tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News July 19, 2012 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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texts while the show was on? >> a couple gossip items i can't share, but thanks for asking. >> absolutely. back to you, greg. >> thanks, andy. special thanks to lori roth map, her disturbed baby-sitter, bill schulz, braun oler, that does it for me. i'm greg gutfeld. george zimmermn the record. tonight, if the election were held tomorrow, tomorrow, who would win? >> obama. >> but is that true? karl rove disagrees with charles krauthammer. so do i, your humble correspondent. we have interesting facts on how the presidential vote is shaping up. i think it's bad for the presidency. he's opining and telling people how it ought to be done. >> shouldn't president bush help the republican party win back the white house? dana perino will help us out on
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that. also tonight, lou dobbs on whether the obama administration even knows where billions in taxpayer stimulus has gone. >> windmills from china, electric cars from finland. >> caution. you are about to enter the no-spin zone. the factor begins right now. hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. who would win the presidential election if it were held today? that is the subject ofhis evening talking points memo. last night charles krauthammer predicted president obama would win if the vote were held right now. >> he's got a two-point edge in the popular vote. it's almost inconceivable that you would have that strong an excess in the overall vote and lose in the lec electoral colle. >> however, karl rove disagrees
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and believes romney would win. that's interesting as they're both astute analysts. talking voice believes obama would not carry one state that voted for john mccain last time around. therefore, mitt romney begins with 173 electoral votes. i also think the president will lose north carolina. that's 15 electoral votes. he'll lose new hampshire, four electoral votes, and indiana, le11let me torl votes. that brings romney up to 203, 270 to win. the governor is 67 electoral votes away if my analysis is correct. he can get 60 of those if he wins virginia, ohio, and florida. that would leave him just seven electoral votes from the presidency. you can see that mr. obama has very little margin of error. according to a poll by purple strategies, ohio, virginia, and florida are tied within the margin of error. as dick morris says when it's a tie, the challenger usually wins because undecides break against
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the guy they know best, in this case, the president. also the state of colorado with nine electoral votes is a tie as well. florida most likely to go to romney. the governor there is republican. the economy very shaky, and the minority vote for obama will not be as great as it was in 2008. ohio has republican john okay sickasik as governor. romney has a chance to take ohio. virginia is a wild card, but it's controlled by a republican governor, bob mcdonald who has improved the economy in his state. it's a good chance that romney will choose a vp candidate from one of those three states. he almost has to. going forward, romney is in pretty good shape according to karl rove's map. he's competitive in michigan, iowa, and new hampshire, three states that we want for president obama last time around. they comprise 26 le electoral votes. talking point does not see how barack obama will carry nevada with unemployment at close to 12%. with all due respect to charles krauthammer, at this point i
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think romney might be in the zone, and that's the memo. nowr to the top story tonight. reaction. joining us from stanford, connecticut, the author of the big best seller screwed, the aforementioned dick morris. so basically we're crunching the numbers, not too much speculation. this is all based on the poll, but a brand new fox poll just came in. this is registered voters and you always quibble with that, 45% for the president, 41% for romney. you say? >> well, last time i think it was seven points for obama. registered voter polls include roughly third of the sample that doesn't vote. obama is sweeping that demographic. he wins people that don't vote by 3 to 1. among those who do vote which is the likely voter poll, scott rasmussen today has it at 47-44 romney. now, when 44% of the people are
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voting for obama and even in some of these swing states as much as 47% are, that means he's going to lose the state. let me play a game with the people at home watching this. if you are going to be married to the same guy next year, same person next year, raise your hand. okay. hands down. undecided? what does it say when you're undecided about that? i think that whenever you have an undecided voter they are predisposed to vote against the incumbent. >> i think that's logical. >> that's one other thing which you also alluded to. all of these polls quote african-american turnout at 13 or 14%. it was 14 in '08, it was 11 in '04. when you ask voters are you likely to vote, how much are you following the election, how interested are you, the blacks are way down, way below whites on this, and i think they'll turn out 11%. the historic norm. so i think all these polls are two points wrong.
