tv Jimmy Kimmel Live ABC November 4, 2016 11:00pm-12:02am CDT
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? [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: hi, there, welcome back. you are here on a big night. the president of the united states is here. he's backstage eating as many mozzarella sticks as he can before he gets home to michelle, she does not allow them in the white house. we have new shows this week with felicity jones, gordon ramsey,
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science bob pflugfelder, jimmy eat world so join us for all of that. [ cheers and applause ] i am very appreciative tonight's guest can take time away from helping rig the election to join us tonight. he is the 44th president of the united states. he'll soon be out of work so please accept his linkedin request. please welcome president barack obama! [ cheers and applause ] ? [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you! thank you! >> jimmy: how are you doing? >> i'm doing great. >> jimmy: you seem like you're in a good mood lately. >> first of all, the mozzarella was terrific. >> jimmy: it was good, huh?
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know, that you pick on your audience a little bit during the breaks. >> jimmy: yeah, during the commercial breaks, yeah, i do, yeah. >> you're kind of tough on them. >> jimmy: i'm not running for anything. oh, wait, i'm running for vice president! no wonder my name's not on the ballot. >> should have gotten some tips. >> jimmy: i should have. >> you should have called. >> jimmy: i called, nobody answered. >> biden didn't take your call? >> jimmy: biden did not take the call. literally no one took the call, it was remarkable. when was the last time you went through a metal detecter? detectors. [ laughter ] i apply metal detectors. or people do so for me. >> jimmy: when that day comes in the future, and it is going to come -- [ laughter ] you are going to be mad, aren't you? >> well -- you know, i keep secret service after i leave. >> jimmy: right. >> so -- >> jimmy: oh. >> they've got connections. >> oh, so forever? >> i'm not taking off my shoes. [ laughter ]
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>> jimmy: as i know you are a big sports fan, you're a white sox fan, are you really happy that the cubs are going to the world series? [ laughter ] >> yes. no, you know, i watched the end of the last game. and to see just how happy everybody was, i actually felt pretty good. >> jimmy: you did. >> i am rooting for my hometown team. even though it is not my team. >> jimmy: it's not your team. >> it is not my team. but you know, i was watchi the last time they won a world series, thomas edison was still alive. [ laughter ] sliced bread had not been invented. so this was literally the best thing since sliced bread. for cubs fans. [ cheers and applause ] >> white sox got their championship a little over ten years ago so we're feeling okay. >> jimmy: bill murray may be the premier cubs fan of all cubs
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i happened to be there, we did a tribute to bill murray. he crashed the white house. >> he came into the oval office in a cubs shirt. and i don't usually allow that to happen. >> jimmy: yeah. >> first of all, most people come with a shirt and tie. it was bill murray so i figure, i get no tie. but don't rub it in with the cubs jersey on. >> jimmy: i'm amazed by him. he pretty much does wants. >> what he wants. nobody checks him. not even secret service. >> jimmy: metal detects him. >> it doesn't matter. >> jimmy: did you speak? did you chat? >> well, he had won the mark twain. >> jimmy: mark twain prize, yeah. >> the mark twain prize. will had won previously. i should mention by the way, will gets this prize, we do this photograph in the oval office.
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a big to-do, then he leaves without the prize. [ laughter ] which you know, somehow the board members didn't find funny at all. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: they didn't. >> bill did not forget the prize. >> jimmy: he remembered the prize. >> we took the picture. then he agreed to do a little social media skit. about signing up for people who didn't have health care, signing up, because open enrollment's coming up november 1st. we thought of a skit, we decide carpet in the oval office. and somebody grabbed a glass, we were trying to putt in the glass. and he won repeatedly. i mean, he kept on -- the glass was rigged. [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: it's happening a lot lately. >> i was a little frustrated. what makes matters worse, then he's giving me tips about putting. [ laughter ] serious.
