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Old Apr 17, 2004, 11:16 AM   #1
SF4-EVER
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Default Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

I just saw on CNN.com that Heather will be a guest host on Larry King tonight. She and Larry will be interviewing Paul -- Paul Newman, that is. The show is at 9 p.m. ET.
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Old Apr 17, 2004, 11:34 AM   #2
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

Hmmm....thanks for the reminder.... odd that it falls on the same day as Linda's passing, isn't it??? Anyway...I'll try to tune in (maybe), just to see what she does.... and all the while, I'll be remembering Linda!

Anyway, thanks for the info!!!
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Old Apr 17, 2004, 02:26 PM   #3
beatlewho01-02
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

It'd be funnier if Paul Mccartney interviewed Paul Newman. Two Pauls in a pod.
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Old Apr 17, 2004, 06:19 PM   #4
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

Thanks for the notification - I just turned it on, 15 minutes into it. Interesting. Would be interested in other people's opinions of it.
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Old Apr 17, 2004, 06:34 PM   #5
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

[ QUOTE ]
beatlewho01-02 Posted:
It'd be funnier if Paul Mccartney interviewed Paul Newman. Two Pauls in a pod.

[/ QUOTE ]


Good one!!! I would have by far preferred that, actually!! !!!

I don't know...I'm not really a Mills fan...so I'm not digging her being there too much! (Hmmm....I wonder what Paul--McCartney--had to do to get her to be able to be the guest host??? $ ???) I've kind of been tuning in and tuning out every few minutes, as I'm not that into her, you know, and to me, this really is a day to honor Linda.....The timing is very interesting on all this (with this being the anniversary of Linda's passing), anyone else think so??? Anyway...I guess Paul Newman's cool, I admire him and his wife for all they do, so I'm not minding that aspect of the show...

Hmmm....so I wonder if it's true that Ms Mills will be making return appearances as a sub-host??? It will be interesting to see if she does!!

Well, that's my two cents, for now... Maybe I"ll have a bit more to say later!!
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Old Apr 17, 2004, 07:03 PM   #6
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

I actually thought she was a pretty decent interviewer. She's a bit cut and dried, but I think that's just kind of her personality. She didn't ask stupid questions and she and Paul Newman did seem to have a rapport. I wonder if being an interviewer is a career aspiration of hers or something?
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Old Apr 18, 2004, 11:10 AM   #7
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

I kind of tuned in and out, she did a fairly good job and as Rell said her ?'s were pretty good. what's with the hair
though, she wasn't at a day in the park or at the beach?
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Old Apr 18, 2004, 12:13 PM   #8
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

Here's the complete transcript. It's kind of long, but...

HEATHER MILLS MCCARTNEY, HOST: Tonight, Paul Newman. It's a rare, in-
depth hour with a Hollywood legend, opening up and sharing his
personal passions with me, Heather Mills McCartney, next on LARRY
KING LIVE.
Good evening. Hi. I'm Heather Mills McCartney, filling in for Larry
King. It's my great pleasure to welcome the multi-faceted, rarely
interviewed Paul Newman.

Hi, Paul. Thanks for being here.

How come you're such a philanthropist?

PAUL NEWMAN, ACTOR: Come on. Well you start quickly, don't you?

MCCARTNEY: But you are. You're kind. You're generous. How come?

NEWMAN: Well, I think above all things I acknowledge luck. And I
mean, if you think of that torrent of sperm out there...

And -- and ours was lucky to fall where it did. That's for starters.
You can't pick your own parents, but you may be lucky enough to have
parents that give you the gift of induction and deduction and
certain intelligence, certain way you look. I mean, it's all -- So
I -- I've been very lucky. And I -- I try to acknowledge that by
giving back something to those to whom luck has been brutal.

MCCARTNEY: Is that what initiated you to start the Hole in the Wall
Camps?

NEWMAN: Yes. Because you know kids, especially with life-
threatening diseases don't have a lifetime to correct it.

MCCARTNEY: So you were very much into giving them some joy and
laughter, not just put money into cures?

NEWMAN: Yes. And actually, what they're finding out, you know, is --
we have a slogan now, laughter is the best medicine.

MCCARTNEY: Have you had any children that have come to the Hole in
the Wall Camp and sort of recovered unexpectedly, that you know of?

NEWMAN: Well, when we started the camp in 1988, let's say 70 percent
of the leukemia patients, children who have childhood leukemia died.
Now it's the other way around. Seventy percent survive. So that's
good news.

We, I think, had the first camp that allowed children with HIV, and
now with pediatric AIDS under control, especially in the United
States, that whole session with HIV will disappear in about three
years, I think.

MCCARTNEY: Did you find that...

NEWMAN: I have laryngitis, which is why I sound so...

MCCARTNEY: So sexy?

NEWMAN: No.

MCCARTNEY: You never tried this one for a role?

Did you find that some parents who obviously, fear breeds ignorance
when you had HIV kids on the camp? Did you find some people were
afraid or did everyone understand that no, it's not contagious?

NEWMAN: The city council was much more concerned than the counselors
or the staff were. We'd done our -- our research on it, so we were
very confident. And we took -- we took some serious precautions.

MCCARTNEY: Did you find that some pharmaceutical companies are still
trying to make too much money out of it? And there have been some
very inexpensive drugs, but they're not always available for kids,
especially in South Africa?

NEWMAN: I'm not familiar enough with that subject to really talk
sensibly about it, but I do know that there are a lot of
pharmaceutical companies who are donating drugs in underdeveloped
countries. So...

MCCARTNEY: Yes. And then the Hole in the Wall Camps, you've got this
new one opening up in California, the Painted Turtle. Do you want to
tell us a bit about that?

