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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  July 10, 2015 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT

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will be that president >> i'm sure they can find you online. >> rick santorum.com. >> thanks for joining us we hope you have a great night and see you back here, soon. special edition of the o'reilly factor is on. tonight: >> it's a factor's most compelling. >> what we have right now is disgusting how we should have a discussion. >> barbara walters sits down with the factor for her last interview. i have many questions for her. >> is there a war on women in america? >> are you an intraspeckive woman? how much talent do you have? killing jesus the movie based on my book by the same name was a huge success. kelsey grammy has a lot to say about his role king herod. >> people are going to be surprised so-to-see how evil you are in this movie you are an evil guy. i wrote you evil and you played it evil. >> gary sinise on why he is so passionate about helping american wounded vets. >> really the vietnam era
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veterans that really educated me as a young man about what they had had been through and how terrible it was for them to come home. >> 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. the primary anchor on univision jorge ramos asked me for an interview. i immediately said okaymo because mr. ramos is a stand-up guy he comes in here when we ask him. the interview is interesting because jorge and i see the world very differently. >> thanks so much for inviting me to your set. >> a pleasure. you always come on the factor jorge. you are a standup guy and so i'm happy to talk to you. >> this is the no spin zone. so when it comes to race, politics immigration, you are clearly right wing. >> >> well, that's your opinion but i would say that i'm a problem-solver on immigration, for example which is one of your big issues, all right? >> sure.
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>> i want everyone to be treated fairly. i don't oppose a pathway to citizenship for illegal aliens in america. i do not oppose that. >> but you want to secure the border. >> correct. because i don't want the merry go round to continue which i don't think does the country any good. chaos doesn't do anybody any good. >> you a border in impenetrable. >> if it's made a felony they won't do it anymore will they, jorge? >> well they. >> will they jorge? make it a felony to overstay their visa they won't overstay their visas anymore. >> they are coming because we are giving them jobs. >> all right. so let's advice -- revise that and have a worker program. i'm for a fair immigration law. >> but to say that you want to secure the border that's just an excuse to do nothing. >> well, no, if i were the president, i would secure the border, jorge. if you have 150,000 children
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crossing the border, you don't have a secure border. >> no, no, no. >> come on. >> that's exactly the opposite. what it means is that the system is working therefore they are working. >> working? >> exactly. they surrendered to the authorities. >> they shouldn't get to the authorities, you see in most countries you can't get to the authorities. you can't even get in because of the way they have it structured. we need to have a system whereby it's impossible to physically get in unless you go through the process. you can do it. >> it's almost impossible. anyway, you claim there is not such a thing as white privilege in america. >> correct. >> many african-americans disagree with you. and some of them believe that, for instance, martin and michael brown were killed simply because of the color of their skin. >> i respect that belief but i don't believe it's based on facts. when 99.9% of the arrests made in the united states and african-americans are arrested out of proportion to the rest of the population, result in no harm to no one you must say
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that the police aren't targeting anyone. >> don't you think that michael brown died simply because -- >> , what do you believe. >> he was shot, he was completely unarmed. >> you have to let the process play out first. you are jumping to conclusions. do you believe this police officer in ferguson woke up and said i'm going to kill a black man? do you believe that? >> not like that. >> do you believe that he hated black people this police officer? >> we don't know that. >> that's right. we don't know it? >> we are seeing many examples of african-americans, african-americans being killed. >> you are seeing a few. not many. a few. >> i'm sure you saw this article by nicholas kristof? >> yes, i did. >> when whites just don't get it i think he is talking about you because he is mentions you. >> of course he is talking about me. >> he demonstrates when it comes to net worth income, employment,. >> yes. >> life expectancy. >> yes. >> incarceration rate. >> right. >> that whites are doing much better than african-americans. >> andations are doing better than whites.
