have a safe and wonderful week. good bless you all. good bless you all. thank you, pat boone! >> sean: as republicans begin their march towards the 2010 midterm elections there1= are rumors who may step up in 2012 and attempt to unseat the anointed within. we've been following movements of several heaviways. )jrq' one steps foot in a key primary state. wouldn't you know it, my next guest is headed to the great state of new hampshire this weekend for a major event. he's here to tell us about it, former speaker of the house newt gingrich. he has a free online newsletter at newt.org. when i see that smile i know i'm not going to get the answer. it happens you more than anybody right now are heading to new hampshire, iowa, south carolina. so, you are thinking -- you can come clean now. you are thinking about maybe running? >> well, i'm thinking about being helpful to the citizens who are concerned stuart, new hampshire is going to have a tremendous training program saturday looking at new media. looking at scott brown's great victory. looking at what we can learn from obama's campaign and they asked me to come up for american solutions and share a set of ideas about the things we are doing to try to expand the ability -- how could i turn them down. >> sean: they are going to have fried twinkies and corn on the cob. >> i can't turn her down. >> sean: i'm going to move on. i know i'm not going to get that answer. you've got that smile on your face and it melts my ability to grill you on it. certainly, i suspect you are probably going to give in serious consideration. >> of course. >> sean: okay. first of all, let me move on to the issue. i think of homeland security, now big news broke late last night, in fact they are now reconsidered this issue of ksm and the trial in new york. here's my question. instinctively, they didn't think it was a bad idea. instinctively they thought it was okay to give miranda rights to the christmas day bomber. instinctively they say there is not a war on terror. he thinks he cancu negotiate with iran without preconditions. i'm concerned about their instincts. >> you don't know where they are going to end up because they keep equivocating. if mayor bloomberg had not come out so aggressively against what he estimated to be a billion dollar waste offhañ money they might still be going to new york. i don't think they are doing this because they are rethinking it. the obvious answer is try them in a military tribunal and try them in éñ cuba. we have a facility at guantanamo go ahead and use it. they are going to maneuver, dance, bob and weave and do all sorts of things. it is a terrible idea to take terrorists into a civilian criminal court under procedures which allow them to try to get american secrets out in the open. it is a terrible waste of money for the american taxpayer to fund that kind of effort. i agree entirely with scott brown, one of his campaign promises kept telling people let's spend on equipment for american troops not on lawyers for terrorists who are trying to kill americans. >> sean: listen, i am hopeful, this is such a bad idea, it is going to cost hundreds of millions. frankly i think put people's lives in jeopardy and at risk in new york. it is going to become a worldwide circus. i would like them to reconsider maybe immediately in the 50 minutes we interviewed the christmas day bomber, he said more attacks are coming. he trained with people who are planning these attacks. can we immediately begin interrogating that person? is that something for reconsideration? >> look, the first big threshold for president obama to cross is to recognize we are at war. if you're at war, none of the criminal defense rules apply. when you're at war you are allowed to take an enemy combatant, the christmas day bomber is certainly an enemyav6 combatant as is ksh and you are allowed to have them interrogated by the intelligence and military community there is zero reason, zero reason, to give them miranda rights. they are not american citizens. even american citizens would not have miranda rights if they were engaged in combat against the united states. totally different set of rules. >> sean: i was asking in the last couple of times you have been on the program, very specifically, if you thought that barack obama had the ability -- you witnessed this up close and personal, maybe the tendencies or -- for self preservation, the ability to move to the center, to the right, as bill clinton did on endingóiñ welfare as we know i. the era of big government is over. was that question answered for nut president's state of the union wednesday night? >> i thought it was a very weak state of the union. i thought he was all over the place. he was pandering to every group, a little here, a little there. it was very disorganized. i thought hisl' style was weak. peter roth in u.s. news had the right analysis, he say he looked so small compared to a previous great speaker. he said no, i'm not referring torc(ñ george w. bush or ronald reagan, i'm talking about obama the candidate. if you look at how relatively lacking in authority he was last night, and compare it to what was like as a candidate this is sort of an amazing shrinking presidency, at the present time. >> sean: did you think he almost, you know was attempting to get the chamber to rise and start chanting, "yes we can" that he missed the old days of the praise and adulation. >> two of the places i was struck by. oneeh was total explicitmr28 hypocrisy of speaker nancy pelosi, smiling