The Megyn Kelly Show - The TRUTH About Jill's Treatment of Joe Biden, Bari Weiss' Leadership, and "Strangers" Accuracy, with Maureen Callahan | Ep. 1332

Episode Date: June 4, 2026

Megyn Kelly begins the show discussing the ongoing delays in California election results, why it could take weeks to determine the runoff in the governor race and LA mayor race, legitimate concerns ab...out confidence in California's election system, and more. Then Maureen Callahan, host of The Nerve, joins to discuss Belle Burden’s bestselling divorce memoir "Strangers," questions about the accuracy of the book’s portrayal of her marriage and financial situation, Burden's spin about relationships and accountability, the lies in "Strangers" about Belle Burden's significant personal wealth from before the marriage, revelations about her trust fund worth more than $60 million, the spin during her book tour interviews with Oprah and Drew Barrymore, the turmoil at CBS News following the firing of Scott Pelley, criticism of Bari Weiss' leadership and management style, the unfolding PR disaster, Tony Dokoupil’s emotional farewell to Pelley, why cable news, corporate media, and social media is such a "snake pit," whether all competitive industries feature jealousy and workplace toxicity, Jill Biden's treatment of a clearly infirmed Joe Biden on display, her gross book tour, Blake Lively using a victim's law to try to get legal fees, the way her fight is hurting real victims and more.   Subscribe to Maureen's show The Nerve: Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-nerve-with-maureen-callahan/id1808684702 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4kR07GQGQAJaMNtLc9Cg2o YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thenerveshow?sub_confirmation=1 Substack: https://thenerveshow.com/   Supersure Insurance: Simplify your business insurance and get a free coverage report at https://Supersure.com/Megyn The Wellness Company: Don’t let a sudden illness derail your summer—secure your peace of mind and save $45 on a Medical Emergency Kit today by visiting https://UrgentCareKit.com/MK and using promo code MK. Relief Factor: Declare your independence from pain—try the 3-Week QuickStart for just $19.95 at https://ReliefFactor.com or call 800-4-RELIEF. Byrna: Go to https://Byrna.com or your local Sportsman's Warehouse today.     Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKelly Twitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShow Instagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShow Facebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow  Find out more information at:https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to The Megan Kelly Show, live on SiriusXM Channel 111 every weekday at New East. Hey, everyone, I'm Megan Kelly. Welcome to the Megan Kelly Show and happy Thursday. It's another day filled with breaking news from all over the country and another day where we do not know who's moving on to the runoff in the major California elections for governor and Los Angeles mayor because they really just have to wait for the mail-in votes to arrive. And there's apparently been a surge. in mail-in votes, especially from Democrat areas of California. So it's really just too difficult for them to predict how these races are going to come down. I'm sorry, but if you don't smell a rat, your olfactory nerves are not working.
Starting point is 00:00:53 This is sick. This is no way to run an election. There will be no public confidence in this if it doesn't track the way the actual in-person vote tracked as of Tuesday. I mean, this is third world shit we're looking at right now because you have Tom, sorry, not Tom Steyer, thank God. You have Steve Hilton leading in California
Starting point is 00:01:16 and you've got Spencer Pratt currently in second in L.A. But they won't call it for either one because they think Tom Steyer at the gubernatorial level and Nithia Raman at the L.A. mayor level may surge miraculously in the mail-in votes and overtake one of the top two spots, leaving the Republicans in the dust and not able to move on. Like, no one's going to accept this. Like, California is 39% Republicans.
Starting point is 00:01:53 They have no representation whatsoever at the state level. And now, for the first time, with their, you know, half their city in L.A. burning down and their state in tatters with homeless everywhere and hypodermic needles on every sidewalk. Now the public gets to vote. And what we have to wait, they're saying it could be weeks before we know the result. Weeks. Days or weeks. You've got Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida, rightfully ripping them, saying, we have 10 million voters here. We count it in a day. Get your shit together. It's not exactly how he put it, but that's what he's saying.
Starting point is 00:02:35 And you've got a lot of Californians out there who want real change and have it available to them in like a realistic way. This could actually happen for the first time in a long time. And it just feels very much like it is in serious danger of getting stolen out from under them. And you guys know, I'm not a big stolen election person. You know, I'm not. I've never bought into that shit. I want to see cold hard proof. somebody who's going to make allegations of a stolen election.
Starting point is 00:03:05 But how are you going to have confidence when they're talking about surge in mail-in votes, especially from Democrat counties and more than half of the vote outstanding in mail-in balloting? More than half? So you can control any election. If you've got more than half of the vote outstanding, you can control anything. This is not just military vets who are overseas. This is like half of the populace there who they are letting. and you can mail in the ballots on election day.
Starting point is 00:03:35 They don't have to be in by election day. I'm just like, okay, I'll give you the specifics as we get into this in just a bit. Then we also have got to get into this. All right, so for months now, I've actually been obsessing over this book. I've shared my thoughts with a lot of my dear friends over this book. I don't know why this book has struck such a chord with me and a lot of other women in particular. but now it finds itself immersed in controversy and for good reason. All right.
Starting point is 00:04:03 It's a bestseller and it's called Strangers. I actually saw it because my husband Doug's book is on the New York Times bestseller list. Thanks to all of you in large parts. So thank you. It's called The Lost Empire of Emmanuel Nobel. I have an update on that in a second. But I looked at the Times bestseller list, which I don't normally do. And thankfully Doug made it.
Starting point is 00:04:22 And this woman, Bell Burden and her book, Strangers, is still at the top of it. It's also nonfiction like Doug's book, and it's called A Memoir of Marriage. It's been 19 weeks on the bestseller list now, in fact. So, wow, good for her. But it turns out that much like another book that our friend Maureen Callahan took a deep dive into and exposed as a fraud. And now the author of that other book is facing a lawsuit from the woman who claims her story was stolen. Just like that book, this book, too, appears to have taken. some serious liberties with the truth in order to create a narrative around this poor me, mom
Starting point is 00:05:03 and wife, who was left by the evil financier husband that are now just coming out. It's coming out that this woman can buy you in your entire family. Okay? Like, she wrote a whole novel, not novel, nonfiction piece about how her husband left her in the lurch for another woman, how her financial security was in tatters. She didn't know where to turn, what you do next. She was going to lose all her houses. And it turns out the New Yorker did a deep dive.
Starting point is 00:05:32 She's worth $67 million. We're like crying tears of this woman, some of us. Do you have $67 million? Would you be writing a piece about how you didn't know how to pay your bills? If you can't pay your bills with $67 million, it's a you problem. Okay. So there's a lot to get into. And the perfect person is here to do it.
Starting point is 00:05:57 Her name is Maureen Callahan, and she is the host of The Nerve with Maureen Callahan on our MK Media Podcast Network. Go and subscribe now on YouTube. It's on every podcast platform. You can get it for free, wherever you go, or just go to thenerveshow.com to find out all the deets on how to connect with Maureen. Here's a question. How many brokers does it take to ensure your business? If you are like most business owners, the answer is too many. Multiple policies, multiple applications, multiple applications, no clear view of how it all fits together. In fact, it's just a massive stressor for most people. And when questions come up, it's not easy to get the clarity you need. And usually you need it quickly when you're dealing with insurance. But super sure changes all
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Starting point is 00:07:32 That's super sure.com slash Megan paid for by SuperSure insurance agency LLC, a licensed insurance agency. Maureen, welcome back. Thank you for having me, Megan. You've been on all of these stories right from the get-go. And it's the same publisher. Is it? Who did Amy Griffin's The Tell and then did Bell Burd. Strangers, the same publisher.
Starting point is 00:07:56 You know, her story never struck me as real in the first place. I remember reading her modern love column, which was the precursor and that got her the book deal. In The New York Times, they have a column where you can write in about your modern love story, and she did that and that turned into the book. And it was, this was the story, some and substance. My husband came home one day and said he wanted a divorce. I don't know what's a differentiating factor that. makes that story unique. I'm sorry for her that her marriage ended and she didn't want it to,
Starting point is 00:08:29 but it happens every day. I went and reread it because we're doing this on the nerve tomorrow as well. And I reread that original column. And you can tell because in the book, she writes about, she went, she had a very lengthy back and forth with the editor at the New York Times. This is like a 900 word column. It should not take that long, right? And you can tell the editor's pushing her like, what's different about your story? Come up with something. You may be a New York City heiress. You may be descended from Standard Oil, the Vanderbiltz.
Starting point is 00:09:05 You know, your grandmother may have been, you know, Babe Paley, who is, by the way, married to the head of CBS, Bill Paley. So she's not some fawn in the woods. She doesn't know how media works and big media and big money, okay? So, Belle, what makes your story different? What makes it different? And what she comes up with is, I'm special because this happened to me during a pandemic. Yeah, that is.
Starting point is 00:09:29 She does highlight that a lot in the book. Okay. Is she the only person whose marriage fell apart during the stress of the pandemic and global lockdown? Right. Come on. I really found this an interesting read. I listen to the audio, as I do with most books. And she reads it herself.
Starting point is 00:09:46 You have to speed it up. She's got a very slow cadence. But I thought it was just interesting from like a human, a human perspective. But the more I listened, the less I liked this woman. Because if you listen to the book or read the book, what you will see is somebody who's very much like, he left me. It's all about, I'm not giving anything away. This is how it basically opens, but the husband comes. Actually, they're in their Martha's Vineyard, multi-million dollar estate in the pandemic. And she gets a call from a man who says, I'm sorry to have to tell you this, but your husband has been having an affair with my wife. And she's, devastated and the first night her husband admits to it, but apologizes and feels bad. And then by the next morning at 6 a.m., he awakes her in bed saying, with his bags back saying, I thought I loved you. I don't. I'm leaving you. I haven't been happy in a long time. And he pieces out and he goes back to their pad in the city, which is also a multi-million
Starting point is 00:10:42 dollar home. And before you know it, he really does, he is leaving her. He does not ever come back and say, I made a mistake. It's totally unclear to me. me, whether he winds up with the woman, like the affair partner, I don't think that they wound up together, but I could be wrong. And then she talks about the journey of like how devastating this was because she was blindsided. That's what interested me. And it's like the nightmare, you know, that like someone you deeply love, just one day comes to you and says, I don't love you, I'm out. Like you've somehow grown repulsive to me. That's a horrible, horrible nightmare. I think we've talked about this because it's like I never forgot it when I heard about it. But it was like Lonnie
Starting point is 00:11:24 Anderson and Bert Reynolds who were supposed to be like the it couple. Remember everybody like back in the day they were on like battle the network stars and all the things together as husband and wife. They were so sweet. And they their love affair was held up as like the love affair of all love affairs. And she said one morning he looked at her in bed and said, you know you're the love of my life, don't you? And she said, of course, and you're the love of mine. And that afternoon, she got served with divorce papers. So it's like that kind of shit is very tough to recover from. It's like, all my judgment sucks. My interpersonal skills are bad. I can't read people. I have no EQ. I can never trust again. I can never love again because I'm going to set myself up for this.
