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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  July 3, 2014 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT

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noon right here on fox and then at 7:00 p.m. an "on the record" special wrong turn, marine held in mexico that's tomorrow at 7:00. set your dvr. see you next week on the 5:00. have a great fourth of july everyone and good night. >> the o'reilly factor is on. tonight: >> the factor goes hollywood. >> you don't want me to leave. you want this date to go on forever. >> how does conservative actor kelsey grammer handle liberal hollywood. >> do you have any heat when you go back because you are a republican and conservative? >> i have lively speculation about certain conversations. i have read some things about how pathetic it is to be a republican in hollywood. >> why are so many celebrities becoming so engaged in politics? republicans have gone have gone to where the democrats were 40 years ago. >> we selected some great interviews with top celebrity icons. it's hollywood and the factor together. >> i could interview you every day. >> thank you. i appreciate it?
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>> that's one of the reasons do you a show every day. >> it all starts right now. you are about to enter the no spin zone. the factor begins right now. hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for joining usent tonight.ne ache core rob low aw book called love life. second nonfiction tone. story was a big hit mr. lowe said there is a bias against good looking people. i wouldn't know. the reason you got into pictures in the first place is that you were decent looking. you were just some guy inohio ohio shoplifting. come on. >> it take as journalist of your stature to bring thisjo out of theur shadows. >> yes he.o o >> studies show, worldwide at least 10 or 20 people a year are afflicted with good
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looking bias. with good-looking bias. >> you are telling me because you are a pretty boy you don't get the real gravitas parts that somebody like daniel day-lewis would get. is that what you are saying here? >> i am merely saying this that when they tell you you can't play the lead role of a pta father because you don't look right, when you are pta father you go, hmmmm you know what you would be great for? the rich jerk. >> but you would be great for that. >> because i am a rich jerk. >> i watch these old movies on turner classic movies. you know, gable and grant all those guys are very good-looking guys. they got all the plumb parts. >> right. >> it's changed now. you have to have angst. >> i love those guys, guys who are my heros like continue anywhere row and dustin hoffman and pa chin know. >> all ugly guys. >> they are charismatic.
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>> all right, now, you also have said n your mow meeting this book that you want less government intrusion. is that correct? >> i do. yeah. your pinhead friends in hollywood they don't want, they want equality for everyone, which take as massive government. >> i want equality for everybody is great. that would be amazing. i just think that individuals usually do a better job than collective big government. >> so you don't want the government to be telling you thousand live and how not. that's kind of a libertarian position. >> that's funny, does that make me a libertarian? i'm a hollywood pinhead, bill, i don't know about political labels. >> libertarians want less government and more personal freedom which i think is what you are saying. >> that is what i am saying. all this time shedding the dogma of political labels. and you are telling me now i have to go back to living. >> it's not bad.
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you have to hang out with stossel which is very very difficult. >> i take it back. >> you know, i think, look, i'm not a libertarian but i don't think that the government can solve the problems that the government purports to be able to solve. >> just for the record we do need government for a lot of big ticket items. not total. >> we need the government to keep the transportation system running and to defend us against people like putin. helluva job on that. >> is he unbelievable. >> you should play putin. >> i have the pecks. >> you wouldn't mind going topless. >> i wouldn't mind shaving a little bit of my head. >> killing putin. that might be coming up. the book "love life" as i said your first book was very successful. say they buy 20 bucks on "love life" here what are we going to learn that we didn't learn in the first book. >> honestly there were so many stories that i didn't want to put in the first book because, frankly, i
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thought they were a little too provocative. if i put them in the first book i thought it would be all anyone talked about. so, once i got my confidence up as a writer really, i felt like i could tell some of the more. >> all right, so this goes a bit further than the first book. >> it absolutely does. but, also, i wanted it to on one hand be provocative and didn't have the guts to say in the first one. also be personal about raising two teenage boys. >> i read the book. it's a good book. lowe puts together a fast read. >> wait, wait, wait. this is amazing. >> i'm not blurbing you. it's a fast read. it's good. i got one more question and then i will let you go. i want to do the beard stubble thing. should i do that? is that hard to do. >> i want you to know the day i woke up and ready to shave honestly. >> o'reilly i'm not shaving. >> i said i'm on o'reilly and i know how much he hates it, i'm keeping it. >> you know, i'm not putting it down.