and standing to applaud when he called for the end of earmarks. i thought it was such a total act of hypocrisy, knowing that the chair hand has asked for members to submit all earmark requests by march. i just -- if you look at that clip, it is truly astounding the contempt she has for the american people and her leaf we are stupid enough to think that -- and her belief to think we are stupid enough to think it has any meaning. the other was when he was wrong about the supreme court decision. my impression is justice alito was saying that's wrong. if you watched his face at that moment, he sort of reacted involuntarily. . >> sean: what is interesting, the president was wrong. here's the supreme court justice saying, not true. the justice didn't know he was on camera. but the president knew he was on camera. fairly unprecedented for a president to attack the supreme court that's in front of him with congress and get the applause that followed. orrin hatch characterized it as rude. more importantly on substance the president was wrong when he said that foreign corporations can influence american elections because the ruling specifically said it does not. so what does that say about the lawyer from harvard? >> first of all, the citizens and the work there is extraordinary important case and historic landmark. my take is the president's lawyers were as wrong about the supreme court as they are about trying terrorists. it should worry every american that the president is getting legal advicezçex and is out of touch with reality and factually wrong. >> sean: when we come back, i want to ask do you think the president's tone was angry? look into your crystal ball and tell us what you think is going to be happening for 2010. more coming up after the break. crime is down across america. the people keeping us safe are under attack. our own ainsley earhardt looks at disturbing trend of law enforcement officers under fire. walmart's $10 90-day generic prescriptions... don: ...no matter where you live. don: plus get free shipping on over 3,000 other prescriptions. don: call 1-800-2-refill for your free home delivery. save money. live better. walmart. we're shopping for car insurance, and our friends said we should start here. good friends -- we compare our progressive direct rates, apples to apples, against other top companies, to help you get the best price. how do you do that? with a touch of this button. can i try that? [ chuckles ] wow! good luck getting your remote back. it's all right -- i love this channel. shopping less and saving more. now, that's progressive. call or click today. >> sean: we continue with former speaker of the house newt gingrich. i want to go to the tone of the president's speech in the state of the union. i thought he came off as angry. maybe cool on the surface underneath i thought it was small-minded, whining, self-justifying not exactly honest. there were certain phrases in there he said we've got to be more transparent. we've got to work openly. i was screaming c-span. he hired all the be lobbyists then complained. you mentioned earmarks earlier. do you think the president, this is the first time he's experiencing disapproval and he's having a hard time handling it? that's the impression i'm getting. >> i think there were two different character ricks -- characteristics within emotional the other intellectual. the emotional petulance this was a teenager upset, stamping his foot saying how dare you notñ#sñ give me what i want. i thought the tone was very under presidental and very unlike the obama candidacy which was positive, and which really was uplifting and optimistic. i thought the intellectual thing, just unbelievable. i mean, how can he talk about transparency, when everything they tried to do on health care is secret? how can he talk about eliminating earmarks when they are in the process of writing earmarks? the degree to which intellectually, this speech was profoundly dishonest, not only factually wrong as we discussed about the supreme court case. area after area, fundamentally, misleading. i think is amazing. probably not a record for presidential speeches. but it certainly in the league with those that are truly fundamentally misleading. >> sean: i think the most misleading thing he's said we've lost four million jobs in a year. we saved two million. the math doesn't add up. we've never used that type of standard before. then trying to act as a fiscal conservative, when they've run up more debt, more deficits in one year and in two years, than, you know almost the entire eight years of george w. bush in that two year peer. it doesn't make sense. -- two year period. it doesn't make sense. >> the right benchmark is the congress if you measure the time pelosi and reid took over in january of 2007 and how much the democratic congress in three years has increased the size of the deficit it is a breathtaking example of totally wasteful spending politicians aggrandizing themselves in earmarks all unprecedented. it is ironic the voters fired the republicans in 2006 for too much spending and put in power liberal democrats who have spent on a scale no republican could have dreamed of. >> sean: looking forward, you were there and i was emceeing an event the night you became speaker of the house and i lost my voice that night and i will never forget it. i remember you being interviewed, seeing you many times that night and getting one of the first interviews with you. as a local radio host, you were loyal to your local friends and