
Megyn Kelly discusses the story of the Kentucky Derby winner Golden Tempo's amazing comeback, the trainer Cherie DeVaux becoming the first female trainer to win ever, the inspirational story of jockey Jose Ortiz and his brother, and more. Then Emily Jashinsky, host of "After Party," joins to discuss Tucker Carlson’s viral interview with the New York Times, his perceptive “reframing” of Nick Fuentes and his place in our culture, the areas where the left and right align, the massive layoffs at The Daily Wire, the business and editorial decisions that led to this moment, whether America's ceasefire in Iran will be able to hold while the UAE says it's being attacked, the alarming rise of gas prices, how the Trump administration can get out of this war, a bombshell new story setting up the Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni trial, what the embarrassing Ryan Reynolds text messages about Baldoni reveal, the key question at the center of the Blake Likely trial with Justin Baldoni's company, s...
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Megyn Kelly
Welcome to the Megyn Kelly show live on Sirius XM Channel 111 every weekday at noon East. Hey, everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to the Megyn Kelly show and Happy Monday. We've got big updates for you on the war in Iran. There's breaking news at this moment, which we'll get to in just a bit. Plus, we're going to show you why everyone is talking about the Tucker Carlson interview with Lulu Garcia Navarro over at the New York Times. You may recall she and I sat down together not long ago. Now, she has sat down with Tucker, made a ton of news, but we have an unorthodox lead story for you today. Unorthodox because we don't do a lot of sports here on the MK show, but we have got to make an exception for the greatness we witnessed on Saturday at the Kentucky Derby. I can't, I can't stop looking at the videos of it. I, I, I'm not gonna lie, I've teared up multiple times while watching this horse come from behind and win this thing. Is it just me? I don't, I'm such a SAP. I do love horse racing. I grew up steps away from Saratoga Raceway, which I absolutely adore. It's like time travel there. Nothing has changed since 1959. There is nothing quite like going up there. You don't have to be in like any sort of fancy part of the park. You could just go get a hot dog, get a beer and watch your horse on $2 bets all day. Trust me, I've done it many times. And think you're in Shangri La. Anyway, I do enjoy it, but this was just so moving, you know, it's like I love all the movies, I love Seabiscuit, I love Secretariat. And this guy's story on Saturday was kind of like a Seabiscuit if you did not see it. Golden tempo, who faced 23 to 1 odds and who was literally in last place earlier in this race, I mean last by a lot, had a stunning come from behind victory, narrowly beating out Renegade who had much better odds and who also had a bit of a slow art, slow start notwithstanding, watch this is next.
Race Announcer
And then come the two trailers, Albus and late running Golden Tempo. So onto the back stretch they go here in the Kentucky Derby, six speed as expected, setting the pace of 46.44. Renegade is in behind that group. He's on the rail. He's got 10 lengths to make up, has 6 speed into non perimeter 12 on the far turn, Mike Smith and so happier there. Turn their outside two and a half back, and then down toward the inside comes Emerging Market as they make their way to the top of the stretch. Further Ado is getting going on the far outside with Commandment. They're both putting in their runs as they arrive into the final furlong. O Sally is also gaining ground on the far outside as they come to the last 16th of a mile. Danon Bourbon in front, both selling a huge long shot. Renegade and Golden Tempo are closing two. Here's Golden Tempo. Golden Tempo and Sheree Deval make history in the Kentucky Derby over Renegade in a final time of 202.27 seconds.
Megyn Kelly
Ah, so great. We love a Cinderella story here in America, don't we? It's incredible. It almost took divine intervention for this horse to pass 17 horses and win this thing. And maybe that is indeed what was at work on Saturday, because look at Golden Tempo arriving at Churchill Downs. On his face, you see what looks very much like a. A cross, an actual cross. He's got the white marking up his nose that a lot of horses have. And then he's got the horizontal cross at the top of it. Unbelievable horizontal line, making it look just like a cross, like he's been kissed by the Almighty. It's great. And he ran like it, too. Now, the stunning underdog victory. It would be a great story all by itself, right? Because this horse, they weren't sure about him. We reported this in AM Update. He had lost his previous two. He'd only run four races, and he had lost the most recent two. He'd come in third, kind of fell apart toward the end and couldn't. Couldn't close it out. So you can understand why the odds were 23 to 1 against him. They were like, eh, I can't do it. You know, nice horse. But no. So no one was expecting great things from him, or at least almost no one. But that alone would be a stunning underdog story. We love those stories. But the more you dig in on Golden Tempo, better it gets. Because you heard the announcer mention there a woman. Her name is Cherie Devoe. You know, Golden Tempo and Cherie Devoe were showing her petting Golden Tempo here for the listening audience. It's great because other than the day of the Derby, she's always in her sweatshirts and her, you know, jeans. She's. She's a horse trainer, but she's not looking to put on any airs for us now that she's becoming a national star. But Cherie Duvo is officially the first woman trainer to win the Kentucky Derby and just the second female trainer to win any Triple Crown race. And I guess you are allowed to say she won it, even though she. She's not a horse. To me, it's like, kind of jarring. The horse won the race, but, like, you do say she won it, her breeders won it, then her, the jockey won it. They all won. They all are recognized as winners on Saturday. And here is Sheree's live reaction to the victory. Watch. Her legs are kicking. She's in the air. Her daughter's squeezing her. Oh, my gosh. You can feel the excitement. Cherie appeared on the Today show this morning. The race aired on NBC and explained why she was not especially surprised by Golden Tempo's victory. This is a look from above Saturday afternoon. Golden Tempo goes from dead last, 23 to 1 odds, by the way, goes from dead last to first. For folks who don't really follow horse racing, that's pretty remarkable. But you maintain that you kind of expected that, that your horse sort of had this all season, this sort of slow start, but finish his straw right.
Cherie Devoe
So Golden Tempo is what we call a deep closer. So he is out the back, and he just doesn't have a lot of speed, but he has a lot of stamina. And towards the end of the race, he does have a. We call it a quick turn of foot. So he can make up a lot of ground. But just in the early stages, he likes to just hang out behind and let them all do the hard work, and then he can just finish up and, you know, beat them all at the end.
Megyn Kelly
He likes to just hang out. I'm sure that's tough to watch as his trainer or owner or fan, but boy, oh, boy, it wasn't tough to watch on Saturday. And Sheree weighed in on her now viral celebration, too. That reaction, that's gotten a lot of attention over the last few days, you going just bonkers. Folks who, like, know you. Well, that's not unusual. That's you at pretty much everywhere.
Cherie Devoe
Yeah, no. Well, it's gotten a bit tapered down as I've gotten older.
Megyn Kelly
But that's the taper down.
Cherie Devoe
No, no, no. That is not the taper down. That is definitely all systems go. But, you know, if you win the Kentucky Derby, man, male, female, whatever, you should have a reaction like that.
Megyn Kelly
I think that actually was her friend standing next to her who hugged her on the win and she had. She posted something on her Instagram thanking that friend's employer, which I think she said was like the racing association of a particular state. Or maybe it was the national for firing her friend so that her friend could come work for her and be part of the historic day and historic win on Saturday. Such a sweet story of friendship for those two as well. Despite being the first female trainer to win the Derby, Sheree does not to her credit, want to make this about her gender. The horse racing has long been dominated by by men. It's started to change a little bit in recent years, but you made history on Saturday. Do you consider yourself a trailblazer? Is that something that.
Cherie Devoe
No, I consider myself a horse trainer and I just happen to be a female. But you know, it's quite an honor to be the first female trainer to win a Kentucky Derby.
Megyn Kelly
Perfect, perfect, perfect. Great answer. She posted this picture of Golden Tempo this morning on X with the caption being a celebrity is hard work. Some well deserved rest here for the listening audience. It's the horse wearing like a horse blanket around him and completely snuggled into a bed of hay. So you know, they say horses sleep standing up, but they can sleep lying down too. And this horse looks like he's enjoying his rest on his side. You know, you almost expect somebody to be reading him story right next to him. And here's one they should read to him. It's about a winning jockey named named Jose Ortiz, a Christian family man who frequently posts Philippians4:13 on social media. Quote I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. Jose came up short his first 10 times competing in the Derby before finally winning gold on Saturday. Look at this tweet from May 23, 2020. It's a picture of Churchill Downs where they run the Kentucky Derby. Jose writing quote, one day some dreams really do come true. Here's Jose getting emotional after his victory. Watch. I'm just blessed. I get to ride it almost every year but get to win. It is just special to have my mom and my dad here today. It's very special. I just wish my grandpa was here, but I know looking for heaven. Just very happy that I get my goal, my life dream, goal achieved. And you know, it's just amazing experience. I can't wait to see my family and celebrate. Oh so sweet. So sweet. He's from Puerto Rico. Thank God his parents were there to see it. Imagine what that feels like for them too, right? And especially considering that the jockey of the second place renegade was Jose's brother. I read Ortiz. Look at this photo. This is the best photo of the two brothers together. This is put out by the Derby and for the listening audience, what you see is the two brothers on the horses. This is like moments after they cross the finish line, their horses neck and neck, and the two brothers, each with their arms outstretched, touching each other's arms. I was like, I'm tearing up just looking at that. That is so beautiful. Good for them. What a moment that must be. I'm sure the life of a horse jockey is not easy. I'm sure it's actually quite physically grueling. If you watch the Derby, you saw just moments before they went into the gates, Great White, who was a long shot, beautiful horse, reared up on his hind legs and threw his jockey who fell. And then Great White almost fell right on that jockey. Thank God the horse did fall, but both he and the jockey were okay. And then he was rearing up. He was clearly, like, in a mood and did not want to get into that gate. And he ultimately scratched. So, yeah, I mean, I think the life of a jockey is challenging in a lot of ways. And these two brothers went through it together, obviously with the support of their parents. And what a day for both of them and for their. For their parents, too, to watch it. Uh, now, Irad ran on Renegade, and he rode on Renegade. And Renegade's owner, Mike Repo, had reason perhaps, to be disappointed on Saturday. After all, his horse was indeed one of the favorites. But Renegade did not win. He came in second. So what was Mike's message? And he, as he got a hold of Renegade's jockey, Irad, considering. Irad, you know, had the second place finish. And let's take a listen to what Mike said to him. Little warning on the explicit nature of this great conversation.
Emily Jashinski
It is.
Megyn Kelly
That's why you're the best rider in the country.
Race Announcer
That's why you're the best rider in the country. You're the best.
Megyn Kelly
You're a animal.
Race Announcer
Okay.
Megyn Kelly
Okay.
Race Announcer
You are the animal.
Megyn Kelly
And if you're ever going to lose,
Race Announcer
you lose to your brother, family.
Megyn Kelly
Okay? All right. Let's go beat him up a little later.
Race Announcer
Okay.
Megyn Kelly
I'm so proud of you as a. Unbelievable. I rather be second to you than win some years. He got hit right away.
