Regan and Schilling were discussing presidential candidate Donald Trump’s remarks from a 1992 “Entertainment Tonight” video that recently surfaced. In the video Trump was riding up a Trump Tower escalator and was conversing with a 10-year-old girl. Trump then turned around and told the “ET” crew with him, “I am going to be dating her in 10 years. Can you believe it?”

Regan also addressed Trump’s 2005 “locker room talk” regarding women, but Schilling redirected the conversation back to Trump’s 1992 comments, saying: “The conversation you’re having about the things he said about the 10-year-old girl, to me, is at the very heart of why this is a problem.”

AD

AD

“How many times — and I have three boys and a daughter — how many times have you looked at a young man and said, ‘Wow, is he going to be, he’s a beautiful young man. Wow, he’s a gorgeous young man,’ and that man was 12, 13, 14, 15?” Schilling asked.

“I’ll be honest, Curt: zero,” Regan told Schilling while holding up her hand in the shape of a zero.

“Now, see, that’s a lie,” Schilling retorted. “There’s no way you haven’t seen somebody else’s son and said, ‘Wow, he’s beautiful.’ ”

“And thought I would be dating him? No. You’re alone on this one,” Regan said.

“To jump to the point where you’re insinuating something like pedophilia or molestation is where you’re going with this because he’s joking about, ‘Well, when she gets older, I’m going to date her,’ ” Schilling said. “How do you get from there to being revolted and disgusted?”

AD

AD

“I don’t look at a young boy and say in 10 years I’m going to date him,” Regan said. “I just don’t. I think that would be pretty sad if I did.”

The conversation eventually transitioned to Schilling’s political future. Regan asked Schilling about running for office in Massachusetts; Schilling admitted he wants to run for office, but “I have to ultimately check with Mrs. Schilling because she’ll be the one that makes the final decision.”

Schilling has been known to rock the boat since retiring from the majors. He ruffled feathers shortly after helping the Boston Red Sox win the 2004 World Series, appearing on “Good Morning America” and urging Americans to re-elect President George W. Bush. ESPN relieved him from his commentator position in April after displaying what the company deemed “unacceptable” conduct when he posted a meme about transgender people. In 2015, he compared Muslim extremists to Nazis and said Trump’s opponent, Hillary Clinton, “should be buried under a jail” in March.

“I have a nasty habit of talking, a lot, about anything anyone asks me and totally unconcerned about giving you my opinion,” Schilling wrote on his blog in March 2015. “You will never question where I stand, right or wrong agree or disagree on anything.”