i will never forget it. more importantly, you captured/w 54 seats that night. we saw what happened in massachusetts, virginia, new jersey. we see where independents are moving. do you think that this could even be a bigger year than people are saying? that nancy pelosi could lose her job? that even the senate if things align the right way the republicans could take back the senate? >> well, let me start with michael barone made the case recently,qz you look at scott brown's vote in massachusetts. a state where obama 26% of the vote there may be as many as 150 democratic seats that could be in play. the number of new candidates that pete sessions and others tell us are starting to come out of the woodwork. people saw what happened with scott brown suddenly people are saying gee, i would be willing toer is of. i think you will.h"÷ get a new wave of candidates showing up in the next two months that expand the universe of democrats who are in trouble. in senate where the vice president's son declined to run this week. i think mark kirk is going to win the senate seat in illinois. i think pat thom going to win inejwujbzáv&vania. think mike cast going to win the seat in delaware. all of a sudden you could see the getting close to 47 seats even money boehner is going to be speaker of the house next year. >> one of the things you did effectively, we'll look at past models that worked, reagan model, contract with america. you were able to nationalize the election with a positive agenda, specific promises. if you look forward the strategy of the democrats is to try and divide. according to what we are hearing they want to divide the tea party movement with the republican party. they want to isolate, they want to sort of separate. do you think that strategy would be effective? what do you think the strategy of the republicans ought to be if they really want to achieve the goal that you say is attainable? >> well, let me say first of all, adam's help with american solutions i met with tea party leaders in arizona and dallas, texas this week. i think the tea party leaders understand their goal is get congress away from big spending, liberalism, big government. i think they are going to be skeptical of cynical efforts by liberal democrats. they are willing to work with republicans. they are clearly independent but they are willing to work with them to defeat liberals. republicans ought to offer a positive alternative. i think they could have the tea party movement help. >> sean: have fun in new hampshire, enjoy your fried twinkies and corn on the cob in iowa and don't give us any answers. i don't expect any answers for a while. the day is coming, i'm going to be pushing hard, looking for answers. mr. speaker, good to see you. have fun in new hampshire. >> let not your heart be troubled. when we come back the great, great, great, american panel is next. ♪ ♪ . >> sean: tonight on our great, great american panel he's former mayor of the city of province, rhode island hosts his own program the buddy ciani show vincent buddy cianci is here. he's a nationally syndicated radio talk show host on the salem radio network. hugh hewitt is back. she is the co-host of happy hour on our affiliate sister station, rebecca diamond is here. good to see you all thanks for being here. happy friday. they are going to move the ksm trial. still not gonna interrogate the underwear bomber. >> of course you want the underwear er interrogated he was so stupid he couldn't light himself on fire. the most important thing, remember when you mayor like bloomberg said today, you can't handle it. it is funny to watch how they changed their attitude. before the massachusetts election they were into making sure this happen in the city of new york because they wanted to make an example. it doesn't belong in the city of new york. the terrorism threat could come again. >> sean: it doesn't belong in any city. >> guantanamo bay is where it belongs or some corn field in idaho. >> sean: we don't have a war on terror this is i think ultimately in the end, pray to god i'm wrong, these mistakes, it is not a war on terror, man caused disaster, we don't interrogate the underwear bomber, mirandizing enemy combatants. this is going to be obama's legacy. >> i agree. the worst decision of the first year until they gave miranda rights to abdulmutallab was to say ksm was going to new york, irresponsible, uncomprehensible7oo. eric holder the attorney general still has not been able to explain it, there is no explanation. he's a military combatant. it is a category error he should be tried in gitmo. he should have already been executed he wanted to plead guilty. >> i think there is something going on behind the scenes. before blomberg was all for this he's like -- bloomberg was all for this he's like we can handle it. new york city has the finest police officers and security, no problem. after massachusetts all of a sudden he's saying it is too expensive. and the federal government may not get the funds approved by congress to reimburse us for this i don't think i there may have been persuasion from the white house to push bloomberg and schumer and to say this gives us a good excuse. >> sometimes you like to have trials in your city. like we had the von bulow trial, celebrities come in and take hotel rooms, media comes in, that's a good trial this is a crazy trial. >> sean: what bothers me their initial in s on everything are wrong. in the minutes they intergated the underwear er the guy said oh yeah, i trained with other people and they're coming. who are they, when and where are they coming. >> you don't mirandize them. those rights could be revoked. he could be sent to gitmo tomorrow. everyday is another mistake not to send him. >> sean: first instinct not a war on terror, we can negotiate with iran, close gitmo. >> know you know why they are down in the polls. 