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>> all right. now, the electoral college, the key to this is the republicans have to keep what mccain had. they have to start with on 173. if you start getting defections from the south, and i saw a map today where south carolina, they say it's in play. i don't believe that for a second. do you see any state that voted for mccain that might go for the president? >> no. no. >> all right. so that's rock. you start with 173. all right. now, the president starts a little higher because he's got states like california and new york and washington state. fairly significant electoral votes there. so he's starting a little bit higher than mitt romney, but as you said, in states like michigan, that's in play this time around. iowa is in play. >> i've studied all the polls in the different states, and i think romney is going to win almost all of the battleground states. i think he's going to win virginia, florida, new mexico. >> but that's based on your wish, not reality, right?
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>> no, it's based on reality because i've been through hundreds of elections with incumbents running against challengers, hundreds of them, and the incumbent always loses the vast bulk of the undecided vote. >> tomorrow on the factor, and this is a signal to the guys upstairs right now, i want to have the polls between carter and reagan at this point in the middle of july. >> we'll have it. you'll see it. >> the other thing i wanted to ask you about is the obama administration very quietly is telling the states they can change their welfare rules. now, since you were one of the architects of the welfare reform under bill clinton, what do you think this is all about? >> oh, it's horrible, bill. when i was negotiating with trent lott and working for bill clinton on the final version of the welfare reform bill, trent said i want an absolute lead guarantee, cinch guarantee that the health and human services administration cannot redefine the word work to include
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sleeping late or going to school or going to a truck driver school from the back of a match book, and we wrote language that was air tight about that. now obama's administration is totally disregarding the statute. no question it will be thrown out by the courts, but it will take a while, and they are defining work as including study or training. in the past they've even defined bed rest, training to become a hula dancer as work. it completely guts the purpose of the law. >> yeah. you've got to state the purpose was basically the federal government told the states listen, you've gotta keep track of anybody getting well far money to -- welfare money to see that they're actively trying to find work, or they get cut off, and now it seems -- >> no, it's not that. you have to keep track of them. they actually have to be doing work, and if they can't get a job, you have to provide a public sector job where they work 40 hours a week in return
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for their welfare benefits. >> all right. so they have to be doing something to get the welfare. >> right. >> which the obama administration wants to do away with that. why? why do they want to do away with that. >> because he wants to spread entitlements. when obama took office, 43% of americans got checks from the government. now 50% are. his goal is to expand the entitle manies to expand his base. there's something even more scary thafn this, bill, in my book screwed, i write about the rights of the child treaty which is under negotiation in the un and the u.s. is likely to sign. that creates a statutory requirement to give welfare benefits to people to bring children up to certain levels. in britain, cameron is being sued for cutting welfare benefits unthe rights of the child tree treaty. receipt about it in my book. president bush the younger may have taken a the show at president clinton, his father's pal. later, body language on
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your former president speaks out about current approximate. president bush the younger said no. >> i think it's bad for the presidency to have former presidents bloviating, opining, telling people how it ought to be done. i don't want to undermine our president or whoever's president, and a former president can do that. >> but a couple of years ago i interviewed president bush on the same topic. 2/12. republicans have a lot of optimism that they'll take the white house back. are you going to help them? are you going to get out there and help them? >> i don't know. i don't know yet. i mean, thapts a lon that's a l.
