Whenever Bill O'Reilly needs to remind his audience of the debauchery in higher education, he sends out his stalker, Jesse Watters, to provide video which not only documents the degeneracy but provides some nice "traditional" titillation for O'Reilly who, being a single Catholic, can't have sinful sex. Watters recently stalked Brown University for some material to take back to Bill for more shits and giggles. Watters, no stranger to Brown, asked students about a college event, "Nudity in the Upspace," an event that features lectures and events which "explore nudity in all its forms." As Bill and his aging fan base associate nudity with sex, Watters was sent to Brown to do his trademark smirking while asking salacious and judgmental questions. And in so doing, Watters underscored why Brown students, after his last Brown escapade, was described as a "creepy, ambushing, stalker lunatic."
Last night, Bill began by reminding viewers of how student activity fees had been used, at Brown, to partially fund a sex "exposition" and when Jesse Watters checked it out, students weren't happy. The visual backdrop had the Brown logo with the words "provocative display" under it. Bill is lying - He must be mixing up Watters appearance at Yale to expose their "sex week" because the only Brown event that Watters has covered was the "Sex Power God" party which was used, by O'Reilly, to expose debauchery in the Ivy League. Bill smiled lecherously when he said that when he heard that Brown was going to have a "clothing optional week, (titties, titties, titties) "we asked Watters to man up and go back to Brown."
Bill played the video which began with Watters asking two women about "Nudity Week." Note - this is not the correct title of the event but one that Watters has been using on his Twitter, the Fox promo, and the article on Fox Nation. One of the women responded that "Nudity in the Upspace" is about finding a way for people to be comfortable with themselves. Watters asked a pervy question about whether this is a "ruse" so students can see each other in the nude. (Was that a reflection of where Bill and Jesse's priorities?) When a male student reflected about how the media loves violence but goes crazy when a nipple is shown, Watters grinned lasciviously. In responding to a question about his "angle" was, Watters, again, exposed his perversity and juvenile sense of humor: "If there's a naked event on campus, I want to know about it."
It got even creepier when Watters asked whether a woman was the nude body painter or paintee. He asked about nude yoga. When a male student said it was "like a spiritual experience," Beavis (or is it Butthead) Watters asked "was it hard." To another male student who did some nude theater, Watters asked "was it small." (Wow, penis jokes)
It got even stranger when Wattters asked students to call their mothers so that he could tell them it's "nudity week at Brown." (The woman he spoke with watches O'Reilly and didn't have a problem with the nudity.) Engaging the requisite slut shaming, he asked the woman, who had participated in nude body painting, if her parents knew about. (And it's his business, how?)
In doing their follow-up, O'Reilly noted that Watters was "attacked" by the Brown University newspaper. Watters added, proudly, that he was "kicked off campus by an administrator" who told him to "leave the quad immediately." To Bill's question of why, Watters said that he "guesses" that "you're not allowed to film everywhere" and he "wanted to dive [tee-hee] deep into nudity week." Jesse, looking so self-satisfied, said that the college newspaper is "very angry" with him and organized a drinking game to make fun of him. When he said that "they're probably hammered, now," Bill asked - wait for it - "are they clothed?"
Bill, far more mellow than after the "Sex Power God" thing, opined that it's "harmless" to which Watters added that he had "nothing against nudity week" and "may have participated" if he had been allowed to. (titties, titties, titties). Bill was concerned about the student activity fees. Watters "joked" that only a small amount went to the event but that you "don't have to buy props, or clothing." Bill "joked" that the money went into paint.
In closing the sexually suggestive hit piece, Bill pontificated "we have nothing against Brown, just having a few laughs at your expense."
I think the student video, done in response to Watters' creepy stalking, sums it up nicely.