48% approval rating. this country not being run by the liberal wing. >> >> sean: if your poll numbers are that low and the american people are rejecting by 70% to 30% your health care plan, do you reverse course? >> he's not reversing course maybe a bone here and there. if he wants to keep flying around in air force one he'll start changing quick. >> i revert to the judge napolitano on this one he's been on happy hour many times. he's saying according to the constitution unless we're at cannot try these people in a military tribunal. >> the judge is wrong. you must tell him, the judge is wrong. he's wonderful, he's wrong. >> thezé judge is a guy that i always look to. >> wrong. >> why is he wrong? >> because the united states not extended judicial rights to combatants in a time of any declarationá of war. >> we are going to have you and the judge on for debate. >> sean: there's supreme court precedence, congressional legislation has passed this is has been what has happen in the revolution war, civil war, world war ii. i'm talking constitutional law right here. >> times have changed. sitter . >> that's the thing this administration doesn't see it as a war. >> sometimes -- obama was wrong when he looked at alito he that whole opinion wrong. sometimes people make mistakes. this was a mistake. >> sean: three strategies by they think they can divide the tea party movement more conservatives from mainstream moderate republicans and out in latest one emerging in the political points white house plans to step up efforts to hold republicans accountable. they want to create a series of votes that will take place to say see you're obstructionists, the party of no, does that work? >> i don't think so i think the obama administration is struggle for any strategy to survive. this thing iíog massachusetts and i'm from that area was amazing to watch what happened. the democratic machine and the kennedy machine is very strong in massachusetts they couldn't hought they had won it. they didn't even take a poll. >> however, you guys we have a short memory, a year ago everyone wanted to throw out the republicans and this is how obama came into office, hold on. if they don't go for something like these tax credits, republicans have been calling for this $5,000 per -- new hire tax credit how can you not go for that and all of a sudden people are going to say, wait, they are more for their agenda than helping the country. >> [ inaudible ] >> sean: we to take a break, more with our great, great, great -- special investigative report with ainsley earhardt, are police officers under attack across the country? larry the cable guy. more with our great american panel, straight ahead. ♪ my sunglasses. ♪ people say i'm forgetful. maybe that's why we go to so many memorable places. love the road you're on. the subaru outback. motor trend's 2010 sport/utility of the year. the subaru outback. my joints ache so bad, i wake up in pain every day. i want to know why. i want to know why my hair is falling out. how did this happen? how did this happen? a little pain in my knee. that's how it started. that's how it started, this rash on my face. now it's like my body is attacking me. i want answers. announcer: when you don't have the right answers, it may be time to ask your doctor the right question. could i have lupus? . >> sean: we continue with our great american panel. james o'keefe remember him they go into the acorn offices they got great videotape. i thought in that instance they did a terrific job. federal officials charged four men plotting to tamper with the telephone system in new orleans. it didn't smell right the way liberals were going after them. james o'keefe is going to be on this program on monday evening. he did release a statement today. he said: the government has now confirmed what has always been clear no one tried to wiretap or bug senator landrieu's office i learned from a number of sources that many of her constituents were having trouble getting through to her office to tell her they didn't want her taking millions of federal dollars in exchange for her vote on the health care bill. in investigating we decided to visit her district office. the people's office to ask the staff if their phones were working? on reflex could have used a different approach to the investigation particularly given the sensitives that people under -- understandably have about security in a federal building. >> there's a fine line between journalism and criminality. confronting or invading an acorn storefront is a little different from going into a building that is secure, a federal building that has security there. i don't know the facts. i don't think any of us know the facts. >> sean: that's the key. everyone has jumped to conclusions, i think unfairly. he makes a good point. is this people's seat if they are claiming the phones aren't working does he have a right to ask? >> i'm going to wait. i do believe, that the left is going to use go after our friend andrew because big government and big journalism.com are very, very dangerous for the left because he deals in facts. >> sean: i want to ask you is maybe the mistake they made they might