Race Announcer
Right away.
Megyn Kelly
You did everything right.
Emily Jashinski
Un Believable.
Megyn Kelly
I love you. Okay. Oh, so great. I love him, too. If you couldn't totally hear it, he was saying, unfucking believable. You're the best writer. So effing proud. If you're ever gonna. He says, if you're ever gonna lose, you lose to your brother. I love this guy. He's straight out of Central casting. You did everything right. Everything right. The whole time, he's hugging him, he's kissing him, he's hugging him again. What a sweet guy. At least based on that one clip. I don't know anything about him, but I love how he handled coming in second and getting that jockey in front of him. Wow, that's great. If you ever get a fucking lose, you lose to your brother. That's great. Love the New York accent. Isn't it so great? All the drama, all the history, paying off big time for NBC. The Derby, setting a record viewership. In fact, I was riding in my car with my kids the next day, and Thatcher, who's 12, said, mom, what do you. How many people do you think watch the Derby? And I said, you know, I would guess about 20 million. And I'm happy to tell you I nailed it. They did set a record. It was an average audience of 19.6 million across NBC and streamer Peacock, which NBC owns, with a live audience peak of 24.44 million viewers, probably for that last for a long. Has Golden Tempo brought it home out of nowhere? It's so great when you hear the announcer, like, realize, holy, two new horses are about to come across the finish line and past the ones I've been announcing on and by the way, shout out to the announcers because, like, how hard is that? Because for the rest of us, I think you see the horses start and it's such a clump of color and horse, you have no. I. I have no idea what I'm seeing. Thank God for the announcer's ability to call out the names, to say them quickly to. I mean, second by second, update you on who's just a nose ahead and who's not and who's making a run for it and so on. In any event, no one, including the wonderful announcer, saw Golden Tempo coming. I mean, he was last. Was like, kind of rid him, wrote him off. And then he said, how you like me now? His winning time was an impressive 2 minutes, 0 2.27 seconds on Saturday. 2.0 2.27. Not quite, though. Not quite as impressive as the goat of horse racing. I speak, of course, of Big Red, or Secretariat, as he was officially known. His record of 1:59:40, which is actually quite a bit faster, believe it or not, those two seconds are something like the equivalent of 17 furlongs or H horse lengths longer. So, I mean, had Secretariat run that same race, even with this horse in it, Secretariat would have crushed him. It's kind of crazy to think about how amazing Secretariat was. So his record, which was set in 1973 at the Derby, still stands. A remarkable achievement. According to Sporting News, 19 of the 20 qualifying Kentucky Derby horses this year can trace part of their lineage to Secretariat, including Golden Tempo. How cool is that? That horse? I mean, he like. He had special sauce. Like there's something magical about him. And in case you have forgotten just how majestic and impressive Secretariat was, here he is in the 1973 Belmont Stakes behind them.
Race Announcer
Then it's Twice A Prince and the trailer is Private Smiles. As they go by the turn, those two together. Sham on the outside. Sham getting ahead in front as they move around the turn with Secretary at second. Then there's a large gap. Make it eight lengths back to Mike Allen in third and Twice A Prince fourth. And Private Smiles is still the trailer. They're on the back stretch. It's almost a match race now. Secretariat's on the inside by ahead. Sham is on the outside. They've opened 10 lengths on Mike Gallen, who is third by ahead with Twice A Prince fourth. Then it's another eight lengths back to Private Smiles who is trailing the field. They continue down the back stretch. And that's Zephyr Carrion now taking the lead. He's got it by about a length and a half. Still stand 10 legs back. 5 gallon twice a print they're moving on to now for the turn at Secretariat. He looks like he's opening. The lead is increasing. Making three, three and a half. He's moving into the turn. Secretariat holding on to a large lead. Dan is second. And then it's a long way back to Mike Allen and Twice A Print. They're on the turn and Secretariat is blazing along. The first three quarters of a mile and 1:09 and 4/5. Secretariat is widening now. He is moving like a tremendous machine. Secretariat by 12, Secretari by 14 wins. On the turn, Sam is dropping back. It looks like they'll catch him today. As high down as Mike. Defense are both coming up for him now. But Secretariat is all alone. He's out there almost a six half of a mile away from the rest of the horses. Secretariat is in a position that isn't happening against. He's into the stretch. Secretariat leads his field by 18 lengths. And now price of Rick has taken second. High Ballard and move back to third. They're in the set has opened a funny tonight. Please. He is going to be the Triple Crown winner. Here comes Secretariat to the wire. An unbelievable, an amazing performance. He hits the city 25 weights in front. It's going to be M second, Michellin third, Private Smile Sport and Dale, who had it today, got back to an amazing.
Megyn Kelly
Oh, my gosh, I, I It makes me tear up to see those moments, those great sports moments. Whether it's Miracle on Ice or the hockey this time around in the Olympics, male and female, the US Teams or the the horse coming from behind. And that was a. Yeah. Match race as they were saying that. That whole story was documented so beautifully in the movie Secretariat starring Diane Lane. And just a fun fact for you in the movie Secretariat and in real life, there was a famous moment as Secretariat was about to be born. And they knew that this was a good pairing of, you know, the mare and the stud. And it was from two very respected breeders. And they would meet. Denny Phipps of Phips Stables, would meet with this other breeder. Forgive me, I can't remember his name. And they would flip a coin, and whoever won the coin toss would get the pick on the horse they wanted. And the Phipps family had Secretariat. They had Secretariat and they. Well, here's what happened. We pulled it from, from the movie so you can see what went down in the coin toss all those years ago.
Race Announcer
Please don't take offense, Ms. Chenery, but
Megyn Kelly
your father almost never won our coin tosses. And I do hope you've inherited his life. All right, we're all here now. Mr. Phelps has the call. Is the owner of Bull Ruler. Now the winner has the choice of the offspring of Mr. Chenery's mares, Hasty Matilda or Something Royal. Are we all in agreement here? All right, here we go. Talk Ed. Heads it is. I'll go with Hasty Matilda, Ms. Chenery. Okay, so she took Something Royal, which led to Secretariat, and they won everything because now she had Secretary. And the Phipps family lost out on that. And the Phipps family, however, did not stay losing because they co own this beautiful horse here, Golden Tempo. So anyway, Secretary's links to racing go on for very good reason. He's a historic horse. So are his offspring. So many of them. And Golden Tempo, I don't think we've seen the loss the last of him. Will he win the Triple Crown? That would be hugely exciting. But at this point, who cares? Seeing this horse come from behind. Bring the the W to the first female trainer. Yes. To the Phipps family, who co owns him with St. Elias Horse Stables and Jose to bring it home for Jose and the brother with the arms. And it's like also good. We there's so little good news. That's why we had to start the show with this amazing story, bring us bringing in now for reaction, Emily Jashinski. She is host of After Party on the MK Media Podcast network and she's host of the MK Wrap up show on Sirius xm. When there are supply constraints on commodities prices surge. You see it with fuel prices, with everything happening in the Strait of Hormuz right now. And you know what else is a limited commodity? Gold. They mine it out of the ground and when it's gone, it's gone. Governments cannot just print more of it. And that's why everyone from central banks to savvy savers consider diversifying with gold. If you've been thinking about it for years, like so many, but have still never moved some of your savings into physical gold, consider Birch Gold Group. Now through May 29, Birch Gold is giving first time gold buyers a rebate of up to 10,000 bucks on qualifying purchases. For details and a free information kit on diversifying into Gold. Text MK to the number 989898. Birch Gold can help you convert an existing IRA or 401K into a tax sheltered IRA in physical gold. Text MK to the number 989898 to see if you qualify for a first time gold buyer rebate of up to $10,000. Emily's such a great story, isn't it?
Emily Jashinski
You're killing me. You're killing me. You just did 25 minutes on horses. We watched Secretariat clips. We were watching highlights. It was such a journey, Megan. It was. I had no idea. Megy Kelly, horse girl. Such a journey this morning.
Megyn Kelly
Yeah, I am, I have, I'm a sucker for any of those, like, you know, come from behind victories. But I do love horse racing. I do. I, I know it's controversial with some because sometimes they mistreat the horses. But like I know some of these, I know some in the Phipps family. I've known them and they're wonderful people. And most of them, I think dearly, dearly love the horses. And, and it's like there is nothing like watching a horse race. I love the whole thing. You go for the day. You can either do it the fancy way, like I've been to the derby a couple of times, which is super fun. You wear your most outrageous colors. You, you sip those mint juleps which are awesome, or you can do it, you know, lower brow, you know, you can buy the cheap ticket in and do the $2 bets here and there, which is so fun. If you see your horse come in, you know, win place or show it doesn't matter. Like, it's so thrilling. It's like, I don't know what it is. I guess I'm just like a gambler deep at heart, even though I almost never gambler. But it is so exciting. Do you ever do it? Have you ever done it?
Emily Jashinski
No, I haven't. But, you know, I love any moment in sports where the announcers are so good at channeling the excitement of the moment. And I feel like that's what we got out of the Derby this year. Like, that was actually really, really incredible. There's an art to doing, and it was totally nailed.
Megyn Kelly
Yes. I remember one time, years ago, I was with some friends, and it was. I think I was in college. I had no money. We went to. I think it was Belmont Stakes. And it was trying to think about exactly how it went down, but I know we ran out of money by the end of the day. And then our last race there and back. When I was in college and law school, I was an avid aerobics instructor. It's actually how I helped put myself through college and law school. I taught, like, 15 to 20 classes a week. It was insane. And I did aerobics, and I did step aerobics. I was in the Step Reebok demo team back in my day. Emily and a different body. In any event, the last race of the day had a horse named Aerobic Stepper. I was like, oh, my God, I've got to bet on that horse. And it's like this horse, Golden Tempo, it had terrible odds. We all scrounged. None of us had any money left. We came up with 20 bucks, and we bet it on Aerobic Stepper. And damn it, the horse won. It won. We. We had won a few hundred bucks. We were in, like, seventh heaven. We thought we were rich. It paid for our whole evening. Like, the group of us. I don't know, it's like this small turn of fortunes, and you feel prescient when you see your horse go across first and you feel like a winner, even if. Even if your life is. I'm, like, pushing people to go to the gambling track today. But, like, even if your life isn't going that well, your horse wins. People can probably relate to. This is probably why they love regular sports that I don't watch that much. Like, your team wins in basketball or baseball or football, and you. You feel like a winner. You know, it's true joy. It's joy for the. The team that you love or the horse that you believe in. And it's joy for you, because you feel smart, you feel pressured, you know, like you backed the winning horse. That's a saying even outside of race horsing, you know what I mean? Like horse racing. So I love it. It's a feel good story and America needs one of those right now.
