Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis - The Trump Manifesto, Merrick Garland's Misleading House Testimony, Reactions to Biden's Executive Order on the Border, Charles Lachman on the Importance of D-Day & More
Episode Date: June 6, 2024Tonight's rundown: Hey BillOReilly.com Premium and Concierge Members, welcome to the No Spin News for Wednesday, June 5, 2024. Stand Up for Your Country. Talking Points Memo: Bill lays out what ...Trump should do to bolster his chances for reelection. Merrick Garland testifies in front of the House Judiciary Committee. Democrats react to Biden's executive order concerning the southern border. Television producer and author Charles Lachman joins the No Spin News. This Day in History: President Ronald Reagan dies. Final Thought: Mick Jagger calls out DeSantis. In Case You Missed It: Read Bill's latest column, "Truth and Consequences." Get the "Red, White and Real" deal featuring the new "Not Woke" mug and "Team Normal" hat for only $39.95! Election season is here! Now's the time to get a Premium or Concierge Membership to BillOReilly.com, the only place for honest news analysis. Preorder Bill's latest book CONFRONTING THE PRESIDENTS, a No Spin assessment of every president from Washington to Biden. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bill O'Reilly here.
Welcome to the No Spin News, Wednesday, June 5th, 2024, stand up for your country.
Now, if you have followed my career, you know, I don't get involved with campaigns.
I was on a Hannity radio program today, and he said, Sean Hannity said to me, he goes,
I've never really heard you inject yourself to the extent you are in the 2024 presidential race.
And that was a good observation on Hannity's part. I never do that because my job is to cover
both candidates. I mean, obviously you know how I feel about issues, but in a fair way, I'm not
trying to promote anything for this country other than the welfare of it. I want good things for
everybody. And now we're in a situation in history where we have the second worst president
ever. And how can I not get involved here on that level? I have to. So I am. And I don't have
any, let's say, connections to the Trump campaign. I don't talk to them. I talk to the president
it once in a while. I think he's mad at me now for some reason. I don't know and doesn't really
bother me. You know, everybody's mad at me on occasion. So I do have advice, though, for the Trump
campaign. And I debated about whether to do this, but I'm going to do it because it's so important
and that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. So the Republican Convention is
July 15th to 18th in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. On July 11th, Mr. Trump will be sentenced by Judge
Merchan in New York City on this totally bogus hush money case. There is a very good op-ed in the
Wall Street Journal today. Excellent. About how Donald Trump's due process was violated in this
trial, which if the Trump lawyers are smart and they lose in New York State, they'll take it
into the federal system. Really good column, and it's worth you while I'll check it out. Anyway,
at the convention or even before the June 27th debate, Donald Trump should put forth the Trump
manifesto. Okay? Write it down. The Trump manifesto. I'm going to tell you what it is in a moment.
Now, at this point, Donald Trump is running on a personal beef.
80% of his rallies and his appearances are talking about personal stuff.
That's smart in the short term because he's raised $100 million since the New York jury found him guilty.
That's a colossal amount of money, and he's going to need a billion.
The Trump campaign will need $1 billion.
to compete against the Democratic machine.
Okay, so he had a perfect right to be personal about it.
I would have been, but now the statute of limitations on the personal beef is pretty much ending.
He's got to segue into the policy situation.
So here are the 10 things that I, your humble correspondent, would suggest be put into
the Trump manifesto. Number one, how he will defeat inflation. Precisely how. Number two, border
security. That's right, in Trump's wheelhouse. All he has to do is go back to remain in Mexico.
Three, a migrant policy for those already inside the country. Now, if he goes detention camps,
mass roundups, he's going to lose votes. You've got to
to think that out. Americans don't want doors kicked in in the middle of the night and screaming
babies being taken out of homes. That would be foolish. You've got to think this out.
Four, energy. What would you do in the energy situation? Five, Ukraine. Trump is dodging Ukraine.
You've got to spill out what you would do. You can't just say, I'll get a deal with Putin.
that Trump is capable of doing that, but I want to know more.
Six, Israel terrorism, all right?
Define it.
Seven, college madness.
Are you going to cut off federal funds to colleges that are out of control and practice
anti-Semitism?
Are you going to do that, Mr. Trump?
Specifics.