have gone into that office misrepresenting themselves as repair men? >> there are 1,000 ways to get people. [ talking over each other ] >> if they want to get him, they will get him, trust me. >> when you said there is a fine line between journalism and criminality. no here's a huge line and difference. when james o'keefe was on happy hour i praised him for the work that he did in practicing -- in cracking down on acorn with fraud. however, i took him to task for calling himself a journalist. you cannot go a as journalist it is unethical as a journalist to lie to you or to dress up and lie that i was somebody even [ talking over each other ] investigative reporters should not lie or impersonate somebody. [ talking over each other ] >> sean: they were wrong? >> they were working with -- it is okay for them to do it? >> i don't agree with his tactics. try to do it another way. do not go to a lawmaker's office and -- [ talking over each other ] >> sean: tim tebow heisman trophy winner quarterback for university of florida and his mother will appear in a pro life commercial for focus on the family. they are already attacking ad. >> tim tebow is an american hero inspiration to young men and young girls. we need lots of tim tebows. kurt warner announces his retirement today, we need them. he's just a great american and the idea that lefties want to shut him down is outrageous. >> the issue is whether the ad should be shown on the super bowl? three million bucks. it alike putting a hooters ad on the christian broadcast network. >> sean: buddy it is not. >> it is. when you are praying to that your team makes the point spread. [ talking over each other ] >> the other side should counter and show their ads. i think it is the wrong audience. it is mostly men watching and the final decision rests with the woman. >> three million dollars they could use that for such good purposes over the 30 seconds. >> sean: coming up police officers across the country are ambushed, under attatatata we trapped kimberly in this glass box with dust! well, it's only dust. dust contains allergens... from pet dander and dust mites. - ew! - pledge traps up to... 84% of allergens in dust. allergen trappers -- that's the beauty of pledge. s.c. johnson -- a family company. sir? finding everything okay? i work for a different insurance company. my auto policy's just getting a little too expensive. with progressive, you get the "name your price" option, so we build a policy to fit your budget. wow! the price gun. ♪ ah! wish we had this. we'd just tell people what to pay. yeah, we're the only ones that do. i love your insurance! bill? tom? hey! it's an office party! the freedom to name your price. only from progressive. call or click today. >> okay, everyone, we have a lot to cover this morning. tim should be here any second with the latest budget numbers to -- uhh, take us through the initial... schedule... for production and... >> ouch. >> this is one way to avoid getting the h1n1 flu virus. >> oopsie daisy. >> all right. good morning! let's get this meeting started. >> for some better ways, visit flu.gov. [man sneezes] [groans] [groans]8(@0 . >> sean: since the beginning of this month 14 law enforcement officers have been kill in the line of duty. half of them after being assaulted. it is a deadly start to the year. ainsley earhardt reports on police officers unattack. we need to warn you, this piece contains graphic images and should not be viewed by children. >> down, down, down, hands. >> reporter: across america the streets are safer. despite a deep recession violent crime is down from coast-to-coast. the very people charged with keeping us safe are coming unattack themselves. [ bagpipes ] >> reporter: 48 police officers killed by gunfire in 2009 compared to 39 in 2008. 23% increase. most alarmingly, there were five incidents in 2009 where one assailant gunned down multiple officers, killing 15 in all. march, oakland, california, four officers killed by a violent parolee after he's pulled over. april, three officers ambushed and killed in pittsburgh, pennsylvania and two sheriff deputies shot and kill in florida. july, seminole county, oklahoma one man killed two sheriff deputies. november, lakewood, washington four officers ambushed and murdered in a could have i shop before they tart their shifts. the 15 officers killed were the most of any year since 1981. >> when you have five separate incidents in the united states where multiple officers are murdered, even when the officer is down and lerly wounded they don't stop, they -- and severely woundedded they don't stop they move towards the officer to put a bullet in their head that tells me violence is on the up take and people need to be worry. >> reporter: the officers trains in violent skills. >> i've been busier every month seems like i'm getting more calls to talk to some officers police officers. >> reporter: sergeant hogan speaks from experience. 