Starting point is 00:12:07 So that's to me why Bell Burden's story was interesting. Like she she wrote about how she really, really, really did not see problems in their marriage. And this husband doing this to her completely undermine her sense of self. But if you read the book more carefully, then you hear little signs. Like she admits, she completely let herself go physically. That's not an excuse to cheat on your wife and dump on her. But let's face it, it does matter. If you marry a thin, fit person and they completely let themselves go physically. Don't be surprised if the sexual attraction goes down. And eventually, especially with a man,
Starting point is 00:12:48 I mean, if they say, he's not getting it from you, he's getting it from somebody else, not excusing him, I'm just talking about realities here. And that's what happened. And then she admits she completely ceded all of the financial responsibilities to him. He married a corporate lawyer who I think she was at Paul Weiss, like a big, great firm. So he married a gunner.
Starting point is 00:13:09 who was an heiress, but like a serious professional. And then she gave up her job to raise the kids. That's fine. But like he's getting something a little different than he thought he was getting. And on top of that, ceded everything to him. She never paid a bill. She never looked over his shoulder at a checkbook. She couldn't even balance a checkbook.
Starting point is 00:13:31 She had no idea what the finances were. So this guy had all of the responsibility, everything. And she limited herself to one thing. taking care of junior. By the way, I don't even know where actual junior was because they had a boy and two girls. The boy's not even there. He's with another family throughout the whole pandemic. He doesn't live with them.
Starting point is 00:13:49 Only her two younger daughters live with them, which is weird. And so she dumps on this husband like it's all his fault. And that's clearly not right in any marriage or even any affair. And now it turns out the main thread of like what he had done to her other than the cheating, which was like he left her high and dry with the finances is a lie. She's worth almost $70 million, Maureen. And she wrote a whole book getting us to feel sorry for her in her financial situation. This story is so, I love this story.
Starting point is 00:14:25 And I'm actually so glad. Like, I bought the book a while ago and I read it after the New Yorker thing. Oh, you must have enjoyed that. I really did. First of all, I love that word, Gunner. Like he married a gunner. Yes, he did. Yes, he did.
Starting point is 00:14:37 I don't like, I, you, let's see, how do I start this? She is a liar. We know she's a liar. Okay, she says in the book, not only did he just come home and say, I don't love you anymore and I'm leaving, and I was just the perfect wife, what did I do?
Starting point is 00:14:52 Sorry, you weren't the perfect wife, you know? And you're constructing yourself in this book as like the perfect wife and a total victim, and I just don't buy it. Something was deeply wrong in that marriage for quite some time, okay? Secondly, she's like, yeah, not only, I was up against it. I was going to have to sell the Martha's Vineyard Home and the expensive Penn House in New York City. And we were going to have to split the proceeds, Megan, split the
Starting point is 00:15:20 proceeds. And what turns out is like the husband who she paints is evil, like almost like a psychopath. Like I married Christian Bale and American Psycho. What's wrong with me? And that's what I hate about this because it, this is what it implants this fear into women. Like, are you with a psychopath? Yeah. Do you really know your husband or your boyfriend? It's like, the guy was like, hey, have both properties. Take both of them. You know what else you can take?
Starting point is 00:15:45 Now, these are the details that really make this story sing. They have a private beach on Martha's Vineyard, which requires a key, which was most recently valued at $400,000. You can take that. Do you remember? And he's paying for the kids until they're 22. 50 grand a month. And that only, that's just child support.
Starting point is 00:16:04 That doesn't include tuition, doctor bills. extracurricular, she's covering everything. Who couldn't make life work on a, you know, who could make life work on a paltry $600,000 a year, Maureen? Poor Bell. She says in the book, this is a direct quote, it brought me to my knees. It brought, this is what brought her to her knees, Megan. She's at the country club one day.
Starting point is 00:16:27 She's not a country club person, but she joined anyway. Oh, sure. She joined. She's just a regular person. She joined anyway because she needed a social circle. So she's at the country club minding her business. And, you know, she's expecting everybody to be on her side because her big, bad husband had the affair. He cheated.
Starting point is 00:16:42 Yeah. And she's basically telling everybody you should hate him. He cheated on me. And life is very complicated. I'm sorry. It just is. This woman comes up to her and says, listen, sister. I'm going to clue you in on something.
Starting point is 00:16:55 When a couple gets divorced up here, typically only one person gets custody of the country club. Bahara. And Bell is like, I'm sorry, excuse me? What was that? Only one. And Bell says, but I'm the wrong spouse. It should be me. Right. Me. And she's like, it doesn't work that way. I mean, come on, you know that. Like that level of male of like one percent or point one. Like, they've got a lot of options. It happens every day. Rubbing the elbows. They want the guy who can create additional business connections for the people who are there. Yeah, she's very concerned about their country club in the book. And the other thing is the, um, Oh, she also admits in the book, and you got to get deep into it to hear this piece, she was boring. She admits she was boring, not exciting socially, not a great conversationalist, and never
Starting point is 00:17:49 wanted to go out. Like, her arm had to be twisted. Now, I get it. Like, I'm not a huge go-out person. We do go out. We meet friends for dinner, but, like, I'm not on a red carpet very often. Every once in a while you've got to do it. But my point is simply, that.
Starting point is 00:18:04 That works in my marriage because my husband's fine with that. But if you're married to somebody who's like a captain of industry who constantly needs to be out there rubbing elbows and like glad handing with potential clients like he works for hedge funds, so he needs to get rich people to invest in him with him. You do need a wife who can play that part. And I know a lot of them here in my town and they're amazing at it. The women who can do it well are like equal partners to those husbands man. They're incredibly charming, very good conversationalists. Keep the convo going in a way sometimes even the husbands can't. So they actually do wind up being very, very important business partners
Starting point is 00:18:36 and way to their spouses. She admits she couldn't. And repeatedly he was kind of disappointed by her rejection of him on this run and rejection in the bedroom. I'm sorry, but like, what did you think was going to happen? Well, I think she thought I brought the real money to this marriage, you know. I mean, it's so out of touch because I think what's so deeply offensive about this book, which has been propped up by the likes of Oprah, Gwyneth, Drew Barrymore, NPR,
Starting point is 00:19:01 the New York Times, the media industrial complex. is that it is an insult to women everywhere who do not have nearly as many means, whose husbands do walk out the door, who are left with small children to support, who are now facing down the barrel of selling probably their only asset, the family home, and being bankrupted by the cost of litigation if it gets ugly. Who's going to pay the child support? Is he going to show up? Is that going to be another fight?
Starting point is 00:19:26 Do I have to get two jobs? Who's taking care of my kids? Do I have to, you know, all of those things. Bell burdened, and you're so right, she's boring. She's boring. This book is, this is why this book exists, my theory. It is a complete act of revenge against the husband. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:43 This is the sole reason this book exists. It is to punish the husband who had the temerity to leave her. There's this moment in the book. Again, she doesn't even hear herself. She's so bloodthirsty for vengeance. She's like, you know what I'm going to do? James is the name. It's a pseudonym.
Starting point is 00:20:00 But you could Google the guy and find him. Yeah. You know what I'm going to do James? I'm happy to say his name. He doesn't need any protection. I'll find it and read it. I actually didn't know. It's Henry Patterson Davis. He's a hedge fund executive. She calls him James in the book. And they've got three kids. So it's not just, she hates them, but she's also hurting her kids with this. Keep going to. Oh, and you know, she dedicated the book to the children. I'm sure their therapists are going to die to hear that little detail. She says, I'm going to tell the kids that you're leaving me and we're getting a divorce. And he's like, please don't do that. Wait till I'm there. And we can break the news together and try to minimize. this trauma. She's like, no, no, I'm going to do it. I'm going to do it. His boss calls her and says, don't do that. I have been divorced too. We have children. That is a cruelty. Let him be there. And she says, you know what I decided to do? I allowed for it. And that boss gave James, loaned James, his seaplane and his pilot. So James could get back forthwith and deliver the news.
Starting point is 00:20:59 It's like, loaned, loaned, not just the plane, but the pilot, as if the pilot, is an object, not a person. It's this kind of language that really just gives you insight into who she is. That's how she grew up. And she went to Harvard undergrad and I think NYU Law School. She got this great job again. I'm pretty sure it's Paul Weiss. I read the book in January, but it's been a few months,
Starting point is 00:21:20 but I'm pretty sure that's where she was working. It might have been Davis Polk. They're basically the same. But like white shoe law firms where you, you know, make boatloads of dough. She was in corporate law. So she was in sort of the M&A deal-making piece of the firm. And half the book is about how she had no idea what she was going to do. You know, he was going to leave her.
Starting point is 00:21:39 She gets $600,000 a year from him in child support only. I mean, at minimum. She, undisclosed, is her $67 million trust fund. And on top of that, she's got a fucking law degree from NYU and an undergrad degree from Harvard. I think she'll be okay. Like, it's the gall to ask us to feel sorry for her. like, where is my next meal coming from? Maybe you should put a skirt on and go apply for, it's called a J-O-B, bitches. I can't stand disempowered women like this. I'm not going to lie.
Starting point is 00:22:16 I can't stand them. Go get a job. Support yourself. Stop with the boo fucking who for me because my husband is leaving me and no longer wants to be my financial support net. You know, I just, I hate how disempowering it is. Well, the thing that also is really galling is she's out there saying, you know what I'm doing? I'm helping other women. I'm your cautionary tale. Don't leave all your finances to your husband. Don't let him, you know, this idea that she doesn't know how to balance a checkbook and she has that kind of like education.
Starting point is 00:22:48 Went to Harvard. And was in that kind of a high-powered law firm. I think what this woman's problem, her real problem is. She doesn't have a real passion in life. And did you happen to see, by the way, the Wall Street Journal ran this fascinating piece over the weekend. there are all of these like major seminars that are dedicated to the children of massive wealth. Oh yeah. They go.
Starting point is 00:23:10 The billionaires children's go and learn how to stay billionaires. Not just that, but how to find purpose, how to get out of their bubble. Like one of the kids literally says, and they might be 28, it is funny. But like, you know what I did do? I put on a baseball cap and I rode the public bus. Oh, my God. Like something I've never done. And this is Bell Burden.