Eight, crime, social disorder.
What are you going to do?
Continue to send money to sanctuary city.
that don't enforce the law, like New York?
Are you going to continue to do that, Mr. Trump?
Okay?
Nine, abortion.
Not a lot on this.
You got to define your view on it.
And 10, equity favoring a specific race in government policy.
Are you going to ban equity?
Are you going to make an executive order about it, Donald Trump?
All of those things have to be addressed.
That is the Trump Manifesto.
Now, for your premium and concierge members, you can get a written transcript.
There it is.
And you want to send it to the Trump campaign?
Go ahead.
They have no idea what I'm saying.
Now, it might be smart to put that manifesto out before the debate because Joe Biden has no specific plans to solve any problems.
None.
So if you have 10 strong specifics up against his none in a debate, I think you'll probably win the debate, no matter what the moderators do.
I can defend all of those things.
I swat away any questions that come my way.
Okay, so I believe, and you have heard me say this, that a vote for Joe Biden, November.
November is a vote against you and your family. That's how catastrophic the Biden administration
is. Now, I was on a phone today with a friend of mine whose wife is an Uber liberal, and he says,
even my wife doesn't want Joe Biden, but she can't vote for Trump. I told this guy,
suggest to your wife that she not vote. Don't vote at all, or vote down ticket. Because if you
You've pulled a lever for President Biden.
You are hurting your family.
You are hurting yourself.
If you can't pull it for Trump, don't vote.
That was my advice, and that's the memo.
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Hey, I'm Caitlin Becker, the host of the New York Postcast, and I've got exactly what you need.
to start your weekdays. Every morning, I'll bring you the stories that matter, plus the news
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Donald Trump is in France. He's not doing anything today. He segues down to Normandy.
tomorrow. He's going to greet vets. He's going to lay a wreath on the 9,000 Americans in the
cemetery. And he's going to do all kinds of ceremonial things. That's good. 80th anniversary of D-Day.
We'll get into that a little later in the program. We've got a good book to tell you about.
And then tomorrow about my personal visit to Normandy. Then he goes back to Paris tonight,
Thursday, tomorrow night. And then he goes back to Normandy on.
Friday. So why don't you stay in Normandy? I guess it's a security thing. But there are plenty of
good places to stay in Normandy. I don't know where he's going all back to Paris. I mean, it's
easy to needy chop a ride back to Paris, but I was a little strange. Anyway, tomorrow's the 8th
anniversary. I'm going to have my analysis of Normandy based upon my trip there and all
that. You might want to tune into that. Biden comes home Sunday the 9th. Then he goes back to
Italy, Thursday the 13th, four days later. I don't understand this. I mean, the man can hardly
stand up. If you read my message of the day on Bill O'Reilly.com, when he walked off that podium
after announcing the executive order on the border, he could hardly get off. He walked like a toddler.
And they're whipping them back across the Atlantic. Why don't they give him a couple of days?
Get out of southern France, just slayed by the pool. I mean, it doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
But anyway. All right, let's go to Attorney General Merrick Garland. What a disaster this man is. Remember, he, Obama wanted him to be a Supreme Court Justice. This guy is such a disaster. I can't even believe it. So he testifies in front of the Judiciary Committee yesterday. And a lot of it is partisan garbage. I understand that. They try to make Merrick Garland look bad. Well, you don't really have to try. Okay, he looks bad. But there is a key here.
And the key is the people after Donald Trump, Fannie Willis in Georgia, her boyfriend,
Letitia James, Attorney General of New York, they made Justice Department visits and White
House visits.
And the Republicans on the Judiciary Committee want to know about the visits.
For example, Letitia James, New York A.G., who's behind the hush money thing, visited
the White House three times.
We have the dates.
according to White House visitor logs.
Bragg did not go down.
Alvin Bragg did not visit there.
Fannie Willis went herself and her boyfriend, who was on a case, went three times.
Nathan Wade, according to press reports.
We want to know for sure.
Okay?
So all has legitimate questions.
Is there a linkage between all of these charges against Trump and the White House and the Justice Department,
Merrick Garland?
Roll a tape.
Will the Department of Justice provide to the committee all documents, all correspondence between the department and Alvin Bragg's office and Fannie Willis office and Letitia James' office?
