teenager to a restaurant. we are letting that go. glad how you turned this into an up lifting story about -- you know, we know what happened. you guys, woulded with him -- worked with him. do you think he got too
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involved in the world of the social media and the internet? i know we have all had this conversation about him and with him. he almost became an electronic animal. there was no -- it was almost like he had become a computer or something. >> it is hard to -- i mean, yeah. we all obviously had conversations with him saying andrew, give twitter a break today for god sakes. but to separate him from that, to take him away from his computer and his blackberry expi pad and twitter, it wouldn't have been andrew. >> i saw him on a cruise without internet access and it was like talking to somebody who was in detox. there was no question about it. he was on the phone saying, i can't deal with this. where is the computer? >> you remember congressman bob ethridge who is now a retired congressman thanks to andrew breitbart. he grabbed the kid on the streets in dc saying who are you? that video broke the day he
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was on a cruise and he had to spend four days at sea without knowing the impact of that story. >> i think i was with him on that cruise. >> obviously i followed andrew on twitter. i eventually had to -- there is a way you can turn off retweets from someone so you don't see their retweets in your feed. he is the only person i ever had to do that with on twitter to save my sanity. anyone on twitter knows he would retweet all of the hate tweets he would get. >> that was brilliant. the way he understood the social media and played the left against itself exposing how much they hated him and then poking them with a stick and waiting for them to come after him is what he reveled in. >> absolutely, but 30,000 times a day i can't take it anymore. we were talking during the break, i once called into your radio show -- actually ben i think it was because of what you wrote -- >> it was shapiro. shapiro wrote a column --
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>> ben wrote a column making -- shooting stanley could kubric down which means he has big problems. >> he is really rich. >> larry said, breitbart is calling in. we both call in. there was one point that breitbart would not shut up. i put my phone down and started checking my e mail. 2* felt like a half hour later and larry you finally got a word in and said something to me and i was like, i have been checking my e mail for the last half hour. i have no idea what is going on. >> it was beautiful. it was a classic moment. everything was an extension of andrew's thought process. honestly i believe when he came on my show, especially at that time, he took one deep breath and went. i waited for that breath to expire, and then it was time for me to chime in. it was all just one drawn out long run on sentence. >> i was always impressed he remembered whatever the question was by the time he got to the end of it. it was like -- so where were
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we? when he used to guest host for den physician miller and you would -- dennis miller and you would go on the show and it is not that hard. you sit there and go, yep. yep, yep. he goes what do you think? i go, i'm with you there. i want to ask you, app, do you think he was uh districted to the internet? addicted to the internet do you think that was something that had taken over his life? >> i think it had taken over his brain. it was an extension of his body. one thing that i think is not coming out is i really think he was a genius. he was very, very smart. the way he could phrase an issue and make you think about it in a way you hadn't thought about it, he used to complain the conservatives are saying, we lost the cultural war. he would say, you haven't even started fighting. you are not in it. that was a lot of what he was doing. he asked me to endorse his first book, "hollywood interrupted" and i was busy. my own book was coming out and back then i used to read the
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entire book before endorsing it. i would say i would love to. i got it and started reading it. for the next two hours he got 50e mails saying this is brilliant. i can't put it down. h is the greatest book i ever read. it really is a fantastic book. he has interesting insights. he looks at things in ways no one else does all while going a million miles an hour and mayor making connections and having these long phone calls. >> before i go to break, allen, do you have anything to add about his peculiar tees with technology and -- >> from the minute i met andrew, the first things he talked to me about were we need to win the culture. this was his obsession. he used technology as a furtherance of this. i was never on twitter, and then i finally got on twitter. after literally 24 hours i called him and said, so you just rethrow out there all of the hate people throw at you? he said yes, exactly. and i am wearing the pink
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shirt in honor of some of the retweets. as we know about our tolerant friends who hated andrew, they loved the gay slurs. >> yes. >> so in honor of andrew i am wearing pink. >> sure. >> you couldn't find anybody more pro gay than andrew, and he delighted in being called a homo fob. we have to take a break. more on andrew breitbart and here he is asking dr. drew an important question. >> dr. drew? >> yes. did you say something? >> have i a friend -- i have a friend who has sex with his wife once or twice a week. what can we do about this man and his sexual mania?
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welcome back to this special tribute to our dear friend, andrew bright bart. breitbart.
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i have done some events. i think it was a couple times with reason magazine. we did an interview with reason and breitbart -- i think we started off talking about something perverted, and we were drinking and smoking, and then he ended up talking about growing up in brentwood and becoming a conservative. >> i went to a fancy school and saw the parents of the hollywood grad and they were laughable and they had attitudes. i was working delivering pizza and making $60. she gave me a $20 tip and i went down to tower records and would buy new order cd's and by that would be by new standards. >> most who delivered pizzas
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were radical leftists. what was it about her? >> everybody there was a leftist. i wanted to be a rebel. so i -- i fell in lock step with the conservative movement. >> ben i will go to you. it happened to me in my life which is the rebellion against the rebellion. and in pop culture, everybody is the dean warmer is the nerd and the cool guy is the guy who screws with dean wermer. i learn it is the opposite. and he rebelled against those who are seen as cool making him super cool. >> if there was one group he hated more than anybody else he was nirvana. he thought nirvana was the worst thing that happened to the planet earth. that was what was so great. it was a voyage of constant discovery. everything he learned lead him further and further down to the path of truth.
