• [O'Reilly Factor] How the candidates handle media diffently

    From Ubiquitous@21:1/5 to All on Mon Nov 7 05:00:00 2016
    XPost: alt.politics.usa, alt.tv.oreilly-factor, rec.arts.tv
    XPost: alt.politics.media, alt.politics.journalism

    O'REILLY: Thanks for staying with us, I'm Bill O'Reilly in the
    "Weekdays with Bernie" segment tonight. As we mentioned in the
    Talking Points Memo, Hillary Clinton has not done a single national
    interview since September 12. And this week, Donald Trump is
    avoiding the national TV press as well.

    Joining us from Miami, the purveyor of BernardGoldberg.com, Mr.
    Goldberg. Let's take Hillary Clinton first. Do you agree that she is
    being a bit imperious? Word of the day, imperious. Do you think she
    is?

    BERNIE GOLDBERG, FOX NEWS CONTRIBUTOR: I do think she is. And you
    also said in your Talking Points that she is in hiding. And I think
    you are right on that too. But, if I were giving her advice and not
    a likely possibility. But if I were giving her advice, I would tell
    her not to do interviews with you or anybody who is serious about
    this. You said you wanted straight -- answers to straight questions.

    O'REILLY: Yes.


    GOLDBERG: Bill, she can't give straight answers because she is too
    vulnerable. She just can't do it.

    O'REILLY: Well, you are convicting her though. You are convicting
    her of what the FBI is investigating her for. So --

    GOLDBERG: Tell me what is in it for her? What is in it for her to --

    O'REILLY: Well, I will tell you, I'm giving her the presumption of
    innocence, because that's the kind of guy I am. All right?

    GOLDBERG: But when --

    O'REILLY: Go ahead.

    GOLDBERG: But when she -- when you ask a legitimate question, and
    she dances around it, Bill, I know you, you are not going to sit
    there like a potted plant.

    O'REILLY: Of course I'm going to come in and level the boom but why
    doesn't she explain it.

    GOLDBERG: Because she can't explain it. I know it. I suspect you
    know you are being a little too kind right now.

    O'REILLY: Well, no, wait, wait, wait.

    GOLDBERG: And I know your audience knows it.

    O'REILLY: If she, the Secretary of State, okay, and she has been, I
    didn't do anything wrong in the Clinton Foundation, I didn't take
    any money for influence. I didn't do anything in the email. It was a
    foolish personal mistake that I made, sorry I did it. So, if that's
    true. If those denials are true, she had no problem going in and
    explaining whatever question I asked.

    GOLDBERG: And what if it's not true?

    O'REILLY: Well then she should resign and not try to be president of
    the United States. Why do we want a person who has committed a
    felony to be leading this country?

    GOLDBERG: Bill, never lose that charming innocence, it's beautiful.

    (LAUGHTER)

    GOLDBERG: It's beautiful.

    O'REILLY: You asked for an answer. You know, I mean, if the woman
    knows she is a felon and then she is still trying to bamboozle the
    country, it's not going to be impeachment. She is going to be in
    solitary confinement for 30 years.

    GOLDBERG: Everything isn't a crime. Look, let's think -- one
    question that isn't on the daily news and it's a legitimate
    question. I think you'll agree. What if you say, you know, you said,
    Mrs. Clinton, that when you left office in 2,000, when your husband
    left office, you were dead broke. Those were your words, not mine.
    You were dead broke. Now you and your husband are worth over $100
    million. How did that happen in 15 years?

    O'REILLY: That's a good question. Absolutely. And she will say,
    well, we were lucky and fortunate to have people pay us to speak and
    we made good investments and blah blah blah blah blah, you know.

    GOLDBERG: And you would never take that and you know it.

    O'REILLY: Well, I might be skeptical in my follow-up questioning.

    (CROSSTALK)

    Right. But, I gave her advice to level with the folks. She rejected
    my advice. Now, Trump, Trump, you couldn't get him off TV and now
    for the last week, he didn't want to be on TV anymore. What's going
    on there?

    GOLDBERG: You know, I think that makes sense too, I mean, in a
    political sense. If he -- if he does an interview, except if it's an
    incredibly friendly interview, then the journalist controls the
    agenda. But if he goes to a rally where everybody loves him, he does
    the rally, he picks the subject, nobody is questioning him, it winds
    up on the local news at 6:00 that night in North Carolina or Ohio or
    whatever, and he gets his point out with no interrogation.

    O'REILLY: I know, I know. He reaches so many more people when he
    does shows like this which reach millions and millions.

    GOLDBERG: But he is not going to win any more votes than he has
    already won by being on this network.

    O'REILLY: I'm not so sure about that.

    GOLDBERG: Or national television not enough.

    O'REILLY: Because the focus now -- people who weren't paying
    attention now the World Series is over. They are kind of locked in.
    So, I'm not sure that's right. Bernie, always great to talk with
    you. Thank you.


    --
    BREAKING NEWS
    In other news, somehow Crooked Hillary still isn't in prison...

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