Emily Jashinski
A feel good story. That's the story about aerobic stepper and Megan Kelly. That's the movie that I would watch that hasn't been made into a movie yet. The cinematic quality of that, especially as you just told it, astounding.
Megyn Kelly
Wait, I have to tell you one more story about a racetrack which is just so funny. I went to the Kentucky Derby years ago and there was a fair amount of conservatives show up at that thing. And there was this one sweet woman, this is many, many years ago. And this woman said, can we have our picture taken? And I said, sure. So I put. And she's much older, so I put my arm around her. And she said, darling, would you do me a favor? I'm like, sure. She goes, would you mind just reaching behind my neck and just pulling the skin tight for the picture?
Emily Jashinski
Did you do it?
Megyn Kelly
I'm like, sure, I got you. So I pulled it.
Emily Jashinski
No way.
Megyn Kelly
And she left. She was with her sister too. They both laughed. They thought it was hilarious that she does this. I'm like, you know, you can pay a doctor to do this to you just one day. And it will stay that way for many years.
Emily Jashinski
Like, yeah, asking.
Megyn Kelly
Yeah, you know, I like, because I. You seem really nice, but I can't follow you around forever. She was like, she didn't care. She had no humiliation over it, no embarrassment whatsoever. She just want to look good for the picture. And I, I've never forgot that dear sweet lady. She was great. She and her sister. So that was my other horse race story. And I am going, I'm going again this summer. I plan to. To Saratoga. We're making our plans now. It's just such an enjoyable thing. So anyway, to listening audience. You guys let me know. Do you like going to the horse races? Will you be going this summer? And what did you think of the wonderful golden tempo, Cherie and Jose, God bless them. Maybe I can get one of those folks to come on this show and talk about it. Since I'm now America's horse racing aficionado, expert, self, self declared, 2026.
Emily Jashinski
It's been decided.
Megyn Kelly
Okay. Oh, one other thing. I'll tell you, the family now, for years, what we do in my family, you're not gonna be surprised because the listening audience knows I love costumes. We have a box of costumes for the Kentucky Derby and I have ascots for all of the men in my family and like the sort of bowler hats and like a bright jacket and for my daughter and for me and for any female guests we may have over, I have super, super bright derby dresses and fascinators for everybody. So if you just happen to swing by, I will put you in one of these dresses and a fascinator. And Doug makes mint juleps, real ones for the adults and mocktails for the kids. And we all place our bets. Not one of us bet on Golden Tempo, even though we did bet long shots as well. But we did not pick golden. And it was thrilling. So fun to watch the race. We sort of freeze it on the peacock or NBC coverage. And then we, when we're all ready, we come down and we watch that 20 minutes and then it's such a fun tradition anyway, you got to make your own fun in this world. Okay? And speaking of fun, let's talk about what's happening in Iran.
Emily Jashinski
Perfect transition.
Megyn Kelly
Now you, now you see why I wanted to begin with something more fun, not change my mind. We'll get to around in a little bit. Let's start with what happened with Tucker because that's actually really interesting. And then we'll get into what's happening with the actual war. So Tucker sat down with Lulu, who I actually really grew to like over that interview that I did with her at the New York Times. I really think she tries to be fair. She's obviously a liberal and a New York Times journalist, but I like her. And she, I thought, did a very nice job with Tucker. Was it perfect? No, there were a couple of low moments where she's really, really focused on Nick Fuentes. But overall I thought she gave him a fair shot. And Tucker handled himself, of course, very, very well and was very deft. And anything, any sort of, would be traps she was laying. He saw from a mile away. And it made for a very interesting, robust exchange between the two of them. There was the obsession with Nick Fuentes, but Tucker, his answer on it was very, very good. Nick Fuentes, of course, for listening audience, is like they call him far right. I disagree. I don't think he's far right. I don't know what he is. He's non ideological really. He's like more of a black pilled young guy who hates both parties, says very controversial things about Jews and blacks and women, but outside of that, says a lot of things that, you know, have turned out to be prescient, unlike politics. So he's got a bit of a following because he's got a good track record on his political predictions and insights, but he's incendiary in his discussions about any group of color or vulnerable, marginalized, whatever group. So anyway, he's become more and more popular over the past five years with a certain segment of especially young, disaffected men. And it's all the left's fault. It's all the left's fault who have told these young men that race is really what matters. It determines everything. It's the number one thing about you that matters. And by the way, if yours happens to be white and you're a male on top of it, fuck you, you suck. So the left has driven people to, you know, a commentator like this. They have only themselves to blame. But the reporters at the New York Times would never acknowledge that. By the way, he says he's voting for Gavin Newsom. He says that because he doesn't like the fact that J.D. vance, if he's the nominee, is married to. I won't repeat the ethnic slur about Usha, but it's an ethnic slur about him being married to a brown Indian woman. And so I don't. This doesn't sound far right to me, but whatever. Here's how that exchange went between.
Emily Jashinski
Fuentes also thinks Gavin Newsom is. Gavin is hot and good looking and has the. Yeah, he's got the look, all right.
Megyn Kelly
I, I have to say, on the sliding scale of politicians, he is hot. It's like Chief Justice John Roberts on the sliding scale of judges is, he's hot. But like, then you put them out of the real world and things change. And then, of course, Gavin Newsom is like, you know, one of those, like, I don't know, like a Real Housewife, where they might look fine while they're just sitting there in the screen grab, but then you hear them talk and you're like, oh, my God, never mind. Okay, here's Tucker and Lulu on Nick Fuentes sat 17.
Tucker Carlson
Fuentes himself is a distraction from the conversations that matter because power is displayed through the structure of the economic system, globally and per country and in the use of force. So it's the economic program and the foreign policy program are what matters in every government from the beginning of time. Those are the two questions on which there's a bipartisan consensus in Washington between Republicans and Democrats that we should do this thing. The public rejects that thing on both categories. They reject the economics that are a consensus choice in Washington, and they reject the foreign policy, this consensus choice in Washington. And so Washington's response, Wall Street's response as well, is to be like, let's have a race war and you guys can like argue over blacks or whites or whether JD Is married to an Indian woman. Like what? And so Fuentes is incredibly useful for people actual power to divert the conversation to something that is both irrelevant and divisive because it's a divide and conquer strategy. And my strong view gained over 35 years of watching carefully and being involved, is that that's come to its end.
Megyn Kelly
Okay, so smart. Such an important reframing of some of the things that we've been discussing lately, Emily. And I mean, I think this is, this is why people who don't like Tucker find him so threatening because he's such an effective messenger and he can redefine an entire debate. Like he did right there.
Emily Jashinski
Yeah, yeah. And it's a really deep point that he's making. Neil Postman in the mid-80s was kind of hysterical over Ronald Reagan being the president as an actor. And he saw this as the television based epistemology overtaking the print based epistemology. And in Amusing Ourselves to Death, he wrote about how inferior the television based epistemology of politics and culture was to a sort of political epistemology based on print. And there's, I think, merit to that. But what we're in now is like the algorithmic social media based epistemology. And I think this is kind of what Tucker is getting at in that Fuentes, for many people is a meme. They don't sit around and watch like long episodes. He definitely has like a dedicated audience on his streams, which, Megan, I think you're right. The left drove so many young men especially straight into his arms and empowered him with their rhetoric that was often wildly over the top, inaccurate, wrong, and bigoted against men in so many cases. Just did that for like the last 15 years and then don't want to have to reckon with the consequences. But more so, he's for many, many people, a meme. They're laughing at him. They're not laughing with him. They don't really know much about him. They don't have much context for him. They just see funny clips that they were told were, you know, very naughty. And when you're a teenager, you're in your early 20s and people are telling you you can't laugh at these things. The kid's got comedic timing and he says awful things that other people won't and it's a meme. It's a meme. And Tucker is correct. It's a meme that has been used as a distraction from some of these structural problems that people would rather not talk about because it implicates them. It implicates the worldviews that they have perpetuated it imperial. It implicates the worldviews that they still hold dear about the ickiness of populism and the hoi polloi being wrong about their own fates. And so there. It's just much easier to fight this war with the proxy of Nick Fuentes than it is to actually deal with what's happening in the public.
Megyn Kelly
Because if you look at it, and Tucker believes that there's basically a uniparty, that the left and the right on so many of the biggest issues are indistinguishable. And he's not wrong about that. On, on some of the smaller issues, though, there are big differences. Like, not smaller, but like, smaller than, like the economy, which obviously is the number one thing that's motivating most people. But he thinks on the economy and on war, never ending war, and in particular war on behalf of Israel, the parties are nearly indistinguishable and that both sides would much rather see us arguing over Nick Fuentes and his views on race than on those two things on which there's not that big a difference between the two of them. They, they all vote both, Both sides to line their own pockets. They all seem rather corrupt and they all love war. They, they get paid by, they get put into office by the military industrial complex and aipac, and those are effectively their masters, which is why we continue to see war after war after war, even from a guy like Trump, Trump who ran on not doing this.
Emily Jashinski
There's another great moment in the interview where I think Lulu asks Tucker, like, why then are people so obsessed with Fuentes? I'm paraphrasing it. I don't have the exact verbatim language, but he responds, well, because it's easier to call someone, or maybe they were talking about anti Semitism, but I think it applies to Fuentes as well. It's like it's easier to call somebody a name and to call them a bigot because it immediately stigmatizes and ostracizes them than it is to actually grapple with an argument they're advancing. And so if you're calling somebody that word you're calling somebody, you're making this really serious charge, you actually should be able to back it up. But so often it's just deployed in a way that shuts a person down, shuts a person up, stigmatizes them, ostracizes them. And so that is the way to get them out of the argument. And you can basically discredit an entire opposition movement to war. If you say anybody who is flirting with this is you. This is what happened with Fuentes. We were playing Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon with Fuentes every day last fall. Like, if somebody had ever watched a Fuentes clip and laughed at it, oh, my goodness, you hate Israel. It's just happening constantly. And Tucker is right. He points it out in the interview. He's like, well, it's much easier to default to the label and to the name than it is to deal with the argument. It's just a shortcut. It's a cheat code. If you apply the name and the label, then you just are automatically kind of disqualifying them with a segment of the public. And that's really. I mean, it's a terrible way to do politics in the United States. Obviously now you have a huge section of the country that's against this war. You can't really do that. And so it's falling apart.
Megyn Kelly
Yeah. I went on Tucker show months ago and said basically what I just said about Nick Fuentes, which is he's. He has a lot of sharp insights and he's a smart political talker, but he says absolutely vile things about blacks, about Indians, about Jews, about women. And so, you know, you've got to, like, putting that to the side. He's got some smart commentary. But you, you know, you can't, like, obviously, you can't talk about Nick Fuentes without talking about that stuff, which I did. And my newfound detractors on the right, on the neocon pro Israel right, clipped only the one part where I said the nice, like, whatever. What.
Emily Jashinski
What.