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>> is that white privilege? >> no, is it asian privilege that asians do better than whites. >> i know you want to talk about that but here we are talking about there is a white privilege in america. >> there isn't. that's a myth. >> what is it then? >> what it is that you have to look at the successful' people and what makes them successful. therefore i took the asian american community and i said here is why they make more money than whites or blacks because they keep the family together, because there is an emphasis on education, because there is parental supervision of children. those things in the asian-american communities are in stone. while it's eroding in the white and it's almost nonexistent in some black areas. the government cannot solve those problems. if you have 72% of children born out of wedlock, in the african-american community 72%, you're going to have poverty, jorge. >> there is white privilege in this country. let me jump to another thing. you said the idea of writing "killing jesus" came from
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the holy spirit. >> right. >> really? >> yeah. you are catholic, right? >>. no i was born catholic. i'm not a catholic anymore. but it is very dangerous to mix politics and religion. >> i'm not its inning politics. i'm an ordinary citizen i wrote a book. >> you are not ordinary citizen because you are suggesting that god -- >> -- i'm an ordinary citizen. >> jorge. >> talked to you somehow. >> you were born catholic, correct? >> yes. >> in the catholic and christian religion, there is god, right? >> yes. >> and where do we get our talents from? where do we get our inspiration from? >> yeah, but to say that the holy spirit talked to you. >> where do we get it from? are you a christian now. >> no, i'm not a christian. >> you are nothing? >> no. >> you understand the christian theology. >> of course. >> i believe in that, is that okay? >> of course, that's your own belief. >> i believe in it. i believe there isen a active god who inspires. when i was asked when i got the idea from jesus i think i was inspired by the holy spirit. you object to that? you object to me stating my religious beliefs as an american. >> that's your belief but if
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you are suggesting that god talks to you and then you constantly every single day give your political opinion it's. >> jorge, you are drawing real crazy arc here. i believe i'm inspired because i believe i'm in the christian theology. you don't believe it. but why do you object for me saying it? why can't i say what i believe? >> can you say whatever you want. >> thank you. >> thanks so much for talking to us. >> it's a pleasure. >> and allowing us here in the no spin zone. >> it's a pleasure. >> patriotism on deck. actor gary my heart... beats 100,000 times a day sending oxygen to my muscles... again! so i can lift even the most demanding
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to learn about spiriva respimat slow-moving mist ask your doctor or visit spirivarespimat.com ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪ and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... that's huge for my bottom line. what's in your wallet? why is actor gary sinisein devoting so much of his life helping wounded american vets. there is a group called lt. dan band which tours the country raising money for the gary sinise foundation.
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>> here now mr. sinise. how many of these benefits do you do a year, do you think? >> oh, gosh. we have a lot of money to raise at the foundation. weaver doing a lot of things, building homes and resiliency events. the band is part of my foundation. i'm doing various fundraisers and the band fundraiser. it's maybe 35 concerts a year. >> all right. so almost every weekend if you are doing 35. that's a lot. now, explain there is a foundation, i have a foundation named after my parents. you have a foundation. what does your foundation do? it it's a military support agency that's what it is. i have been involved with vets going back to the 80's. after i played the wounded veteran in forrest gump in the 1980s i got very involved. after september 11th we needed help with iraq and afghanistan supporting our
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men and women so i volunteered for the uso started going out there and a helping military charities like the independence fund. i got involved with them. >> with the track chairs and everything like that. >> i got involved with them in 2000 your foundation does what. >> one of the programs that we have is called rise restoring independence, supporting empowerment that means we want to provide specially adapted housing for our wounded veterans. >> okay. >> mobility devices track chairs, that kind of thing. adapted vehicles. >> right. >> we want to do things to empower them and give them their independence back. >> that's very, very important. so you played an amputee in forrest gump. you got to talk to some the vets and you got empathy is that the word, empathy for them that you felt it was your mission to do this? >> partially, and i had been involved with vietnam veterans groups going back to the 1980s. so i had very serious attraction. >> what was it that
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attracted you to the military. >> i had military in my family world war i, world war ii and korea and my mom's side the vietnam era. it was really the vietnam era veterans that educated me as a young man about what they had been through and how terrible it was for them to come home when we started deploying to iraq and afghanistan, i didn't want to see that happening to them. >> you weren't in the military yourself, right? >> no. i was. >> and i didn't serve either. i can't say that i do nearly as much as you do for the military but certainly we have raised millions of dollars for the track chairs here as the folks know. when you do these things, it's hard sometimes. i mean, it's hard because you are a busy guy a successful actor. you live out on the west coast. you have got a family to take care of. yet, you are out all the time. does that ever weigh on you? >> well, it does. but there is a lot of satisfaction also, when you see that you can do something to help somebody. >> absolutely. >> there is a lot of spiritual nourishment you
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get from that. >> spiritual nourishment. you are a believer in god. >> yes, sir. >> and christianity and helping others? >> i felt in some ways that i was called to do this. i have a -- there is a thing that i can provide. there is a thing that i can do. there is a way that i can raise awareness. there is a way that i can give back. >> you are using your fame, obviously, for good to do this. i kind of do the same thing. i figure, a million to one actually 20 million to one i'm here. so he might do some good. >> the guy -- when i visit the wounded and i try to make a big deal out of it, but they are almost stunned to see you. you know. and it's me -- it's me the one -- i'm the one that's privileged to be with them. >> i'm sure they are stunned to see you bill. >> they are. we didn't know you were so tall. >> i'm sure they are stunned. >> i bet you feel the same way. i don't want them to think that i'm anything special.