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i got the stubble going on. >> i knew. >> you took a shower though, didn't you? >> did i do that and wore a vest. >> and you wore a vest. >> that's because you are a pretty boy. that's what pretty coming up: conservative hollywood. we will talk to some heavy hitters. kelsey grammer and raquel welch. >> raw conservative woman? >> i would say i'm a conservative side, yes. >> how did that happen? >> it was my upbringing to tell you the truth. midwestern values. i just was raised in a certain way. introducing nexium 24hr. finally, the purple pill, the #1 prescribed acid blocking brand. comes without a prescription for frequent heartburn. get complete protection. nexium level protection.
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i have lively speculation about certain conversations. i have read some things about how pathetic it is to be a republican in hollywood. there is this little group called friends of abe. >> you are a member of that group. >> i'm a member of that group. there have been derisive comments about that. >> nothing personal to it
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>> nothing personal to it 2 i would have loved to it be on the set with danson and harrelson. you can't get more left wing than those guys. >> not like i'm stupid, is it? [ laughter ] 2. pos 9 2. he as soon as he started watching the factor. >> there you go. >> did you talk politics back in the day? >> once in a while. once in a while. i have always been a small government guy. and that's why i just think that the private sector and society can take care of itself better than the government can. >> did they get heated because rhea pearlman another left wing woman did they get heated when you came in and said i like the conservative guys a little bit? throw a beer stein at you? >> say things like this was actually our phrase, they would say, you know,
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remember when they were having a recall in the governorship somebody said maybe kelsey is going to run. >> i hope he does declare that he is running. i'm going to contribute a million dollars tomorrow to defeat him. >> who said that. >> one of the producers of show. >> you were outnourished then. >> i'm always outnourished. >> i want to get inside raquel welchs day. do you have a special diet? do you eat special food? >> not so much. it's everything that i do. diet thing is very small portions and food combining. there is two sides to raquel. there is the sloppy girl. >> yeah. >> who stays up and eats cake and cookies at night and then there is the raquel in training who is like a military recruit. i wake up at 5:00 in the morning. i'm in my yoga pants. >> 5:00 in the morning? >> yeah because i have to get into n. my car by 6:00. i do like to be awake when i'm driving. >> where are you going. >> going to to my yoga class and in a room 110 degrees.
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intermix it with weight training. >> you work out every day? >> i do work out usually when i am in training six days a week. but i'm not perfect. right now i'm putting my best face forward for you, bill. and i'm hoping it's working. >> i can tell that you are not, you know, look, you are not the average 70-year-old, all right? you are just not. >> i am raquel welch. i am paid to it look good. >> final question, do you fault politics? do you watch the factor? >> i do. >> are you a conservative woman? >> i would say that i'm more on the conservative side, yes. >> how did that happen? because most hollywood pinheads, of course you are north one of those are very liberal. >> i really don't know. i think it was my upbringing to tell you the truth. midwestern values. i just was raised in a certain way. ladies behave a certain way. your country is important. honor those people who do fight for our country. and i did go to vietnam and entertain the troops for the uso. i was fortunate enough to go with bob hope while he was still alive. i had a great great
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experience that really changed my life you were on cheers. they are huge lefties, you never got into a bar stool with them. >> there was never any political discussions on the set. >> interesting. >> because we are sitting in a bar being paid to crack jokes. >> hey, woody beer. >> and one from nic and fudge. [ laughter ] >> all right. >> i thought cliff was going to buy me a beer. >> the closest thing i came to i forget the conversation guest star. why are you raising your kids within a religious framework? i said because you have to give children something to
