Trump Brushes Off "Bimbo" Tweet; Addresses North Korean "Nukes" Issue

Donald Trump has been making the media rounds and he's once again candid about his presidential race, North Korea and even addressed the foul language he's used towards women. 

Speaking to Fox's Megyn Kelly, the Republican frontrunner was asked to address the "bimbo" tweet, which helped fuel the rift between the two. Just to recap, Kelly & Trump haven't been on the best of terms since the GOP debates where Kelly asked Trump to address the negative (and downright sexist, in my opinion!) comments he's made towards women. Matters got worse when the billionaire retweeted someone who called Kelly a "bimbo." 

On Megyn Kelly's primetime special Tuesday night -- the first time they would sit together since the famed tweet -- they finally had a chance to "hash it out." When asked about the tweet, Trump's response was....Trump-like.  

"Did I say that?...Excuse me," he said as he chuckled nervously. "Not the most horrible thing...over your life you've been called a lot worse, isn't that right? Wouldn't you say? You know, you've had a life that's not been that easy," he told the Fox host. 

To which Kelly responded: "It's not about me, it's about the messaging...to young girls and other women." She then asked him if he intends to stop exhibiting such behaviour, especialyl if he becomes president. 

"I'm going to stop it about you now because I think I like our relationship right now so I'm certainly not going to do that with you," was his response.  

 

Kelly was live tweeting some of Trump's quoted during the special:

 

 

 

Fox wasn't the only media outlet to get a one-on-one with the presumptive GOP nominee. Reuters sat with Trump, who had a lot to say on North Korea and the Pyongyang's nuclear program. Trump's solution is simple: speak to North Korean leader Kim Jung Un.

"I would speak to him, I would have no problem speaking to him," he told Reuters. But that's not is, Trump continued, the real solution lies with China. 

"At the same time I would put a lot of pressure on China because economically we have tremendous power over China. People don't realize that," he said. "China can solve that problem with one meeting or one phone call." 

 

 

 

 

 

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