NEWMAN: Well, the camps really started in the original charter for
children with a life-threatening disease. But when we moved to
Africa, we realized that it was not just life-threatening diseases
but the conditions themselves are life threatening. So we had to
change our charter to read children who are living under life-
threatening conditions.

So the Painted Turtle will be opening, I think, in time for summer.
It's a California camp. There will be another one opening in North
Carolina.

MCCARTNEY: And you've got some in Europe, as well, haven't you?
You've got one in Ireland, one in France?

NEWMAN: We have one in Ireland. We have one in the south of England.
We have one in France. We have seven small little safari camps in
Namibia, Botswana, Zambia.

We're about, I think, to take over an abandoned leper colony in
South Africa. It's in the middle of 55,000 acres of wilderness.

MCCARTNEY: Wow. That's beautiful.

NEWMAN: And...

MCCARTNEY: Does it ever sink in that you've created this -- an
amazing achievement? Does that ever -- Do you step back and really
look at your achievements? Or do you just keep going each day?

NEWMAN: I had an idea that a lot of other people expounded on and it
expanded. So I can take some credit for it.

But really I think one of the delights in my life is to go to these
camps and see the staff members who, I think, are some of -- are the
best part of America, who are -- who care -- who care for people who
are less fortunate than they are. And they are some bunch of young
people.

MCCARTNEY: Some of the volunteers have actually said that it's
totally changed their life for the better. And that's a great
message to people who, you know, spend their whole life thinking
about themselves, if you actually go out and do something for
somebody else.

NEWMAN: We have staff -- staff people who change their majors in
college. We've had doctors who've volunteer there who say, I will
never be able to practice medicine the way I did before I came here.
When I saw a kid coming through the door, he was the patient and now
he's a kid.

MCCARTNEY: Especially the fact that you started the OK Corral, which
is the infirmary, to make it fun and bring comfort to the kids and
take the medicine to the kids when they're playing.

NEWMAN: Well, we try to take the steel and the glass out of the
equation and...

MCCARTNEY: One young boy said that -- or his mother actually said,
11-year-old that was suffering from leukemia. And he was planning to
come August 19, and he packed his bags since June. And she said he
was just so excited not to be in hospital.

I mean, it's just incredible. You've done a fantastic thing.

We'll take a break now. We've only just scratched the surface. More
with the ultimate giveback guy, Paul Newman, after this.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

NEWMAN: You just won't learn will you? I used to come in here, I'd
teach you stuff that maybe 5 guys in the whole world know, that most
grifters couldn't do even if they knew it and all you want to do is
run down a bullet.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I'm asking a couple of days, that's all. I can
stay clear that long.

NEWMAN: They'll probably miss you and hit me.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

NEWMAN: Whenever I'm in the dumps, I come up here and it reaffirms
everything that I think is really good and generous about this
country. And to have some kid come up, who's been in the hospital
for 6 months out of the year and say, this place, to come back, is
what I live for, pretty potent stuff.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCCARTNEY: We're back. Hi, I'm Heather Mills McCartney, filling in
for Larry King, and I'm talking to Oscar winner Paul Newman.

One of my favorite lines in your film was, "Boy, I've got vision and
the rest of the world needs bifocals."

Did you ever think at the time that that was really about you? It
really was about you as a person? Because you have had great vision.
You've done these incredible things. And you started Newman's Own
and to donate all the after-tax profits to good causes. People don't
do that.

NEWMAN: Well, as I say, I just acknowledged luck. I'm very aware of
it in my life, and I'm astonished when I -- when I don't -- when I
see people who have been very lucky who kind of own it without
feeling any obligation.

MCCARTNEY: Most people know that, sadly, your son Scott died of,
apparently, an alcohol and drug overdose. Did that inspire you to
get involved in drugs awareness? Because I know you did a public
service announcement to try and bring more awareness.

And do you think things have changed over the years? Or do you think
it's got worse in the drug situation?

NEWMAN: I -- I've never been able to -- to talk very sensibly about
that. But....

MCCARTNEY: Understandably.

NEWMAN: I don't know whether it's getting better or worse. I know
it's getting worse in Afghanistan.

MCCARTNEY: I do a lot of work there.

NEWMAN: What?

MCCARTNEY: I do a lot of work there. That's the problem. You come in
and you give freedom, but then all the poppy growers are back in
Kuwait creating heroin again.

NEWMAN: That's because I think we left long before we were supposed
to. And the warlords have pretty much taken over. Karzai is -- he's
not a governor any more. He's kind of a mayor.

But the poppy production was down, oh, 90 percent of what it was.
And then, of course, it's right back up to where it was before.

MCCARTNEY: And that seems to enter into -- to the western world.
It's as if we are paying the price for interfering with another
country's way of life.

But as far as some of the women that I've spoken with, they wanted
the freedom of choice. So, you know, what do you do in that
situation?

NEWMAN: Well, Afghanistan was one thing. Iraq was something else.

MCCARTNEY: What's your opinion on Iraq?

NEWMAN: I think -- I think if we had had the patience to wait a
little while longer until there was a real -- another Security
Council resolution, which would have drawn other countries into a
real coalition, it would have absorbed part of the expenses.

But it's one thing for unilateral action, but that has its
consequences, which is somebody's got to pick up the tab for it. It
wasn't like 1990 when we had a coalition that really paid for the
removal of Iraqi forces from Kuwait. That was a real coalition, but
now again, I think you're going to find the middle class picking up
the tab for -- for this unilateralism. And that could have been
avoided.

MCCARTNEY: Do you think we should have finished the job the first
time around?

NEWMAN: I'm not equipped to answer that, I don't think.