Starting point is 00:23:29 This is stuff she's never done. I think when you're costated by that amount of wealth and privilege and access and you never have to fight for anything, your back has never been up against the wall financially, it saps you of a sense of finding something that you love so that when you do enter the workforce, your job is a joy, right? Like I feel that way. I feel very lucky, you know, but that's also because I didn't come from anything. You know, I would look at friends of mine as I entered my young adulthood in New York City
Starting point is 00:24:01 and my roommates came from money, and they just had a completely different. They were lost in a way. Like I had a real direction. And I would always say to myself, would I ever trade that? Would I ever trade having like parents who could bail me out versus having like being fundamentally lost
Starting point is 00:24:20 and casting about for what I wanted to do? And it was a no-brainer. It was never would I change places. Same. It created ambition. I always want enough money just so that I could, I told the audience this, my dream was to be able to walk in a pottery barn
Starting point is 00:24:34 and just buy what I wanted, you know? I love that. And I remember when I got to that place in my career and I was like, oh my God, this is amazing, I can do it. And I've learned now through the course of my career for having, I had no money, then I had like a decent amount of money and then I had a good amount of money, that your happiness does not change
Starting point is 00:24:50 the more money you get. Once you get past the stage of I can pay my bills without feeling sick, there is no difference in happiness. Truly, there is none. Just, get past the point where you don't feel sick when those bills come every month. I've been there, too. In my 20s, for sure, and I graduate from law school, I don't know if I'd get a good job. I was $100,000 in debt, which back then was more like $500,000 in debt. I had to pay it myself.
Starting point is 00:25:15 My mom had no money. I knew that I was going to have to take care of her, too. And it was my dad died. And it was stressful. I had this sick feeling. But once you get to the point where, like, you can pay your mortgage or your rent, you can pay your utilities, you can pay for a car. I had Toyota Corolla when I was first getting started in the law. It's the pressure's off. So you don't need all those extra billions. The thirst, like the hunger came from getting to that spot where the bills wouldn't be sickening. And you could possibly have a little extra.
Starting point is 00:25:47 I was actually morning just looking through old journals just yesterday because a friend of mine is going through something. And I had been through something similar. I wanted to find my entry from back in the day. I have them back to when I was a kid. Wow. Yeah, they're stacked up. Wow. And I found this one entry. This is early on at my career at Fox where I was doing my finances. And I was like, if I can manage, you know, to like manage my money, I could potentially get to the point where I have as much as $1,000 extra a month to spend. You know, like I'll have real spending money, $1,000 a month. And I was so excited over it. I am no happier today than I was that day. More money generally creates more problems and like more things you have to worry about. I'm not saying it's not a blessing. I'm just saying for people out there who,
Starting point is 00:26:30 I think like a lot of money is the be all and all. It's not. And this woman was too busy nurturing. I don't know. Like her sense of being a supermom, which she doesn't necessarily sound like she was. She sounds like a terrible mother. I'm sorry. Writing this book is the act of a terrible mother.
Starting point is 00:26:46 I'm sorry. And also it's not a great mother super mom thing to do to forget to nurture your marriage. And like the institution that you're bringing the children up in, like the loving family, the core of what will produce strong. egos and, you know, abilities to handle themselves when adversity comes their way. And instead of just a normal divorce where it's like it didn't work out, we're still going to meet each other's lives, she blows it up into this national story to where now Gwyneth Paltrow's going to star in a Netflix movie about her shitty husband and her kids have got to see that. Well, will she?
Starting point is 00:27:21 Can Netflix go through with this? The whole premise of the book was blown up by the New Yorker. The whole thing was blown up and she's an unreliable narrator, which is, why I don't believe anything she has to say about her marriage or her husband. She said, he was going to leave me with nothing. He was basically a sociopath. I was listening to, she did any number of podcast interviews in which she said, what was it? Oh, oh, she was on the foster sisters one and they said, it sounds really like you were married to a sociopath, you know, what do you think about that? And she says, she was gleeful about it. That's definitely what she wants us to think. She says, well, you know, I wasn't allowed to put
Starting point is 00:27:59 anything regarding mental health in the book. So she was like, I had to take some stuff out, which to me says she basically called him a sociopath in the book and legal over at her publishers, which has another fire on their hands with Amy Griffin, who accused a man, everybody can identify in Amarillo, Texas of being a violent child predator and brutal child rapist. They've got a real problem there. They were like, you can't call your husband a psychopath and at least legal was on on alert that day. And by the way, the fact that he has no feelings left for you doesn't mean he has no feelings. Exactly. What a narcissist. Right. Right. And like his his one statement he gave that everybody's had to include when reporting on her book basically ends with,
Starting point is 00:28:45 you know, I dispute her characterizations of me in this book. And I, and also, I have a loving, supportive relationship with my children and they are loving and supportive of me as well. Like, that was, you could see that was the one thing. he was like, don't go there. Like, do not F with anything suggesting I haven't been a supportive dad. And then she talks about in the book, she writes out how he made fun of her one time. She was like, you know, you're going to leave me with nothing. You're not going to let me have the houses or whatever.
Starting point is 00:29:15 And he responded in a mimicking voice. Like, poor bell, nothing ever goes her way. So you can hear the contempt. And this is her description of how he spoke to her. The contempt he has for her. that doesn't develop overnight out of nothing, you know? There's a reason for that. And then the most famous story in the book that made the rounds,
Starting point is 00:29:38 that made a lot of people want to read it, was about the sandwich. All right. So when he goes back to Martha's Vineyard House to tell the children with her, he's having the conversation. He's got the plane and the pilot waiting for him. And in the middle of telling the girls, like he's leaving their mother, he looks at Bell, the mom, and he was like, starving. Can you make me a sandwich? Which does make you hate him, right? You're like, well, you're a prick. And then she did it.
Starting point is 00:30:11 She did it. So you're like, oh, my God, my skin's starting to crawl. Like this is not a healthy couple at all. So the fact that he would ask her to make him a sandwich while he's leaving her and delivering the breakup news is very bizarre and unhealthy. And I do get a, give her credit because I think it was an aha moment for her in retrospect to realize she did it, that she did it. And she describes in the book about how she just wanted to make that the best sandwich he'd ever eaten so that he would be like, how could I leave this woman who makes the amazing sandwiches? Like they don't have help who makes sandwiches. Sorry, I don't believe they didn't have help in the house during COVID. I don't even know if I believe this story.
Starting point is 00:30:53 Because again, if she's going to lie about the big stuff, I just, I can't trust her in any way. There are bits of it that sound plagiarized to me, really. Okay. So there's a, there's a very famous scene that has blown up into a cultural meme surrounding a very popular Bravo reality show called Summerhouse. And at the crux of that fight between a boyfriend and a girlfriend or an engaged couple breaking up was a sandwich. A sandwich. Now, Bell at another point in the book, finds herself on the bathroom floor. Her husband's leaving her and she cannot get herself up off. Not just any floor, it's the bathroom floor. Elizabeth Gilbert in eat, pray, love, the cultural cancer that is eat prey love. I love when you talk about this. Elizabeth Gilbert, she opens that book, and she is
Starting point is 00:31:39 on the bathroom floor of her well-tended New Jersey home at 3 a.m. And she cannot get herself off. And she's like a 28-year-old healthy woman. And why she has come to the conclusion she must leave her husband. Does she know why? She does not. Is the guy a bad guy? No. In fact, He's a great guy. He makes a nice living. He loves her. He's in love with her. Nothing's wrong with him. She just wants to leave and she doesn't know why. Spends that book vilifying the husband who everybody identifies. You know what I mean? There are these tracks that are just so parallel. Wasn't Amy Griffin on the floor of her closet? Great point. Everyone's on the floor in these books. Megan Markle. It's on the floor waiting for Harry to come home in tears. At least Drew Barrymore actually gets down on the floor. We can see her doing it. So we can see her doing it. So we're know in her case it's legit. I want to play some of the sound bites because the audience by this point is kind of like let me have a look at this gal. Let's place that 21. This is Bell Burden on Oprah. You just brought up finances. I wanted to say this. I hear a lot of women, a lot of women, have made a similar mistake as you did, allowing your spouses to handle all the finances.
Starting point is 00:32:51 And you write on page 95 about, I lost touch with. both the big picture and the details of our financial life, depending on James to tell me what to do. I felt some shame about it, about not being involved, about not asking questions, but I was afraid I wouldn't understand it, that it was too complicated for me, even though I was a former corporate lawyer. I settled into the vagueness, the luxury, and privilege of not knowing. What do you want to say to all the women doing that right now? If my book does one thing, if it makes women pay more attention to their finances and what's going on in their relationship or their marriage financially, I will be so happy because I think I'm not alone in what I did. I mean, truly, who is she talking to? Like the 0.001%. Yes, virtually all women are paying attention to the finances. They have to help pay them.
Starting point is 00:33:51 Mm-hmm. Mostly, usually women are the checkwriters and the bill payers. And the purchasers. Yeah. So, like, what I, she sees herself as our, like, you know, our underdog here to save the day. We're way ahead of you, Belle. We actually do. Most of us work and pay the bills. And it's not unfamiliar to bust out a checkbook or go online and pay our bills. Like, I really, if this does one thing, let it be that. And what, let me give you a similar one. She goes on with, this is Drew Barrymore, right? Is it 22B? Yeah, let's play that one. I want this to be an incredible tutorial on how we as women can really give up the power
Starting point is 00:34:35 and find themselves in scenarios where they are very financially hurt. Absolutely. And if I am a cautionary tale on this one subject, I am happy with that. Okay, because I really think you've given a scout's guide for how women can approach the financials in their marital life in a way that protects them. I really kind of got very comfortable in not knowing and put you in a terrible position. It did. I was really at risk of losing my financial security. Here's your Scouts Guide. Have a $63 million trust fund.
Starting point is 00:35:15 63. I said 67 earlier. I think it's 63. $45 million of which comes from a trust from your father, Carter Burdens Estate. Tell everyone that you don't know how you're going to make ends meet when you're earning $800,000 a year. Apparently, that was her income in 2019. That was her income. So I think that's over and above what the husband was giving in the $600,000 because this is before he left her. He left her in 2020. This is 2019.
Starting point is 00:35:42 She earned $800,000 in income and had $10,000. dollars in assets that the husband had no claim to reports the free press they had a tribeca apartment that last year was listed for just under 12 million dollars they had purchased it for four so that's eight million dollars in change all of this is this is how she's our cautionary tale more she's a cautionary tale you know you look at her with Oprah in particular everything about this tableau bell is on cream upon cream upon cream we're virginal we're just innocent the big back She's a bad wolf came and got me. And she's smiling ear to ear.
Starting point is 00:36:21 She's so excited to tell her tale of, whoa. There's not a tear there. We're on Oprah. Megan. We're sitting across from Oprah. We've done it. We did it. We accomplished something, Mommy.
Starting point is 00:36:34 Do you love me now? And then who's the other thing? Look at them. Cream on cream. You're right. Cream everywhere. Oh, and she's like, yeah, I didn't understand. You know, I left it all to him.
Starting point is 00:36:45 I do not buy this fundamental premise at all. who comes from that level of wealth has had a team of accountants and lawyers and money managers since birth. Since birth. Yes. Sorry. Don't buy it. She's upset because they have a pre-up. And the pre-up that she willingly signed said that you keep what you come into the marriage with. And the normal rule, the default for a pre-up would be you keep what you come into the marriage with. And then monies that are earned during the course of the marriage will be divided between the two parties. in some shape or form, but it'll be divided. And he said, I don't want that.