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either accept and embrace or reject. you can't raise a child with nothing because if you believe in nothing, then later on you will believe in anything. >> what did the person say to you? >> they said that they're just raising their kids and letting them decide. >> the kid can decide? >> yeah. but also i think that because the sifings is based on christian judeo ethic. >> you have got to move out of hollywood there, john. i'm sorry. this is hairs is i out in hollywood. because in hollywood it's all about yourself. you know that. >> sure. >> if we look to history. our great country and freedom are under attack. we are at a tipping point and quite possibly our country as we know it may be be lost forever if we don't change the course our country is headed. >> so you are saying, look, we are headed for armageddon in what way? >> i don't say armageddon. we need to go one direction, left, which would be socialism or right which would be people trying to
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make the money themselves. what has happened is the democrats have gone further left and the republicans have gone to where the democrats were 40 years ago. >> but what do you object to in the redistribution of wealth? >> the fact that they are affecting the small businesses in our country. when you drive around the country and you see these stores that are closed, out of business because of what is going on with our economy, that really tears my heart on. tax me, i don't care. you know. >> you don't care if you paid more taxes. >> i pay humongous amount of taxes. >> sure. >> you do too. >> you want to pay 40% to 45% which is where they would take you income redistributers if they could. >> if it would help i wouldn't mind it the thing is it wouldn't help. >> i have got to see that it's doing good. you have a foundation, i have a foundation. we give a the lot of money privately to charities that we know like the wounded warriors, the fisher house, these people we know --
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chuck, thanks for coming. in good to he see you again. >> plenty more ahead as the factor moves along this evening. barbara walters retired but not before i asked her the war on women, for example. is there a war on women? you are one of the top women. >> i don't think so.
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personal story segment tonight. my interview with barbara walters. she resignedre from tv duties. big tribute on "the view" ast of the ladies lined up to hug. a lot of hugging and celebratory stuff. everybodyy paying homage toto ms. walters. before she left the stage. i asked her a few political questions. >> is there a war on women in america? i mean, you are one of the top women. >> i don't think so. >> okay. no war on women, right? >> i don't think so. and somebody asked mee recently was i a feminist?t?an
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and i thought that's an oldword fashioned word now. feminist because with little exceptions women can do whatever the men do. >> i'm glad you said that.th i think that's the biggest phony issue i have evernt heard. do you have any against men.ive harry reid have given you old time.ld some the boys. other journalist people that pe were derisk to you. when i worked at abc i heard bad things about you. i never saw it myself. but, do you have any mal resentment towards male colleagues? did they hurt you?like >> no, i didn't like some of the things i had to fightains against them and i think there was the still the old school of hard news and it should be men. but that's gone. i like men. i enjoy being men.. i don't have resentment. >> peter was his own piece of work. >> i had access to jennings. a look, why are you giving her
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a hard time for? she is going out and getting information against people. shut up and get out of his office. i mean, i saww it i saw it firsthand. but you tell me you don't have any resentment against these guys?>> i >> i don't have time for a lot of resentment. my time was spent doing my homework. trying to ask the bestrk questions. trying to get the big get. i didn't spend a lotot of time saying why does he do thato to me and i'm going to get even. i don't think that way. liberal woman. you are sympathetic to pro-choice people.po politically correct people. remember when i was on "the view" and goldberg and behar moved off said that muslimsms killed us on 9/11. are >> muslims didn't kill us on 9/11? is that what you are saying?itti [cheers. >> >> you were sitting next to me. all right. you knew what ii meant. you knew iknt was muslim extremists, you knew that.w >> look, do i have my own views but when i am working professionally, i do try to keep my own views out.>> b
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>> but you can't on "thedo. view" it's an opinion show. >> but i do.ch i'm not sure that everybodyally who watchings "the view."gs a >> everybody knows you are liberal, barbara. i don't want to break it to you too gently. t >> i am?yo >> everybody knows. >> do they really? >> i want to know this. when you saw behar and gold berlgberg goldberg. when they ran off. >> what i said was and i said it on the air. this is their show. we're the host. you don't do that to it a guest. >> why do you think they did it? >> because they felt personally affronted. but my feeling was. >> did they really? >> going into old stuff, bill. >> no. but this is what everybody remembers. >> okay. i felt when this is your show and you are in charge, you take what the guest gives and you work with it you don't get um and walk out in a huff. i told them that. >> i want to say something to it all of you. you had have just seen what