The offices you're referring to are independent offices of state.
I get that. I get that. The question is whether or not you will provide all of your documents and correspondence. That's the question. I don't need a history lesson.
Well, I'm going to say again, we do not control those officers.
They make their own decisions.
The question is whether you communicate with them, not whether you control them.
Do you communicate with them and will you provide those communications?
You make a request.
We'll refer it to our office of legislative affairs.
But see, here's the thing.
This is a stone wall, a flat out stone wall, embarrassing for a public servant.
Make the material available so the American public can see what your interactions were
with Letitia James, Fonnie Will, or anybody else involved with the Trump prosecutions.
Come on. I mean, it's just maddening. Really? You're not getting, oh, no, you have communications. Let's see what you did. You don't have executive privilege. It's really outrageous. It really is. Where's Woodward and Bernstein? They're both alive. Where's the Washington Post losing $77 million last year? Maybe if you investigated stuff like this Washington Post, you wouldn't lose.
lose $77 million.
Maddening.
Our reaction to President Biden's
executive order on the southern border, I gave you
of mine yesterday, and you can go read
that, and it's not going to work, it's
obviously a naked campaign thing.
So, one of the squad,
Prumilla
Jayupal,
Congresswoman from Washington,
total nut,
said this, go.
I think that this is a mistake for several reasons.
One, this is severely limiting the right to seek asylum.
Now, this is a right that we in Congress gave to people to come and seek asylum anywhere along the border,
including between ports of entry, because it is extremely difficult for people who are fleeing violent circumstances in their home countries
to make sure that they get to a port of entry.
That's just a lie.
And the CNN reporter, it's a lie.
Congress didn't make any exception that you can apply for asylum in the middle of the desert.
You have to go to a port-a-call.
Then he changed the law.
If Congress hadn't done anything on immigration law in five years, nothing was changed.
She just made that up.
She just made it up.
And again, CNN is, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, why bother watching that stuff?
I know you don't. I'm not yelling at you. I'm just venting here.
All right, here is the policy, according to the Board of Protection Administration.
All non-citizens, including asylum seekers, declaring their fear of persecution, must
enter the country at a U.S. Port of Entry, undergo inspection, and go before an immigration judge
in order to be allowed to stay in the U.S.A. That's it. That's the policy, Congresswoman,
congress didn't change it oh now the democratic party doesn't want to close the border roll
a tape but here's one of my biggest frustrations with this executive order same as it was
with the senate bill that was negotiated that this measure is based off of it doesn't ask the
most important question why are people coming to begin with if
The goal is to reduce the numbers of people coming to the southern border, seeking asylum.
Then let's find out who they are, where they're coming from, and why they're coming.
Are you kidding me?
That's what Kamala Harris is supposed to have done three years ago, right?
The root cause.
They're still banging that drum.
What difference does it make?
They're coming here because they think they can make more money.
and it's safer, but don't go to Chicago or New York or San Francisco.
It just is so ridiculous.
Stone, cold, dumb.
That was Alex Padilla, Democrat from California.
Again on CNN, and there's a CNN anchor, Abby Phillip.
Really?
You wonder why no one watches you CNN?
That's why.
Hey, it's Sean Spicer from the Sean Spicer Show podcast, reminding you to tune into my show every day to get your daily dose inside the world of politics.
President Trump and his team are shaking up Washington like never before, and we're here to cover it from all sides, especially on the topics the mainstream media won't.
So if you're a political junkie on a late lunch or getting ready for the drive home, new episodes of the Sean Spicer's
show podcast drop at 2 p.m. East Coast every day. Make sure you tune in. You can find us at Apple
Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast. Power, politics, and the people behind the
headlines. I'm Miranda Devine, New York Post columnist, and the host of the brand new podcast,
Podforce One. Every week, I'll sit down for candid conversations with Washington's most
powerful disruptors, lawmakers, newsmakers, and
even the President of the United States.
These are the leaders shaping the future of America and the world.
Listen to Podforce One with me, Miranda Devine,
every week on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast.
You don't want to miss an episode.
Majority of the middle class in this country, don't have any money.
It's a survey from the National True Cost of Living Coalition.
Okay, 2423 American adults, it says 65% of middle class Americans are struggling financially.