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they are the special ones. you know, they are giving and sacrifice to the country. >> they don't expect anything, you know. they really don't expect celebrities who walk in the door and take their time to come and visit them. when you go to the war zones and you go to the hospitals and you go around and play for them like i have over a number of years. even with all that i have done i'm still -- every single time i do it, i get so much nourishment out of it. i just feel that, you know, enriched in some way. >> plenty more ahead as the factor moves along this evening. barbara walters retired but not before i asked her political questions on the war on women, for example. >> is there a war on women in america? you are one of the top women. >> i don't think so. women can do and do do whatever the men do. get huge savings
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thanks for staying with us, i'm bill o'reilly in the personal story segment tonight barbara walters 84 giving up television and moderating the view and abc specials. i have known ms. walters many years and have had many interesting conversations with her. i believe the one tonight will fit into that category as well. is there a war on women in america? you are one of the top women. >> i don't think so. >> okay. no war on women right? >> i don't think so. somebody asked me recently was i a feminist? and i thought that's an old fashioned word now feminist. because with rare exceptions women can do and do do whatever the men do. >> good. i'm glad you said that because i think that's the biggest phony issue i have heard. do you have any resentment against him. harry reid has given you a hard time the old boys. derisive. when i worked at abc i you heard bad things but. i never saw it myself. do you have any resentment against male colleagues?
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>> no. >> they hurt you? >> no. i didn't like some of the things i had to fight against them. i think there was still the old school of hard news and it should be men. but that's gone. i like men. i enjoy being with men. i don't have a problem and i don't have resentment. >> okay. because jennings thought you were a little softball, you know that, right? >> peter was his own piece of work as we say. >> i had access to jennings and i used to say look, why are you you giving her a hard time for, all right? she is going out and getting information from these people. that's what you want information, right? and then he would tell me to shut up and get out of his office. i saw it firsthand. but you are telling me you don't have any resentment against these guys? >> i don't have time for a lot of resentment. my time was spent during my homework trying to ask the best questions. trying to get the big get. i didn't spend a lot of time saying why did they do that to me and i'm going to get even. i don't think that way. >> you are a liberal woman. you are sympathetic to
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pro-choice people, politically correct people. remember when i was on "the view" and goldberg and behar ran off because i said muslims killed us on 9/11? >> muslims didn't kill us on 9/11? is that what you are saying? >> extremists did that. >> what religion was mr. mcveigh? plk in i have a was an extremists as well. >> i'm telling you 77 -- >> -- i don't want to sit here now. i don't. >> you are outraged about muslims killing us on 9/11? [cheers and applause] >> i want to say something. >> you were sitting next to me. you knew what i meant. you knew that it was muslim extremists, you knew that? >> look, i do have my own views. but when i am working professionally, i do try to keep my own views out. >> but you can't on "the view." it's an opinion show. >> but i do. i'm not sure that everybody who watches "the view" knows
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really what my political feelings are. >> everybody knows you are liberal, barbara. i don't want to break it to you too gently everybody knows. >> do they really? >> i want to know this when you saw behar and goldberg -- two uber liberals. you are not a uber liberal. when they ran off and you knew whafs saying. >> what i said was on the air this is their show. we are the hosts. you don't do that to a guest. >> why do you think they did it? >> because they felt personally affronted. but my feeling was. >> did they really? >> we are going to 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 up and walk out in a huff. i told them that. >> i want to say something to all of you. you have just seen what should not happen. we should be able to have discussions without washing our hands and screaming and walking off stage.