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should not happen. we should be able to have discussions without washing our hands and screaming and walking off stage. i love my colleagues but that should not have happened. >> let's move ahead. you told tv guide that oprah. oprah winfrey is a person that you could not interview enough? did i say that? >> i guess i felt that about oprahened afeel it about some others. i'm going to throw out names. these are not the ones i think of as the top interviews but they are people i can interview again and again. bette midler i can always talk to her. there is always something new and fresh and funny and charming. cher. i haven't interviewed her in years. but cher was always original. there are certain people who come back and interview again and again and there are certain people you do it once and you have got it there is no new point. i could interview you every day and find stuff to talk to you about. >> thank you. i appreciate that. >> that's one of the reasons you do a show every day. >> i think that journalism
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has changed in america. particularly on television. that it's become now a forum to advance agendas. do you understand what i'm saying? that rather than delivering news and facts to people, that the news agencies have turned now to push certain people and i think barack obama is a good example of how the media got behind him and promoted him. to this day many of them still do. do you disagree? >> i don't think this is what has happened to news. i think what's happened to news it's that it has gotten lighter and lighter. we don't have news magazines anymore. they almost don't exist. the ones that we have perhaps more tabloid and everybody wants it to be fun. and everybody wants everybody to laugh. and everybody wants it to sort of be like "the view." >> why am i so successful? >> god knows. >> i'm darth vader here. >> do you know why you are so successful since this may be my last time with you because you are smart and you are courageous and can
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you take it as well as you give it. okay? >> all right. we wish you best. >> i love being on your interview. >> i said you are the most successful woman tv journalist of all time. it is absolutely a fact. i think everybody should understand that. >> thank you billy. >> >> ms. wtershas al ms. walters has always been respectful to me and others at the fox news channel she deserves credit for that and for simply being aanfo legend. >> next up, the popularity of the duck dines. >> what is this? >> it is an antler albra. >> you can't even say. >> i'm seeing all of them. >> what makes the show such a big hit? is it the beards? the interview moments away. live healthy and take one a day men's 50+. a complete multivitamin with 7 antioxidants to support cell health.
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age? who cares.
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this is a fox news extreme weather alert. hurricane arthur threatening plans for millions along the east coast. janice dean joining us with the very latest. >> new advisory coming out at the:00 giving us the coordinate nantsz on this storm. the 0 mile-per-hour sustained winds. threat for tornadoes evening hours and into the overnight. watch box into effect until 2:00 a.m. we have a tornado warning right here. weak tornadoes but they can cause some damage. watching thasm the latest track has this making landfall really within the in connection with couple of hours between moorehead city
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and cape hatteras and watch this move to the north and east. all eyes on cape cod and the islands over the next 24 to 48 hours as well. kelly, back to you. >> hurricane arthur certainly disrupting a lot of plans for people along the east coast particularly there in north carolina. janice dean, thank you for the update. i'm kelly wright. we take you back now to the o'reilly factor special. back of the book segment tonight. "duck dynasty." it is just that. the television show is a a massive hit. there is a best selling book out aboutut it. and it's the kind-around a company makes duck hunting stuff. only in america would this happen. we talk with the ceo robertson. >> "duck dynasty." did all right. second year. grew it it up. third year beating the factor.>> >> you are supposed to bewo working. >> what do you mean? >> how did that happen? what was it that exploded the show?