Megyn Kelly
What his value was and circulated it all over X. X, all over X. Like, that was the alpha and omega of my own thoughts about Nick Fontes and those people. Them. The dishonest, disgusting people who do that. You know, I just. Whatever. You gotta live with it because the Internet's gonna do what it's gonna do. But some of them are my former friends. Some of them are people who actually used to come in this show, and it just.
Emily Jashinski
It's not good for anybody. And I know, Megan, like, you have really thick skin, but I also just feel like we have to pause and realize what a horrible thing that is to do to another human being, especially another human being who is like, put their own skin on the line to stand up, as you have done many times in some of these campus cases, and to, like, stand up against legitimate anti Semitism. It is just. I don't want to get numb to what a horrible thing that is for one human being to do to another human being. Because in the United States, we have worked really hard to stigmatize bigotry. We have more people from different parts of the world, different backgrounds, living in one country than I think has ever happened in human history in such close proximity. And it is an incredible accomplishment of the American people that we have done this for the length of time that we've done it with the level of relative harmony. Like, yes, things feel tense and painful right now, but what we do in the United States is actually amazing. And it's partially because bigotry, genuine bigotry, has been highly stigmatized. And so to apply that label to somebody who doesn't actually believe those things and to just, again, put the label on them, not argue about whether you're enabling it or just, like, have a substantive argument, fine. But to just toss the label around is. Is truly disgusting. On top of just not being constructive, it poisons the dialogue. It makes it impossible for people to talk to each other. And on a human level, it is really sad. And if you're doing that without thinking about it because you're caught up in the algorithm and you're not pausing 10 minutes before you do it, that's even more shameful. Like, just take a break. Just take a break. And I know it sounds, like, quaint at this point because you've gone through so much of it and many people have, but it's just. So it's such a bad thing to do?
Megyn Kelly
Yeah. No, I mean, it is. You know, it's unfortunate because it's not working out for the people who did it. You know, it's like people who just jumped on the anti Semitism train. They've dismissed Tucker as one. And I mean, like, the notion of calling me an anti Semite is so absurd. The listening audience to the show knows what a lie that is. But, like, the outside people, they don't know. They don't. Not everybody listens to the show on a daily basis or enough to know. But you're seeing it now, right? You're seeing it like the people who have made that they're calling card to just look at all conservatives with doubts about Israel and say you're an anti Semite. They're failing. Their shows are failing. And I Do think it's in part why we saw what I consider to be very sad news about the Daily Wire on Friday, where they had mass layoffs. And this is a company that for most of its existence has been near and dear to my heart. And I still have a lot of friends over there, and I am rooting for them. And even though I've had this massive blow up with Ben Shapiro, the. That he initiated, I have never been anything but good to Ben. And we were dealing with each other behind the scenes in a very lovely manner before he attacked me publicly at the Turning Point thing in December. I'm rooting for Ben, too. I don't want to see Ben suffer. I don't want to see his company implode. But it certainly seems to be. There are reports of 50 to 60% of the staff having been laid off. They officially denied it, but, you know, I think the power, the problem with the Daily Wire is multifaceted. They invested tens of millions of dollars in this Dragon movie, which they, they kept behind a paywall. It had no chance of paying off for them. It was just absolutely foolhardy. They expanded into. They sort of like, you know, they had Mission creep Emily, you know, like they. Now they're selling razors and they're selling chocolate and they're selling, I don't know, all sorts of different products as opposed to just like doing the news, you know, and they started to do all this, like, children's programming and movie making. And it's like, I think if they just stuck to their core mission of doing the news in a more fair and balanced way and hadn't gotten hung up on all these other projects and yes, indeed, the Israel first nature of Ben's coverage in particular. I think they'd be fine. I don't, I'm. I think, you know, in the off election years, it's always a little slower for, you know, any podcast. So I'm sure that's, that's a factor. But I think they would have withstood that no problem had these other factors not been there. I just think in general, the right doesn't take well to name calling, culling of the movement, anyone declaring themselves like the godfather of it, who will decide who gets to stay and who gets to go. According to Ben Shapiro, Steve Bannon had to go as of December, so did Tucker. I got lumped in there as an alleged coward in the world of Ben Shapiro for not being outspoken on, on his favorite issues. Barry Weiss doubled down with her Free Press. None of these people is Doing well. The free press, not. Not doing well. CBS is having the lowest ratings it's had in between 25 and 100 years. I don't even know if it hasn't been around for 100 years, like, in a century, though, basically, since it's formation under her leadership and she's pushing all these messages on her evening newscast and her morning newscast. The people are rejecting it.
Race Announcer
It.
Megyn Kelly
They're rejecting it, Emily?
Emily Jashinski
Yeah, I think that's right. And I mean, at the Daily Wire, one way that you can tell, I think people are rejecting it, is that to their credit, they've allowed Michael Knowles and Matt Walsh to kind of openly dissent from some of Ben's arguments. And sometimes they do it on their, like, live streams, which I think, again, like, that is. That is a good thing. And it tells me that they know even among their own audience, that it's. It's sort of controversial to be totally embracing every single element of Ben's arguments. I think they also, I mean, it's. It's an interesting new media lesson. We don't totally have the full story publicly yet, but the growth was too fast, and you have to have diversified, I think, revenue streams. Whereas if, like a big chunk of your revenue is based around Ben and you want to build a big media company that does movies and TV shows and documentaries and also has a news website and remember, they had a publishing imprint for a while. They were, they were doing books and children's programming. And, you know, you're reliant on probably streams of investor money. But your big poll is still. Ben. At one point it was Candace. That's a really rickety foundation for a media company in the long term. And so I think they ran into some trouble with that where it was just, to your point, mission creep way too fast as well. Like, creep is probably not the right word, but like mission sprinting in different directions, and it was not a good foundation for success.
Megyn Kelly
Yeah, I mean, just he, he's doubled down on it many times, just when President Trump decided to attack Tucker and yours truly and some others who have been skeptics of the Iran war repeatedly in some tweets. A couple weeks ago, Ben retweeted his Turning Point speech calling for us to be excommunicated from the conservative movement, saying, now seems like a good time to re up this. Okay, all right, I see you haven't moved at all off of your position that you get to dictate who's part of the conservative movement, who isn't. Meanwhile, I'd been at fox news for 16 years before anybody even knew his name. Like, some of us had been in this media space for a very long time fighting very important fights for decades. That includes Tucker Carlson, for sure. And it also includes yours truly and others. And he decided to double down on it. So it's like, okay, when your business is hemorrhaging, maybe cast a wide net, maybe launch your criticisms on an individualized basis. Take on Tucker's arguments, take on mine, whatever you think. I'm not saying enough about X. Okay, you can spend your show talking about that if you want. I'm sure your audience doesn't really want to spend its day hearing about that, but okay, you could do that. As opposed to I shall decree who is in and who is out. I appoint myself master of the conservative movement. That doesn't work. Liberals may like that shit, but conservatives don't. Maybe the neocon Israel first crowd likes it, but nobody else does. Emily.
Emily Jashinski
Well, and listen, like, we've been inside these conservative movement spaces. Like, one of the big messages that I have to people inside the conservative movement also, like Republican and Democratic Party. Like, look at what just happened in Maine where Janet Mills, the sitting governor, had to drop out of the race because Graham Platner was so powerful. Janet Mills had all the money. They thought it was ridiculous that Platner would ever win, and she didn't even make it to the primary. A lot of that is because institutions are less powerful than personalities now. So you can't say that, oh, we have to defer to the power of this institution. Like, remember when National Review did this to the Birchers? That doesn't work on younger people. It doesn't work on Americans anymore. It may have been true. No one's true. In the seventies and the eighties with William F. Buckley, but it's just not the same anymore. The institutional power is different. And so you have to make arguments, you have to appeal to individuals, and you have to have those arguments with individuals, not with institutions. And you can't just defer to that stuff anymore.
Megyn Kelly
This same crowd did this to Pat Buchanan, whose ideas have been vindicated 110%, who I've read a lot of over the past year. He has had. Has so many insightful things to say about America's role in the world, about our foundational goals, about what's happening with foreign influence. Yes. From the Israel lobby and others as well, and how we've been. We kowtow to them. You know, we have made ourselves subservient to a foreign nation. Nevermind just influenced by it. And that's why he had to be otherized and demonized. We'll pick this up on the opposite side of this break. More with Emily after this. Don't go away. When it comes to supplements, there are two things that matter most. It has to work and it has to be something you can trust. Both are absolutely essential and that is why I want to tell you about Relief Factor. Relief Factor has been endorsed by hosts for over a decade. That's more than 10 years of trusted voices helping people get out of pain naturally. For many people dealing with inflammation and mobility issues, especially after injuries, it's been life changing. Better movement, less stiffness, and a noticeable improvement in daily comfort. Now Relief Factor offers a quick start option and they actually lose money on this first offer. They do it so that you can try it for yourself and see how much it can improve your life. They know that you will wind up loving it. Relief Factor was created by a Vietnam combat veteran who became a doctor to help people heal drug free. What began as relief for his own patients became something he wanted to share with everyone. Try their three week quick start for just $19.95. Go to relieffactor.com or call 804 RELIEF to check it out. Let's see if you're next. When it comes to getting out of
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Megyn Kelly
Back with me now, Emily Jashinski, host of After Party with Emily Jashinski. It's live every Monday and Wednesday night at 9pm Eastern on YouTube. And you can just get it as a podcast if you can't stay up that late. Like yours truly, we in the Kelly Brunt household have been up late over the past week or two watching Imperfect Women, which I highly recommend. It was so good. We just watched the final episode last night. It's hard to find good thrillers, you know, that don't have like lame ties up at the end, you know, tying it together. They nailed it. Really, really well done. It's got Kerry Washington, it's got Elizabeth Moss, it's got Kate Mara. Really, really good. So if you haven't seen it and you like thrillers, it's an eight parter. I never know where you see these things. Right, Emily, the next question is, which, which app did you watch it on? Who the hell knows? I don't know. I don't know what it on Netflix or Apple.
Emily Jashinski
I think I like that you can stay up late for Kerry Washington, but not for after party. Meghan, I'll remember that.
Megyn Kelly
I have access to after party.
Emily Jashinski
That's true.
Megyn Kelly
I know it's a betrayal.
Emily Jashinski
But Doug, of all people, I expected more.
