person look at your performance, it does have to weighe to on you a little bia surepp it does. you know, you you approach itt with trepidation. i mean, you representyo someone and youou know, it isn t exactly the film doesn t represent exactly who he was.whhr il he was thrilled at the idea of playing in the movie. i mean, he really got a chuckle out of that and i remember him just kind of laughing and stuff that i thought he might be upset about. t well, the brilliants contribution as an audience member watching it i thought was it plays like a comedy for b the first half ofy this movie. it kind of takes everybody by surprise. yeah, that was delivered.y. yes, absolutely. but i took my cue tonally from the real guy from stu. he was an edgy guy and he had rough sort of life experience and he was able to talk to people, you know, in a very relatable way. here s the real question. gu how did you direct these twoys d guys and what did you learnid from the experience you pushed us around?
0 this evening. as always, thank you for beingel with you. op makee this show possible. we hope you ll say a dvr so you never miss an episode. i ll be out tomorrow. tammyut bruce will be and i hope you have a great passover and a great easter and never let your heart be troubled. thanks for being with us. er good evening, everyone.th i m laura ingraham and this is the ingraham angle. h tonight we bring you part two of our exclusive with mel gibson and mark wahlberg. you ll hear why they ve turned to making family themedily mov. plus their thoughts on a new trend among some men in hollywood. you don t want to miss it. but first, dems don t t care. that s the focus of tonight s angle. it almost seems vindictive at this point. now a a i m talking about what the party in power isn t inflicting on the united states runaway inflation, devastating family budgets now crime waves terrorizing our cities. the fentanyl explosion killing thousands of americans every month. millions of illegal