15 years ago, he was on patrol in irvington, new jersey when he saw a man acting suspiciously. you parked here? >> right here. i glanced over at him, stick my head out the window and i say my man hold up a minute. he spins around loaded nine millimeter in his hand that first round comes through the window 12:00 on the steering wheel of the police car. he's lying out rounds, i duck, he gets up to the driver's side of police car leans in with those last four or so rounds, second round hits me in the shoulder, third in the spine and he leans in more and gets down and shoots me right in the head. it was lights out. everything went dark. everything came to a dead stop. i've been shot! >> reporter: amazingly even with multiple gunshot wounds sergeant hogan survived. you know lives everyday with a hole in his head. reminder of how close he came. violence against law enforcement officers is nothing new. about 60,000 officers are attacked every year, resulting in 16,000 injuries. it takes only seconds for a routine situation to turn deadly. texas trooper steven stone learned when he pulled over the driver of a pick-up truck for speeding. he found drugs and alcohol inside. he begins to pat down that driver. >> there was a pistol magazine in his left rear pocket. no one carries a round of magazines there's got to be a gun that goes with it. >> reporter: instantly everything changes. as trooper stone draws his weapon the driver and passenger pull theirs. >> you have seconds to try and decide what you're gonna do what's the best course of action. after that first shot, my vision went black. i thought every round they were firing was hitting me. >> reporter: shot multiple times he was saved by a bulletproof vest. both suspects were later caught. >> just in los angeles in the prior year we had 527 assaults on police officers and we're on track to exceed that number this year. >> could be taggers one day, next day shooting at each other now they are shooting at cops. >> every police officer by training and experience feels like they are a target, because you are. >> reporter: kansas city, missouri officers went to question a man involved in a minor car accident. without warning for no apparent reason he immediately fires on them. officers returned fire. and the man is killed. >> young rookie cops need to know that it is a dangerous job. it's a great)v÷p job but it's a dangerous job. >> reporter: which is why police an cad -- police academies train new officers to never let their guards down. watching incidents like this from georgia. deputy pulls over a driver for blasting his stereo he approaches the car but barely has a chance to say a word. career criminal ben westbrook shoots him point blank in the face and gets out to finish him off. the gun jams so he tries to beat the unconscious deputy to death. deputy regains consciousness as westbrook is trying to wrestle his gun away. deputy survived but was seriously injured. in new jersey the essex and union county auto theft task force is charged with getting car thieves off the streets. >> it can turn dirty real quick so you have to keep your guard up at all times. >> reporter: safety is their number one concern. >> we got to do it safer and better. we utilize our trucks our primary tool. >> reporter: they swoop in on stolen cars with an overwhelming show of force. hoping to quickly neutralize a dangerous situation. >> the most important thing is we you confirm a vehicle is stolen, you have to do a block on it, over power them with our vehicles. we'll come around and book the car in. officers are cautious with this job we've had shootings. we've had people with guns. we have to be kaeufrl -- we have to be careful. people are a little agitated or irritated they were stopped in such a manner and maybe given a command a little abruptly, let me see your hands. it is not about somebody being a jerk it is about wanting to go home at the end of the night. >> i think the public has slowly been come -- becoming aware what police work entails. i don't think they understand the fear that's in the back of your mind at times. about what could possibly happen to you at any moment. >> sean: pretty scary stuff. we want to thank all the men and women who put on uniform everyday to keep all of us safe. >> next, larry the cable guy is coming off the largest comedy show in history. it debuts this weekend. he's here to tell us all about it. ♪ raymond james financial advisers understand there's no one exactly like you. and with a culture of independence they have the complete freedom to offer unbiased financial advise that's right for your idea of retirement. not to mention college funds. raymond james. individual solutions from independent advisers. yeah, this trip is way overdue. i just can't wait to see all those crunchy flakes in action. i hope i get a chance to put two scoops!™ of raisins in some boxes. you know what will really get us in the spirit? ♪ 99 boxes of raisin bran crunch ♪ ♪ if you're nice to me i'll share some with you ♪ ♪ you take one down ( and pass it around ) ♪ ♪ 98 boxes of raisin bran crunch ♪ three tasty ingredients, one great combination. ♪ raisin bran crunch! from kellogg! . >> i like to drink when i fish. like to drink when you fish? of course do you why the hell go fishing. don't get so drunk you don't know what you're doing. i get hammered i start peeing in the lake realized i was in the fish tank in the red lobster. thank god they put rubberbands on them lobsters. >> sean: that was a scene from larry the cable guy tailgate party which debuts this sunday at 9 p.m.. you are laughing at our own jokes. the show was filled in front of 50,000 in lincoln, nebraska. it is believed to be the largest comedy show in history. joining me to talk about the huge event and the man himself, get 'er done, larry, how are you? >> it was the largest taped comedy performance in history, stand-up. >> sean: i'm not surprised. just you? >> just me. >> sean: you knocked the house down. >> it was awesome. >> sean: it was hard to do. >> hit to follow newt, it was funny stuff. he gives this serious speech. i go hey