Megyn Kelly
I know. Usually we're there. Usually there's bad stuff happening that you should know about in Iran. Our ceasefire is not going well. You're gonna be shocked. Tell her I'm shocked. Here's the latest. First of all, the person updating us on the latest bad news is Bradley Cooper, which I told Steve Krakauer, we've, we've really dropped the ball here if we're not taking these pressers live. And Bradley Cooper is the new spokesperson for centcom. Turns out there's more than one man by that name. He says the following, that 15,000 U.S. service members are now involved in what we're calling Project Freedom. We reported on this today on AM Update. It is our new effort to help commercial vessels pass through the Strait of Hormuz. Trump, the administration clarified that we're not allegedly, we're not like physically escorting and protecting them. We're just helping show them the route that will avoid mines and other dangers. I guess no one really knows, at least as is typical with the reporting on this war. But the reporting is that we have 15,000 U.S. service members who are involved in this effort, that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard has launched drones and missiles to try to disrupt the mission over the last several hours. And now we're having like return fire. The US Military blew up six small Iranian boats in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday after Iran launched multiple cruise missiles, drones and small boats at US Navy ships and at commercial ships being, quote, protected. Again, it's unclear by the US Military. According to Bradley Cooper, the Iranian boats were attacked by US Apache and SH60 Seahawk helicopters. So it doesn't sound like a ceasefire. It sounds like there's some fire that's not ceasing. And this is to the surprise of no one, as President Trump claims, but no one knows for sure what's in there, that he's received a 14 point plan from the Iranians to bring this thing to a close, which he claims is not good enough. And now he's gonna play hardball and he doesn't wanna talk to them yet. I was on with Piers Morgan a little earlier, earlier, Emily, and he asked me, what would you tell the President to do? And I said I would tell him to just take the deal, give the Revolutionary Guard something like they're it appears to be that they're mercenaries. So give them some sort of financial incentive to relinquish control over the Strait and don't make whatever around the nuclear program be the thing that screws up the end of the deal, because we already know that we did obliterate their nuclear facilities in June, and our intelligence community already assessed that they're nowhere near having a nuclear bomb. So we'll continue to spy on them. Obviously, if we want to continue with the IAEA inspections, they'd probably agree to that, frankly. And that's really all we need, in my view. I, Mark Levin has a different view. I get it. But let's just get out and try to open up the Strait of Hormuz, because that's the pinch point they have against us, us and now our blockade of their ports at the pinch point we have on them. But we're going to feel that pain already. We've got jet fuel at the highest level they've seen in years. We've got airlines folding here in America. Spirit had many problems, but this was like the last straw. We've got American Airlines profits for this year already projected to be wiped out by the hike in fuel. The the price of gasoline per gallon is now up at what, four. What is it? You guys remind me.
Emily Jashinski
425 or something?
Megyn Kelly
Four, four 45. Now it's 4:45. My own pump in Connecticut. $5 and 9 cents a gallon. $5 and 9 cents A gallon. That's crazy. And you're going to see it right now. They're projecting. I was actually just looking at the New York Times this morning. My God, it's so small. I'm getting so old. But the projection is that the Strait of Horror Moose is expected to remain effectively closed for weeks, raising the prospect of prolonged high energy prices. And they pointed out something I hadn't seen, which is despite Mr. Trump's claims of gas prices dropping soon, Secretary of Energy Chris Wright acknowledged last month they could remain elevated for the rest of the year. Now, that's if things wrap up today, today. But they're not going to wrap up today. So the longer this goes on, the longer the pain goes on because these energy prices remain spiked. And that has a rolling effect that doesn't hit us here in the United States the next day. It takes months. So all of this portends very badly for the midterms and for President Trump's approval ratings and his ability to get anything done.
Emily Jashinski
Emily well, and this is where it's really bad for the president is that he is now in a situation where he has promised to win a war and he said multiple times he's won the war. But Americans have for several months now made sacrifices at the pump. This is obviously going to cause basically across the board inflation. And that's not, I think this is, these assessments are correct. Trump himself acknowledged in an interview with Maria Bartiromo a couple of weeks ago that, yeah, the prices could remain elevated all the way up until the midterm elections. And so when you're asking the public, public to make a sacrifice for safety and then you have to find a way to negotiate something that is different from what was on the table before the war, that is a serious, serious problem for President Trump right now. Because if you lose American lives in the Strait of Hormuz, the Strait of Hormuz was obviously open before the war began. And so if you end up losing American lives, this is an escalation that we're seeing happen right now in the process of trying to get something back to the pre war status quo that is disastrous. All while you're asking Americans to sacrifice their hard earned money. It's basically wiped out the benefits that the Trump administration was excited about from the tax cuts. That's what some of the economic estimates are looking like right now. It's easy to see how those prices are so, so high and not going down anytime soon, in all likelihood. And so you might end up, I pray to God it doesn't happen, but you might end up losing more troops in the process of trying to open the Strait of Hormuz. And what is on the table in terms of actually like we're right now seeing. President Trump has said the Iranian navy has basically been decimated. Well, we're in an era of asymmetric warfare where they have their Mosquito fleet, they have drones, they can find a way to cause us pain if we're truly trying to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. So where things are looking at right now for a peace deal, your option is, I think, the sane option. But the president is in a situation where he said that he was going to change, change the fate of Iran. And he's defined it in many different terms. You know, freedom for the Iranian people. He's defined it as no nukes ever. And I don't know where you go from here at this point. If that's what the President thinks he has to get out of this conflict to look like he's, he's truly had A win. So it's a scary position to be in right now.
Megyn Kelly
Yeah, because you've got the risk of escalation right there, there looming over every move we make and every move they make, anything provocative by, by us and they'd be happy to start this thing back up. They don't, they don't care. And they are enjoying watching Trump suffer politically. And I think the President's very frustrated. My own impression is he's very frustrated right now because he's used to be able to, to being able to will his desires into existence, you know, just the sheer force of him. And he's, you know, he's a tough negotiator. He's, he can be a bully in his negotiations, which has always worked for him and it's not working and he's not used to this. I just, I think he doesn't quite know how to get out of this one.
Emily Jashinski
I think that's totally correct. If they had a good idea of, of how to get out of it, we wouldn't keep hitting these impasses in negotiations and the like. And, you know, that's the question. If, if, if Iran wants to say 15 years, 20 years, no enrichment, and put that on the table and it's not good enough for President Trump then, which again, I don't even think it's an unreasonable position for Donald Trump, who ran on non nuclear Iran against Barack Obama. Like the politics of it, you can easily see how you get, you know, that position from Donald Trump. But at the same time, if that's the brick wall that you're hitting, it doesn't go away. It doesn't go away unless he finds some way to restore the strait, restore the Strait of Hormuz to what it was in the pre war condition and then force Iran to concede while it has all of these asymmetric abilities to keep causing us pain. So I don't know how you end up breaking that wall because it's the same thing that we keep hitting up against. They're not going to agree to no nukes ever. It's just not, it's not going to happen happen. And unless we're willing to keep fighting it out against this asymmetric military threat from Iran, then we're in it for the long haul.
Megyn Kelly
Mm. You've got Lindsey Graham and Mark Tson saying if they won't give us what we want, the leaders with whom we're negotiating in Iran, kill them, kill the people we're negotiating with so that we can get some, quote, more reasonable people to negotiate with. So we should just keep killing the people were negotiating. I mean, what that would do to the United States ability to negotiate with anyone on a go forward basis is unthinkable. And that's, that is to me so irresponsible. That's an insane suggestion. Just like you will agree to everything we demand or we will drone you and your family. You're all gonna die. This is being thrown around casually like it's an easy option for us without any recognition of the fact that we have intermediaries, we have the Pakistani PM who's involved in all of this. Like that's an important ally in some ways. Why would we telegraph to them or anybody else that our word is no good? We are never participating in good faith in negotiations. You disagree with us, we will fucking drone you and it'll be over. So, like, how's that gonna go? What that sounds, that feels really good in the moment when you're killing the person you disagreed with across the table from Jared Kushner. Kushner. The consequences, long term be damned.
Emily Jashinski
Well, right, that's predicated on, in the idea that if you kill this person, if you drone this person, what's going to come next is going to be someone more reasonable. And that assumption is doing some real heavy lifting from Lindsey Graham and anybody making such propositions. Because if you are asking people, like just on a human level, if you're asking people who would be in a position to negotiate after you take out one layer of leadership to then be more reasonable rather than more radical and more doggedly opposed to the United States, again, that is a very, I mean, you are betting a lot on that particular idea of what would happen if you do that. And then what, of course, to your point, happens when you're trying to host negotiations in the future and people worry that it's a setup for them to get killed or droned in the process, the long term ramifications of that way of prosecuting a war are just, just frankly insane. Insane. But it keeps happening. Of course.
Megyn Kelly
Our word used to be really good. Our word used to be very good. The United, the word of the United States of America. And it's being eroded and besmirched bit by bit by every time we keep doing this, this is twice we've allegedly negotiated with the Iranians in good faith only to bomb them while they were negotiating with us. And you know, Thiessen and Lindsey Graham would like it to be, be a third, at least. Speaking of our word, President Trump tells Fox News in An interview that's about to hit, that the Iranians will, quote, be blown off the face of the Earth if they attack US Vessels that are guiding ships through the Strait of Hormuz as part of, quote, Project Freedom. So the Iranians will be blown off the face of the earth if they attack the vessels. I mean, they are attacking the vessels. We just started the hour by saying they've launched drones and missiles, missiles to try to thwart the traffic and disrupt the mission over the last several hours. That's what led to our retaliatory strikes against them. So it is happening. I'm not sure exactly what he means. If this is just more bellicose language by the President trying to escalate everything to an 11, right. To try to just scare them, we're gonna blow in civilization as we know it. Okay. You know, like, all this rhetoric. By the way, the latest poll shows the majority of the public. Public strongly disapproves of that language. They want him to stop doing that. He won't listen. Like shit. Talking is something the President's really good at, and I think he thinks that's his only tool. I really do. I think it's, like, tried and true. It's familiar to him. It's comfortable. It's like the old sweater with the elbow patches. He loves it. You know, he puts it on. He feels good. He feels warm and fuzzy. So, like shit talking and shit posting. He's home. But I don't think he knows how to actually get us out of this. Not. Not against this enemy. Enemy. I want to go back to the Tucker thing for a minute because. Yeah, you go.
Emily Jashinski
Well, I was just gonna say. I mean, it also. The power of. It fades over time. If it's not then followed up. And I'm certainly very happy that he didn't follow up on his threat to wipe out an entire civilization. But it only goes so far. If you continue to speak in the bellicose rhetoric and then it turns out to just be rhetoric, just even tactically, that doesn't fulfill its own goal. So the power of it wanes over time anyway. It's sort of like with the tariffs, which I've been pretty supportive of, to Honest. But it's. It's basically this idea that you can, you know, posture, get the markets to go in one direction or the other. Well, some countries have started to bet against the United States and do their business elsewhere and say, well, we can't rely on the United States anymore. We can't rely on the word of the President because it changes. And so we're just going to hedge our bets and go somewhere else. He's doing something similar, I think, on the foreign policy level. And the power of being able to intimidate other countries into agreeing with you to coerce them, it does wane over time. It's not something that lasts last forever.