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>> possible. >> i'm really not interested in being involved in the political scene. >> you're not going to be like bill clinton going from state to state with candidates. >> i probably won't do that, no. >> former president bush press secretary dana perino. he's taking a lo a little shot. bloviating and opining. he's watching the factor. >> it's a wonderful effect. >> clinton is all over the place discussing politics and trying to help president obama, and then on the other side, he's not. bush isn't. >> i think president bush always thought that it was going to be what he would do, though. he watched what happened to his dad and to ronald reagan. i don't think that this was necessarily directed at bill clinton, but maybe it's not directed at any of them. carter is obvious. >> wait. wait. he was definitely making a point that former presidents can undermine, all right, and i think that he wases talking about his father more than
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himself because i don't think bill clinton undermined president bush. >> i don't think so, either. >> but certainly carter sniped at bush the elder like crazy. >> and carter sniped at clinton a little bit and at bush 43 and at obama. he's been like an equal opportunity basher. >> sniper. >> and bill clinton and president bush, one of the secrets that people don't realize is they actually became friendly during the white house years that president bush was there. he would invite president clinton to lunch when he would be in town. it would be quiet. nobody would know about it. >> they worked together on the haiti thing and all of that. maybe you're right. maybe w didn't have clinton in mind, but certainly it's on his mind that he shouldn't criticize president obama, but here's where i disagree your former boss. this is a vital election. would you agree to that? vital. >> i think it's probably the most important election of my lifetime so far. >> so president bush is -- let's
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say he is a prestigious republican. he's prestigious. i don't think he's got the credibility to go and really campaign like clinton does. clinton's much more popular than bush the younger, but he's prestigious and in certain fund raising opportunities, he could help mitt romney big time and so could his father. he's going to sit it out? >> well, president bush 41 is not going to go to the convention. >> right. >> that is to be expected. >> he's ill. >> and understood. >> right. >> 43 never sought the klieg lights. >> does he love his country enough to go against what he wants and help mitt romney? >> i think what president bush is trying to do through his institute and through his actions is to do things like go to that trip to africa which was both personal but also good for the country. >> where he got yelled at by the guy in zimbabwe? that didn't work out well. >> it was apparently trip.
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>> you're dodging it. >> i am not. >> you admit and i admit and everybody who is watching, whether you like president obama or governor romney, this is a vital, vital election because it's going to set the course for how the united states operates economically, whether we're going to be quasi socialists, european, or go back to capitalism. >> let me speak to that point. >> you've got a two-term president sitting it out, sitting it out? >> he has to be true to himself. >> no, he doesn't. he has to be generous to the country. >> one of the things he did this week, the reason he did that interview was because they just released a book called the four percent growth solution about the promotion of free enterprise. because passions were to th so d only cooled over the passage of time that he's taken the right approach for himself and also for the country. >> dana, you are really a loyal press secretary here. all i'm saying is this.
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if mitt romney asked w to do him some favors, and it would have to be fund raising, that's what it would have to be, all right, would you go here, speak to this crew, they're going to donate money. i mean, he almost has to do it, i would think. he would have to do it. >> two things. my gut instinct is i don't think that he would because i think he would continue to say no. on the other side of things, when you look at what romney did for president bush in 2000, 2004, 2008, and beyond in helping him raise money for his library. if he is asked, just like if you're asked if you're going to be the vice-presidential candidate and you always say no, i wouldn't serve, but then you're asked and you do, we'll see. >> you think bush would do it if asked. is he going to the convention, w. is he going? >> he hasn't told you? you talk to him every hour on the hour i. is he going or not? >> i haven't asked him that question, and that's true. i haven't asked him. >> do you think he's going. >> i don't think so. i think that's the right thing to do for him and elections should be about the future as
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well. >> but want the party -- and i'm not rooting for anybody, but don't you want to rally the party? >> i think that people actually are comforted. >> comforted. >> i think that republicans respect the fact that he has -- one of the things president bush says is the man deserves my silence, and what a privilege to be able to work for a guy like that that i can say he actually stood up for his principles and his beliefs. >> no doubt. >> that helps him. >> president bush is a man of principle. i don't think anybody -- and anybody who said that president bush the younger is not a man of principle, they're lying. he is. >> the media would go crazy if bush came out. >> i think the country is in such bad -- not bad, but so shaky. >> he supports the republican candidate. >> dana perino. there are accusations that president obama doesn't even know where billions in stimulus money has gone. the factor rolls along.