MCCARTNEY: You once said you're an emotional Republican. What does
that mean?

NEWMAN: I -- being an emotional Republican has to do with acting.
I'm now a middle of the road anarchist, politically.

MCCARTNEY: And you plan on creating any anarchy in the near future?

NEWMAN: Who knows?

MCCARTNEY: Are you going to vote Bush or Kerry or neither?

NEWMAN: I've been a life-long Democrat. I don't make any apologies
for that. I don't want to get into a specific -- I mean, if you
really want to sit down and have a political discussion, we can do
that. MCCARTNEY: Over a beer?

NEWMAN: That would be nice.

MCCARTNEY: Do you still drink beer?

NEWMAN: I'm down to about six six-packs a day now.

MCCARTNEY: Oh, my God.

You gave up hard booze awhile ago. Why did you stop drinking booze?

NEWMAN: I found it probably got in my way a little bit. And I need
to do things a little bit more gracefully. When you're young, with
something like that. But I just outgrew it.

MCCARTNEY: What's your favorite film that's you're most proud of?

NEWMAN: I was asked that this morning, and I replied the way I
always reply: you have 77 children and somebody says, "Who was your
favorite?" That would be pretty hard to answer the question, even if
you knew the answer.

But -- that's one of the reasons why I like racing. It's because
it's -- the clarity of a winner is down to 1,000th of a second. To
say that one performance is better than another performance is a
very subjective thing.

MCCARTNEY: But surely when you win, you're going to think that was a
better race than when you lost. Or not...

NEWMAN: I know, but that's not subjective. That's really objective.

And if you -- if you look at any given role and say, "What kind of
help did you get? What was the script like? Who were your acting
partners? How much did -- did you have to expend? What did you have
to investigate? How much did you have to expose?" All of those
factors are different in every case.

And it also varies for the other people that you're supposedly
competing with. What help did they get? How good was the script? Who
did they have to help them in the cast?

So you try to make, and to be considered one of the group is quite
an honor. But then to pick out one and say that that was your best
performance, I think you also ought to ask why. And that, of course,
is the question that is never asked.

MCCARTNEY: We'll take a break now, and maybe we'll talk after the
break about which character, maybe, you related to as a person,
yourself. Think about that.

Still lots to talk about with Paul Newman after the break. (BEGIN
VIDEO CLIP)

TOM CRUZ, ACTOR: (UNITELLIGIBLE) Hey!

What! I made money!

NEWMAN: You lost money. The town is dead for you. Now what the hell
are you doing. I not speak your native language? What is the matter?

CRUZ: You give me this stick OK, and then you tell me to lay low. I
mean, the dang thing, I lay it down, it just jumps up at me, man.

NEWMAN: You don't deserve this stick!

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

MCCARTNEY: We're back with actor, activist and racecar driver Paul
Newman.

Now your first race, was it 1972? In a Lotus Elan? Were you inspired
to race from the film "Winnings"? Is that how you got involved with
it? Or is that just coincidental?

NEWMAN: Well, I -- John and I did a film about two years before
that, about racecar driving. But my schedule was so packed. And I
never really could take the time out to get a license. But I started
in 1972, and I've had some success with it.

MCCARTNEY: Just a little bit. Aren't you in the "Guinness World
Record" for being the oldest guy, 70, to win a race?

NEWMAN: To get underneath the racecar and lift it up with your feet.
No, I -- I -- someone said it was -- I don't know if it's still
active, but I had to win a professionally sanctioned race, yes.

MCCARTNEY: I heard that that was the case.

And how did you get involved with Haas? How did that collaboration --
Carl Haas -- how did that come together?

NEWMAN: Well, before I had -- was involved with Broken Wheel road
racing, I had had a CanAm team, which was another series. And it
expired.

And Carl Haas called me, and -- and we had not been exactly friendly
during the CanAm days, because he provided my cars for the CanAm
series late and overweight. But that was another discussion.

But he said, "How'd you like to start a championship car?"

And I said, "Well..."

And he said, "What if Mario Andretti was the driver?"

MCCARTNEY: Wow.

NEWMAN: I said, "Where would you like to meet and when?"

And we've been very, very good partners for...

MCCARTNEY: So you've forgiven him for the overweight cars?

NEWMAN: Oh, I forgave him that a long time ago.

MCCARTNEY: Do you change cars? I mean, for people who don't know
much about racing, you know, is it a specific type of race, a type
of car that you -- when you race, do you stick to the same car or
you change your cars or...?

NEWMAN: Well, I like to separate my racing, which is on a much lower
level than champ car racing. There are Open Wheel cars that have --
that can stick to the ceiling at 150 mph.

There's been a lot of -- two separate groups. And a great
scheduling. And there's the champ car racing, and then there's the
IRL.

But we're basically road racers, and street racers. And a few ovals.
And -- and -- the first race that we will have at Long Beach.

MCCARTNEY: On Sunday.

NEWMAN: On Sunday. We expect to have 125,000 people at the race and
probably over 200,000 people between qualifying on Friday and some
support races.

The first race that IRL had at homestead -- to my understanding,
they too -- had two very reliable reports. One said they had 28,000.
But -- but with only 8,000 paying customers and 20,000 free tickets.
And then I had another story said there were 18,000 people there.
But 4,000 those who were paying customers. The rest were freebies.

So we have a terrific fan base in champ car. And...

MCCARTNEY: I went to Savistone (ph) once in England with some --
have you been there?

NEWMAN: Your character in "Hud," I didn't like him. You were great
acting him, but why are people so in love with that character? He
was a mean guy.

NEWMAN: Because he had all the external graces.

MCCARTNEY: External graces?

