taking in $20 million and paying an effective tax rate of 24%. let's talk to don stein of the huffington post. dan, last week i was here for chris and i interviewed mark allen. he's writing this book "inside the circus" a lot of details about the presidential race thus far. in his book he points out it was all mitt romney who was reluctant to release his tax returns in the first go-around, and the question i guess i have is, for a campaign that is so controlled, how do they screw up their approach? for example, today we learned he's going to file an extension. we know we're going to see the returns. the returns are going to show him to be a very wealthy guy. why do they create all this intrigue and drama and prolong it? >> i don't know. i don't know whether this guy is wanting to be president or if he's auditioning for a villain in a james bond movie. he's got a secret bank account, a corporation in bermuda that nobody knows about, and everything he does rather than