Starting point is 00:37:22 You keep what you came into the marriage with, but I think we should keep what we earn. Like he was only making $200,000 a year. Now, I say only just because he wound up, you know, very rich at a hedge fund. When he signed that pre-nup, so he didn't know in his defense, he didn't know he's going to make it big
Starting point is 00:37:39 at a hedge fund. He was a lawyer, just like she was. He didn't come from money either, did he came from no money. That's why this marriage initially kind of worked, Because let's face it, you know, it's like some people marry for love and some people, especially from this kind of wealth, choose other things. For her, this guy was, you know, she thought he was kind of sexy. He was dynamic. He was an up-and-coming lawyer at the same firm she was, who I think was a little bit senior to her.
Starting point is 00:38:04 So there's that dynamic of, wow, he's important. And he was a mover and a shaker who was clearly going places. For him, he was, I don't know if he was from the wrong side of the tracks exactly, but he had no pedigree like she did. And she had the family background connection to the Vanderbilt, the famous grandma. The mother, too, was high up in the Bloomberg administration. And she had the $70 million trust fund, which we just learned about. And so she could connect him to the right people because he apparently all along wanted to get into leave the law and be a hedge fund guy, which is where the big bucks are. But it's hard to do unless you have the right connections.
Starting point is 00:38:41 And she did. So clearly he was using her to some extent. And look, she went into it. When they met at the law firm, he was dating somebody else. And so was she. Oh, that's right. She was too. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:53 So it started a little like, all right, you lose them how you get them. Like, be careful how you get them. Here's the other thing that she writes about in the book, which I, oh, by the way, I forgot one of her ancestors, John Jay. Oh. Okay. We have Roger Sherman on Doug's side. Who's that? He signed the Constitution.
Starting point is 00:39:10 Oh, wow. That's really cool. Or the declaration. Yeah. Oh, that's amazing. I know. So it's so fun. We should have named Stredwick Sherman. Well, there's, I'm sure that another dog will find his way. Oh, no, there will be no other dog. Oh, really? Well, maybe the distant, distant future. Keep going. Earmark that name.
Starting point is 00:39:28 So she writes about him. This is what a, this is the allure he had for her. This may have been transactional, but I don't think it was just one way. He had a little bit of danger to him. He lived downtown. He introduced her to like nightclubs. and like rock venues down there. She was like, oh, my first show, like I didn't, I wasn't cool. This guy was kind of cool. My brother was cool. This guy was kind of cool. He had a roommate who had like a drug problem, which to someone like for that's like, oh, we're now, we're down at the zoo.
Starting point is 00:39:58 I get to look at this. Like this, I get to feel a little bit cool, you know. So she, she, I think that that was an attraction for her. And I think, you know, I didn't know that actually. That is really hard to break into the hedge fund world if you don't come from that world. Well, because you need access. too rich people. You know, that's how you get them to invest with you. And if you've got the connections, if you're in the social register, which is a thing. It's actually a very funny thing.
Starting point is 00:40:24 My college roommate, who I adored, she was in the social register. She had gone to Princeton day school, which is a day school that's, you know, a private school in Princeton. And I'm like, and at the time, this is, of course, back in the late 80s, early 90s, I'm like, how much was that? And it was 15 grand a year, which is what Syracuse would cost. And I was like, your parents paid $15,000 a year for you to go to high school. You wound up the same place I did. Like, what do you mean? My parents paid nothing, just the taxes. And I wound up here. I don't think Princeton Day School worked out, but we always had a good laugh over that. But she was in the social register. She was like, and she would show it to me.
Starting point is 00:40:55 And like they, they, you list the name of your boat. The little boys are referred to as master, master so-and-so. Wow. It shows all the lineage. Because these people tend to inbreed, you know, like they want to stay amongst their own. They don't really want to welcome a Marine Callahan or a Megan Kelly at all. That's cool with me. Yeah. No, it's fine. They want their own. You have to have the right lineage, the right pedigree.
Starting point is 00:41:21 You know, the blue bloods want to create more blue bloods. So for him to have broken in there, that was a big plus for him, you know, even though. This is great insight into a lot of the source of the rage and why we have to publicly burn the husband down. Yeah. She gave him. In her mind, you're not there without me. She's not wrong. And you used me.
Starting point is 00:41:43 Now, she knew. The using was obvious. But, you know, but they also had kids together. There must have been love there at some point. Oh, my favorite thing, she goes, you know what really, what really, really was just so dastardly was we had just ordered a new bed. And it was a very expensive mattress, very expensive. It was a sleeve number, which they advertise on television.
Starting point is 00:42:06 You know there are really expensive mattresses that go for like $200,000. Oh, my. I didn't know that. It's a sleep mattress. Like Elon Musk buys those. It's a sleep mattress. And, yeah, one side can be firm and the other side can be soft. And one, you know, it's like NAS and technology.
Starting point is 00:42:23 And she's like, oh, in our bed frame, it was really a bitch to get that thing on the bed frame. Like, as if she can't just have a custom bed frame. You know what I mean? Yeah. It's like her gripes are so outer limits. Oh, at some point, I can't remember whether I read this in the book or heard her say this on an interview. But she was talking about how their wine. collection is worth so much money, they have to keep it off sight. It's not even at their home.
Starting point is 00:42:50 And their art, too. They've got some crazy-ass amount of, like, valuable art. That's what the super rich do. And that was my first clue that I should really stop listening to this woman's tale of whoa. Like, the climate controlled warehouse for the Rothcos. But now to see the numbers, I mean, the New Yorker, to its credit, did a deep dive on, like, all the finances. And it's really, it's stunning that the, yeah, the $5.4 million home in Martha's Vineyard, the place in Tribeca, which they just sold for $12 million, but bought for four. So that's an $8 million profit. Her overall, $63 million in assets and trusts.
Starting point is 00:43:29 Again, you might say, well, that's tied up. I don't know. I'm not a trust baby, trust fund baby. But, okay, let's say most of that's tied up and she can't touch it for some time. By the way, they say it's hers. So if she's sharing it with siblings, they don't mention that. They say that that's her 63 million she inherited. But on top of that, she's got these degrees.
Starting point is 00:43:48 She was making $800,000 a year in 2019. There's some asterisk saying, well, that was an especially good year for her because she sold something that was worth $200,000. All right, well, that leaves $600,000. Again, this is before the $600 per year she was getting from the husband for child custody. So clearly she's doing something. And you know how it is. When you have a lot of money like that, money begets money, people will pay you
Starting point is 00:44:09 all sorts of money for whatever. You can start some stupid-ass business, and you've got all these rich people who are used to just giving money to each other. It's not that hard. So in any event, yet another embarrassment for this publication. Hold on a second.
Starting point is 00:44:23 Let me see if I can find. I'd love to find the name of the publication. I had it in here someplace. That actually put this out, the same as the one that did the tell. Oh yeah, here it is. Dial Press. And in particular, there's an editor
Starting point is 00:44:37 there named Whitney Frick, and she also did Amy Griffin's book, The Tell. The same editor did both books. And she defended the tell when it came out that Amy was being accused of fabricating the whole thing and stealing another woman's story, which she denies. They came out and said the following. Book publishers are not investigators. This is Amy's story. We trust her.
Starting point is 00:45:04 And all of our authors that they are recounting their memories. truthfully. This is so pathetic. What do you mean? You've disparaged and defamed. This guy, James, whose real name I just said a minute ago, you've disparaged and defamed, essentially the teacher down in Texas in Mr. Mason. Yeah, Amarillo, where Amy Griffin's from. What do you mean they are, we trust them that they are recounting their memories truthfully. That's how you get sued. Like that, What a shirking of all burden. And especially in Amy's case and now in Bell Burdens, once it comes out from an in-depth investigation, the Times has done two on Amy Griffin and the New Yorkers now done one on Bell Burden.
Starting point is 00:45:49 Don't these publishers have a responsibility to go back and say, we feel the need to add a note at the beginning of this publication, that we've misled you actively in something that's supposed to be a memoir or like a truthful recitation of one's life. this is not nonfiction. This is not fiction, I should say. And same for Oprah and Gwyneth and the others who whitewashed these stories, Maureen. That statement from the publisher sounds to me like a cover your ass statement because they all have legal departments. This is like, you wouldn't know this unless you're writing a book, whether it's fiction, nonfiction, a memoir. Well, fiction is fiction. Okay. Nonfiction. So Ask Not. I wrote about a large number of the girls and women I wrote about are no longer with us. The law in America is you cannot defame the dead. And yet I had legal eyes on that book from inside the publisher eight ways to Sunday.
Starting point is 00:46:48 On top of also paying, they don't fact check it per se. They just try to protect themselves from a lawsuit. As the author, it's prudent to spend your money to hire an outside fact checker to make sure that everything you've got your eyes dotted, et cetera. that's a cover-your-ass statement. They're trying to say, we didn't have a lawyer. Look at that.
Starting point is 00:47:08 It's a memoir. We just got to trust the writer. That's all on her. She's getting sued. We're indemnified, which they're not. And how this woman has a job still out of my mind. Honestly, like, beware.
Starting point is 00:47:18 If Whitney Frick is the editor on your book, that's her attitude, apparently toward truth or falsity and what's being billed is a true story in the form of a memoir. So good luck with that. Gwyneth, good luck with your project on Netflix.
Starting point is 00:47:31 Now, I do want to talk about a book that deserves to be on the New York Times bestseller list because I just want to tell you quickly. My husband Doug Brunt, his book, The Lost Empire of Emmanuel Nobel, is crushing it. It's doing really well. Amazing. And it's very hard to say this for any book. The reviews have been uniformly raves. He's gotten such great reviews on this and it's selling well too. And I just wanted to read one to you. You'll hear what it's about in this review. But this guy, we don't know him. His name is Steve Eubank. and he wrote a very long, great review, not very long, but a nice in-depth review, and I'll read you some of it. He goes on, first of all, that the best nonfiction writers are ones who started in fiction, because they know how to tell a tale.
Starting point is 00:48:17 They know how to spin a story for you so that it's interesting. And then they can use those same storytelling abilities when they write the nonfiction work, which is exactly what Doug did. So he says, yeah, the biggest compliment you can give a narrative nonfiction book is it reads like fiction. entered Doug Brunt, who had a best-selling fiction catalog before shifting gears with the wildly successful, the mysterious case of Rudolph Diesel, which I praised to the rooftops when it hit. But there's always the risk of a sophomore slump. Many great writers have one book in them. The follow-up always tells the tale. Well, fear not. Brunt's newest book, The Lost Empire of Emanuel Nobel, is at least as good, if not better than his first. Like Diesel, most people only know the name Nobel because of Emmanuel's Uncle Alfred, the inventor of Dynamite, who created the Nobel Prize. But what you don't know is that Alfred did not conjure his invention out of some dream. His father, Imanuel, was an explosives expert who created the first contact mine, blah, blah, blah. There wouldn't be a Nobel Prize, if not for Emmanuel, however, who stood up to the king of Sweden and wanted the family to contest Alfred's will. And then he goes on to talk about learning stuff in school that it turns out was not true at all, how Doug disproves it in this book.
