I treat this show like any other financial show or the market pages of the Wall Street Journal. I look for clues to what people are thinking and doing, what is driving their trading decisions. When a consensus forms then is the time to watch out because the market is likely to do the opposite. A good example happened last week when all four were bullish on oil. If that isn't a warning to avoid being long oil I don't know what is. This week I see that Bolling was short oil.
The pros make the same mistakes as the ams, the difference being that they realize it and adjust. The ams hold on, praying for the chance to get out.
WSJ works the same way. Whenever all the "experts" are quoted being worried about inflation the morning a price number is released, I'd be thinking about being long before thinking about being short; the odds generally would favor some kind of bounce. But then I might change my mind later . . . .