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when you frame this, everybody else is on the left and he decided to be on the right. it formed in his mind with the clarence thomas hearings. he heard he was a horrible, sexual deviant. and when he saw what they were about he was indignant and outraged at the likes of joe biden and ted kennedy that that's -- it was that anger at a bully that was using lies and innuendo and name calling to a good and decent man. >> you bring up nirvana and i want to go to kurt. >> i believe andrew breitbart is the kurt cobain, dying in his prime and will in fact become bigger and breitbart will be a bigger name because of his unfortunate demise.
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i am putting a sugar coat on it here. as you know as somebody who swims in pop culture how important it is this guy can even talk about that sort of thing. >> that's true. now that he is not around not as many people hate him. his or raw -- hora remains. he can be helping to change pop culture. >> i want to get back to something you said about how it was important breitbart could talk about this thing. i don't think that is a small thing. i don't think it can be underestimated. a lot of what conservatism has been missing since breitbart, there was a lot of cultural criticism. the argument was we haven't started to fight the culture war. he actually participated in the culture. it wasn't like someone whose musical tastes atrophied. he understood the culture. he was part of the culture. he didn't dismiss it.
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i think that brought a big thing to conservatism. >> it will make us remember andrew for the destructive things he did like bringing the truth out. he was an artistic soul. he was very creative. the networking and bringing people together. the social network was a creative act. for a party and a movement that was considered accountants. he was artists that could bring everybody forward with him. >> can't spell art without breitbart. any of you try to do it. see how i did that? >> greg, just so you know my understanding is that andrew really wanted bill schulz to play him in the movie. >> larry, that's because he wanted to bring hollywood
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down. >> that's right. that's his plan. >> you know the phrase culture is up stream from politics, that was andrew's. the culture is up stream from politics he started off loving hollywood and wanting to be a part of hollywood. and the way he was conservative is he was driving around delivering for the movies and started listening to rush limbaugh in the car. and then he decided he hated everything he was doing in the movie industry and wanted to take it down from the inside. that was his goal. >> i have to take a break. i want to thank all of you on remote, ann coulter, larry o'connor. it sucks we had to do this show. but i think he would have liked it, and everybody, i don't know, say a prayer for the family and see if we can do our best for them. we will have final thoughts as we wrap up "red eye" tribute to andrew breitbart. >> andrew, how do you feel? do you think this guy should go away for life?
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>> well, the real question here is who made off with all of the money?
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welcome back to our dear friend of the show.
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one of the things i liked was he had an idea every minute. it was always some new website like this one fnlt. >> what is your plan forward for the future? more websites, more, i don't know. >> i am not kidding you. i came off of the website that i am going plan and i wanted to use your merry men who are out traveling between l.a. and new york. this would be my first foray into the nonpolitical websites. celebrities who fly coach.com. i own the url. don't try and buy it. >> this is me. no, this is not another clip. boy, i lost weight again. no, he had another great idea called women who pick up dog poop.com. he would drive around seeing women walking their dogs, cute girls in l.a. he said this would make millions. pretty women picking up dog
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poop.com. he collected some pictures. >> the problem is he would get too close. you have to do it from a long lens. >> is t sounds like a guy explaining a fetish to his wife. >> he got that idea. he always had -- he got to that point -- do i have time for occupy wall street? this is him with occupy wall street. >> as much as i hate occupy and i ripped it. i have been to occupy and i swear, occupy, chapel hill, l.a. twice, dc, when you go down there, and you get caught up in the pulsing action. they have like a guy doing a turn table and it was like this dancing during the middle of the day. i is a a hippie chick with a little ponch and she was doing hula-hoops to the music with her neck. and you can stand there and see the freaks of nature like
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the old dead shows of the 1970s and 1980s and as much as you hate the politics behind it you are like, i kind of like you people. i don't know why. i can't explain it. >> that's the point. he saw the humanity. he didn't demonize anybody. he knew those people were having fun even though he disagreed. >> he also knew what was going on. he obviously believed deeply in all of his causes, but he had that artist inside. he was like a prop master. he delighted in using the tactics against the left because they were primarily tactics of the left and he was good at it. >> have i to move on. thanks to ben. kurt loder, bill schulz, andy levy and congressman thadius mcconnor. thanks for watching and god bless the breitbart family. >> i want to sing a song for you. it goes a little like this. ♪ smack, smack, sugar smack
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♪ give me a smack and i'll smack you back ♪ ♪ it is fun to eat the smacks of wheat ♪ kelloggs sugar smacks.
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