Starting point is 00:49:30 He says this is not just a book about an industrialist, although it would be excellent if that was its only storyline. This is the most fascinating history you will ever read about the Romanovs, Rasputin, Lenin, and especially Joseph Stalin. Brunt takes you places your history professors dared not tread for fear of ticking off cranky old, commy department heads with dandruff on the shoulders and their tweed jackets and teeth the color of Nagud Hyde. I don't know who that is, but that sounds fun. If you want the real story of the Russian revolution, it's devastating impact on the Russian people, Europe and the rest of the world read this book.
Starting point is 00:50:05 And then here's just one more. There's more, though, he says. Brunt never writes this, the best ones don't. But the subtext of Nobel is that the revolutionary impulses that darkened Eastern Europe and led to 70 years of death haven't gone away. And he goes on just talking about how timely the book is. He says, read this book and recommend it to others.
Starting point is 00:50:25 You won't regret it. That's incredible. So sweet, such a good one. That's incredible. That's so exciting. You know, we're lucky enough we have Doug on the nerve tomorrow. Oh, yay. Which I'm really excited about.
Starting point is 00:50:36 And I was really thinking about it, you know, because when he left a copy of the book for me the last time I was here. And he prefaced it by saying, you know, I don't necessarily think it's your thing, but I'm just going to leave it for you. And it was really sweet. But I was really, I was thinking about him and Nobel. And I had obviously read some of the book. and loving it. But I was like, we write about very different things,
Starting point is 00:51:02 but we definitely have a similar interest as authors, and that is in hidden parts of history. Yeah. And people lost to history. And there's nothing more fun, whether you're a writer or a reader in digging that up. And you both have a great gift of a writer,
Starting point is 00:51:16 which is an economy with words. We'll be right back. If you are heading into summer without a medical emergency kit, you are taking a risk most people don't even think about until it's too late. Summer colds linger and can turn into sinus infections that last for weeks. Getting sick right before vacation can derail everything.
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Starting point is 00:52:05 Start on your meds sooner and feel better faster. Order yours online in minutes and it's shipped right to your door and save 45 bucks with our promo code MK at urgent care kit.com slash mK. That's promo code MK at urgent care kit.com slash mk. Oh my goodness bell. We got some talking to do, girl.
Starting point is 00:52:35 I see that you've marked the book up. I have marked the book. I wanted to do this book because there's so many friends that I've had who've gone through this and I feel like I've gone through it with them. Yes. You are every woman that you have written the manual for every woman.
Starting point is 00:52:53 This is the book is just, it's a memoir of marriage, It's also a memoir of every woman who's gone through divorce. You are every woman. Oprah is so out of touch. I mean, this is, I have to recant because the other day, you know, I know you did this as well. Gail on call her daddy. Yeah. With the finding the friend in bed with the husband.
Starting point is 00:53:13 And, you know, my producer Marlena and I, we went through it together. And I was kind of like, I can't help but like Oprah in this moment. She's being a good friend. She's like, what do you mean? He's driving your best friend who we just fucked her. train station. What are you talking about? And I'm like, everybody doesn't need an Oprah. And then I see that. And I'm like, no, no, no, Maureen, catch yourself before you go any further. You are every woman. Really? Really? Really? No. We were just talking in the break about what makes us resent this woman.
Starting point is 00:53:44 And I was saying, I can't stand the fact that she took a spot at Harvard and at NYU law and apparently just used them those spots and those degrees to get her MRS degree, which is what she really wanted. There's nothing wrong with wanting to be a wife and a mother. Stop taking up other people's spots at these institutions if that's what your goal is. It pisses me off because there are a lot of young men and young women who would kill to get a spot at one of those institutions. And then would use it to actually make a difference in this world and then sit around after, you know, the husband leaves you because you got uninteresting and you let yourself go and you were already boring to begin with. You gave up the one thing that would have given you something to discuss when you came at the dinner party, a dinner table at night.
Starting point is 00:54:30 And say, I don't know how to make ends meet. Like, use your damn degree. Go practice law. Hang out your shingle. Do something. Like the ineptitude, the helplessness, the feigned helplessness projects a weakness that I really abhor. Here's another theory of the case. What if she's not that bright?
Starting point is 00:54:52 What if she's a good student and could do the me? memorization and test taking and had all the top tutors to help her through and all of the special dispensations. And then she got a nice cushy job because of who her parents were. But what if she's not that bright? She's clearly not an original thinker. She couldn't even craft a story that could hold up to scrutiny for more than a year. As soon as the New Yorker took one look at it and was like, why don't I check the marital assets? Although, you know, my theory is that he gave the financial as he gave the divorce settlement or like papers from the divorce proceeding to the New Yorker. I think you're dead on.
Starting point is 00:55:27 I'm sure he was sick of this narrative. Of course. Who does she think she's kidding? Of course. And he's got a run around New York City circles with this on his back, you know. His reputation counts for something in the world he's in. You're asking people to trust you with great amounts of wealth. And she's out here trying to assassinate his character, trying to fuck with his life in every way possible.
Starting point is 00:55:48 And every woman down on the talk show, circuit line has bought it hook, line, and sinker. The Oprah treatment, the Gwyneth treatment, the Drew treatment, now the Netflix treatment. And this poor guy is like, you know what? It was a complicated marriage. I choose not to say anything because he's smart. He realizes coming out there and saying, let me tell you what a nightmare bell was, is not going to win him any fans. It's not going to win him all these women who now hate him back over. He had an affair. But again, what preceded it? What was going on in the marriage?
Starting point is 00:56:24 That's really not disclosed. She makes it sound like, oh, it's just a total surprise. And then these quiet admissions about letting herself go, not being interesting, not going out, not having sex, not doing, whatever. Okay, so enough about Bell Burden. But this is the greatest book promo she's had. Okay. I want to talk about CBS News. Wow.
Starting point is 00:56:43 A lot of drama over there. So I didn't realize that now in the wake of like bloody Sunday, they only have three correspondents left. It's Bill Whitaker, Leslie Stahl, and some other guy who's like a sports guy over there. I can't remember his name. That's it. Everyone's been fired.
Starting point is 00:57:03 Barry Weiss fired the executive producer. She fired the top two female correspondents. Anderson Cooper quit. Obviously, he was not in line with the new management. He chalked it up to all my busy life. But the timing was not accidental, just as the Ellison's took over CBS. and they came under all the scrutiny each you're trying.
Starting point is 00:57:22 It's funny because there's a divide. You know, the left wing thinks that Barry and the Ellisons are trying to trumpify CBS, and that's why they're leaving and no longer watching. I disagree with that. I think the Ellison's would like to make CBS somewhat more Trump-friendly because they want an in with the administration. They want the administration to approve all of their mergers. Barry can't stand Trump.
Starting point is 00:57:41 Barry is a non-woke Trump-hating liberal, which is fine. That's who she is. But, like, Barry's definitely not trying to, like, do more and more pieces that fluff Trump. She may be trying to inject a little bit more fair and balance into the 60 minutes pieces here and there. I'm sure that's what Scott Pelley objected to. That's not a bad goal, right?
Starting point is 00:58:02 60 has gotten so far left. Scott Pelly, Leslie Stahl, they all hate Trump. That guy Bill Whitaker, the fluffing, he did a Kamala Harris in that one ridiculous interview. They're not wrong that 60 Minutes has a bias problem and it leans left. My issue about how this shit is going down, Maureen, is, of course, Scott Pelley is a prig and deserve to be canned long ago. He's totally unreliable and he's very biased. However, irrespective of the fact that what they're trying to do and like fixing the editorial over there, you know, I think as somebody on the right side is something that's laudable, they're not handling it well.
Starting point is 00:58:37 Whenever the drama of inside your company blows up to the point where it is a multiple day story on every news outlet in the country, you've done something wrong. You haven't made. You haven't managed your talent and your off-air talent well at all. And it's part of what a good leader does. Yesterday I was explaining Roger Ailes and how whenever he had to demote somebody or lateral move somebody, he always made it seem both to them, and they'd know, but definitely to the outside world like it was a promotion. He and he would put personal skin in the game to make sure it looked like that because he
Starting point is 00:59:16 cared about his people. Sometimes you're not making it in the ratings. that's unfortunate, but he wouldn't fire you. I mean, honestly, he did it to Gretchen Carlson. She was hosting Fox and Friends. That wasn't working out. She wasn't fun. And he, so he gave her her own solo show in the middle of the day.
Starting point is 00:59:35 No, no offense to Gretchen. I was in the middle of the day solo too. But it actually was a promotion for me and I wound up going from there to the prime time. With Gretchen, it wasn't because Fox and Friends was one of our highest rated shows. And she wasn't working on it. but he made it look like it was good. He gave her her staff. She got to name it what she wanted, whatever.
Starting point is 00:59:54 I wasn't just thinking of her. There are many people who did this too. And then they don't run to the news media and start complaining. Now she wound up complaining about him in a different way. But my point is simply when it's spilling out like this with his drama and now the other, the last remaining three are threatening to quit, something's gone very, very wrong in the way that the problems are being managed over there. What's your take?
Starting point is 01:00:15 Well, you and I've been talking about this for a while. since she took over. And I remember saying to you that what I have heard is that, like, impeccable source. Barry's terrible at managing people. Terrible. She was terrible at the free press. You know, she's very lucky that the Ellison's came according because the free press started off as very buzzy and kind of electric. And then it just, it fell flat. Like nobody talks about it anymore at all. People were leaving. The staff morale was terrible. She was. She doesn't listen to anybody. She's busy having dinners over Bill Ackman's private residence being told what a genius she is.
Starting point is 01:00:54 Yeah. You know? And so she, you know, and I remember saying to you, like, you can't go in and fire the entire newsroom. Like your job coming in is to have a little bit of humility and say, you know, what can I learn from you? What can you tell me about this storied institution? You know? And when you've got like people who are, Leslie Stahl is like 84 years old. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:12 She's going to be like, I don't need this. I don't, like, you're going to have an empty roster. I mean, my problem with 60 minutes is that it's just gone soft. Like, Mike, since the days of Mike Wallace, it is not. Murderer's row, what it used to be. What a murderer's row. What a, you know, what a compliment to be. When I was at the post, somebody was like, you're on murderers row.
Starting point is 01:01:30 And I was like, deeply thankful. Yeah. You know, that's a real epic compliment. They were great. You want to be on murderers row. And now it's like they're doing softballs of like, let's go visit Adele in her mansion. You know, it's like, who cares? What does this thing doing?
Starting point is 01:01:43 Why does it exist? So Barry goes in there. And one of the first things she does is steals an on-air opportunity from one of the correspondents by doing that town hall with Erica Kirk, which bombed. I'm sorry, but there is, I've said this before, more to broadcast journalism than just the journalism piece. Barry, with all due respect, is not a television personality at all in any way. She's not. And she failed. It was a miserable exchange.