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that should not have happened. >> you told tv guide that oprah, oprah winfrey. >> yes. >> is a person that you could not interview enough. >> did i say that? i guess i felt that about oprah. and i feel it about some others. i'm going to throw out names at you. these are not the ones i think of, you know, as the top interviews but they are people i can interview again and again. bette midler, can i interview her there is something always new and fresh a charming. cher i haven't interviewed in years. cher was always original. there are certain people whom you can 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 can 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 has changed in america particularly on television. that's it's become now a forum to advance agendas. do you understand what i'm
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saying? >> i do. >> 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. and to this day many of them still do. do you disagree? >> i don't think this is what's happened to news. i think what's happened to news is that it's 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 sort of to be like "the view." that's what i think. >> why am i so successful? >> god knows. >> i'm darth vader here. >> 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 you can take it as well as you give it. okay? >> all right ms. walters. >> i love being on with you. >> we wish you the best. i said you are the most
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successful woman tv journalist of all time. it is absolutely a fact. and i think everybody should understand that. >> thank you billy. >> ms. walters has always been respectful to me and others here at the fox news channel. she deserves credit for that and for simply being a legend. and big-time athletes and movie stars calm racial tensions in the
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welcome back to the special edition of the o'reilly factor. the most compelling stories. turning now to the racial division in america. we all know the problem. blacks whites whippers, all -- hispanics all see american society differently. it has reached a big-time problem. we recently spoke about it with former nba stars jalin rose and metta world peace. roll the tape. >> you were raised in a very tough town, detroit. how do you see the police in america, generally speaking? >> i respect the police. i respect all public officials. if i could stop the world on its axis right now military firemen the police department, teachers. they should all be paid double. that's how much i respect what they do for our great country. >> so, when you see protesters out there saying listen, police are
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generally racist and they give black americans a harder time than white americans, how do you jaylen rose, react to that? >> i don't think the police start their day by getting in the car looking at one another at two white cops saying hey we are going to harass as many black as we see today and shoot them down. what happens is you have unfortunate situations taking place caused national uproar trayvon martin, michael brown or eric gardner killing. the statistics saying wow it happens to be a white cop versus a black individual. let's further investigate. when you don't indict, all of a sudden the hoody, all of a sudden i can't breathe. now becomes a rally cry. not against the police but against a system that a lot of people sometimes feels like continues to let them down. >> before i let you go, i want to tell everybody that you, in addition to your
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commentary, put your money where your mouth is you are trying to repair relations between the police and young black people in the city of detroit. just tell us about that. when i started jalen rose leadership academy a free tuition charter public high school in my hometown, one of my goals was to put a police mini station in our school because a lot of time when that interaction happens, there is tension involved and you don't get to see the chance to see that interaction happen when it's friendly. so unfortunately detroit doesn't have the funding for police mini stations anymore, so the idea didn't come to fruition. but it's very important for us to have that interaction when it's not hostility involved. >> all right. your academy is funded by private donations? >> yes. we are tuition-free public charter. we are state-funded but our goal is to bridge the education gap through funding, through opportunity, which in turn, leads to achievement.