NEWMAN: He had all the external graces. He was thin and muscular and
drank well and was great with the ladies and had a sense of humor,
had a sense of boldness. He was simply rotten at the core.
MCCARTNEY: He wasn't my cup of tea. I liked John Joseph Vincent
in "Fort Apache the Bronx." I loved that character. That's my kind
of guy, especially the way he kept delivering babies and saving
people's lives that were jumping off buildings. And then there was a
great scene were you were doing all these sort of crazy faces to
save this guy from hurting somebody on the streets.

That was one of my favorite films.

NEWMAN: Thanks.

MCCARTNEY: That was very good.

Now "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" must have been a favorite,
because you took the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp name from "Butch
Cassidy," and Robert Redford took Sundance Festival. So was that the
first time you united as a working partnership with Robert?

NEWMAN: First time we had a film together, yes.

MCCARTNEY: And what do you think of him?

NEWMAN: He's a kick in the rear. Funny, really distant sometimes,
sometimes hard to fathom.

MCCARTNEY: He said you're...

NEWMAN: Great sense of the environment.

MCCARTNEY: Yes.

NEWMAN: And -- and the sacredness of it. And has his passions, too.

MCCARTNEY: He said you have the attention span of a bolt of
lightning. How do you feel about that?

NEWMAN: Well, I will -- I will cuff him heavily about the head and
shoulders next time I see him.

MCCARTNEY: I can't believe that's true, because how can you -- maybe
he means you've got your thumb in so many pies that you can do all
these things.

NEWMAN: I have no idea.

MCCARTNEY: You must have a feminie quality, because women are
normally better at multitasking.

NEWMAN: I'll accept that.

MCCARTNEY: Talking about that, can you cook?

NEWMAN: I cook. I cook. I have a very limited repertoire, but the
stuff that I cook is very good.

MCCARTNEY: And is Joanne a good cook?

NEWMAN: Joanne gave me, as a Christmas present, two meals a week and
we're working on it.

MCCARTNEY: So were you always the cook through your life? Or do you
get a lot of take-aways?

NEWMAN: Joanne did a lot more cooking when the kids were young, and
she did a lot more cooking for the whole family and everything.

As the kids left the house, that left me. Maybe she just, as you
said, had the attention span of a thunderbolt. But she's back to
cooking now, and of course, she always was a terrific cook when she
cooked.

MCCARTNEY: Great. Well, let's take a break now and speak more.

Time for a commercial break, but stick around for more with the
legendary man himself, Paul Newman. See you in a bit.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

NEWMAN: I'll jump first.

ROBERT REDFORD, ACTOR: Nope.

NEWMAN: Then you jump first.

REDFORD: No, I said.

NEWMAN: What's the matter with you?

REDFORD: I can't swim!

NEWMAN: (LAUGHTER) Are you crazy? The fall will probably kill you.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

NEWMAN: Did that ever happen to you, that all of a sudden you can't
miss? I dreamed about this game, fat man. I dreamed about this game
every night on the road. 5 ball.

This is my table man. I own it.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCCARTNEY: Welcome back everyone. Hi, I'm Heather Mills McCartney,
filling in for Larry King. I'm doing a rare interview with Paul
Newman.

In the film "The Hustler," were you really a great pool player? Did
you practice? Or was that just great editing?

NEWMAN: I had to be a pretty good pool player, not a great pool
player. But...

MCCARTNEY: Better than Jackie Gleason?

NEWMAN: Jackie Gleason and I played four games during the course of
the film. I beat him three games out of four. The three games were
for a dollar. The fourth game was for $200. So he was looking right
down my...

MCCARTNEY: So he hustled you?

NEWMAN: Oh yes. He was hustling me. He was looking down my throat
the whole time.

And the thing that was marvelous, he had such patience. He just --
because everybody in the crew is standing around watching these
games going on. He had the patience to lose the first three to
sucker me in for the last one.

MCCARTNEY: Didn't you learn that from the script, though?

NEWMAN: Well...

MCCARTNEY: Wasn't that one of your...

NEWMAN: A script is a script. Real life is real life.

And after -- the funny thing, after the film was over, everybody, if
you would go into a bar with a bunch of guys and they had a pool
table, you'd always get some guy coming up and saying, "You've got
to play. Shoot a game of pool with me."

And I said, "I really don't play."

And they'd say, "Come on. Come on, we'll play a little game."

I'd say, "I'm really sorry. I don't want to play."

They'd say, "Come on. We'll play for something. What would you like
to play for?"

And I said, "How about your house?"

MCCARTNEY: And then they'd back right off.

NEWMAN: That's right. I never had to play again.

MCCARTNEY: Peter Ustinov says that your true destiny lies behind the
camera. Do you feel that you were more comfortable as a director
than an actor?

NEWMAN: I was very comfortable with actors. I don't know that I was
very comfortable with a camera. But I think the best -- one of the
best movie experiences I had was working with Joanne on...
MCCARTNEY: "Rachel, Rachel."

NEWMAN: "Rachel, Rachel." Good film.

MCCARTNEY: There was a contract, a clause in your contract at the
time, apparently, with Warner Brothers where you had to somehow, to
get out of it, buy yourself out. How did you manage to do that? You
had so many films left to do, and you wanted to go and work with
20th Century Fox.

NEWMAN: That's a long, complicated story. And just suffice it to say
that -- that they arranged for me at a figure that I thought I'd
never be able to pay off in 10 years. And I think I paid it off in
nine and a half months or something, through three movies.

And...

MCCARTNEY: Which was amazing.

NEWMAN: It gave me a real opportunity to be on my own, which is good.