Starting point is 01:02:12 Erica is a very interesting person. Love her or hate her, and I realize there are a lot of people there who feel strongly about Erica. I love her. She's interesting. You could make an interesting interview with her. You know what I mean? Like you could definitely go to very,
Starting point is 01:02:27 but Barry chose her favorite issues and tried to zero in on those without realizing those don't have mass appeal. And also stole the on-air opportunity from an on-air talent. You never saw Roger Ailes doing his, own interview. You didn't see Chris Licked or Jeff Zucker, the bosses at CNN sequentially. Go take the big interviews from Anderson Cooper or Caitlin Collins. Most people have no idea who's been running MSNBC all these years because that person would never swoop in and do the job
Starting point is 01:03:01 of the on-air talent. Barry Weiss did that because Barry Weiss wants to be a star, like you said. And I'm sorry, whatever you think of Barry Weiss, let me tell you that the on-air talent don't like her. And they don't appreciate this bullshit. So she swoops in. She's going to rule with an iron fist. There's a report out today that she said to David Ellison, the son of Larry, what's your tolerance for pain? And he said, hi. And so they fired Scott Pelley. They played the tub guy. Like, yeah, yo bitch, you're out of here, Scott Pelley. And no one's crying any tears over Scott Pelley. But on the heels of firing Sharon Alphonsey, the other woman, the executive producer, who they just lost an.
Starting point is 01:03:42 executive producer. This was the new executive producer. So three women, by the way, last week, fired in one fell swoop. Then Scott Pelley, that's four in seven days. And he came out, Scott Pelley said that he said to Barry in front of the staff, why did you fire the executive producer of the show? And she was like, I'm not answering that question. Okay, you can do that. You can say, I don't owe anybody an explanation. He's like, why did you fire Sharon? I'm not answering that question. Why did you find that? I'm not answering that question. What, you can play hardball all you want? What is that going to do to the existing morale within CBS news? Within 60 minutes, it's going to make everyone hate you. You won't even say why. That's their boss. That's the, not their boss,
Starting point is 01:04:31 but that's their colleague with whom they've been building this show now for many months during a tumultuous time. And all they know is you've canter. It makes everybody feel unsteady. I'm sorry, but there's a way to handle people. And she doesn't know what it is and clearly neither do the Ellicence. They're enjoying their little two minutes of power. Like, yeah, my tolerance for pain is high. Fuck them.
Starting point is 01:04:52 Fuck all of them. Let's red wedding them, you know, from Game of Thrones. And you can feel really good about yourself for a while until you see the bad ink start to pop up in publication after publication after publication and people like Steve Croft start to come out, who was part of Murderers Row, row and say, what are you doing? He says 60 minutes is a shadow of its former self. He's like,
Starting point is 01:05:16 he says it's, it no longer exists. Yeah, sorry, he's an interview with New York Magazine. The firings are too substantial. It seems almost impossible for me to imagine what kind of a show they can put on in September. It is very difficult for me to imagine a world without 60 minutes or a show like 60 minutes, which is not afraid to take on the government. You see the timidity all across the broadcast schedule right now. Um, and, And all of this is self-created. It's self-inflicted. You know, I wouldn't necessarily trust it if my boss says to me, my tolerance for pain is high because I'm going to think that's going to boomerang back on me someday.
Starting point is 01:05:53 Yeah. David Ellison's tolerance for pain is not going to be super hard. She's not going to last more than a year in this job. No. She's not. And I also, listening to you read that and what Steve Croft had to say about the hollowing out of 60 minutes now, they'll never rebuild it. I actually think that what's going on here is that Barry doesn't know how to create. She knows how to destroy.
Starting point is 01:06:16 She knows how to be in opposition to something. She made her name with that open letter to the New York Times saying the editorial page has gone too woke, too left. She wasn't wrong, but that's how she made her bones and how she got her venture capital to found the free press, which was exciting for a minute. And then it flopped, right? And now we're over here at CBS. and we're not creating new things. We're not creating excitement. We're not bringing in people to make something bigger or better.
Starting point is 01:06:45 She's destroying it because I don't think she knows what else to do. Yeah, I know. And honestly, you can't swoop into 60 minutes, fire all the top staff without any explanation and then expect the remaining ones to do exactly what you want them to do. It's not a prison camp, right? This is not forced labor. Right. Like you are not the Gestapo.
Starting point is 01:07:06 Like just ease up a little. These are human beings. They've built their careers there. They've put in a lot of blood and sweat and tears at CBS. Listen, CBS is leftist. It's whatever. But like these people have worked there for a long time. And they, not like us, but they respect Scott Pelly.
Starting point is 01:07:25 They love 60 minutes. They're not going to take well to this. So I really, I said from the beginning, you actually can fire everybody. And that's what you're going to need to do. If that's, if you want this kind of change. Yeah, then you better fire them all. Or you're going to have a very unhappy work staff sitting there very resentful of you and looking to undermine you at every turn.
Starting point is 01:07:46 And they can. They're like the CIA. They will be leaking on Barry now to the end of time. She already has taken a massive black eye. And it's only going to get worse. She doesn't understand that she's going to conduct meetings like that until Scott Pelly basically fuck off. And that entire, full of investigative journalists, isn't recording this?
Starting point is 01:08:06 Yes. And going to leak it to everybody they know? Is she that thick? And wait for the next mistake you make and the next meeting and the one after that because they're loyal to him, not to her. That's the truth. Okay, I'm just giving the dynamics inside a newsroom. I'm not defending Scott Pelly.
Starting point is 01:08:24 But these are the dynamics inside a newsroom and they do need to be managed. Like any corporation, you can't just go in there like, what's your tolerance for pain? Hi. Then let's start hurting people. Oh, great. What a wonderful. place to work. Here, by the way, is
Starting point is 01:08:40 Topra. That's Tony Docapul. Oh, right. Yeah. The one who's always crying. He should be crying because his show has never seen worse ratings. Lionizing Scott Pelly on the way out. The one they just fired. Here's what he said. SOT 6. He was, in some ways, a man from another era.
Starting point is 01:09:00 And that's not a knock. He didn't watch the competition, he said, because he knew who he was. A journalist who. valued truth at all costs. And always kept alive the memory of colleagues killed in the field. A reminder that his chosen line of work could be a dangerous one. But Pelley also made one major break from the past. He changed the signs around here under the CBS Evening News logo,
Starting point is 01:09:26 where Scott Pelley's own name would have been. He instead wrote the CBS Evening News with all of us. Well, Scott, from all of us, thank you. That red sounded, watched like an obit. Like he's dead. He's dead. He may as well be dead because he's not 60 anymore. So he's dead.
Starting point is 01:09:48 We can bury him. So there was just on the break, I was looking at The Daily Mail, and they have this amazing piece about Scott Pelley, this woman who interned for him years ago. You know, my whole thing with Scott Pelley is I cannot stand the taking of the readers on and off and putting the arm of the readers into our- Scott Pelley. And we're just, we're so, we're such an intellectual and I got to put it back on.
Starting point is 01:10:10 And they care about the news, Maureen. Megan, this former intern who now works in the media says she was in the control room, working for him, and she saw him instruct the cameraman slowly zoom in on me as I remove my eye with her. It's like William Hurt and broadcast news, right? She said from that moment on, I was like, you can't take this guy seriously. Oh my. I'm a serious person. That is so like with all of us.
Starting point is 01:10:37 So that's perfect because it's the same way that somebody's like, I don't like to talk about myself. I never talk about myself. I only know my friends are really interested in talking about me for some reason. So I'll talk to myself about them because they ask. But like I hate to talk about myself. I would never. It's narcissistic and it's self-centered.
Starting point is 01:10:53 But you know, a lot of people do have questions about me. So what would you like to know about me? Right? Like that taking, putting all of us instead of like with Scott Pelly while night after night he's insisting he's the ultimate authority on every story. He is the ultimate know it all. He's not in the business of learning anything. He proved that time and time again is just perfect.
Starting point is 01:11:17 That is chess kiss on brand for him. We played the Moms for Liberty site yesterday. He's such an arrogant jerk trying to tell these moms for Liberty who are on there lamenting porn, basically, in our school libraries. that it was a figment of their imagination and that they make things up and then they don't back them up. It's like this is not a question of opinion. It's a matter of fact.
Starting point is 01:11:41 It's been proven over and over. A Supreme Court case acknowledged it. But he never corrected the record. That's just one example. Here, interestingly, well, here's more first before we move on to that. Jimmy Kimmel had some thoughts on Scott Pelly last night, saw five.
Starting point is 01:11:56 Last night, the Trump suckups at CBS fired a great and deeply respected journalist Scott Pelly from his job at 60 minutes because he stood up for truth and integrity at a show that's been the gold standard for broadcast journalism for 57 years. He said the collapse of values at the top has become untenable and he let him have it in a staff meeting right to the new guy's face. Okay. 57 years, I would guess it's more like 42. 62. 60 has not been respected for the past 15 years. No. Like they did go. hard left. We could see it. The Leslie Stahl, the laptop can't be verified. Right. Right. Which we only knew about because Trump tape recorded it himself. You know, like they, she didn't air that. Right.
Starting point is 01:12:44 The ridiculous fluffing of Kamala Harris. That was insane during the campaign trying to make her sound better than she was. All of it. You know, the audience knows that the- It was terminal. That Sharon Alfonsoe who got fired. Again, I'm not defending her journalism. Just saying the handling of it has been very poor. But she was the one who was giggling about the crackdown on free speech in Germany, like the arrest of people for their opinions. That's right. She thought it was hilarious. That's right. You clearly saw a woman who wanted to bring that over here to the United States. So it has not been the gold standard for that long. And it actually is interesting because Steve Croft, in addition now here speaking out to New York Magazine, he went out with Bill
Starting point is 01:13:23 O'Reilly recently. Really? Yes, which I thought was very interesting because clearly they have different political sensibilities, but they're both kind of older, grizzled news guys, you know. So there seemed to be a mutual respect there. And he did lift the dress up a little on what it was like to be on 60 minutes during the heyday, you know, the 60 minutes. And the answer is not great. Listen here, it's not six B. I can remember when I was tapped to go to 60 minutes, I thought this was fantastic. And I expect them to a lot of people who would just come up and say, that's really great. I'm really happy for you, whatever, the thing. And then you realize after a while that not everybody was happy that I got this job.
Starting point is 01:14:04 Right. There were other people that wanted it. And so then you've all of a sudden made a bunch of enemies. And that's, it's just, you know, it's a snake pit. Okay. It's fascinating that he used that word. I actually put this in my book. when I got offered the primetime spot at Fox.
Starting point is 01:14:30 O'Reilly was my mentor. But the name of my show came from a segment I had done on O'Reilly for years called The Kelly File. And I talked to him about it. It was one of the first people I talked to about it. Like, what should I do? Should I take it? How should I think about this?