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do you tell them as the mayor of new york city did to watch out for the police? >> well, i make sure my kids understand people understand if somebody is racist it came from somewhere. they weren't born racist. if somebody is gang member they weren't born a gang member. i want to make sure that my children understand the environment they live in. not all police are bad. i grew up in environment where police weren't around a lot. i experienced some profiling. i experienced good police. i remember growing up playing basketball police put their guns on the ground and played basketball with us. >> in queens. >> in queens. i experienced both sides. >> what's the message of this book. >> the message is you don't want to start racial wars or things like that. you want to have solutions. you want to, you know, have prevention tactics and things like that. and you also want to address issues. you don't want to just push it under the rug. >> it's written for children. >> it's written for
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children absolutely. you don't want children growing up hating police, hating another race, hating -- blacks hating whites whites hating blacks. that's why my book is very diverse. >> when you hear someone you know, look, the ferguson, missouri thing it was established beyond any reasonable doubt. >> right. >> that the initial reporting hands up. >> right. >> didn't happen. >> right. >> okay. do you feel it's necessary to correct the record to people who believe it did happen? >> i believe -- i do believe that and i also believe that the black -- blacks make up 70% of ferguson. and we are only 5% of law enforcement and nobody is involved in politics, you know, if you want to really change that community you have to get involved in politics. you have to get involved in the school system and change. >> absolutely. blacks are a majority in that town if they wanted they could have a blackmayor and organize and have more power. >> organize in a more, you know. >> i have known you for a while because i'm an nba fan. >> right. i see you all the time. >> your name used to be ron
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artest. >> used to be. >> why is it now metta world peace. >> i feel i continue to evolve and continue to connect to people, to the earth. >> to the earth? >> everything. >> okay. >> i'm just evolving as a person. i wanted my name to evolve. every day every month i continue to evolve more and more. >> okay. so you wanted kind of a new age name, metta world peace? >> i just feel like changing it. >> what do they call you. >> metta in china they call me panda. >> this year you played basketball in china. >> yeah. >> that must have been a trip yeah. >> it was great. i enjoyed it so much. >> plenty more as the factor moves along this evening. new movie "killing jesus" one of the stars kelsey grammer plays king herod. he will be here. >> all the infants born in my kingdom how will you find this one child
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fresher dentures... ...for those breathless moments. hug loud, live loud, polident. ♪ ♪ and continuing now with the special edition of the factor in the personal story segment tonight. my book killing jesus became a very big success. and with that success the book became a movie on national geo. >> i know you jesus of nazareth. you have opinions on everything. what's his opinion on this?
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>> any among you who is without sin, let him be the first to cast the stone at her. any among you who is without sin. >> recently i sat down with two of the stars from the film kelsey grammar who plays the evil king herod and a muslim actor who plays the lead role of jesus. so you were raised in lebanon, correct? >> right. >> now lebanon is an interesting place because there is a big christian community as well as obviously the muslim majority. when you were growing up as a muslim, did you know anything about jesus? >> oh, yeah, absolutely. we celebrated christmas. >> you did? >> oh, yeah. and i knew not so much in details about his teachings or what he stood for until later in my life. but i always understood his presence in my life and in the world and the importance of his presence and how he affected people.
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that always got from a very young age and how he influenced the world in such a positive and powerful way. >> let me follow you. what is your name? >> judas he is he is -- escariot. >> please, -- bless you jesus. >> there was the surfing jesus, jeffrey hunter in king of kings blue-eyed blond hair. when you auditioned you did such a nice job they said well is he muslim i said would jesus hire him? >> how could you know me? >> it's an honor for me to be in this position and when i told my mother, the first thing she said bless you my son for playing our prophet peace be upon him. >> the power and the glory. i was heavily influenced in
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his teachings. i have many people whom i was guided by in that process. when i you found out that i got the part, i only had but excitement passion and love and i couldn't wait to get there and like start working on it, you know, and filming. in terms of preparation i also like i read your book, which was fantastic and i -- the screenplay. >> you did a nice job adapting the screenplay. and you brought anger to jesus, which which i think some people are going to be surprised by. >> this is the house of prayer. >> this is my livelihood. >> when you summoned the anger in the seen when you go into the temple, your demeanor is not of a peaceful god. you are really wanting to right this wrong. what are you thinking about? >> he was playing the game. he was very clever man. and when he went into that temple to do this, he did that for a purpose, a
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reason. >> oh, sure. >> he was trying to fulfill the prophecy. it's not entirely him being reactive it was all planned and plotted in his mind with no judgment toward humanity and everything about it, you know in terms of like the story itself. if you really want to ask me the essence of it, it's a story about love and it's also a story about celebrating us humans what we are capable of doing for one another. >> this temple is god's glory. >> god's glory is love. >> fantastic performance. >> thank you so much. >> thanks for coming in. >> thanks for having me. it's a pleasure. >> a child born in your kingdom is the god of israel's chosen, the messiah. >> the messiah? >> you are playing one of the worst men in the world. people that don't know the
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story, herod orders the murder of all infants under the 2 in the bethlehem area. how is it you are a beloved actor here in america. you are playing a really bad guy and did that in chicago? >> it's fine. i'm an actor. you lend yourself to the role. it's not -- it doesn't necessarily reflect on you. if it does, then maybe there is something wrong with the audience. >> people are going to be surprised though how evil you are in this movie. you are an evil guy. >> i wrote you evil and you played it evil. >> okay. >> now, before you did killing jesus you were raised christian i understand. >> um-huh, yeah. >> did you have a frame of reference about jesus? >> he is the savior. that's how i go about it. without apology, i'm a christian. i'm not -- i was raised as a christian scientist but i'm not a practicing christian scientists at this day although i still observe many of the contents of mary and her writings.