MCCARTNEY: And then, the kind and generous guy that you are really
showed when there -- there was a clause called pay and play, where
they'd set up a film but if they didn't find the right co-star,
actress, to play with you, you would get paid. And you turned down a
lot of money and said, "If I didn't make the film, I don't want you
to pay me."

But then when you came to make "Rachel, Rachel," you found it really
hard to get funding. Do you think they were a bit stingy there? You
let them off all this money and when you needed $300 thousand to
make "Rachel Rachel."

NEWMAN: Actually, it was 700 thousand.

MCCARTNEY: In the end. Yes.

NEWMAN: You and I both worked for nothing I think. Well, for scale,
but it was worth it and ultimately it was rewarding.

MCCARTNEY: She actually said that -- no disrespect to all the other
directors -- but you were her favorite director to work with.

NEWMAN: What else could she say? She has to live in the house, you
know.

MCCARTNEY: She's a pretty straight-talking lady, by the sounds of
it. Were you very proud of her when she one the Oscar for "Three
Faces Eve"?

NEWMAN: Oh yes, that was very early on. It was her second film.

MCCARTNEY: Yes. Now, you waited a long time to get your Oscar. Did
you not resent that? Every time you hope for an Oscar and it doesn't
come through. I mean, isn't that a pain in the butt? NEWMAN: Listen,
I also burned my tuxedo when I was 70 and that's...

MCCARTNEY: Why'd you do that?

NEWMAN: Well, because I think I had worn my tuxedo enough for all
ordinary purposes. I don't collect honors out of arrogance anymore,
but simply because I've been honored enough for all ordinary
purposes. And that's all I have to say on the topic.

MCCARTNEY: When people give you awards or offer you awards, do you
ever sort of say "Look, I've got enough," and suggest anybody else?

NEWMAN: Never occurred to me.

MCCARTNEY: That's what I do.

NEWMAN: You do?

MCCARTNEY: I know it sounds terrible. Yes, when I get offered
awards. It's not when you become complacent, just when I got to 22,
which is my favorite number I said, you know, I know this girl,
she's a really unsung heroine, why don't you give it to her? It
would make her life...

NEWMAN: What a good idea.

MCCARTNEY: That's what you should start doing.

NEWMAN: Yes.

MCCARTNEY: Say "You know what? Give it to such-and-such.

Now you work with a young man that I know, Jude Law on the "Road to
Perdition." What did you think of him?

NEWMAN: He's terrific.

MCCARTNEY: He's terrific isn't he?

NEWMAN: Got a lot of guts. He really hangs it out there and I have
great respect for that.

MCCARTNEY: You give him some good family advice? He's been quoted as
saying you said when your stuck between you're working on a film for
long periods of time and then he's got four kids, he feels he should
be home with the kids, and you said you didn't feel that it affected
your children, so...

NEWMAN: Oh, I think it did a lot. I don't remember saying that.

MCCARTNEY: You think it did affect the kids? Do you think it's a
hard thing to balance? Joanne's quoted as saying that she never felt
like she was the best mother or the best actress because she felt
torn. Is that normal? NEWMAN: I would think so. I think probably
harder on a mother than -- I don't know, why do I say that? I would
do things a lot differently now than I did when I was a father the
first time.

MCCARTNEY: So don't you think then you're the best person to give
advice to people?

NEWMAN: No, I'm not in the advice business.

MCCARTNEY: When you first saw Joanne, was it love at first site or
did you fall in love on picnic?

NEWMAN: Oh boy. I'm uncomfortable talking about stuff like that.

MCCARTNEY: But you definitely fell in love. You've been married 46
years. Can you not give us any tips on that? I've only been going
two.

NEWMAN: No, I have no advice to give on that either.

MCCARTNEY: No? Maybe I'll ask you again after we take a break.

We need to take a break but Paul and I will be back in a couple of
minutes; stick around.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

NEWMAN: This is the life we chose, the life we lead. And there is
only 1 guarentee, none of us will see heaven.

TOM HANKS, ACTOR: Michael could.

NEWMAN: Then do everything you can to see that that happens. Leave,
I'm beggin you. It's the only way.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: It's hard when you have a disability, because
when you're around regular people they don't have any other
problems. You feel embarrassed, but here it doesn't matter.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: People didn't accept me for who I was. And being
at this camp, nobody judges me wrong and nobody made fun of me.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I used to think that nobody had leukemia. I got
this rare case that nobody would, like, really care about. But once
I came here, I realised that there are other people going through my
pain and suffering and I didn't feel alone anymore.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCCARTNEY: Welcome back. Paul Newman's our special guest on this
edition of Larry King Live. Newman's Own.

When you started it off. Is that what set up the Hole in the Wall
Gang camps? Did you use the money to set them up, and does is it
still solely support it or do you find funding elsewhere?

NEWMAN: Well, we started the food company as a joke back in 1982 and
it started making profits from the first year. And also, the thing
that I like about the business is it doesn't take itself very
seriously. That's half the delight of it. And the royalties that I
get from the business and the profits after charity I can give away.
And a lot of that goes to the Hole in the Wall Gang camps. It's a
misconception that these camps somehow are...

MCCARTNEY: Solely funded.

NEWMAN: ...solely funded by me, which I couldn't do even if I was --
but we get -- I helped get a lot of the camps started. If they have
sustainability problems, I help them with some things like that.

The new camps that are going up overseas and all over the world now,
if you can believe it, we give seed money to and send people over to
do diligence and help them create acceptable boards and the
association tries to be helpful with medical practices that been
very successful with, programs that we've been successful with,
programs that we haven't been successful with and...

MCCARTNEY: So you pass on the information so that other people can
learn from what you've done?

NEWMAN: Oh yes.