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who's the boss segment tonight. the romney campaign stepping up its attacks on president obama. >> where did all the obama stimulus money go? friends, donors, campaign supporters, special interest groups. where did the obama stimulus money go? solyndra. $500 million taxpayer dollars, bankrupt. so where did the obama i stimuls money go? windmills from china. electric cars from finland. >> 79% of the 2.1 billion in stimulus grants awarded went to overseas companies. >> i'm mitt romney, and i approved this message. >> so do a truth serum on this ad. basically was it true or false? >> basically it's true.
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there are exceptions to that. there are a couple of issues that the ad, i think, missed, but overall, absolutely straight forwardly directly true. >> okay. how much stimulus money do you estimate has been pumped into the private economy to try to get things rolling? >> they put out $780 billion which is usually rounded up in public discussion to a trillion dollars. >> okay. >> but the reality is it's been diffused a lot of people. >> some of it has been tapped into and some of it has been paid back by the car companies in detroit. however, there's a lot of money that's gone out. do you think the obama administration knows where the money is? it's an awful lot of money to keep track of in. >> i not only don't believe they know, i'm somewhat skeptical of their intent and i don't think they necessarily care. more troubling is the national media doesn't have a very good grip on this. watchdog agencies are doing better, but they're only now
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focusing on the reality of what was stimulus. >> you are cynical. lou dobbs is cynical saying the federal government doesn't care about the taxpayer dollars and doesn't want to find out where it is. >> by the way, the more we learn about where this money has gone, they're desperately hoping we don't find out. >> let's go over that now. chinese windmills. what's the chinese windmills? >> the chinese windmills is probably the weakest part of the romney ad because only a few windmills were actually supported by american taxpayer dollars. >> why do we want to support chinese windmills? >> we don't. the ad makes it sound like there are a gusher a windmills. >> why would we give any money to build chinese windmills. >> it's green energy, and the president of the united states. >> so they built them over in china and sent them back here? >> exactly. what is really cool about this is not only would we be supporting them shipping the windmills in, we would be
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setting up companies like solyndra and others to manufacture our solar panels while china ships them to this country. >> there's not any windmills in china. alan combs is a if a i fanatic t this. >> actually, fisker was put together by one of the big supporters. steve wesley was also helping. these are obama guys. >> these folks are getting money. in the case of fisker, they say to us they didn't really even need it, they just did it to help the obama administration. >> they just took the money to help the obama administration. >> you know, i'd like to help the obama administration. if you'd like to send the factor stimulus money, we can buy some more ties. now, listen. the fisker deal, is this in
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finland? >> it's being made in finland. it's a beautiful car. >> it snows, how can they get it on the road? >> they have an indoor facility. >> did we build that, too. >> well, we didn't. they had a billion dollars they raised in capital. >> let me get this straight. this is interesting to me. so they want electric cars, but bush was in this, too. bush was in this too. >> bush himself was not in this. >> not in the bush administration? my notes are no good? >> your notes are very good. the problem with it is that this money was dispatched by the obama administration. >> all right. so let's blame it all on bank bk obama. here's the vision. we're going to build an electric car in finland that's going to come back with the windmills. are they going to ship them back together. >> you've got a logistics issues there and the collision of factors. they were going to build them in delaware. >> what's finland? delaware is not close to
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finland. >> finland is the big money car. that's the hundred grand job. the volkswagen, if you will, of electric cars, i guess we can't say that any more, what would be the model, but anyway, the volkswagen of electric cars was going toe the delaware built car, but they shut that plant down later. >> why did we send money to finland? why? if you're building them in delaware, why are we sending it to finland. >> they give it to fisker, that's the way it is. >> so the money goes over there and then comes back to delaware. this is crazy. >> one of the things in the obama administration expenditures is it doesn't matter where the money goes. what's going to happen is we'll see higher debt, a greater waste. >> do you think that they sit around in the oval office and go we want higher debt and greater waste, let's go. do you think that's what they're doing? >> i sure hope it is because if
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this is by accident, this is a mind bog ling epic ... >> how could you do this? >> do you really think, bill, they didn't notice after the first year they had run up a trillion and a half dollars in debt? >> you just don't -- these aren't rounding rounding errors. >> i just think it's incompetent that nobody pays attention. that's what i think. they sign off on it and all the charlatans move in. >> if you think i'm going to sit here and defend the administration's competency? >> body language. are president obama's presidents controversial remarks on success and mitt romney's reply to this. adam will give us the corolla point of view. we hope you stay tuned for those rortle.