Megyn Kelly
And plus, it's like my main thing is I don't want American troops to die, number one. But I really am very focused on the midterms because the midterms get tougher for Republicans in 28 in particular in the Senate. I mean, obviously in the Senate because the House redoes itself every two years. But the Senate is, it's the map gets worse for the Republicans in 28. So they really need to hold on in 26. And now we played it for our audience late last week, Mark Halperin saying, I think the Senate made may now be in play, like legitimately in play, which was new for him. He hadn't been there. And so like, if we lose the Senate, if the right loses control of the Senate, you like, forget, you will not confirm another judge. President Trump will not get another judge on the federal bench for the remainder of his term, which is a very big deal. That is like a large reason a lot of people on the right voted for President Trump because of the lunacy happening on the federal bench. And to put a stop to that, well, you can kiss a goodbye, never mind the investigations that we're going to see. It was just going to be nonstop investigatory. He's never going to have a nominee to his cabinet confirmed. You know, he good luck changing out a member of the Cabinet because they need Senate confirmation too. Like, it's just, it's going to be so stymied for him if he loses control of the Senate. That can't happen. Which is one of the reasons why we are looking so closely at gas prices which are hurting people. They're hurting working people. People like my mom who lives on a fixed income. Obviously I help my mom out, but, you know, without me, she'd be living on a fixed income. That would very much be rattling her because her day to day would be deeply affected by these gas prices. And that's how most Americans live. Here's Harry Entin on how Americans are reacting to the rising gas prices in Sotten.
Harry Entin
Look at this blame for the increase in gas prices. 77% say Donald Trump. Donald Trump. I look back at every president I could find on a similar question, which is when the gas prices rise, who Gets the blame. Trump gets the blame. More than Joe Biden did back in 2022, more than Barack Obama did in 2012, and more than George W. Bush did back in 2005. 71%. Donald Trump takes the cake. He owns this mess, according to the American people. And it is quite the mess because as gas prices climb ever higher and the increase in the percentage percentage that blame Donald Trump climb ever higher, his approval ratings go down in the base. But when you break it down by party, this is where it gets, oh my, you know, this is a Republican base that has been infatuated with Donald Trump for years. But even here, blame Trump for rising gas prices. 55% A majority of Republicans blame Donald Trump for gas prices. That is the highest ever blame for gas prices from one zone party. Then you see 82% of independents, that's the highest percentage who blame the President of the United States. Among independents, not much of a surprise, 95% of Democrats, but majority, majority, majority.
Emily Jashinski
Hmm.
Megyn Kelly
And what he keeps saying, Emily, is that it's basically your patriotic duty to support these higher gas prices and pay them because Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon, notwithstanding the fact that it was his own intelligence agencies that said they're not getting one. We're good. That's not a concern we need to have right now, especially in the wake of the bombing that we did in June. So that, I mean, it's not, the public is not buying his rationale at all. And what he keeps saying also is look at the stock market. The stock market, okay, that's a rich person thing. Like, I'm sorry, but like, yes, the average person may have 401ks that get affected by the stock market, but the true new average American is worried about what's in their weekly disbursement from Social Security, what they get in their paycheck, and they don't have a ton of money in the market.
Emily Jashinski
Right. Stocks are a long term concern for probably about 60% of the country, but it's not their monthly, their monthly income is not coming from that. And so it's. He takes so much credit for the market that I think it's actually why Harry Anton was just pointing out out those numbers are historically high of your own party blaming the President for where gas prices are. Because if you are constantly taking ownership of the markets, it looks to the average person like you're taking ownership of the economy. And he's done that in various ways over, you know, gas prices are great, he's taking credit for the grass. The gas prices being Great. And so he's, you know, if anything economic is happening in a good way, he's taking credit for it. He's very intentional and strategic about that. And so it's much easier than for people to blame you when the economy is in a bad position. And, and Megan, I remember you and I were talking a month ago about some of these Senate races. I think the big ones to watch are Ohio and Nebraska right now, because if you're in Ohio or if you're in Nebraska, you're Pete Ricketts. And you have to defend the administration at every campaign stop. That is taking money, it feels like to the average person is taking money out of their pockets for the Strait of Hormuz, which was open before the war began. If you have to defend that at stop after stop, your support for this war, your support for this president to vote voters, those two races are really, really, really ones to watch. Susan Collins is kind of always vulnerable but always persists. So I don't know what's going to happen in that race. Texas, I think, is probably safe for Republicans. North Carolina is going to be a real problem for Republicans. North Carolina, Ohio, Nebraska, yep, that's a big, big problem across the board. Georgia, certainly. So a lot of serious headaches for Republicans, especially as they get into the summer and they're back at home.
Megyn Kelly
One in May concerns me, too, because this Graham Platner, who's now going to be the Democratic nominee, you know, even Tucker was like praising him somewhat on that New York Times interview because his foreign policy sounds like Tucker's, you know, like, don't intervene, like stay out of other people's wars, which I like too. However, you look down the resume and you see he wants to pack the Supreme Court with extra seats and make Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico state. No, it's a no. No. Oh, my God. If that were to happen, you know, like, we'd have amnesty. We'd have mass amnesty if we had a Democrat in the White House and a Democrat controlled Senate. With people that radical, it's very scary to me. I care about foreign policy, but it's not my number one issue to the place where I'd be willing to vote for a guy like that. But he's got, I don't know, he's got some, is it charm? I don't know if that's the right word. Is it like, like charisma? I'm not sure. He's, he's new and he's young and he's interesting in a way that Susan Collins can never be and never was.
Emily Jashinski
Yeah, we've interviewed him before at Breaking Points and he's very raw. Like he will just have a conversation like a normal human being. And so policy disputes aside.
Megyn Kelly
Damn.
Emily Jashinski
Looking at him as a candidate, I know it's such a low bar for politicians, but he's the type of guy like, I was just listening to him with David Sirota on Lever News yesterday. David asked him if he would go on Tucker's podcast and Graham's response was, you know, I don't know, to be honest with you. I'm just sort of torn on this question myself. I've been thinking about it a lot and I just don't, you know, he's like, I just want to be honest. I don't have an answer for you right now. It's like that to the average voter right now in this, as we were talking about earlier in the show, the algorithmic social media based political discourse that we have, it's like, oh my gosh, that person sounds like a human being. They're not reading talking points. So I think he's just a very, very good, good candidate. Policy disputes aside, again, he's very anti establishment. He says the problem is with both parties and he's just able to talk like a normal human. So he'll, he'll be tough. He'll definitely put up a good fight in that race.
Megyn Kelly
Yeah, yeah. I don't know. It's like, it's funny because the Democrats will vote for him now standing his Nazi tattoo. And the New York Times will sit down with Tucker, notwithstanding the fact that they've been telling us he's like chief racist of all times. Right. Like on the front page of its paper just a couple years ago. But now they're interested in him, right, because he's crossed the President. It's like they're so predictable, these left wing media outlets and the Democrats in general. They're so predictable. It's like, oh, whatever. A certain male gesture comes to mind. Okay, I want to keep going. I did want to get to this one. I did think this was interesting. Tucker was asked about the Nick Fuentes interview. He had told me this privately, but he said it on camera. Here it is, thought 18.
Tucker Carlson
I wish I hadn't done the Fuentes interview because.
Megyn Kelly
Really?
Tucker Carlson
Yeah, it was totally not worth it. I mean, it was kind of interesting, I guess, but it was used as I added to the distraction. What I really wanted to talk about was where we were going in this war with Iran. And I spent like a month getting Calls from people being like, you're a Nazi. Okay. And I wish I hadn't done that. Not that it didn't imperil my soul. I've interviewed far worse people than Nick Fuentes. Like Mike Huckabee, Far worse person than Nick Fuentes. Hurt many more people than Nick Fuentes. Same with Ted Cruz, but so I don't think it affected me. I interview people I disagree with all the time.
Megyn Kelly
Time.
Tucker Carlson
And often I'm polite to them, including war criminals. The only person I've really been in polite with is Ted Cruz because I have limited self control, and he's just so repulsive. I couldn't control myself and I was a jerk, and I tried to apologize, but if you had to sit across from Ted Cruz, it's just. There's something about him. It's just like, repulsive. I mean, it's like disgusting. Like, if you entered a men's room and Ted Cruz was there, you would be like, I can hold it. I'm leaving. And I broke down under the strain of his repulsiveness. But in general, I try to be nice to everybody. But, man, that Fuentes interview, I just added to the distraction.
Megyn Kelly
Okay, so we've established he does not like Ted Cruz. But I play that clip not for that piece, but for the Fuentes thing. I knew that he had regretted doing it because it's truly like they turned Tucker into a Nazi for sitting across from this guy. And it's crazy Emily, because, you know, she pressed him too. She's like, well, I saw your Ted Cruz interview. It was much more contentious. It was more prosecutorial, where your interview with Nick Fuentes was, like, more friendly. And he explained there why. Why he doesn't like Ted and why they got contentious. And, you know, Ted gave as good as he got in that exchange. But it's amazing how much of our national conversation revolves around this guy Fuentes. And some of these characters who make their way into the news, they ha. They have their opinions. They're controversial, of course.
Emily Jashinski
Course.
Megyn Kelly
But it's like, why wouldn't she want to discuss more what the policy makers are doing than what this kid in Chicago, I don't know if he's a kid anymore. I think he's like 29. Could be wrong, but he's, you know, in Chicago, thinks about life. Like, why. Why is she so focused on that and not actual policy that'll appear on the pages of the New York Times the next day and the day after that?
Emily Jashinski
I had the exact same reaction to the interview that it Was like genuinely generally okay. But then the focus on the Fuentes dust up absurd, like wildly over the top. It was interesting to me that Tucker said he didn't think that it was worth it. It quite obviously was not worth it. Like the juice was not worth the squeeze. There was a middle part of that interview that was really critical of Fuentes as it was happening. And nobody went with that section of it at all. You saw no clips from that part of the interview. It basically just didn't exist where Tucker was questioning him on how you can consider yourself a Christian and be bigoted and believe in blood guilt and the like. Again, nobody picked up on that part of the interview, didn't see any clips of it. But yeah, it did become a distraction through. It's not even really Tucker's fault that it became a distraction. I was getting actually kind of angry when I was listening to this recent episode of Tucker's show where he did a great interview with this head of a startup on that is doing like reproductive technology, like very high tech reproductive stuff. And it was, you could tell, a technology that Tucker found abhorrent, morally abhorrent. And I'm listening to him give this kid a really fair, kind, polite, civil, decent interview. And it was a fantastic conversation, which made me angry because if you listen to every episode of Tucker's show, you realize he does this all of the time. He's truly correct that basically it was the Ted Cruz interview and the end of the Huckabee interview where he lost his ghoul. But it's something he's like, he's a conversationalist. And it's why his show is successful is because he's very good at getting people to open up and genuinely press them as a human being, from one human being to another on the questions that the conversation is leading them to. It's not super prepped. It's really him up in Maine just having a conversation. The cameras are rolling. And so the, the. That's why people like him. And that's why this effort in the long term is going to backfire to try to, to smear him. Because again, when you dig into it and you watch the reality, just like I thought, Lulu did a good job of bringing out who Tucker is by giving him the space to talk in this conversation. He sounds reasonable outside the clip ecosystem. And when people have that experience of seeing the long form versus the clip, sometimes it's radicalizing for people and in a good direction where they realize they are being lied to by the people who they thought were against the media, who they thought were against the institutional legacy media who are acting just like the institutional legacy media.