newt, finance any stuff, you knocked 'em dead. >> sean: a little different tone. is everything all right in your business? the economy is really slow. >> it is bad here in new york. i don't get here much. i seen a prostitute outside with a sign that said no payments until 2011. good night sean you guys got to do something. >> sean: it is a problem in new york. >> i got to admit something to you and everybody else i'm not proud of it. i've been sleeping with members of my what is worse i'm self-employed. [ laughing ] >> can i do two segments. >> sean: this is good. before we get to -- by the way, i didn't see the movie, i'm going to take this home and watch tonight. >> it's awesome. that dvd is great. five ,000 people, i was about as nervous -- 53,000 people. i was about as nervous as you can get. that thing went smooth, the sound was good. i thought as a one liner timing comedian i was going to get thrown by the big crowd that's a good special. comedy central, sunday night at 9:00. it doesn't interfere with any of our stuff. >> sean: it does hannity is in a repeat sunday night at 9:00. >> tivo hannity, -- >> sean: tivo larry. i want to ask a serious question. health care is taking over the country. it is a big deal. they want to nationalize health care. >> well, look it's crazy. why would you want to -- you know, you 75% of the people enjoy what they . what do you want to wreck that for them? why done you just take care of the ones that don't have it. and not wreck it for the people who enjoy what they have. it doesn't make any sense. i get irritated at the doctor any way. you spend all this money and sometime you don't feel any better. i went to the doctor, i thought i had chronic fatigue syndrome. spent $3500, turn out i'm just lazy. you believe that? >> sean: i can believe. >> i had stomach problems, he goes don't eat nothing all day and drink this. i go how much is it? he goes $500 it will clean out your system. i can do that with a corn dog and mountain dew. >> sean: go to -- >> yeah. waiting on the doctor to come in, they have a thing, hemorrhoids awareness week. i'm not kidding. they a hemorrhoids awareness week. let me tell you something, if you got hemorrhoids, i'm pretty sure you're aware of. what's that cantaloupe doing hanging out your behind? i think there's something wrong with him. he's got to get to the doctor. crazy. i'll tell you what else i don't like about going to the doctor you got to sit in the waiting room next to some dirt bag with some disease and coughing. you are sitting there like, [ coughing ] >> how are you i'm ricky? what in the world you are getting leprosy on everybody. >> sean: that's is true. last time were you here i talked to you about al gore -- >> i'm the one you want to come to for he politics. >> sean: we need some comedy relief. >> couldn't get worse than what we . >> sean: you were talking about al gore and global warming. >> i got to be honest with you. what a farce that has turned out to be. i was up in canada -- canada. i had a polar bear beg me to shoot it in head it was so-called. any 's what i told the cops. -- any way, that's what i told the cops. global warming and al gore he's like the co2 level. i don't know about the co2 level but the bs level is getting high. have you seen him lately global warming hasn't -- he's like a tick on dracula he needs to sweat a bit. nobody asks about the sun. it is our fault they got global warming but they discount the sun. >> sean: blame the sun? >> yeah you this big ball of fire in the sky it is humans doing it. that is like sitting at a bonfire and somebody lighting a cigarette and somebody going put out that cigarette it is getting hot in here. how did all the ice melt sean we've had four ice age as loan? once the whole world was covered in ice. was the dinosaurs driving suv's and stuff back then? it makes no sense. >> sean: it doesn't. who do you dislike more, al gore or nancy pelosi? >> i don't dislike anybody sean, i'm a nice guy. i like everybody, i do. we are all human beings, i like everybody. i don't like their policies and i don't like what they are shoving down our throat. al gore's personal wealth has again from three million to 93 million in the last three years. i mean put two and two together on that whole deal. so i'm sure he's a nice guy personally, i've never met him. but you got to follow the money trail on some of this. it is ridiculous after a while. i don't know pelosi either. somebody sent me an e-mail and it said nancy pelosi naked. >> sean: oh! >> it was unbelievable. >> sean: everything good with the wife and kids? now that i to deal with this. >> wife and kids are good. my little boy was laying in bed the other day -- you just want your kids to grow up good. he was in the bed the other day saying to his sister we heard him on his little monitor he he was like reagan, do you love jesus? i love jesus. reagan, i love jesus. i'm thinking that's cool. my little boy's talking about the lord, you know. then i realized he was saying i cheez-its. went interest here to there, real quick. i bought him a swing set for christmas him and my little girl and there was like 1,000 pieces. i didn't want to put it together. i gave both of 'em an ambien before they went to bed and they woke up in the middle of the night and put it together themselves. you ever take one of them ambiens it gives you a lot of energy? >> sean: larry the cable guy. >> sunday night 9:00, dvd comes out tuesday, hilarious, you'll love it. >> sean: 50 plus thousand people showed up.