40% of all Americans are unable to plan behind their next paycheck.
46% don't have $500 saved.
I'm not going to say rainy day, that's a cliche.
Right? But I don't believe that stat. I don't believe 46, almost half the country doesn't have 500 bucks saved. I don't. Sorry, I don't believe it. But I do believe that most Americans don't have a lot of backup funds. And here now is the smart life segment. And it's a tough one. If you are one of those people with a low savings account, no assets at all, we're not counting your house.
house and your home mortgage and all of that, not counting that. So you have nothing in the bank
case something goes wrong. You need to work on the sixth day. You need to get another job.
That's the only way out, okay, because your boss is not going to give you a big raise
unless you're doing something extraordinary when most Americans aren't. So you work five days a week,
you got to work six. What do you do? There are two ways to make quick money in this country.
One is to drive an Uber or Lyft or even a taxi. Okay, if you have a driver's license, you can do that.
And you can make pretty good money. Plan B is to deliver food. As we reported this week,
takeout food delivery booming through the roof, which is one of the reasons people don't have a lot of
of money because you spend it all the money on food. If you deliver for an upscale place,
you're going to get tips on that delivery and you'll get paid out of the delivery charge.
So one day a week, you can do that. Now, if you are a responsible person who takes a shower
every day and looks okay, you're going to get hired like that and speaks English. I mean,
tattoo on your forehead, that might be an impediment. But if you are presentable, you can make
money on the sixth day. And that's what you have to do. Or you're going to go down.
Not a matter of if, it's when. Smart life. City of Evanston, Illinois, is being sued
by Judicial Watch for paying African Americans living in that town reparations. So that
the city is set aside $5 million.
And right now, if you're African American in Evanston and you apply and meet whatever
standards they have, you get $25,000 check handed to you, Evanston, Illinois.
Now, it's taxpayer money.
Okay?
So, Judicial Watch has sued, says this discriminates against Evanston's non-black.
citizens. Okay, we don't have any use for judicial watch. I don't trust them. We've asked
them to come on a number of times and explain their situation. They will not. I won't
give them any money. I know that they do file lawsuits that I sympathize with, like this
one, but I don't trust them. And if they want to come on and tell me how wrong I am,
they're welcome to. But this lawsuit is in play.
Best and worst airports for disruptions.
Now, this includes cancellations and delays.
Here are the best.
Salt Lake City, Minneapolis.
JFK has only 22% of flights disrupted.
I'm going to challenge that.
Detroit, Seattle, Tacoma, C-Tac.
All right?
So if you go to those airports, you're a lesser chance to get a hammer.
Here are the worst.
Dallas, Fort Worth.
Houston, George Bush Intercontinental, Charlotte, Chicago O'Hare, Miami. Miami is, to me, I always go
out of Lauderdale. Miami's a really, really tough one. All right, 80th anniversary of D-Day,
as we mentioned, is tomorrow. On the first day of the invasion, 2,5001 Americans were killed.
Okay? 5,000 wounded. The best, the picture.
of that is saving private Ryan. Brutal. Six-day battle, okay? Over the six days,
Americans lost 29,000 killed, 100,000 wounded. Germans, hard to say. They weren't given us
their casualty counts, but the estimates are Germans lost on the six-day battle, about 40,000
dead and 80,000 wounded. But again, very difficult to get that. So with the interest in Dede Haas,
I'm reading a book called Code Name Nemo, like Captain Nemo, can remember that, 20,000 leagues
under the sea, code name Nemo, the hunt for a Nazi U-boat, and the elusive Enigma Machine.
Book is good, moves along, lots of information, this is not a novel, this is a nonfiction book.
The author is the very famous Charles Lockman, the executive producer of Inside Edition,
full disclosure. I worked with Mr. Lockman in the Stone Age, and I am responsible for every
single success he has ever had is an entire life.
I'm doing, Bill.
I know. He joins us now from New York City. So I'm reading your book. And it's a good,
you set it up as a thriller. But a lot of people don't understand that the U-boat situation
was perhaps the most effective tool the Nazis had.
And they would just run a rough shot.
And this one particular U-boat was so lethal.
And you go through what the U-boat did
that the allies wanted to capture it.
They not sink it.
They wanted to get information from it.
Pick up the story from there.