Megyn Kelly
That's exactly right. He's going to be on the program on Thursday, so we'll talk to him about some of the other clips that are making the record rounds and more. All right, I'm going to take a quick break, Emily. We will come back and we've got to get into the massive, massive piece that just dropped in Vultr on Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively with some new reveals in there. Wow, talk about dysfunctional standby. Paying 7080 90amonth to Big Wireless for unlimited data is insanity. Especially when PureTalk is going to give you unlimited high speed data from for just $34.99 a month. Unlimited high speed data at Pure Talk used to start at $55 a month, but because PureTalk is constantly pushing to give you more for less, you can now get unlimited high speed data for just under $35. So if you looked at Pure Talk before and did not make the move, check again. And if you're wondering is Pure Talk's network really as good as the overpriced big guys? Try it out for 30 days. 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No BS news only on the Megyn Kelly Channel, Sirius XM111 and on the SiriusXM app. Back with me now, Emily Jasinsky of the After Party show and the MK Wrap up show as well, live right here on Sirius XM after the MK show airs. And you can call in and speak to her just as soon as that starts and a short time. Time. Okay. So Vulture does a very, very deep dive into the Baldoni Lively saga. This is part of New York magazine's media empire and it was a fascinating read, I have to say. It was 30 pages long. And what I learned is that you should never work with Blake Lively. You, every errant word, suggestion, story, personal anecdote or moment with the guard down will be used against you. Notwithstanding the power imbalance being on her side, she will paint herself a victim. She will turn her celebrity husband against you and Taylor Swift, as we know. And that the loathing of this woman extended well beyond ultimately Justin Baldoni and his business partners. Even Sony, right? Was it Sony, which was, I guess, putting out the film. I gotta make sure I have that right. Yeah. Sony called her a terrorist. Called her a terrorist in the way that she was behaving toward Justin Baldoni and the rest of the people working on this film because she wanted to be a boss lady. Lady Emily. And she tried to bully Justin Baldoni and was bitter about the fact that on her prior films where she'd been hired just to act, they would not let her screenwrite or direct. Meanwhile, they had other people filling those roles. And that was also the case on this movie she did with Baldoni. It ends with us. But she thought she had a weakling whom she could bully into letting her do those things. And when. And he did, did. He largely did, but only when she decided it wasn't enough, he wasn't seating enough. And she started to defriend him on social media and so on. Did he then realize he needed to hire his own team. And that's when she started to feel like she needed to sue him. You know, like any bad publicity must have generated, been generated by him. There's no way people could be turning on her. And now we're about to go into a trial where it's maybe May 4th today. We are 15 days away from the start of what is likely to be the trial of the century, at least when it comes to civil liability and. Or Hollywood. So what were your impressions? I know you took a look at the, the Vulture article.
Emily Jashinski
Yeah, well, I always love when Kelly's court is in session on this because the trial is going to be like, really? I don't know. It's. It's just there's so many tangled variables or interests that are like going, going through the legal process right now with this story. But the, the Vulture piece puts the meat on the bones. I think, of the broad contours that you and a lot of others saw immediately when that Christmas time New York Times article dropped. That was. This was how. This was like a year and a half ago at this point, where this was like the first big article of the saga. And it was trying to point the finger at Baldoni in almost a Me too way. And you could see in that story how something was being built and constructed even at that time when we had so little context about what was happening behind the scenes. And what you get in this Vulture piece is the step by step TikTok of how Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds roped in a network of very powerful celebrities and their reputations to try to take down Baldoni and save Blake Lively's career. They brought in Matt Damon and Matt Damon' wife. Obviously, people have known about the Taylor Swift of it all for a long time, but they are consciously trying, and you see in their text messages, which are deeply embarrassing because they are groveling to their celebrity friends, like reading them as a third party. You have secondhand embarrassment for these celebrities who are groveling over more powerful celebrities and trying to bring them to their side. They are invoking politics. Ryan Reynolds is referring to Baldoni as a foaminist. Like faux minist. A fake feminist.
Megyn Kelly
Yeah. Here's the quote he writes to. To Matt Damon and his wife. This is from Ryan Reynolds. He calls him a malignant, malignant. Easy for me to say. Malignantly vain, sociopathic foaminist with almost no sense of boundaries or shame. Keep going.
Emily Jashinski
Yeah, I mean, they are. There's message after message where they are invoking politics, feminism, being A good ally.
Race Announcer
I.
Emily Jashinski
You can see this in some of the early text messages between Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni. They are like bonding over allyship. It just makes your skin crawl because it's so cringy.
Megyn Kelly
It's like their wokeness. Yes.
Emily Jashinski
It's just like toxic millennial behavior, which I can say because I'm a millennial. But they are just like trying to bring these, this huge network of celebrities to crush just Justin Baldoni and they are manipulating the media in the process. It's incredible to, to watch the behind the scenes happen with all of these text messages. It's amazing.
Megyn Kelly
And how small these huge stars are. Yes. At heart.
Emily Jashinski
Yes.
Megyn Kelly
You know, you can have all the money and all the fame and all the trappings of Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively and still feel so small that you've got to rally your celeb network to try to ruin this Director Justin Baldoni, who really wasn't planning on doing anything to Blake Lively. He wanted to have a successful movie. He wanted to have a great rollout out. She started to publicly humiliate him by unfollowing him on social media and getting the rest of the cast to do that and making him stay in the basement for the premiere. And he accurately deduced, I mean, it doesn't exactly take a genius that she was trying to ruin him. Like this was the beginning of a smear campaign from which he was unlikely to recover, hired his own PR team to try to fight back. And that's been painted as now retaliation for the alleged sexual harassment she in my view, completely falsely claimed she was subjected to on set. The sexual harassment piece of her claim has been thrown out. But I do think one of the most interesting things about this trial is going to be the exact same dynamic we saw at Amber heard Johnny Depp in that trial because she, you see in the text messages outlined in this article that her team, including starting with her and her husband Ryan Reynolds are, they're like, we will label him, him this foaminist, like a fake feminist. Justin Baldoni was one of those touchy feely guys with a man bun who was like, oh, women, women. And I need to be a real ally and all that stuff. And they were like, he is the devil himself. He's a disgusting man who uses that as a label to reel in women whom he then takes advantage of, speaks inappropriately to treats with me too like behavior years. And they are going to have the chance to tell that story. They are going. We get some of the details which I actually hadn't heard some of these about how they write in the about how it started to go south initially over tensions around sex scenes. Reading from the piece here, some of the first hints of tension between the two emerged as they started working out the intimate scenes between their characters in the spring of 2023. Baldoni wanted the movie's first sex scene to telegraph the shifting power dynamic between Ryle the guy and Lily the gal. That's Justin and Blake's characters. She's in charge and then he takes over. Baldon wrote in a description of the scene. Quote, two strong personalities coming together as one. His character would start kissing his way down her torso until his mouth finds that precious place between her legs. I mean, this is like day what of me doing the dirty readings on air after that J.P. morgan lawsuit.
Emily Jashinski
And I'm not Adam Corolla, so I can. I can't handle it quite like that.
Megyn Kelly
Becoming like a sidekick for me. Okay. His direction called for the camera to then close in on Lively as she, quote, moans in ecstasy. Baldoni's notes about a different scene described what parts of their respective bodies he hoped to show. Quote, I imagine side boob, an outline of butt in close ups. If she is comfortable, he wrote, I'm fine showing my. But female gaze. Because he wants the whole scene shot through like a female gaze, he says. Lively expressed discomfort with a number of these proposals and a nudity writer that she negotiated. She drew the line at any implication of oral sex along with any nudity beyond side breast, which would be seen whilst still wearing a bikini. Lively, who is 38, also did not want to perform an on screen orgasm. I'm too old for that. Baldoni later recalled her saying she told Baldoni that some of the scenes in the script, like one in which Lively would role play as a naughty doctor doctor, were starting to feel pornographic and so on. So it takes you through how she started to view him as like, this me too creep. As opposed to like the director of a saucy movie that has like a passionate couple in which she realized he's actually an abuser. Right. So it's like if Baldoni were doing this and they were making like, I don't know, the Social Network. Yeah, you'd be like, like, isn't this about Facebook? Why are you talking about side boob? But like, this is about love, relationship, sex and blah, blah, blah, and how. Whatever. And so that's her side versus back to the Amber Heard Johnny Depp thing. His side, which is she's the fake feminist. She wraps herself in this cloak of female empowerment. But she instead uses it as a cudgel against perfectly legitimate business partners who happen to be male because she knows it's a weapon. It's a tool in her arsenal. And if. In that. If she. Blake Lively deploys it, they're effed. And no one will believe anyone other than, you know, the Believe all woman Blake Lively making the allegation. So like it. Those are the dueling narratives. It's almost like. Like who's going to win the narrative. Whoever wins the narrative wins the trial.
Emily Jashinski
Didn't one of them. I thought Baldoni actually hired the. The Johnny Depp. Was it the publicist or the lawyer in the Amber Heard case? Like, that's one of the meal.
Megyn Kelly
The lawyer doesn't work for him. But it might. It might be. I mean, he's. He has Brian Friedman, my lawyer, representing him, who does not have the Johnny Depp lawyer at his firm. But it could be a publicist.
Emily Jashinski
Yeah, but it might make sense.
Megyn Kelly
By the way, Brian. Brian Friedman. Friedman. He went on in the well, which is one of our MK True crime new shows with Mark Garagos and Matt. Sorry, Matt Murphy. And they interviewed Brian Friedman and he offered some insights on the trial, which is great because he's about to try this thing in two weeks and listen to what. This is the one I want to play because it actually telegraphs a little bit about what they. The defense are going to concede. Stop. 34.
Brian Friedman
You know, are you defaming someone when. When you're actually, you know, what was showing up are videos that existed on the Internet. You're not creating new content. You're actually, you know, you're actually just being blamed for content that was older content that is reappearing in the Internet and reappearing in significant ways. I mean, I think we could all agree that during the premiere of a movie, the start of a movie, there's a publicity campaign. And that was another issue in why there was some organic hate. But ultimately, I think that when you're basically doing nothing but showing what already exists, whether something like that can be actionable.