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body language segment tonight. president obama really started something when he told the nation that individual success is usually built on help from other people including the federal government. >> somebody helped to create this unbelievable american system that we had that allowed you to thi thrive. somebody invested in roads and businesses. if you've got a business, you didn't build that. somebody else made that happen. >> to say something like that is not just foolishness, it's insulting to every entrepreneur, every inknow separator in american, and it's wrong.
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look, president obama attacks success and therefore unpresident obama, we have less success, and i will change that. >> body language. we'll take the president first. they were both like wind mills. i got the wind mill thing going here. they're both like this. first of all, what's this? >> when you're doing this chopping motion, you're trying to be emphatic. >> two hand chopping. >> the difference is if you watched, obama was very animated. very big large gestures. you can tell he's playing to the crowd because it's context dependent. he's dancing, moving all over the place with these large gestures. >> why? what is he trying to get across. >> he feels positive, happy, he knows the crowd is enjoying what he's saying. he's kind of doing the dance. when we get to romney, you see a completely different picture. he's much more serious. there's an ambiguous anger in his face because he wants to show he's right. you see the brow come down, his lips tighten, his jaw cle clenc.
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when you see those hands moving, the only saw that i would take away anything from him was his very last sentence when he talks about under president obama, we have less success. as he says this, he opens his hands a little bit more. that was the only flash. >> what does that mean. >> usually that means there's a bit of an internal struggle. he's not quite sure about that, and that's why his hands are like that. >> how can he not be quite sure? he's building his whole campaign on that. >> that's true. >> let's get back to the president. the president is performing, as you said. >> yes. >> to his crowd. >> yes. >> does that mean he doesn't necessarily believe what he's saying, that this is just a performance? >> really, what it means, you have to realize both of these people are coached, but what it boils down to is he's going to play to whatever audience he needs to. when he needs to be serious, he'll be serious. when he hears cheers -- >> in sincerity, does it merit? >> you would be able to tell if his movements didn't match the timing of his words. as he's doing his dance, what i'm looking for is to make sure the timing is on, and in both
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situations, the timing was on. that's one of the most important things. >> both men, you think, believe what they were saying? >> yes, i do. >> robert blake we think has gotten away with murder. he went on cnn the other night. go. >> why would i marry her if i was going to kill her? i mean, i was worth $25 million. i could have hired somebody to kill her when she was in tibet or some place. she drove all over the country. i could have hired somebody to follow her for ten months and make her disappear so nobody would ever find her, for christ sake. i would go out to dinner with her to kill her? what the [bleep] is the matter with you? >> so i don't really -- he looks to me unstable, mentally unstable. did you pick that up? >> what i pick up on is that he is so emphatic in his protests that that to me is a big red flag. >> wait. wait. he's accused of murder. i mean, the guy, you know, that's big, so i didn't get
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that, but i just think that he may not be all there. >> these gigantic hand movements are not normal. he knew what he was going to be asked when he went on. >> he knew. >> so the expletive, taking up the big space, leaning forward, using his body to kind of be very aggressive, and the very large hand movements all say to me i'm trying to attack you so you'll back off. when we become that angry. >> but that's not crazy, though. that's con drived. >> right. >> there's a goal there. >> yes. >> so you're saying that he isn't nutty. >> no, i'm not saying that. there's a fine line between how he's behaving erratically and when someone is trying to pretend that they're angry so that you back off the questions. >> you think he was pretending? >> i think a lot of what he does. >> feigned outrage. >> feigned outrage. a good word. he comes across as back off because i'm dangerous. that's a big thing that people do, they deflect the anger when they're trying to look like they're innocent. >> when we come back, adam corolla says high taxes are not good for america.
