Bill O'Reilly Defends Brian Williams to David Letterman: 'NBC Should Bring Him Back'

The Wrap
March 25, 2015 at 11:11AM
Brian Williams
FILE - In this Nov. 5, 2014 file photo, Brian Williams speaks at the 8th Annual Stand Up For Heroes, presented by New York Comedy Festival and The Bob Woodruff Foundation in New York. Williams has admitted he spread a false story about being on a helicopter that came under enemy fire while he was reporting in Iraq in 2003. Williams said he was in a helicopter following other aircraft, one of which was hit by ground fire. His helicopter was not hit. NBC News was not commenting Thursday about whether its top on-air personality would face disciplinary action. (Photo by Brad Barket/Invision/AP, File) (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Bill O'Reilly was the interviewee rather than interviewer on Tuesday when he visited David Letterman on CBS's the "Late Show" Tuesday and was quizzed about Brian Williams' fabricated story controversy.

"We have a sport in the United States called 'lets destroy the famous person,' and that's what happened to him," the Fox News Channel anchor told Letterman.

"I think the NBC should bring him back. I think they will bring him back."

The late-night host then compared Williams' six-month suspension from NBC News for exaggerating a story of being on a helicopter shot down by RPG fire in Iraq in 2003 to criticism of O'Reilly's 1982 Falklands War claims.

"When this came out, people said that Bill O'Reilly himself might have said things that were exaggerated and untruths and they had to go back 30 years … 38 years to the Falklands War," Letterman said. "Was there a difference?"

"Only if I did something that wasn't true, and what I did was accurate so we had a controversy there," O'Reilly said. "I put forth what my side was, and they put forth what their side was, and folks decided. And it worked out OK for me — I got even more viewers," he said, revealing that ratings went "20 percent up."

When asked if he ever fibbed on the air, he replied: "What I do is analysis, so it never comes down to that."

"Trust is the residue of both positions," Letterman said, comparing the two anchors. "So people must trust you to the same degree that they trust Brian Williams."

"I've been on the air for 19 seasons now, 15 years at number one, our ratings are now as high as they have ever been — so I think they do trust me," he said.

"The Late Show With David Letterman" airs nightly on CBS at 11.35 p.m.

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