Along with addressing her meeting with Donald Trump earlier in the day, Kelly File host Megyn Kelly began Wednesday’s show by clashing with MSNBC host/liberal activist Reverend Al Sharpton over what transpired in Ferguson, Missouri to the point that Sharpton rudely told Kelly to “calm down.”

In what was part of a wide-ranging interview dealing with the African-American vote, President Obama’s legacy, and Black Lives Matter, Kelly turned to Ferguson roughly eight minutes in and, after summarizing how the case ended, wondered if Sharpton “feel[s] bad about what you said” about Officer Darren Wilson.

Of course, Sharpton deflected and sought to debate the semantics of what the DOJ report did and did not find about whether Wilson violated Michael Brown’s civil rights.

Kelly paused the interview to reappear live in her studio to read a few portions of the DOJ report that set the record straight that there was no evidence to prove “that Wilson was unreasonable in his fear that Michael Brown would once again attempt to harm him and gain control of his gun.”

When the interview resumed, Sharpton attempted to convince Kelly that the DOJ report was somehow in conflict with “what eyewitnesses and others who called us into Ferguson” relayed when they were “put...on my television show” where “they told us what they saw, so if I say what I believe to be the case, based on talking to several witnesses, I should apologize for what?”

The Fox News host shot back that Sharpton’s beliefs about the shooting have “been disproven” and, instead of engaging on substance, Sharpton lectured Kelly for simply having a daily TV show in which she “state[s] what you believe.”

Naturally, Kelly corrected him by informing him that she doesn’t share her opinions and Sharpton responded that he, of course, is “an opinion guy” on MSNBC.

It was at this point that the confrontation escalated when Kelly pushed Sharpton to accepting responsibility for the impact the incident has had on Wilson’s life:

KELLY: Okay, but when your opinion is proven to be wrong by the Department of Justice, Barack Obama’s Department of Justice and a man's life is ruined, I mean Darren Wilson — Daren Wilson has no job. He has no life. He hasn't been rehired. Do you bear some responsibility? SHARPTON: If you and I talk to the same witnesses and the DOJ talks to the same witnesses, and they don't believe him and you and I do, it doesn't make us wrong. It means — KELLY: But you don't talk to all the witnesses. The DOJ does. They get people in there and it can be a crime to lie to an FBI agent. It is not a crime to lie to Reverend Al.

Clearly beat, Sharpton informed her that she need to “calm down” and this did not sit well with the FNC star as she told him to “watch it.” When Sharpton seemed confused and asked if there was anything “wrong with that,” Kelly told him: “Ask Bill O'Reilly about that. I had to lecture him on that one himself.”

The interview ended moments later when, after trying to ask Sharpton if he ever “correct[ed] the record” on what really happened in Ferguson, Sharpton grabbed Kelly’s microphone and demanded to know if she saw and covered him protesting with those that wanted to see Wilson indicted.

The relevant portions of the transcript from FNC’s The Kelly File on April 13 can be found below.