Starting point is 01:14:47 And he encouraged me, but he warned me. And he said, cable news primetime is a snake pit. and was really kind of warning me to watch my back. He's not, it's interesting to hear somebody like Steve Croft, who I always looked at as like, just a tough shoe leather reporter, you know, he's definitely a lefty. His interviews of Obama were just downright, shameful. He was in love with Obama. Shameful.
Starting point is 01:15:13 But, you know, I begrudgingly accept that when not doing a political story, right, like where his politics made their way into it, he would do a good job. that even at 60 there was that like that jealousy that makes ascension to a top spot a real you know double-edged sword there can be serious positives you know in many ways you succeed on paper but like the downside to success is it's enormous you know all of your colleagues in his case turn against you some of mine did at fox too um out of jealousy or competitive feelings and then the outside world starts paying a lot more attention to you. I would say not so much in Steve Croft's case,
Starting point is 01:15:59 but certainly at Fox, and even in this role, the more success you have, the bigger target you are, the more people misrepresent you and just hate you for kind of no reason other than you make them feel bad about themselves in some way. But it was interesting to hear somebody like a man, like Steve Croft talk about that dynamic,
Starting point is 01:16:18 and I'm sure it's probably true for all of them. It is probably true for all of them. You know, it's interesting because at 60 minutes, and I don't know if it will be the case going forward, but they would typically assign one correspondent to presidential contenders. And then as the field winnowed, you know, Croft was assigned Obama, and he was lucky and that Obama got elected. And so Steve was Obama's guy. Every time Obama did a 60 minutes interview, he sat with Steve Croft. He owned that, right?
Starting point is 01:16:49 So that's a great thing to have. but I think it's interesting, you're right, to hear a man talk about, like, what we typically consider, like, sort of more the province of mean girl stuff. Yeah. You know, competition, jealousy, sort of like an aggressiveness that can feel subterranean. Do you think it's every industry? Like, at that level? I was going to ask you that. I don't, media is bad.
Starting point is 01:17:16 It's very bad in terms of its toxicity for sure. You know, I was with Sean Ryan last week. And you can't go online right now without seeing multiple attacks on me by these bots that are clearly paid for by AI firms that are very, very pro-Israel who have decided I need to be destroyed because I'm not in favor of this war. And it's like swimming in a stew of toxicity. And at this point in my career, I've gotten used to dealing with that. It doesn't make it any more pleasant. But I was wondering, like, do you think it's every industry? And I think the answer is it's a lot of them.
Starting point is 01:17:47 I think a lot of people listening to this right now have some measure of this in their day jobs. Oh, sure. Where, like, if they've ascended, they're a target. Or even if they're, whatever position they're in, there's somebody who begrudges them, the job, the success, the benefits, the respect of the boss in the company. You know, there's always something. And people, as my therapist always says, people are complicated.
Starting point is 01:18:11 You know, they need to work out their issues on you sometimes. You know, I think it happens at every point of your career. And I was thinking when I was, first starting out and like, you know, I was ambitious and I was competitive and I wanted to do the best job. I wanted to be better than the person next to me and I wanted to get the promotion. And that's, you're kind of, at least I was, under the impression that as you rise, if you're lucky enough to, because I think luck is a huge factor, no matter how hard you work, that it somehow would lessen, right? That as you get, your life is going to get better. You're going to make a little
Starting point is 01:18:51 more money, you're going to have a little more institutional respect, more people in your field will know who you are. It'll get easier. And in fact, sometimes I think it can get more intense, you know, because now you're fighting for fewer positions in rarefied air. I'm sure it happens like at like the world's best medical facilities. I'm sure it is a snake pit. Yeah. Colleges. You know, like a top neurologist, right? Or in, if you're at Tesla or if you're in tech or like, I think it's everywhere. I think it's, I'm, I'm sure it's like even like who got to go on that on that most recent moon voyage. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:19:26 Who got to go? Yes. You could hear little rumblings like, yes. Why is the head astronaut? Is it, is it DEI? I don't think it was. I think it was the most qualified guy who was also mediogenic, right? Because you have to now be mediogenic up in outer space.
Starting point is 01:19:41 You got to project some confidence. You know what I mean? It's true. Yeah, I don't know. Well, I feel like most people go through this. And they go through some sort of toxicity in their job that makes them question like how great is this do I want to keep doing this for me I've always been lucky in that I love the news I love talking about the news I love reading the news and I love delivering the
Starting point is 01:20:03 news I think like we do it in a very compelling I think entertaining way which is what our brand has been that's why people come to us they trust us and they know that they're going to get the news in a way that's interesting it's not going to be like some bore fest like you can get from scott pelly where it's not only boring, but it's wrong. It's like biased and he'll never correct it. In any event, I don't think Scott Pelley's going to wind up on a podcast anytime soon. I think he's probably thinking that's beneath him and he's too, like, important for that. My prediction would be next move will be like PBS, you know, like a frontline type program.
Starting point is 01:20:43 That'll be his ride off into the sunset. It won't be independent media. I guarantee you he thinks that's been. Beneath him. It really, it really only works if the arm goes into your mouth and it's unhygienic. And some poor minion of yours has to pick up your eyeglasses and clean them. I would put his future with a side of like teaching media studies at like Columbia. Oh, God. Or at the Kennedy School.
Starting point is 01:21:09 Yeah, Kennedy School of Government. Sure. The fake Harvard. Okay. Moraine stays with us. We got a lot more to get to, including Dr. Jill Biden and the latest from Blake lively. For 250 years, Americans have believed in a powerful idea that we were meant to live free, free to work hard, free to move, free to enjoy life without being held back. But if everyday aches and pains are slowing you down, it might be time to declare your independence from pain. And I felt the difference too. Relief factor is a 100% drug-free research-based formula designed to help your body fight inflammation, which is one of the root causes of pain. It's not a quick fix or a temporary mask.
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Starting point is 01:23:23 burner dealer partner near you. That's B-Y-R-N-A.com. Hey, everyone. It's me, Megan Kelly. I've got some exciting news. I now have my very own channel on Sirius X-M. It's called the Megan Kelly channel, and it is where you will hear the truth, unfiltered, with no agenda, and no apologies. Along with the Megan Kelly show, you're going to hear from people like Mark Halperin, Link Lauren, Maureen Callahan, Emily Dysh, Jesse Kelly, real clear politics, and many more. It's bold, no BS news. Only on Megan Kelly channel, SiriusXM 11, and on the Sirius XM app. Morin Callahan is back with me. She is the host of The Nerve, which you should subscribe to now on YouTube and all podcast platforms. I was saying
Starting point is 01:24:12 the other day, you weren't even hear how the nerve is perfect for the summer in particular. You know, and like, it's like the cocktail you need when you go. off to the beach. You know, like, thank you. That's exactly how I'd want to spend my time in the beach, just sitting in a chair under an umbrella, listening to the nerve. It's shoot it into my veins. Megan, thank you. It's the truth. You know, I feel that way. Okay, I don't exactly feel that way about Dr. Jill Biden, but I do feel the need to get to an update on her because she won't stop herself on this book tour. She continues to go out and about. And here is, okay, is it, here's the slip she did on morning Joe when talking about the joint presidency she shared with Joe.
Starting point is 01:24:58 You tell me, listen to the pronouns inside 8B. Me, Doug, I thought we were a great team. We chose Kamala, Joe chose Kamala to be BP. So we were supportive of her. What? We. We chose Kamala. Not he. We. Oh, I'm so happy to be talking to you about this because I just want to get out of my system. We're apolitical over at the nerve. But this to me is just like, this is just a malignant narcissist who will not leave the stage and is insistent upon bringing all of us into her delusional reality in which she had no idea. Anything was wrong with her husband. No idea. And she says, we chose her.
Starting point is 01:25:45 We chose her. That isn't even factually correct. Because if you remember the palace intrigue at the time, they were forced into it. The news dropped on a Sunday. Normally, it's a Friday news dump. So that was how, like, perilous this whole thing was. They really finally got him to sign the document. Like, I won't run.
Starting point is 01:26:04 And this is my announcement. Kamala immediately begins getting on the phone, whipping the votes, whipping the votes, whipping the calls. getting in, like, that's how Kamala got the nomination. It wasn't because the, the Biden's hated her. Yeah, they hated her guts. And they were forced to take her as his VP, too, even though she'd called him a racist on the open debate stage because she's a black woman. That's why.
Starting point is 01:26:23 And Jill apparently was the one who never forgave her for that at the debate. Yeah. Oh, no, Jill Biden can't stand Kamala Harris. And it's mutual. So it's like, okay. And she clearly seems kind of bitter at her and her complaints. There was this moment at the 92nd Street Y in New York on Tuesday where she was was doing her book event. And guess who made a guest appearance? Awkward A-F, as the kids say,
Starting point is 01:26:45 Sot 8E. Oh, Joe has a question. Like you couldn't ask it later? Who do you love most in the whole world? Whooppy. That pisses me off. And the reason that pisses me off is that if they, if they, had their way, he'd be president right now. This pisses me off on a human level because I've got, I can speak as someone who has a living parent with dementia and another parent who died of cancer. Now, Jill's out here going, oh, you know, it's been very hard.
Starting point is 01:27:27 Joe's got stage four cancer. Very, very difficult diagnosis. Yeah, I know well. I would no sooner drag my father out to a book event. Oh, my God. You have to dress in a suit. do you know how enervating that is for someone who is that sick? Yes.
Starting point is 01:27:42 And then to have to sit there for two hours and be transported back and forth and not for nothing. Traffic in New York right now, it took me two hours to get to you today. It normally takes an hour. We've got the World Cup. We've got the NICS. We've got graduations happening. It is gridlock everywhere. That is not a kind act that you do for the man.
Starting point is 01:28:02 You say you love more than anybody, which apparently she doesn't because now it's Whoopi Goldberg. And like he's in firm. Just take one look at him. Who do you love more than anyone else in the world? And that was the most they could have him do. That was the most, the twisting of the, you know, the turn behind the Barbie could deliver. And literally they wanted him to be the leader of the free world right now. Only because Trump stopped him.
Starting point is 01:28:29 Did it not happen? I mean, it's incredible to me to see him as he deteriorates even further, just the obviousness of their lie. Of course, we all knew it. I'm just saying, like, there it is. is the evidence, more evidence of it. And it's so glaring and it's galling. Okay. So that's what's happening over in Jill Biden world. Good luck with your book. That was the one thing Joe Biden gave us that I liked. I liked his saying, good luck in your senior year. Wait, wait. What was that? He just randomly says it and it works for me. I don't know. It's just like a good kiss off.