Well, it was a first thanks for having me, Bill.
I really appreciate it.
It was a audacious plan to buy.
by an innovative, brilliant Navy strategist named Captain Dan Gallery.
And he had this idea that had been brewing in his head for a couple of years.
And then he was named the commanding officer of the USS Guadalphanal,
which was an aircraft carrier.
And his idea was to not pulverize a Nazi boat.
His goal was to just force it to the surface by,
a round of depth charges and hedgehog mortar shells,
just enough so that the U-boat captain would abandon ship.
He wanted the German sailors to jump into the ocean,
and that enabled a raiding party that he had organized
to zip along on a small whale boat to seize the Nazi U-boat.
And it wasn't so much to capturing the U-boat,
intact was obviously a key goal. But the real mission was to seize the enigma machine. And the real,
real mission beyond that, was to seize the all-important German secret codes. And they succeeded
in doing it, but it was very difficult. And you take us through that hunt to get this U-boat.
How did they know the enigma machine, which is a decoder, all right? That's how the Nazis
sent messages, was on this particular boat.
Every U-boat had at least one, and in most cases, two Enigma machines.
That's how they communicated with the German High Command.
Yeah, the High Command.
Okay.
So they get the boat, the U-boat, and they get the Enigma Machine.
But the German High Command thinks the boat was blown up.
They don't know the Americans have captured it, right?
Correct.
The essential operation was to keep it secret from the night.
They don't know.
They think the U-boat is dead and all the sailors are dead because that's what happened
in most of the cases.
The United States gets the enigma machine and they are able then to read the top-secret cables
coming back on the military from Berlin.
How did that affect the D-Day evasion?
Well, this secret operation, the capture of U-505,
was conducted on June 4th, 1944, two days before D-Day.
And when they captured the Enigma Machine and the secret Nazi naval codes,
it enabled the Americans and the British to read the naval course of communication in real time.
They didn't need to go to Professor Alan Turing of movie fame.
they didn't need hundreds, even thousands of hours of computer time to decipher these codes.
They could read it in real time.
Just as soon as the communications were sent out to the U-boats,
the U.S. commanders were able to read those secret messages.
So it freed up an enormous amount of computer time during an essential period of the war,
the immediate days after the D-Day invasion.
All right.
So they got information, and the Germans didn't know they had it,
and that obviously contributed to the victory, not only in D-Day, but going forth on Europe.
Now, one of the things that struck me because I do this work as well, Lachman, as you know,
was that you got a lot of German stuff, a lot of research on the German side of it,
what the captain was, what he was going through, what their strategy was.
Where did you get that?
Well, I found that material in the archives of the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry, where U-505 is currently on exhibit.
If you can believe that, there's a Nazi U-boat in a museum in Chicago.
And this capture of U-505 was the most important time in their lives.
Imagine that they abandoned ship, they are rescued by the American Navy task,
force, they're sent to a POW camp in Louisiana to live out the war, that families in Germany
don't know that they are alive. They are assuming that they were lost at sea because they were
not allowed to communicate with any family members or with the International Red Cross or with the Swiss
embassy in Washington. So all the family members of suit, and then after the war, when it was
revealed what had happened, it was basically a return from the dead. So this was an eventful time
in their lives, and they actually would return to America periodically every 10 years on a big
anniversary of the capture and visit U-505. And during one of those visits, they decided to leave
a lot of their remembrances behind. So this was all kind of buried in the archives of the
museum in Chicago. Good work. There's good work. And where is that boat on display?
that you vote right now? Where is it? The Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago,
now called the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry. Interesting. I think people will check that
out. Final question for you. You like this stuff. You like this World War II stuff.
You know, I wrote Killing, Pat and Killing and Rising Sun. I like it, too.
But I don't believe that the younger generation of Americans, under the age of 50,
All right, really understand how important this war was, number one, because they don't teach history in public schools very much anymore.
And number two, I'm not sure that the younger generation now, 30 and younger, would be able to do what the greatest generation did.
You want to weigh in on those?
I can. I unfortunately do agree with you on that assessment.
Very interesting story. One of the nine U.S. sailors who were involved in the raiding party,
none of these guys really wanted to talk about it after the war. They're very humble.
They just wanted to return to civilian life, raise their families, get married, and earn a living.