MCCARTNEY: We want to go to the island one, because we thought one
(UNINTELLIGIBLE) California you can get easy access to celebrities
to come there, that Ireland, it's pretty close to us, we got married
there, so we'd love to go. It's in a castle there, is it?

NEWMAN: Well, yes. And the manor house, which is a 15th century
manor house and so forth, you went to see it kind of just as a
courtesy because the Irish government had asked us if we were
interested. So when I went in back of it and I saw these 19th
century neo-Gothic stables that they put up 2, incredible
rectangles...

MCCARTNEY: Wow.

NEWMAN: ...I just could see nothing but children on horses and
Medieval things going on. And the Irish certainly took the bit in
their mouth and ran with it, because they've done an extraordinary
and wonderful job in creating a real haven there.

MCCARTNEY: If Newman's Own, on funding, if they give the seed money,
how did they get funding, through corporate...

NEWMAN: Through corporate donors, foundations, individuals; it comes
from all over, all different kinds of sources.

MCCARTNEY: Do you get to visit any of them much?

NEWMAN: I got to Barretstown last year and the French camp last
year, and this year I'll get to Barretstown again, and the French
camp and probably the one in Israel and possibly Jordan, and I don't
know that we'll get to South Africa.

MCCARTNEY: Wow. If you're a parent with a critically ill child and
you would just love your child to go to one of the camps, how would
people go about that?

NEWMAN: They just have to apply.

MCCARTNEY: So you've got a Web site?

NEWMAN: Oh yes.

MCCARTNEY: We could look up, so we'll put that on there.

NEWMAN: When we opened our first camp in 1988, and we had a lot of
help from a lot of very charitable, philanthropic people and sat out
there on the road waiting for the massive assault from children to
fill the place and it was less than half full...

MCCARTNEY: Well how was that?

NEWMAN: Because I thought we'd be born with credentials.

MCCARTNEY: It's good that you weren't.

NEWMAN: Well, as it turned out, it was a blessing. If we'd been full
we probably would have made a lot more mistakes. So at least we had
a kind of shakedown crew. I can't tell you what it's like to feel
that you put this whole thing together and somehow you didn't
realize that the parents wouldn't trust you until they really had
confirmation that you knew what you were doing and that you had a
validity and...

MCCARTNEY: And now you've got this great history where you've got so
many campers, volunteers, one wheelchair user said "I feel like I've
got legs," and that's amazing.

NEWMAN: We had a father who tells a story that he picked up his kid
at the end of the session and he was driving out the door and pulled
out in the highway and his kid said, "You know, I'm really glad that
I have cancer so I can come here every year.

MCCARTNEY: Oh.

NEWMAN: I mean, stories like that will just...

MCCARTNEY: It makes you appreciate every finite second that we have
left on this planet.

We're going to take a break. Still more to come with the politically
outspoken Paul Newman, not quite. But first, a quick commercial
break.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTFIED FEMALE: One thing I love about camp is the community in
the dining hall, where everybody, all these people come together.
They sing and cheer and yell and scream, and everybody is just one.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: It's just like a major escape, is what it is.
It's like, just a certain amount of days where you can live your
life the way you want to. It's just no limits and no holding you
back.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

NEWMAN: I wish you'd stop being so good to me captain (ph).

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Butch, you haven't talked that way to me, you
never, never!

What we've got here is failure to communicate. Some men you just
can't reach.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCCARTNEY: Hi, again, I'm Heather Mills McCartney filling in for
Larry King tonight, and I've got just a few more minutes to spend
with movie idol Paul Newman.

Your daughter now got involved in Newman's Own. How come she didn't
get into acting?

NEWMAN: She was in several of the family films, actually.

MCCARTNEY: But she didn't continue.

NEWMAN: She went to acting classes and came away and said that she
thought she had no gift for it and when Newman's own got started, of
course, by that time she was into the environment and into organics
and she said "I'd like to start the organic arm of Newman's Own."

MCCARTNEY: Does that do as well as the original Newman's Own?

NEWMAN: Well, it was kind of a subsidiary, it was run that way, and
at some point we decided that it really should be all hers, so it's
her company now.

MCCARTNEY: She very environmentally conscious?

NEWMAN: Oh, man, don't pick a fight with her.

MCCARTNEY: I won't, I love it. NEWMAN: She makes a -- she's
extremely knowledgeable. She's extremely knowledgeable about that
and she's really knowledgeable about her products and...

MCCARTNEY: So you're very proud of her?

NEWMAN: Yes. She -- you know, they started off with snack foods,
pretzels and cookies and stuff and now they're into cereals and dog
food and it's all organic and the company is just cooking.

MCCARTNEY: That's great. That's wonderful. What about the other
kids. Any of those acting?

NEWMAN: Not an actor in the bunch.

MCCARTNEY: Wow, are you glad about that? Do you wish there was?

NEWMAN: Oh listen, they should do what they want to do, I'm not -- I
don't have any ownership in them.

MCCARTNEY: Would you think you'll ever work with Joanne again doing
a film?

NEWMAN: I've been considering the shape of my memory.

MCCARTNEY: But behind the camera you could take your time.

NEWMAN: Yes. You bet. I'm looking for it every day.

MCCARTNEY: If you get great script, you could direct something.

NEWMAN: I hope so.

MCCARTNEY: What was it like working with Tom Hanks?

NEWMAN: He's in a class all by himself. And very deceptive, I might
add.

MCCARTNEY: In what way?

NEWMAN: Well, he's very, at least in this role, he is very
understated, and it was really -- you had to be in close to see what
was going on underneath that veil of monsterism

MCCARTNEY: Is he a method actor?

NEWMAN: I don't think so. He's lucky with his instincts.