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he is the guy. he is the one. >> okay. when you got the role, and you start to research it, did you learn anything? >> well, you know, what's funny, maybe it's a karma or a kizma kind of moment. things start to happen when i take a role all of a sudden isible i pick up history book in the hotel room the first page opened up on herod's palace. i started checking it out and i realized he was a man of great accomplishment and survived his own sort of rule for 30, 40 years. murdered half his own children. had 30 or 40 children. he was a very busy guy. >> he was busy. >> this is what helped me realize that he probably was worried about being assassinated. >> all the time, right. >> and then that led to -- people used to say when i first got the role how are you going to play him? wow, it's going to be so much fun. i thought what are they talking about? this is a hamlet herod's
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herod. i thought he must sleep with a weapon in his bed he must. >> right. >> if he is that paranoid. that helped me to play the whole first scene. >> anything you learn through the whole first experience? >> i loved morocco. >> that's good. >> i had been to morocco 20 years previous and loved it then and tangier. wonderful culture. wonderful food. >> did you get to keep the costume so you can run around west hollywood now? >> with a beard. i had sort of a full beard myself at the time and, of course, not big enough to play one of those guys. am actually a gentile playing a jew which is always controversial. >> you brought a lot of edge to the role. >> i had had fun. >> suzanne somers' me to live a long time. why? we will find out if you're suffering
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as you may know actress suzanne somers has writ ep a number of books on health. she wants everybody to live longer including me. when i heard that i was flattered. so i talked with ms. somers, the author of the new book tox-sick. >> she's written like 95 books on how to be healthy right. >> yes. >> i'm going to go down my rental men of the day and you tell me -- regimen of the day. >> you need eight hours fort repair work to happen. you can sleep eight hours without drugs. >> i don't need drugs. >> i don't either. >> you are ahead of the game. >> i wake up in the night because i have brilliant thoughts that come to me and i go wow, that's a good thought. >> you know what turns that noise off if you take a
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supplement called gab aa. it takes it away. >> it's a supplement. >> just a supplement. >> for breakfast, i have japanese tea. >> great. love that. >> japanese tea and then maybe a piece of gluten-free toast. little butter because i have to flavor it up. >> absolutely. >> ever since we got on the low fat, we've gotten fatter and sicker. with this new book you helped me. i was watching one day and i went yeah. because there were 80 different strains of wheat engineered down to five. so the gluten process -- >> you got it. >> that started me on the journey of writing this book of why are there so many allergies, a.d.d. adhd. >> because it's in efrk. >> then for lunch, i have tuna sandwich or ham and cheese and some soup. chicken with rice something like that. >> great. >> what kind of bread.