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>> people like ducks i guess. >> more than ducks.ore >> we are taking a breaking because it's raining. >> we are inside you idiot. reak it's the family values. it's something positive. kids can sit and watch, grabbed parents. there is not a lot of filth on it. it's funny. it's harvard to be funny. >> bill: you guys are characters, that's for sure. >> go, pull, pull, pull, pull, pull, pull, pull, pull. >> yeah. >> now we are getting somewhere. i'm about to pull this truck all the way across louisiana. >> bill: there has got to be something more to it. what is that? >> people watching, brothers sisters mom and dad. you see all of us together so all of the bickering and the fighting which is always playful. people can see themselves in that. they can see their brothers. >> bill: because they are identifying with you guys. >> imagine themselves what if we all worked together and had a crazy uncle we have got thrown in there. >> bill: you know wily the whole country is going to look like zz top. >> that would be awesome.
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♪ every girl crazy about a sharp dressed man. ♪ >> bill: it would be awesome. >> we're just 100 years off. in 1850, this was in. >> bill: life expectancy was 12. everybody died. >> but the beards were awesome. >> bill: how do you think i would look in this kind of a -- you know, no. >> no -- i can see it. i can see it. >> bill: the factor dynasty? but you do this consciously to look this way. what's that message about? >> well, i think my father had a lot of antiestablishment in him. evidence came through the 60's. >> got all the chicks after him working the take. young youths of america here is a news flash started grinning and staring at the ground and shut up. >> whenever he got out and lived on the river and said i'm going to make duck calls no more cutting my hair. no more shaving my beard. >> bill: you could be a
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hell's angel. >> i'm trying to change that image. we are trying to make it more positive and friendly. >> bill: your dad is an amazing story by the way. he beat out terry bradshaw as quarterback of the louisiana tech. started duck dynasty stuff to lure ducks to you so you can kill them. >> duck calls, quack, quack. >> bill: kill the ducks, slaughter. >> they eat them. >> bill: blow them out of the sky. [duck call] >> bill: anyway, he starts this and you will the whole family gets involved and you are all rich but you don't act rich? >> i guess rich people act differently. we can buy better things better we are not all about money. >> bill: you are not. i know you a little bit. we ran into him in d.c. >> we hung out at the baseball game. >> bill: at the gnats game. buff you are rich but you don't act rich. that might be secret to your success. >> we try to stick to our roots. we grew up not rich at all very poor. for us we can remember what it was like. weave try to stay humble
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and lord willing we are doing it and we have been successful. god has blessed us and. >> bill: and do you incorporate god in the show. >> oh yeah, we have a family prayer right at the end. >> amen. >> amen. >> bill: the aclu bothered you yet on that. >> nobody has. everybody has been. >> bill: you let me know. you guys are big factor viewers down there, right? >> i watch my factor. that's how i work on my debate skills. >> bill: oh, so somebody -- >> -- my wife doesn't always like it because i just -- you know, i tell her keep it pithy, let's go. >> bill: i met willy's wife. i tell him i'm not debating owe o'reilly here. that's pretty still to come, hide the kids, my pal jon stewart talking politics with me, your humble correspondent. things get wild. >> how is president obama doing so far? >> i'm appreciative of the fact that he has tried to reengage the regulatory mechanism of the government. >> wow, the regulatory
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mechanism. >> that's way over my head the mechanism. what is that? >> and you are 6'5". >> i have no idea what you just said. >> that's like i was throwing a marcus coalston. >> moments away. this is the age of knowing what needs to be done. so why let erectile dysfunction get in your way? talk to your doctor about viagra. 20 million men already have. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach, and abnormal vision. to avoid long- term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. this is the age of taking action. viagra. talk to you doctor. captain obvious: this is a creepy room. man: oh hey, captain obvious.