MCCARTNEY: And my nephew-in-law says I have to ask you, "Did you
really eat 38 boiled eggs?"

NEWMAN: Never even swallowed an egg?

MCCARTNEY: But isn't method acting about actually doing the real
thing?

NEWMAN: Not if you have to swallow eggs.

MCCARTNEY: Not a big egg fan.

NEWMAN: Well, actually, Henry Fonda, when I was in a film with him
he -- when we started the film, actually, he had a big eating scene
to do, and they'd say cut and he, could stuff. He would stuff a
whole dinner into the side of his mouth without swallowing anything
until they said cut and he would "ptui!" so he taught me how to do
that.

MCCARTNEY: Are you still a prankster? You were very renowned for
playing some jokes on.

NEWMAN: That was my younger, more stupid...

MCCARTNEY: Was it Robert Redford that brought you and a run-down
Porsche or was it the other way around...

NEWMAN: No, no. Redford gave me a Porsche for my birthday, except
that it had been hit sideways or the front had hit the other -- it
had hit a trunk, and there was no engine in it. And the only way it
got into my driveway was some truck had to dump it off the end of a
hook and with a note saying "Happy Birthday."

So I had the whole thing compacted and put in a wooden box and he
had a summer place in Westwood that summer and I got the name
through the real estate agent, got his alarm number and the key to
the house and had four of us bring this Porsche into his vestibule
and just drop it there with a bolder note. But of course, he won.

MCCARTNEY: Why?

NEWMAN: He never admitted that it was in his vestibule.

NEWMAN: But I learned something about practical jokes. I played one
on George Roy Hill once and it was -- it scared him and scared a lot
of people actually, and this was during "Slap Shot," and there were
a couple of days when he wasn't speaking, and finally at the end of
it when there was a -- we had kind of a confrontation. He said, "at
the core of every practical joke there's an element of
maliciousness."

MCCARTNEY: Really.

NEWMAN: "Because you're trying to make somebody look stupid or
you're trying to take advantage of them." So I've cut down on my
practical jokes to people who I really don't like.

MCCARTNEY: Oh God. So you feel like you've grown up a bit now?

NEWMAN: No, I've just suppressed it.

MCCARTNEY: When you did the film "Winning" you said when asked if
you would ever do a competitive race you said "I'm 45 years-old, I'm
not as hot as I used to be." But now you're 79. Have you got hot
then? Is that how you can race now? NEWMAN: Well, I think I'll keep
racing until that point where I really embarrass myself.

MCCARTNEY: And you've talked about retirement and retiring from
things but not being able to, but why's that? And what would you do
if you retired?

NEWMAN: Well, I'm closer to retirement now than I've ever been. I
don't know, it's just retiring from one facet of life and starting
another one.

MCCARTNEY: Any ideas...

NEWMAN: I've got a lot of stuff waiting out there for me.

MCCARTNEY: So you'll never really be retired. Because everyone who
says that they're retiring, they kind of sort of seize up.

NEWMAN: You can't retire from life.

MCCARTNEY: No. So any plans for the future apart from this race
you've got going on Sunday?

NEWMAN: I'm just trying to get through the day.

MCCARTNEY: And still enjoying it?

NEWMAN: Yes, Long Beach is our first race of the season. We have a
terrific crowd of people coming and they're real hard core road-
racing, open-wheeled racing fans and loyal and we're going to- we've
got some technical things which I will explain to you in great
detail if you'd like.

MCCARTNEY: And I know in your early days you never liked to be
called a sex symbol or told how handsome you are but I can say it
now you're 79, you've got to be used to it by now. But you still
look great. Can you take that with a "Thank you, Heather"? Or do you
still not accept that you're a very handsome man?

NEWMAN: Is that what you think of me?

MCCARTNEY: I think you're very handsome. I don't just think you're
handsome, I think by now that you're 79 and you're still looking
great, you should accept that.

NEWMAN: Oh thank you.

MCCARTNEY: You've proved yourself in every other way. I really,
really want to thank you for being my guest tonight on LARRY KING
LIVE and we'll talk some more. And hopefully you can show me around
the tracks Sunday.

NEWMAN: I will indeed.

MCCARTNEY: Take care.

NEWMAN: I promise.

MCCARTNEY: Thank you.

Thanks to Paul Newman for an intriguing hour. Larry will be back
tomorrow. Stay tuned for more news on CNN.
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Old Apr 18, 2004, 01:18 PM   #9
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

Susan,

thank you for posting this transcript.
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Old Apr 19, 2004, 12:43 PM   #10
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

But ouch. I guess others weren't as favorable about her...

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/s...e=Daily%20Mail
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Old Apr 19, 2004, 02:02 PM   #11
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

[ QUOTE ]
Rellevart Posted:
But ouch. I guess others weren't as favorable about her...

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/s...e=Daily%20Mail

[/ QUOTE ]

Nor this one. I didn't see it, I can't comment.


http://www.megastar.co.uk/meganews/n...M3NjY4OTY.html

Run of the Mills

Sid Billington




Mills failed to shine as chatshow stand-in
Ah, Heather Mills. When the wife of Sir Paul McCartney isn't busy being a mum and doing good for charity, she tries her hand at being a chatshow host.


Yes, we laughed along with the Daily Mail, which is a first, as they tell us about the squirming interview Mills conducted with Paul Newman when she stood-in for American host Larry King.


"Hi Paul, thanks for being here," she said. "How come you're such a philanthropist?"


"Come on," responded Newman. "Well, you start quickly, don't you?"


The interview, which was screened in America and then on CNN international yesterday to 170 million viewers, was panned by critics.


