“She’ll do anything for another drink” – Greg Gutfeld TORCHES Ana Navarro after shocking boat stunt leaves critics questioning her credibility and fans stunned over claims she swam to strangers for alcohol when her wine ran dry

 

Greg Gutfeld is no stranger to controversy, but his latest takedown has left even his regular viewers doing a double take. On live television, Gutfeld accused Ana Navarro of crossing a line that no TV personality should—after reports surfaced of her leaping off a boat and swimming to a stranger’s vessel in search of more alcohol when her own supply ran out. He didn’t just criticize the act itself—he went further, branding her an “addict” and questioning if she’s capable of speaking with clarity on-air. The alleged incident, bizarre and unconfirmed by Navarro, has sparked a fierce debate about professionalism, personal conduct, and how much private behavior should impact public trust. Was this a lighthearted misstep or a damning sign of deeper issues?

See the full exchange and decide for yourself before this clip disappears from the headlines.

Michael Le Brecht II/ABC; Ana Navarro/Instagram 'The View' star Ana Navarro jumps off boat while on vacation in Greece

Michael Le Brecht II/ABC; Ana Navarro/Instagram

‘The View’ star Ana Navarro jumps off boat while on vacation in Greece

It began as an innocent summer escape — turquoise waters, sunlit skies, and a group of friends sailing through the Greek islands. But within days, the trip that was supposed to be a blissful break for television personality Ana Navarro became the centerpiece of a media firestorm, complete with accusations, public shaming, and a viral clip that refuses to fade.

The spark? A bizarre account of Navarro allegedly leaping from her boat mid-cruise, swimming to a stranger’s vessel, and returning with a bottle of wine after her own supply ran dry. The story — originally told by Navarro herself with a dose of humor — might have passed as a lighthearted vacation anecdote. But when Greg Gutfeld, one of television’s most unapologetically sharp-tongued hosts, heard it, he didn’t laugh. He torched it.

“She’ll do anything for another drink,” Gutfeld said on-air, accusing Navarro of crossing a line that revealed something “far darker” than a mere stunt. His commentary didn’t stop at the act itself — he openly questioned whether Navarro’s judgment and credibility were now beyond repair.

In an industry where image is currency, his words landed like a direct hit.

Pawel Kaminski/Disney via Getty 'The View' cohost Ana Navarro at a Disney presentation in May 2025
Pawel Kaminski/Disney via Getty

 

“I Learned I Can Swim While Holding a Bottle”

 

Navarro had shared the story herself on Instagram. Sun-kissed and smiling in vacation photos from Rhodes, she joked to her followers that she had invited friends aboard her rented boat, only for them to drain every drop of her white wine. Faced with the crisis, she claimed, she swam to a neighboring boat to “barter for a bottle — in Greek.”

“I learned I can swim while holding a bottle in one hand,” she wrote, calling it a “practical hidden talent.”

To her, it was a playful admission. To her fans, it was a glimpse of her carefree, chaotic energy. But to her critics — and especially to Gutfeld — it was a glaring lapse in judgment by a woman who commands a national platform.

Sources close to the show say Navarro’s team was blindsided by the controversy’s rapid spread. What was meant to be a throwaway vacation post became a full-blown character question. Her detractors accused her of glamorizing reckless behavior, while supporters insisted it was nothing more than a harmless — if unconventional — adventure.

Still, the optics were impossible to ignore. A TV host, mid-hiatus, leaping into open water and returning triumphantly with alcohol from strangers’ hands — it was the kind of visual that burned itself into the public imagination.

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A Stunt or a Scandal?

 

Gutfeld wasted no time turning the narrative from quirky travel story to cautionary tale. On his program, he painted a picture of desperation and impulsivity, describing the swim as “something you’d expect from a reality TV meltdown, not from someone who sits on a panel and tells America how to think.”

His pointed jab — “She’ll do anything for another drink” — spread across social media in seconds. The phrase was clipped, memed, and reposted alongside videos of Navarro’s sun-soaked vacation. Online commentators piled in, with some echoing his accusations and others mocking them as overblown.

The debate spilled into entertainment talk shows, podcasts, and gossip columns. Was this simply a grown woman enjoying her break in an unorthodox way, or was it a public unraveling in plain sight? Experts in media ethics were even dragged into the fray, discussing whether public figures have a duty to model restraint — even while off the clock.

Adding fuel to the fire was the fact that Navarro, at least initially, made no move to clarify, downplay, or defend her actions. Her silence was read by some as a calculated refusal to dignify the outrage, and by others as an admission that the story was too messy to untangle without consequence.

The Unforgiving Nature of the Spotlight

 

The speed of the uproar speaks to the brutal efficiency of the modern celebrity news cycle. What might once have been an amusing, private vacation mishap now spirals within hours into a public referendum on a star’s credibility. In Navarro’s case, the image of her swimming wine-in-hand became more than a joke — it became a metaphor, interpreted and reinterpreted by millions.

Critics have painted her as reckless, impulsive, and unprofessional. Supporters counter that the outrage says more about society’s appetite for shaming women in the public eye than about Navarro herself. They argue that Gutfeld’s on-air takedown was a calculated attempt to turn an innocuous act into a reputational wound.

Either way, the incident has placed Navarro in the peculiar position of being at the center of a scandal for something that — by her own telling — took less than five minutes and hurt no one.

As for the bottle of wine that sparked the chaos? Navarro hasn’t revealed whether she ever drank it. But by now, the real intoxicant is the story itself — a potent mix of spectacle, judgment, and viral fascination that shows no sign of wearing off.