Megyn Kelly
Okay, so if you're showing something like that exists, can it be actionable? I thought he might have been intimating that it's possible those negative videos about Blake were recirculated by some on Baldoni's team. I could be wrong, but I thought I gleaned that from his answer and I. That could be what she's trying to base her claim on. You know, that's definitely her theory, which is that Baldoni's people put. Pushed it. There was not a lot of proof of that. There was a lot of proof that a bad PR wave overcame her around the time of this movie, but not that Justin Baldoni caused it, that he was ready to do that, that he had hired PR people to help him if he needed to do that. But there may be a question of whether if the PR people working for Justin helped circulate those bad videos, is that worth $400 million, as she's now claiming?
Emily Jashinski
Right, That's. I mean, this is. I think that's the crux of everything in this. Like, one of the reasons I find this story so interesting and have from the beginning is like, it has potential to be a radicalizing experience for young people who are interested in pop culture and the way that people who are interested in politics have had some radicalizing experiences along the lines of what we were talking about earlier in the show, where you have have the clips versus the reality. And what we see in that vulture story, especially if you go back and read the original New York Times story that has been questioned hugely throughout all of this, every step of the way, it's that you see how there are. There's a big business now in manipulating what was supposed to be the raw, authentic future of the Internet, which was social media. This has become a big corporate endeavor with millions, sometimes billions of dollars on the line. And it is absolutely behind scenes being manipulated for business purposes, for personal purposes, with. By people who have more power than you, who are trying to create these images and these actual narratives. Like, they know perception is reality, and so they're trying to manipulate the perception. That is one of the absolute most fascinating things about this story is the chicken or the egg component, where people organically already starting to question Blake Lively amid this kind of vibe shift that was happening at the time over, like, millennial feminism and. And how sort of weird it was and how outmoded it seemed to Gen Z. Was that already percolating or was it planted or was it just part of, like, it percolated organically? And then it became part of this business strategy in Baldoni's camp to get his cut of the movie to win. At the end of the day, they're like, manipulating screenings. It's just like the level to your point about how small celebrities can be small. But then also in this, like, what is even the right way to put it, this strategic grand plan to make more money at the end of the day and protect their reputations. Like, it's really Amazing to see that in action when you go behind the scenes.
Megyn Kelly
So true. There's, there's one other I wanted to show from in the well, which you guys should check out. It's a new podcast with Matt Murphy and Mark Garrett Aragos featuring Brian Friedman. This week, the lawyer for Justin Baldoni sat 33.
Emily Jashinski
The loss damages on a movie that wasn't made would seem to me to
Megyn Kelly
be the most speculative type of damages. That would almost be garbage.
Emily Jashinski
So is that the argument? What was the argument?
Brian Friedman
Well, some of the argument was, you know, obviously that Wayfarer had the rights to the movie. So it was ultimately their decision to whether to make the sequel or not. And there was a no, you know, you know, there, there was no, you know, decision made and possibly the sequel could never be made. That certainly who was going to be in the sequel or not and who is going to be participating and at what level, even if one was made, was, was some decision that wasn't even made yet. And, and in fact Sony, who, you know, was a co financer of the movie, you know, Mr. Krab reported in court that, that, that Sony had referred to Blake Lively as, you know, as a terrorist. And so there was no guarantee that Sony would want Blake Lively to be involved in the, in the sequel. You know, when you refer, referring to
Megyn Kelly
someone as a terrorist, incredibly telling. And you know, she's trying to get damages for a sequel to a movie that never had a sequel. All right, got to run quickly. Emily, you'll pick it up in a couple of minutes on the after show. Thank you. We're back tomorrow with Red Scare. Thanks for listening to the Megyn Kelly show. No bs, no agenda and no fear.
Episode Title: Inspirational Kentucky Derby Winner, Viral Tucker-NYT Interview, and Blake-Baldoni Trial
Guests: Emily Jashinsky
This episode opens with Megyn Kelly indulging her passion for horse racing, celebrating the improbably emotional, history-making Kentucky Derby win by Golden Tempo and its larger cultural resonance. The episode then shifts gears into political and media analysis: a deep breakdown of Tucker Carlson's headline-dominating New York Times interview and the political weaponization around controversial internet personalities, complete with a frank discussion of the right’s internal divisions. The final third details the explosive, celebrity-fueled Baldoni-Lively trial, centering on the viral Vulture expose and what it reveals about Hollywood power plays, media manipulation, and the weaponization of personal reputation.
[00:00 - 24:00]
Megyn Kelly:
"Golden tempo, who faced 23 to 1 odds and who was literally in last place earlier in this race...had a stunning come from behind victory, narrowly beating out Renegade...I can't stop looking at the videos of it. I...I've teared up multiple times." (01:03)
On Cherie Devoe:
"Cherie Duvo is officially the first woman trainer to win the Kentucky Derby and just the second female trainer to win any Triple Crown race." (03:28)
Cherie Devoe on Golden Tempo’s racing style:
"Golden Tempo is what we call a deep closer...he just doesn’t have a lot of speed, but he has a lot of stamina. And towards the end of the race, he does have a—we call it a quick turn of foot." (06:43)
Cherie Devoe on her historic win:
"No, I consider myself a horse trainer and I just happen to be a female. But you know, it’s quite an honor to be the first female trainer to win a Kentucky Derby." (08:37)
Kelly reminisces about her Saratoga childhood, the emotional pull of underdog stories, and the enduring legacy of Secretariat.
"His record, which was set in 1973 at the Derby, still stands. A remarkable achievement...19 of the 20 qualifying Kentucky Derby horses this year can trace part of their lineage to Secretariat." (16:40)
Both hosts reflect on the universal joy and communal tradition of "backing the winning horse"—the emotional payoff even for casual fans.
The Derby draws record viewership (peak 24.44 million viewers).
"We have a box of costumes for the Kentucky Derby and I have ascots for all of the men...We all place our bets. Not one of us bet on Golden Tempo...but it was thrilling!" (29:26)
[30:37 - 80:57]
The media swirl around Tucker’s interview, particularly the focus on far-right internet figure Nick Fuentes, which Megyn and Emily critique as a deliberate (and cynical) distraction from more substantive issues like war and economic policy.
Tucker’s own critique:
"Fuentes is incredibly useful for people actual power to divert the conversation to something that is both irrelevant and divisive because it’s a divide and conquer strategy." (33:56 - Tucker Carlson)
Emily Jashinsky on why Fuentes is blown out of proportion:
"He’s for many, many people, a meme...They just see funny clips that they were told were, you know, very naughty. And when you’re a teenager...the kid’s got comedic timing and he says awful things..." (35:27)
Megyn and Emily trace how accusations of bigotry—especially anti-Semitism—are weaponized to discredit and purge dissident voices (and even themselves) within right-wing spaces and media.
Megyn Kelly:
"The right doesn't take well to name calling, culling of the movement, anyone declaring themselves like the godfather of it, who will decide who gets to stay and who gets to go. According to Ben Shapiro, Steve Bannon had to go as of December, so did Tucker. I got lumped in there..." (47:30)
On Tucker’s messaging skills:
"This is why people who don’t like Tucker find him so threatening, because he’s such an effective messenger and he can redefine an entire debate. Like he did right there." (35:05)
The stalling fortunes of The Daily Wire are discussed, interpreted (in part) as backlash against "Israel-first" posturing and gatekeeping by figures like Ben Shapiro.
Emily:
"[DW] had mission creep...selling razors and chocolate...children’s programming...If they just stuck to their core mission...and hadn’t gotten hung up on all these other projects and yes, indeed, the Israel first nature of Ben’s coverage...I think they’d be fine." (46:01)
Critique of the crumbling power of institution/deferential authority in the new, personality-driven media landscape:
"Institutions are less powerful than personalities now. So you can’t...defer to the power of this institution..." (49:00 – Emily Jashinski)
"I wish I hadn’t done the Fuentes interview because...it was used as I added to the distraction. What I really wanted to talk about was where we were going in this war with Iran. And I spent like a month getting calls from people being like, you’re a Nazi." (75:50)
"I have limited self-control, and [Ted Cruz is] just so repulsive. I couldn’t control myself and I was a jerk, and I tried to apologize..." (76:39)
[52:06 - 71:20]
"If you have to defend that at stop after stop, your support for this war, your support for this president to vote voters, those [Senate] races are really, really, really ones to watch." (71:20)
"[If the right loses Senate control] Trump will not get another judge on the federal bench...that is a very big deal...it’s just going to be so stymied for him if he loses control of the Senate." (67:36)
CNN’s Harry Entin quoted:
"77% say Donald Trump [is to blame for the increase in gas prices]...more than Joe Biden did back in 2022, more than Barack Obama in 2012...55% of Republicans blame Donald Trump...that is the highest ever blame..." (69:20)
Stock market as an insufficient metric for ordinary Americans:
"Stocks are a long-term concern for about 60%...but it’s not their monthly income. So it’s much easier for people to blame you when the economy is in a bad position." (71:20 – Emily Jashinski)
[80:57 - End]
Ryan Reynolds in texts, on Baldoni:
"Malignantly vain, sociopathic foaminist with almost no sense of boundaries or shame." (88:25)
Megyn:
"You can have all the money and all the fame and all the trappings...and still feel so small that you’ve got to rally your celeb network to try to ruin this Director Justin Baldoni..." (89:22)
Claims of Lively’s discomfort with sexualized scenes are juxtaposed against the business realities of a romance-focused movie and what’s 'routine' vs. ‘abusive’ behavior.
Parallel drawn to the Amber Heard/Johnny Depp case: whose narrative—#MeToo victim or 'weaponized feminist'—will the jury believe?
Kentucky Derby underdog story: Emotional retelling, with trainer Cherie Devoe breaking gender barriers—"[Golden Tempo] narrowly beating out Renegade who had much better odds...Almost took divine intervention." (01:03)
Ortiz brothers' final stretch photo: Sibling rivalry and shared triumph.
Megyn's horse racing nostalgia and family "costume party." (29:26)
On media distraction and uniparty consensus:
Tucker: "Let’s have a race war and you guys can like argue over blacks or whites or whether JD is married to an Indian woman...Fuentes is incredibly useful...to divert the conversation..." (33:56)
The viral consequences and regret over the Fuentes interview:
Tucker: "I wish I hadn’t done the Fuentes interview because...I spent like a month getting calls from people being like, you’re a Nazi." (75:50)
Hollywood power games exposed:
"It’s incredible to watch the behind the scenes happen with all of these text messages. It’s amazing." (89:02 – Emily Jashinski)
Megyn Kelly’s tone throughout is both exuberant and incisive—alternately reveling in a rare moment of underdog triumph and deriding the political and media climate for its cynicism, hypocrisy, and intra-tribal warfare. With Emily Jashinski’s wit and analytic depth, the episode moves fluidly between personal, cultural, and political stakes, offering listeners a sense of the volatility—and the occasional uplift—characterizing this political and media moment.