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those types of broad analysis. you know. how is he doing? it doesn't lend itself to a very easy answer. i think there are certain areas that you seems to have made progressed or stabilized certain areas. i'm appreciative of the fact that he has tried to reengage the leg go tore mechanism. >> wow, regulatory mechanism. >> regulatory mechanism. >> mechanism. >> that is way over my head. >> and you are 6 a. that's like i was throwing a marcus coalton. that's like i was jumping out there. >> what is it. >> the idea that we would have people there checking if there was lead in our toys. >> equity prosecuting the folks using federal
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government's power. he has made strides in doing that? you know, that's a pretty smart analysis. a lot of people don't think you are smart. >> thank you very much. >> did your writers come up with that. >> no. they are in my pocket. >> when you deliver your stuff, are you cog nay isn't a of the fact that your audience are primarily stone slacker who's love obama and when you criticize obama, you may be turning on them why don't think about feeling it it. it feels like a valid piece of absurdity to put out there. we vet things internally. i can't -- whatever you say, someone is not going to like. >> it sounds like what you are saying is and correct me if i am wrong and i don't want to be wrong when i'm with you because you know i got mad love for you, that's a rap phrase. >> i got it. >> correct me if i am wrong, what you are saying is, if an artist supports someone that has been convicted of killing a cop they should not be allowed to go to the
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white house? is that a reasonable paraphrase? >> i am. no it's a little bit more than that. >> okay. say it again. >> i am saying that when a president invites someone -- in this case the first lady invites someone. the resume has to be put in front of them and they have to select people who are almost unimpeachable. all right? because they're getting that honor to go to the white house this guy is controller all day long with this. not only did he celebrate this cop killer he celebrated another one in philadelphia. >> again, i make the distinction, he is not celebrating a cop killer. is he celebrating someone he thinks was unjustly. >> you're the president. will you make that call? >> can i be honest with you? >> yeah, please. >> if i'm the president and i'm booking my own poetry slams, throw me out of office. >> you like sandra, right? >> i know she is a particular punching bag for you. >> oh, no, no, no. >> god forbid a woman come out of nowhere and speak about an issue close to her
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heart. >> yeah. and her hand in my wallet. >> you want to pay for this woman's birth control? do you want to do that? >> here is what i want to do. i want to make sure that women are entitled to the same healthcare benefits that men are entitled to. is that a part. >> that is not a part of that. men don't get that. >> she works for a private university. >> george town is a private place. >> she wants everybody to get paid for. >> no she doesn't. she wants georgetown to do it? >> we have to pick up the dating now in this country. we pick up dating. >> do you understand the difference between a public institution and private institution. >> dating game is going to be on pbs. we will pay for it and the aftermath. >> what did those nuns do to you? what did they do to you to make you so uncomfortable. >> i don't want to pay for it. >> we were all the product of this type of appropriations, you know that right? >> president obama criticized the president, you you criticized him a couple of times if when he didn't do the far left thing
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that you wanted. >> how far left am i. >> depends on the night and the ratings. >> stuart is nice for coming here. look at you now. >> being very comfortable with me. you don't want me to leave. you want this date to go on forever. >> okay. >> i feel like we should get together outside of this weirdly egg-shaped table. >> okay. the let's not push it. >> right now, grade president obama. >> i don't do that. >> the jon stewart scale of how -- you voted for him. has he lived up to your expectations? >> no. yes. i don't know -- but i don't know if my expectations were fair to that individual. i believed we were at a more transformative time and so -- but i have come to respect a certain steadiness of his craft that i don't necessarily agree with. i think he had an opportunity more in the reagan mold to be a little bit more of a bully pulpit
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president than what he he appears to be which is more of a tipp o'neal president. like a legislative worker. more of a -- someone who understands your bureaucratic method as opposed to something that is more, you know, teddy roosevelt, ronald reagan type. >> i didn't understand a word of that but it sounded really good. >> is that true? i just threw in a bunch of names. i thought he was more of a woodrow wilson. >> here is the most important question of the interview. >> sagittarius. >> are you ready for this question? i have no idea what you are talking about. i appreciate you coming in here. you are a stand up guy. >> you know. this i will always defend my positions. i am not -- i don't put this out there lightly. >> no. the thing i like about you is you do take cheap shots all the time. but you defend those cheap shots. >> let me tell you something. that's not the only thing you like about me. your respect grows in leaps and bounds. you are like the grinch
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right after they realized they don't need presents for christmas. your heart grows to dimensions you didn't even know about. i'm like a shot of left town right in your ass like a b-12. you love it you love me because we are the same people. uhhh. >> i think i'm going to commit suicide. jon stewart, everyone. >> plenty more ahead as the factor moves along this evening. 50th anniversary of rocker beatle mania. as beatles exploded in the u.s.a. a great paul mccartney story for us. >> thank you paul for enriching our life with the greatest music. the sound track. >> good for you. >> i said if he wants tofu i will shoot him some tofu. oh, honey! oh! here, have some of ours. oh! hebrew national. a hot dog you can trust.