Starting point is 01:28:58 Good luck in your senior year. Okay. Blake Lively. Something interesting happened on the show this week. So there's a woman named Victoria Burke, is that her last name? And she came on the program because she is the one who came up with and drafted that 47.1 law that will allow a woman who sues somebody for sexual harassment and then gets slapped with a defamation lawsuit as a counterclaim by the guy, it'll allow her to recover her attorney's fees times three if the defamation claim gets dismissed. It was a way of eveninging the playing field. It could be the man who's getting harassed. I handled a case like that when I was a lawyer, but usually it's the man harassing a woman. Let's be honest, because men are generally in the power position still. And she was trying to help
Starting point is 01:29:56 disempowered, unconnected, poor women who get harassed stop a really powerful, connected guy from making her life a living hell by giving him some skin in the game. If you hit me with his defamation claim and I managed to make it go away, you're going to have to pay me my attorney's fees and whatever actual damages you caused me times three and punitives. So it's a severe penalty. Blake lively tried to use it against Justin Baldoni. Right now, after walking away from this lawsuit, which was bullshit from the start, she's trying to make him pay this so she can declare it a victory.
Starting point is 01:30:30 And Victoria came on the program and made quite a bit of news about what's happened here. Listen, listen here. I received a communication from her attorney that Blake was intending to now move 47.1 nationwide, including she would be moving to New York. And I responded, I'm already doing that. And can you please check with me before going forward? whole strategy was to fly this under the radar because we basically usually don't have much opposition and I said there's oftentimes your client is compared to Amber Heard.
Starting point is 01:31:07 And so I would prefer you check with me and just stick with like mentioning the California part about mentioning it's being moved nationwide because I was worried that this is going to become just a PR campaign for her and it wasn't go be about survivors anymore. It was going to be about like, I didn't want her to turn my bill into the Met Gala. Amazing. And that's what Blake Lively is doing. So this whole thing is about her trying to emerge, Maureen, as a champion of women trying to bring that 41 point, 47.1 provision nationwide. She's the one who stole it from Victoria Burke and expanded it nationwide because she's Blake Lively, who was terribly sexually harassed by Justin Baldoni.
Starting point is 01:31:54 champion of the ladies. Meanwhile, the originator of the whole bill who actually was the victim of a sexual assault, unlike Blake, is saying, please don't do that. If anybody's going to bring it national, it's going to be me who has learned how to get this thing passed in four states so far. And I neither need nor want your help. And they're not listening to her. So Blake Lively is going to do even more damage to women. It's not enough. that she's damaged any other woman who's going to come forward and say that man sexually harassed me because now it's synonymous with this, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:33 Now she has to further shit on not only the author, the hard-won authorship of a bill and the author who says, please don't do that. There is an entire strategy here that you don't understand. You're a fucking actress. Yes. Get out of my lane. Yes. And I'm trying to help women of lower socioeconomic class than the likes of you.
Starting point is 01:32:54 And Blake says, no, I'm going to do what I want. Like, it's so on brand. Yes. Just burn it to the ground. I just want her, you know, Ryan's out there right now. Promoting his rexom's series, you know, trying to just be Mr. Relatable God. Like, these two. Yeah, you know that.
Starting point is 01:33:11 Welcome to Rex. No, but it sounds an awful lot like another word. You're so right. Nominative determinism. Wreck them, wreck them. Who wants? No, rectum. That's what I'm.
Starting point is 01:33:20 Oh, oh, you're filthy. I don't know. As I heard. Oh my God. So, yeah, no, but she's just burning it all to the ground. Burning it all. Not enough. Not enough.
Starting point is 01:33:31 Like, if she really wanted that Taylor Swift invite to the wedding. Yeah. Now it's definitely not happening. If she was on the bubble at all, Taylor is definitely crossing you off the invite list. This is so humiliating. I just feel like she truly is all about her. Even in defeat, we knew that she was trying to make herself look like a victor by filing this thing and pinching Justin for potential millions.
Starting point is 01:33:51 But I didn't realize this piece of it until this one woman. came on our show and broke this news, that it's about much more than that. It's about Blake trying to make herself look like she's a champion for all women and to bring this provision nationally, even though the author of it, an actual victim, does not want her interfering. And basically, it's stolen valor because Blake's like, with all my money and resources, I can do this faster and better than you can. Meanwhile, she can't because she's a nitwit. She doesn't understand the strategy. And this woman also was saying it was never intended to do. for use by somebody like Blake lively.
Starting point is 01:34:26 She said that also in our extended interview was saying, like we talked about how she is the empowered one. She's the one in the richer, more connected power position versus Justin Baldoni. She doesn't need a defamation law tweak
Starting point is 01:34:42 in order to protect herself from Justin. You're right? It's like he's the one who, if any thing, would need protection from her. Anyway, she's such a small person and that's been exposed to this whole lawsuit. So that's a blessing.
Starting point is 01:34:54 Ted Danson. I know. Who saw this coming? I didn't either. It was just in my feed yesterday. I'm like, well, this is interesting. Ted Danson is one of the people who has done blackface in the most infamous way possible. He did minstrel show blackface. I think there's a difference. There is a difference between, you know, blackface and that somebody wants to look like Diana Ross and they tint their skin with like Tanner and this. We're showing the picture of him. in like what they used to do like in the 1930s with the white makeup around the mouth and the black like shoe polish on the face, which is, I mean, whatever. You're not allowed to say either one is okay. Trust me. I learned that the hard way. But this is just obviously so degrading and nobody ever had an idea in modern history that this would be okay, except for Ted Danson. So he did that in 1992 at the Friars Club in a roast of Whoopie, who was his lover at the time. And she, helped him write it and was totally in on it. And so he went on this podcast with W. Kamah, Kamah Bell, W. Kamah Bell. And he was so self-flagell. Let me just give you a feel for how Ted sounded, Sot 29. Why I would like to address this is, and apologize forever. I am, I know what was in my heart. Yeah. So I have no problem. talking about this, but I need to and want to apologize for the rest of my life because somebody today can go on the internet, you're right and go, what the fuck?
Starting point is 01:36:33 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Wow, I feel betrayed. I feel angry and whatever. And I did that. Okay, so let me tell you something about this, Kamaha Bell. After the 2024 election, he, this is the headline from him. Voters ran toward racism, misogyny, and xenophobia. If Kamala was a rich white man, the race probably wouldn't be as close. The country still has an uninvestigated race problem that we are afraid to investigate. After I said my comments on NBC about how I didn't, like, when I was growing up, Blackface wasn't like you wouldn't get canceled for it, like in the 70s and the 80s.
Starting point is 01:37:17 He came for me. He started ripping me and was unforgiving, unapologetic, whatever, unforgiving. entirely of me. Let's see how he handled Ted Danson, who not only talked about, I never wore blackface, but just talked about it. But Ted, Ted wore it in minstrel show. Let's hear what he said to Ted. I do want to give you some more flowers around the fact that you demonstrated to me how to apologize in public. Thank you. How to say, oops, like how to go. And around an issue, and I'm sure you know what I'm referring to. I do.
Starting point is 01:37:56 We can go anywhere you want, but only because it's you. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. I mean, you would be the person I'd want to go talk to. And when you did my podcast, I want to give you a little flower. We nipped around the, we didn't even, we weren't nipping around it, but you said something, I said something.
Starting point is 01:38:16 And we both looked at each other going, ah, I know what you're talking about. And you said, yes, I do. and we'll move on. Yeah. Which was full of grace. It went on like this for quite some time. Ted Danson talked about how he went to some race, like expert sat with her for an hour
Starting point is 01:38:36 to, you know, expunge the sin from his head and heart. You know, he did the mandated therapy, basically, and to make him non-racist, I guess. I guess. And he got flowers for that, too. This was like a lick fest by this Kamau Bell. who is completely forgiving of Ted Danson because he was self-flagellating over it. I don't remember Ted Danson ever coming out when I was twisting in the wind at NBC and saying,
Starting point is 01:39:01 no, she's not wrong. It wasn't just the 70s and the 80s where people would do this and think it wasn't a problem. I did it at the Friars Club in 1992 in the worst way you could possibly do it. And I didn't realize when I did that that it was incredibly. I love calling attention to this because all these people let me twist in the wind. I know. Jimmy Kimmel's done it too. I mean, I don't know that it's ever really been okay, but to don it. But what Ted had going for him in that moment is he was with Whoopi Goldberg.
Starting point is 01:39:31 They were having this hot affair. And everybody was really, really like attract. Like, you couldn't look away because it was like, you know, Ted Danson, he was such a good looking guy even now. And Whoopi Goldberg? Yeah. Like, I think he left his wife for Whoopi. He suggested, many years. He suggested this was racist too, the fascinating, the fascination.
Starting point is 01:39:50 No, that was not it. That trust me, it was not it. It was like this very handsome, talented, masculine guy with like Whoopi Goldberg, who doesn't look like she bathes very often. That's it. She's not as attractive. And, you know, Whoopi took like half of that heat. And she was like, if it's okay with me, it's okay.
Starting point is 01:40:11 So you can't assail him. And everybody loved him, right? What was the other day I was going to say about this with the, with the, oh, oh, what that host said about, you know, America's still got a very big race. problem. Uninvestigated. Uninvestigated. Really? Bull shit. And I was thinking about this last night because I was watching the Knicks game, which was electrifying. Yeah. Go Nix. And you watch these guys on the court, you know, it's and a mixed race crowd and everybody's behind their team. That's it. And New York, one of the most polyglot cities in the world. Nobody gives a shit what color your skin is. They're just in it for the Nix. That's it. And we are the melting pot and we love it. So, you know, fuck off with this uninvestigated racism. Oh, my God, like, uninvestigated. Are you kidding me?
Starting point is 01:40:57 Like, do you watch MSNBC? Have you seen them over the past six years? Because it's been investigated. CNN, too. They've been investigating it. Trust me. But I just love how all these people were like, let her twist because she said,
Starting point is 01:41:09 people used to do this in the 70s and the 80s and they didn't get canceled. Like, this was something you would see. Turns out NBC, I said that on NBC, and my show was canceled. NBC's biggest star did it. Ted Danson, not to mention Zach Graff, the one on Scrubs.
Starting point is 01:41:24 Oh, he did? They'd been airing that on Scrubs two years prior to my comments on NBC. Luann de la Ceps from the Real Housewives. That was a flashpoint moment. She did it on Broadway, on Bravo. It was a flashpoint. That's the segment we were discussing. Oh, really?
Starting point is 01:41:38 That was the segment. But my point was simply like, it was everywhere and you didn't always get canceled over it. That's what I said. Luann survived. Yeah, no, it was just ridiculous. But Ted Danson let me twist in the wind. Twisted. So you twist too.
Starting point is 01:41:51 sir, although not on Kamah Bell's show. He's going to give you lots of flowers because you're a self-flagellating leftist. Maureen, a pleasure, my friend. Always lovely to see you. Love you, Megan. Can't wait to tune into the nerve. Recommend you all do it as well. I'll be listening right alongside you. We're back tomorrow with somebody I've never interviewed. Best-selling author James Patterson. Now, we'll see if he has gotten a review like the ones Doug is getting. I've something tells me he has, but I'm looking forward to meeting him. and it's going to be fun. So we'll see you then. Thanks for listening. Until tomorrow. Thanks for listening to The Megan Kelly Show. No BS, no agenda, and no fear.

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