The New York Times described Donald Trump's State of the Union Address on Tuesday night as "veer[ing] between two moods -- combative and conciliatory." Democratic minority leader Chuck Schumer described it as "sort of like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and the excitement and the enthusiasm was all in the Mr. Hyde parts." But according to early polling -- weighted towards self-identified Republicans and right-leaning independents -- a majority of Americans who watched it approved of Trump's remarks. Our two excellent guests today, award-winning opinion journalist HEATHER DIGBY PARTON of Salon and author and political media critic ERIC BOEHLERT, join us to make sense of both parts of Trump's remarks -- at times disjointed, at times collegial, at times aggressive -- as he veered between out-and-out lies to something more closely resembling facts, but shamefully lacking in context.\xa0 Did Trump meet the bar set for him by his own White House aides, who promised new calls for "unity" and "bi-partisan cooperation"?\xa0 Is Trump capable or even interested in that?\xa0 We also discuss the striking sea of new and veteran female Democratic Representatives dressed in suffragette white; Nancy Pelosi's triumphant new-again role as House Speaker; Trump's obsessive (not to mention graphic and largely false or misleading) advocacy for a southern border wall as the only solution to what he describes as\xa0 an "immigration and humanitarian crisis"; the stunning number of important issues (from the climate crisis to gun violence to the recent record-long government shutdown and much more) that Trump ignored; the misleading use of Venezuala's ongoing political crisis as an attempt to smear "socialism" in the U.S. in advance of 2020; and Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams' smart and spirited response to Trump's dark and largely substance-free SOTU...