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that's why i always choose the fastest intern.r slow. the fastest printer. the fastest lunch. turkey club. the fastest pencil sharpener. the fastest elevator. the fastest speed dial. the fastest office plant. so why wouldn't i choose the fastest wifi? i would. switch to comcast business internet and get the fastest wifi included. comcast business. built for business. personal story segment
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tonight. perhaps the most controversial rock star in the country is 65-year-old ted nugent. sold more than 40 million albums and knows pretty much everybody in the rock world. sometimes new jent's politics can make things aen bit dicey. >> so, your place in the music world, you know, most of them are avowed liberalle. people. how do they treat you.he me >> they treat meyo wonderfully. there have been some real friction over the years. in fact, some artists i use the name generously have actually dedicated their albums to their family and friends and then had a big f-u ted nugent on theiru te record. >> but they have come around. i guess they put down the dope temporarily and theyor have realized that i'm justm a detroit did guitar player who stands up for the righting. thing. the love fest is indescribable. i have great friends. i have been doingat this for 5 over 50 years cat scratch fever. >> you sold 4 oomillion records. the bona fides are thered in the music industry.
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this crystallizes the whole thing.was paul mccartney beingwed interviewed in detroit manywed years ago with his new band w on the run.nd >> band on the run.♪ >> and of course where would any of our quality of lifety be without the beatles. g ♪ and the incredible gifts of paul mccartney paul is doing interview in detroit where i'm god by the way. number one guitarist of detroit. paul was giving interview and interviewer asked him what do you think of our inner city mad man ted nugent. tirade how i'm co coward because i slaughteredcent innocent animals that can't shoot back. >> they called me to respond because they thought we'll get ted going here on this one. and so paul condemned me and said i never had a goodod musical idea in my life. l it was just really hateful. g
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they asked me what my i c response was. i said there is only one response i can give to paul mccartney. thank you for enriching our the life. greatest music, sound track. i said if he wants tofu i will shoot him tofu, i'll shootu him some tofu. t >> ted, you don't have to shoot tofu. >> it's more fun if you do. ja- >> rap, jay-z, huge. ♪ the rap thing has almost taken y over the music industry.. >> have a nice day with that bu, i come from the original soul w brothers, the james brown. ♪ these guys just wreaked of an american, defiant, celebratory e and deliver the best music as
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possible. even to this day, i don't get the rap thing, which is ap fascinating because my son rocko does kind of a spiritual rap type thing. ♪ which i cringed at it at first t but i also support my son and n his own musical vision and his own musical dreams.get >> thright. >> so i don't get that music. if i want funky and driving rhythms, i'll go to james brown or this new guy bruno mars. ♪ >> how about earth, wind, and u fire? ♪ last question, you're anti-drugu >> hardcore. i, >> so am i, as you know.o you th what about this legalization of marijuana thing.g.it. what do you think? >> i'll try to capsulize it.er would you want your pilot high,n
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your butcher high? how who you want high in your world? after holding gifted musicians in my arms as they died, you a can't convince me that it's a victimless crime or it's an e. individual choice. you -- you've clearly identified that you get high to disconnect. >> right. >> what are the benefits to d disconnecting? i disconnect but i do so with a sharp stick so i'm at least getting meat when i get high. >> it's a purpose. >> it's a purpose. >> ted nugent, one of a kind. up next, bo derek, clint eastwood, all of them. we're coming right back. they lived. ♪ they lived. ♪ they lived. ♪
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(dad) we lived... thanks to our subaru. ♪ (announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru.