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f.b.i. in his stead, the author of the big new best seller not taco bell material, adam corolla. we should say miller will be on tomorrow and he couldn't get here tonight. we appreciate you filling in, adam. >> i saw him. he was in the parking lot, by the way. i passed him on the way in. dennis miller. he was trying to eat a they saws in the parking lot. >> i could see that. you're kind of a new found rich guy, you know, making it big as a comedian. you got a nice book out, selling some copies. how do you feel about rendering your cs above 40%. >> i don't like it and i'm wildly insulte insulted when eve does that. when are you going to start paying your fair share? i pad last year what a meter maid pays in 50 years. you don't think that's my fair share? you want me to pay what a meter maid pays in 55 years. >> you live better. >> good. i work harder than a meter maid,
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and i'm smarter than a meter maid, and i bust my [bleep]. >> people can get more if they work harder. >> you guys in los angeles and hollywood, i would tax you guys at 70%, just you guys, because the money you take home, the take home pay, you spend it on hookers and cocaine, so it would be better used, you know, to fund programs that we need. doesn't that make sense? >> by the way, since when did transvestites and speed get replaced by cocaine? >> i'm sorry. that's a good point. >> wow. i felt like i was attacked. bill, let me tell you something very seriously and very honestly. i am sitting about two blocks away from the burbank airport. a few years ago after doing my podcast, i drove brian cranston to the burbank airport to catch a southwest flight to new
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mexico. i said what are you doing? he said i'm doing breaking bad. he said it was originally supposed to be shot in riverside, california next so san bernadino, california which just declared bankruptcy. we shoot it in new mexico because they give us breaks on the taxes. they're going into season 5 of breaking bad, and every single tax dollar has gone to new mexico and not broke california. it's a great strategy. >> people in hollywood tend to be very liberal, and they want to have higher taxes on the 1%. when their films and tv shows are in motion, they send them to new mexico or vancouver, canada or places like that where they don't have to pay the taxes they have to pay in california which is bankrupt. california, not just san bernadino, the whole state is bankrupt. you see a little hypocracy here? >> yes. i spoke to it on the way to the burbank airport. i like brian cranston. he's a real nice guy.
quote
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let's face it. he wasn't arguing with me. he said we're going there because it's cheaper, and now that's five seasons of breaking bad that we could have had here with caterers and grips and everybody. times how many productions? >> on this topic, i have to tell you. if your life had turned another way and taco bell had hired you, you wouldn't have these tax problems, carolla. you know what i'm talking about? >> that's true. >> you've got to put everything into perspective. >> thank goodness. >> you're an astute analyst of the entertainment industry. batman comes out tomorrow, right. is batman tomorrow or something like that? this is like huge. does everybody dress like a bat out there? what's going on? >> well, we dress like bats year around just in case a batman movie comes out. once in a while they'll release one on blu-ray and we'll want to be ready. it's insane to me because it's funny when people go have you seen the new batman, and i go
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wait a minute. let me get this -- let me guess here. this is the gay one who is super happy and minces about or is this the dark brooding not your father's batman? what? i'm shocked. the 40 something-year-old adult should not be talking about this movie with nearly as much fever and fervor as we do. >> but everybody -- i'd like to be batman. that would be fun. you don't have any speed limit, the batmobile goes wherever you want and you have cat woman. cat woman. now, i don't know whether you're old enough to remember julie nuwmar. i don't know whether hathaway, the new one, will be able to fill julie's paws as cat woman. >> or cat box, as it was. i would say this. i love julie nermar.
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jim ble belushi hates her. google that one and you'll laugh. i got off the batman bandwagon when they started molding nipple nipples into his fake breast piece. they started putting lipstick around them. >> i left the wagon when caesar romero was something when he retired. adam carolla everybody. did you see that on deck, a charles bronson type vigilante action here in new york city? we'll show you what happened in just a few moments.