And they became, one became a roofer, a firefighter, another a refrigerator repairman.
Just blue-collar guys, great guys. Then one day, years passed.
one of their kids who was going to college came home from school and his mother for whatever
reason decided to show her something she went to the nightstand in the bedroom came out
and she carried a box with her and she opened the box and inside was a silver star and she said
your father was a war hero and that was the first time he ever knew that his father was a hero of
of the war who sees this Nazi U-boat.
And it's a possible anecdote.
But I have to say that the parents and the grandchildren
of these nine heroic sailors
who really went on a suicide mission,
they are doing the best to carry on with the legacy.
They're so proud of the achievements and heroism
of granddad and dad.
And it's really, it was a thrill to hear them
and to talk to them for the research in the book.
The Golden Silver Star, second, the highest decoration to the Congressional Medal.
All right, on another subject, do you want to tell the audience how I saved Inside Edition,
which I think is still on the air after 30 years or something?
You want to tell the audience how I, O'Reilly, your Humboldt car, want to save that whole operation.
That should be your next book, all right?
Forget about Nemo.
Let's do O'Reilly saving Inside Edition.
Really, want me tell them the story?
Briefly.
Briefly. Okay. The original host of Inside Edition was David Frost. We all kind of remember him. Disaster did not work out. You at that time were the senior correspondent. We hired you from ABC. And David Frost was out. And in Pops, Bill O'Reilly as a new anchor of Inside Edition. And the rest is history.
The rest is 30 years.
I want gratuities from every single person.
And you, the biggest one, still working at Inside Edition.
I turned that thing around.
It's a great story.
David Fraze fired it to three weeks.
Three weeks.
And there I was in a bullpen, you know, throwing heat.
And I said, look, give me the deal.
I don't know whether you remember, but my only request,
was I write every blank and word on that show.
And I did.
Everything, I wrote even the promo copy.
And you remember our executive producers,
we're doing topless donut shops and all of this stuff.
I go, we're not doing that anymore.
I'll take the donuts, but we're not doing the topless stuff.
And turned it into a show that CBS still runs many, many years later.
The book is Codain Nemo, the Hunt for a Nazi U.S.
boat and the elusive enigma machine. I am reading it. It's my strongest recommendation.
Charles Lachman. Thanks for appearing today with us. Thank you so much, Bill.
Good to see you again. Okay. All right. This day in history, June 5th, 2004, Ronald Reagan dies.
All right, 93 years old. That was 20 years ago today. Died from Alzheimer's. You know Ronald
Reagan pretty thoroughly. If you don't read Killing Reagan, my book on him, which tells
every part of his life, the good and the bad. He was a great president. But I want to tell you
a little bit about Alzheimer's disease. About 10 million people in the United States have it.
It is fatal. You have Alzheimer's, you're going to go. But nobody knows the timeline of it.
All right. Reagan lived for a long time with. And the diagnosis is four to eight years. And they don't
have a cure, but they're close.
Medical research is close on the Alzheimer's front.
And I am following one particular company, which
might have a breakthrough this year,
I think it's very important that the media follow this stuff.
All right, this day in history, 20 years ago,
Ronald Reagan died back with a final thought about Mick Jagger
in a moment.
OK, here's final thought of the day, Mick Jagger.
80 years old, rolling,
Stone, Keith Richards, 80 years old, Ronnie Wood, 77.
They're running around in USA.
They're doing concerts sold out.
80 years old, these guys.
Okay, so they're in Orlando.
And Mick Jagger says this.
Go.
We've got some great local celebrities that are come tonight.
There's a lot of celebrities here in Florida.
Tiger Woods is here, for instance.
Giant attorneys here.
with the backstreet boys and front to santa's up there in a suite all right he's having a date night
for me all right he's having a date night we again just a jest nothing big all right i don't know him all right i don't know him
I don't hear good things about him.
John Mullaney, the comedian,
he did a hysterical bit about Jagger hosting Saturday Night Live.
Just Google John Malaney, Mick Jagger.
It's just off the chart.
Funny.
Anyway, Jagger is worth 500 million.
Richards, 500 million.
So getting more.
And there it is.
So thank you very much.
for watching and listening across the country and the world to the no spin news. We'll see you
again tomorrow.