Newman, who is renowned for being frosty during interviews, didn't warm to the charity ambassador's line of questioning about his son's death from drink and drugs or his relationship with his wife.


"When you first saw Joanne (Newman's wife), was it love at first sight?" asked Mills.


"Oh boy. I'm uncomfortable talking about stuff like that," replied Newman.


Running on empty, Mills decides it's safer to talk about herself as "the ultimate giveback guy", as she called Newman, wasn't giving her, er, anything.


Discussing the current political situation, Newman commented: "I don't know whether it's getting better or worse. I know it's getting worse in Afghanistan."


"I do a lot of work there," replied Mills.


"What?" asked a baffled Newman.


"I do a lot of work there. That's the problem. You come in and give them freedom, but then all the poppy growers are back in Kuwait creating heroin again."


Er... we're not sure that's relevant, love.


OK, how about this one...


"When people give you awards or offer you awards, do you ever say, 'Look, I've got enough', and suggest anybody else?"


"Never occurred to me," replied the talkative Newman.


"That's what I do."


"You do?" asked a stunned Newman.


"I know it sounds terrible. Yes, when I get offered awards. It's not when you become complacent, just when I got to 22, which is my favourite number, I said, you know, I know this girl, she's a really unsung heroine, why don't you give it to her?"


ENOUGH.


Two-nil to Stella, we reckon.
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Old Apr 20, 2004, 05:07 AM   #12
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

Honestly, I didn't think she was that bad. And I'm not like some huge fan of hers who thinks everything she does is wonderful just because she's her or anything. But she was ok. Not great, but ok. Certainly not embarrassing.

I think she's just so desperate to be taken seriously and not just seen as the young blonde trophy wife of a rich guy that she tamps down any warmth and humor she may have, so she comes across kind of cold sometimes. She needs to relax a little, but I imagine that's hard to do when the press is slamming you relentlessly.
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Old Apr 20, 2004, 09:29 AM   #13
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

I may be way out of line saying this but is it any coincidence that the two media sources that bashed her were the lovable anti-Heather British press?
I saw the interview too, and for having been her FIRST time with no previous experience except being on the other end, i thought she was great. Sure she wasn't Larry King but its not fair to make that kind of comparison. Newman seemed to like her too.

this utter hatred some of these rag papers have is just stupid. i know certain media has its agendas but they need to lighten up!
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Old Apr 20, 2004, 12:22 PM   #14
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

Typical press for slamming her.

Personlly and professionally, I think she did a well done job. She covered most of Paul's career and charity life, and a touch of personal. Paul seemed to be enjoying her hosting. I liked it and think she should be a good talk show host.
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Old Apr 22, 2004, 04:46 AM   #15
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

How did the American media respond to the interview? I read one of the British newspaper reports and it's beginning to look as though it's another part of the press's vendeta against the 'new' Mrs. McCartney.
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Old Apr 22, 2004, 06:34 PM   #16
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

I don't think the American press gave a damn. She wasn't bad for a first time interviewer. Those British rags need to lay off.
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Old Apr 23, 2004, 02:28 AM   #17
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

[ QUOTE ]
beatlewho01-02 Posted:
I don't think the American press gave a damn.

[/ QUOTE ]

The American press didn't give a damn because most Americans don't know or care who Heather is, unless they are Beatles fans. I bet an awful lot of people tuned in last Saturday night and went, "Huh? Who's she?"
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Old Apr 27, 2004, 04:33 PM   #18
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

The Guardian chimes in.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv_and_radio/story/0,3604,1200202,00.html

Another record was claimed this week on Larry King Live (CNN). Not by Mr King - he was away - but by his stand-in, who officially became the person who's done the worst interview on television ever.

Her name? Heather Mills McCartney.

Paul Newman was the poor victim. Mrs Macca's questioning, in more or less her own words, went something like this: Hi, I'm Heather Mills McCartney. Paul Newman, how come you're such a philanthropist? I do a lot of work in Afghanistan - you come in, you give freedom, and then all the poppy growers are creating heroin again. What's your opinion of Iraq? I liked John Joseph Vincent in Fort pache, The Bronx - I loved that character 'cos he kept delivering babies and saving people's lives that were jumping off buildings. What do you think of Robert Redford? When you get offered awards do you ever suggest they give them to someone else? I do that. What do you think of Jude Law? He's terrific isn't he? I think you're very handsome.

Everything was wrong with it. She asked the wrong questions in a dull monotone, and didn't seem to listen to his answers. At times she forgot which side of the interview she was and talked about herself. She appeared keen to show him how much she knew about him, wanted to impress him with her knowledge of his life, his films, his charity work and his car racing. Funding was what seemed to fascinate her most, and when she ran out of things to talk about she returned to subjects she'd already covered - so car racing got a couple of outings. Cool Hand Luke has never looked so confused. Stay away Larry, it's hilarious.
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Old Apr 27, 2004, 04:52 PM   #19
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

Oooh...I love your review there, Susan! You are right on! She is not cut out to fill in for Larry, and she needs to remember (though I doubt that she can...she seems to be the main thing that she thinks about all the time!) that she is not what it's all about, when she's giving an interview! It's not the Mills story...it's about whoever is acrossed the table from her.... You're right, it was pretty funny at times... (Hmmm....and I wonder in just how many ways she was trying to impress Mr Newman...I mean, did you notice how low-cut that top was???) I guess she did alright...but I think that she ought to stick to the landmines! Anyway... that's just my two cents!
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Old Apr 28, 2004, 03:59 AM   #20
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Default Re: Heather Guest Host on Larry King Tonight

Not MY review, the GUARDIAN's review...

I'm not commenting one way or the other as I didn't see the program.
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