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beneath the streets of brooklyn, new york. >> all right. here to explain what happened, that looked pretty serious. >> let me tell you something. you're a man. you're also 6 foot 30, you don't ride subways. you have your limo taking you everywhere. let me tell you something as a subway rider, an infrequent subway rider. every time i'm on a subway and it's busy during rush hour, it's a hotbet of perversion. people are rubbing up against you. so what happened here is this guy allegedly grabbed the bottom
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of some woman and she let him have it. >> absolutely. >> and you know the iphones started coming out as well as they should, and then you see these guys. they grabbed the guy and they said no more of this. >> what happened to the guy? >> well, he was arrested, and he is charged not, you know, with inappropriate touching which probably is not going to do very much, but i mean, this is a message to all you pervs out there, you know. you've got big brother and big center watching you. >> that's dangerous. the guy could have a knife or a gun. this is new york city, and it's not an easy place to be. i applaud those guys for doing that. >> would you have jumped in. >> i would like to think i would have, but i would not want to mess the suit up here. i'm kind of one of those batman type guys. i do respond to that. >> moving right along. >> in minneapolis there's a cat video deal. roll the tape. ♪
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>> do you like it? >> are you telling me you're not laughing hysterically at that. >> can we see that again? roll it again. so what is this? why are we doing that. >> there's a film festival. don't go to cannes film festival. go up to minneapolis. they've got this art institute place and on the wall, on the building's wall they show basically a cat, the internet sensation things. cats have taken over the internet. i don't know if you know that. >> somebody's director cut this together? is that what they did? they actually made that film. >> look at that little guy. look at that little guy. oh, yeah.
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it's a way to make people happy. >> that's what brian kilmeade does every morning. >> i love that little guy. >> okay. so it's just an art film. that's what this is. >> it's an art film. >> but it's a big phenomenon. >> it's on the o'reilly factor. it will be even bigger. >> there are millions of people watching it on the net and everything else. >> believe it or not, cats have overtaken the internet. >> do you have a cat by the way? >> i had a cat, lassie. may she rest in peace. >> you have a cat lassie? >> my family has a sick sense of humor. the cat was about 112 years old when it finally passed away. >> americans love their cats. >> i used to make fun of people that had cats, especially guys. >> you became a cat person and named it lassie. >> meow. >> in a moment, the factor tip of the day, don't name your cat lassie. you'l>> hey. >> you'll at thank
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>> the tip of the day and you will be grateful to here it in a moment but first a quick reminder the >>bill: and the first billo'reilly.com presidential townhall meeting set for july 25, eastern time. you can debate we back-and-forth, check out the premium membership. see you july 31. and now newsletters. >> you and millions of "factor" viewers do but go to your local mall and ask and robert from san diego: all that is not everyone but i agree your generation has been
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distracted by high-tech to a great extent. >> and from kentucky: >> because he doesn't see >> he doesn't see himself as a socialist but the president sees himself as a social justice seeker. >> george from georgia: >> i pay millions of dollars to the government, george. that funds your medicare big iime. i pay capital gains on money i risk investing, american companies, so they can expand and create jobs. i up there -- i employ many. all from georgia, i got a skull
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tattoo on my neck, i have had several job interviews but in fall backs. get it removed. greg, from england: do you have any tattoo regret? >> i am too boring for that but once i get ink from the pen on my hand. >> i am tired of the tip of the day. i ask my history teacher husband if "killing lincoln," was good, and he said no, it is great. >> tip of the day: do you have a smart mouth? i do. you do not want to go to the dentist. >> it is very senseless. yes. senseless.
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>> take your time. >>bill: it is not safe, root can naturally, cavities, awful, why is a product called "smart mouth," a rinse in the morning, you do it at night, and it really keeps my mouth kleenex sent when i'm cursing. dentists will tell you a mouth full of bacteria can really hurt you. in a lot of ways. check out www.smartmouth.com and that is the "tip of the day." >> please check out the fox news factor website. word of the day, do not be
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