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i've been coming out here to l.a. for about 18 years because california is the biggest audience factor and also because it was 82 degrees in february.
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over the years, we've had a a chance to talk with a lot of famous people and tonight here's a look back. why are you a republican? >> you know, i started out not being very political. i just realized, looking into other issues, i was a republican. >> a republican in this town in showbiz, that can be a drawback. >> well, i'm told i will never work again. >> who told you that? >> people in the business. >> really? >> yes. i don't believe it. >> why are so many actors so liberal? >> i would say because from the beginning they have been on the fringes of society. they were a minority. they needed to survive. >> have you been hurt by your liberal activist? >> yeah. >> you think so? >> yeah. ♪ >> did the business change? is it better or worse? >> i don't know why this whole thing has gotten out of proportion with the industry as far as our politics are
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concerned. >> so it's gone so far left, right? >> yes. and people are afraid to say that they are republicans because they were afraid they wouldn't work. >> is that a legitimate fear? >> well, i don't go out and shout it from the rooftops. >> so you're a conservative guy? >> i'm a very conservative guy. >> i think we just blew your cover. >> it's okay. >> work is tough after age 35 here. >> after age 30. >> it's tough. >> women are devalued the minute they hit about 25. >> and it's all physical, right? >> physicality, women get older, women get younger. >> is it your vision to spread the word of jesus? >> i think that what the film speaks about is a sacrifice of a loving god willingly taken and that these are good, valuable messages. i know i've had the finger waggled at me. they say you're blaming me. i said, i'm not blaming you at
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all. >> i've got no choice. let's go. >> when you watch television today and compare it to what you guys did, what do you think? >> well, it's a different world. they don't appear to me personally that much. >> you don't like the graphics and all of that stuff? >> no. >> at least on camera? >> no. >> the problem with television, which comes into your homes, is that 7 and 8-year-old children are seeing a lot of vulgarity. >> some of them. but they run some shows with a lot of sexuality for teenagers and you think that makes them have sex? >> no. mother nature makes them want to have sex. >> president clinton, do you stand behind him? >> i have not been a fan of the president based on his don't ask, don't tell policy in the military. i think it's outrageous. >> do you think there should be
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any discussion of sexuality in the military? >> i don't think people should be able to be proscibed in the military because of their sexuality. >> what made roosevelt great was how he dealt with the depression and world war ii. abraham lincoln was great because of his time. i think what clinton is, and it's one of his problem, he's a consumate politician. i think it's why we have politics and politicians. >> just in 20 years, the population of hispanics in l.a. has gone from 38% to 50%. is this a good or bad thing for the city? >> the only solution that is plausible is a solution that they had in the '40, the guest worker program. giving amnesty to another 3 or 4 million people is only going to encourage another 3 or 4 million people to come here. >> what do you do with the
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people to come here? >> if it's illegal, it's illegal, bill. >> to you, it was a relationship film and then it gets blown up into an issue film. >> it could be blown up. but i didn't see what the blow-up is. it wasn't that -- it didn't a message for anything. but nowadays -- in the old days, everybody was talking about the major liberals. now we have sort of the kn knee-jerk conservative group that has tried to politicize everything. it is a relationship film. it doesn't make a statement for or against anything. it just happens to be the way the story -- >> you did the fair and balanced. you had the priest in the key part of the film advising against this in a very, very articulate way. i said, look, he presented both sides of it. we really appreciate you taking the time to come and talk with us. >> thank you, bill.
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>> again, thanks for watching us tonight. i'm bill o'reilly. please always remember that the spin stops right here. we're definitely looking out for you. brakieaking tonight, a stor and political fallout. good evening and welcome to "the kelly file." i'm megyn kelly. first, though, the final part of our exclusive interview with the domestic terrorist-turned college professor who helped launch the political career of our current president. in 2008, professor bill ahers was introduced as the founder of the weather underground. that issue came when it was discovered that