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>> i don't eat a lot of the bread. i take the crusts offment i'm a sissy. >> is that okay? >> well -- see our fish is kind of wrecked. you have appn amazing brain. mercury settles in the brain. you might try an egg sandwich. >> for supper i eat pretty much anything i want. i can go for a steak or burger. i got a sweet tooth. so i get a little dessert. but i try not to eat to late. >> yes. it's hard to digest. >> do you ask for grass fed. >> i ask. the guy who cooks it laughs and gives me what he has. this is new york, not the west coast. if it's grass-fed, it's better. >> if your cow ate corn which is what they're feeding the cows, corn-fed against their natural evolution. then they get infection and e. coli and then they have to give that cow antibiotics. >> so i'm not a fanatic about anything. i do eat some sugar. i think sugar is bad because it
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puts weight sometimes you got to have haagen-dazs. >> life expectancy is around 80 years old in america. >> the futurists say 110. >> who want to live to 110. >> what about if your brain is sharp and no bone loss. >> no bone loss? how do i prevent that. >> testosterone. >> i have plenty of that. >> you do. but it has to be declining and so you take a blood test and see where your levels have dropped and then you fill the tank. >> how about dhea. >> absolutely. that's a precursor to testosterone. i take progesterone i take -- >> a lot of people say too much of that and your toes are going to fall off. >> by blood test. what i need. i'm like goldilocks. >> you're a happy person. >> i'm a happy person. you would have been like a freshman in high school when i was a senior and --
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>> and you would have been mocking me. >> i would have dated you. you would have been too young for me. >> get him out of here. >> all right. congratulations on trying to make the american population for healthy. we always tell people you know read the books but check with your doctor beforehand what's best for you. thanks for putting up with me suzanne. >> i get who you are. >> one of the very few. >> i went to colin qui has a ♪ the goodness that goes into making a power kale chicken caesar salad is rivaled only, by the goodness felt while eating one. panera. food as it should be.
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personal story segment tonig interesting new book by comedian colin quinn. it's called the coloring book. a comedian solves race relations in america. here now is colin quinn. >> you grew up in a racially mixed neighborhood. i didn't. levittown was all white. >> all irish. >> your neighborhood? >> yours. >> no. we were italians and a lot of
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jews but no blacks. where was your neighborhood and what did you learn? >> park slope. back then. i learned, well that people like you could -- people could be prejudice without being racist for example. >> because they don't know any better. >> to be fair. >> do you -- in this book, i went through it but didn't read it all. is there a theme of the book that americans could lessen this situation? >> at least we could try. i have ideas. but you need to have shows. i know you like to have ideas. i have ideas where unless we have -- what we have right now is disgusting how we should have a discussion. that's the only racial discussion we have. >> you want to cut through the b.s. >> the only people who speak it are angry on or pandering. as you know from any racial debate everybody has their conclusion. >> preconceived. >> they've already decided what they want. they want to convince you.
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you need shows on tv. that's how we do things here. >> you're in show business, you meet a lot of people. is there racism in show business? do you think minorities don't get the breaks that whites could do? >> i wouldn't say they don't get the same breaks. but there's people hired, their friends and -- >> that's cronyism. >> a lot of that is white cronyism. >> jon stewart and i, you ever hear of him? >> yeah. >> we had a thing about white privilege. he believes it's keeping people down. if you work hard and do what's necessary no matter your color, you can succeed. where do you come down on that? >> it's hard to say there's 100%. but i feel that -- i feel like it depends on the job. where there is -- so i mean i can't say that there's 100% of what you say is right. but yes, i do believe that people use white privilege and supremacy too easily. >> in your business if you're
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funny, does it matter what color you are? >> no. >> okay. in the sports business if you can play and score, does it matter what color you are? >> no. >> if you can pick stocks that go up does it matter what color you are? >> i've never met a blackstock broker. let's be honest. >> now, there are. if one comes in here and say i've got ten for ten, everybody is going to him. >> of course. >> i think you picked a bad example. >> go to -- students down there, come on. >> that's racist quinn. >> you can't do that. i'm giving everybody a break in every -- there's no black stock black stockbroker. >> you killed your book. >> i live three blocks from wall street. never seen a black stockbroker. >> good book. provocative. colin quinn thanks for coming
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in. that is it for us tonight. thank you for watching this special edition of the factor. i am bill o'reilly and please always remember the spin stops right we're definitely looking out for you. welcome to the kelly file special. the baltimore six. tonight new revelations in the criminal case against six cops that touched off riots protests and a nags debate on race relations. welcome to the kelly file. this weekend marks three months since freddie gray was arrested a man described as a repeat small time drug dealer taken into custody after he ran from cops. police found a knife which they said was illegal and decided to take him in. they loaded freddie into a police van and brought him to the station. somewhere on that ride the medical examiner has concluded freddie gray suffered a