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hand's a little too firm on the -- bill, you're a comedian, not a golfer. he took money from me. and i paid him $5. so basically the whole visit was a disaster. >> jimmy: you have money? do you have any money right now? >> no, i have somebody. >> jimmy: you have somebody for money. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: in the movies when the -- or tv when there's something going on, some big event in the world, somebody always says, wake the president. >> yeah. >> jimmy: then somebody has to wake the president. >> right. >> jimmy: does that happen? first of all. >> well, first of all, i have a phone right by my bedside. >> jimmy: yes. >> and every morning, somebody calls and says, mr. president, it's your 7:00 a.m. wakeup call, and i pick it up. and it works just like a phone. >> jimmy: yeah. >> that's it. >> jimmy: nobody pokes his head in? >> no. >> jimmy: hopefully you're covered up or whatever? >> no. look, there have been maybe three or four instances where you do get a call in the middle
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for example, when the typhoon hit japan. fukushima. >> jimmy: right. >> you're not sure exactly what is going to be happening, it's the other side of the world, so it's the middle of the night. we had to deploy our experts and our military to make sure that any potential nuclear disaster was contained and we helped the japanese. every once in a while. but for the most part -- >> jimmy: they let you sleep? >> for the most part they let me sleep. usually the real serious problems that come up are ones that we've anticipated. we can kind of see coming. >> jimmy: do you hate -- >> knock on wood, i've only got two or three months left. >> jimmy: right. [ cheers and applause ] >> you have to be ready if something happens. >> jimmy: right, you have to be ready. >> but as i've mentioned before, what i don't do is like a 3:00
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morning? >> about people who insulted me. i try to sleep so that in the morning i'm actually ready for crises. >> jimmy: the debate, you watched donald trump, do you ever laugh? do you ever actually laugh? [ laughter ] >> most of the time. [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: did you ever actually watch that "access hollywood" billy bush tape? >> i did. >> jimmy: you did. >> i saw it. >> jimmy: where did you it? on tv? >> we were in chicago. i think i was coming out of an event. somebody just showed it to me on their phone. >> jimmy: at that moment did you know that it was going to be as notable as -- >> yes. >> jimmy: -- it turned out to be? >> well, didn't you? [ laughter ] that's just not the kind of thing -- >> jimmy: i didn't know because -- >> i think that's one of those things where if your best friend
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23rd times the charm. shhh. (clink) boom. yes! 23rd time is the charm, cliff. yea, you showed me. yes, you did. (shelly thinking) this must be how odell beckham feels when he scores a game winning touchdown. touchdown! odell beckham jr. (crowd noise) (odell thinking) this must be how shelly felt when she won that purple bear. ? ? pepsi. ? ? ? ?
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[ laughter ] guys you miss and once you're out you're going to reconnect with them? >> you know, there are probably some guys who don't make the cut but they're still good guys. [ laughter ] known them since high school, you have fond memories. hey, man, i'll catch up with you. [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: the president is here with us. we'll take a break, be right
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[ cheers and applause ] ? >> jimmy: hi there, we are back with the p [ cheers and applause ] so you voted already, right? >> i have already voted. [ cheers and applause ] and i want to make sure that everybody in the audience, anybody who's watching, regardless of party, regardless of how frustrated sometimes you may feel about the political process, do not give your power away. go ahead and vote. [ cheers and applause ] and it's easy. you know, most states now have early vote. so it's not like you've got to go right on november 8th. you may have a couple of weeks. you walk in, nobody's there, you
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but i always say that -- i quote justice lewis brandeis in saying, the most important office in a democracy is the office of citizen. it's not president. it's not congressman. senator or governor. it's a citizen. and each of us have a certain responsibility. we can't just sit back and complain. we've got to try to have an influence. >> jimmy: who did you vote for? [ laughter ] >> it's a secret ballot. >> jimmy: why do you think so many people don't trust hillary clinton? >> you know -- a lot of this just has to do with the fact that she has been in the trenches, in the arena, for 30 years. and when you have been in the public eye that long, in politics folks go after you. and they're trying to find a weak spot. and any mistake that you make
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ginned up. and there are commercials around it and a whole narrative begins to build. that has an impact on people. but i can say that having worked with her, she is smart as a whip. she does her homework. she works really hard. she cares deeply about working families in this country. and you know, she's not somebody who thinks the job is about flash and sizzle and making speeches, it's about just getting policy right and making sure that folks are doing a little bit better. and i think that at a time in our politics when everybody wants to get 100% of what they want right now, and the assumption is if somebody else doesn't agree with you then they're completely wrong, and we
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of politics that hillary represents which is pragmatic and says that you don't get everything done all at once, you do -- you make progress in little pieces at a time. that may not attract as much attention. it's not something that goes into 140 characters as easily. >> jimmy: right. >> but i think she will be an outstanding president. [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: are you way, are you glad that there are term limits? that you're not being pressured -- >> yes -- well, not -- you know, george washington is one of our greatest presidents. not just because he helped to lead the revolution, but because he had the wisdom after two terms -- at the time there was no constitutional prohibition on him continuing, and he was being pressured by a lot of folks to say, you're the only person who can hold this together.
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back and say, i do not want to set a precedent where i am president for life. now personally for me, if i were able to run for a third term, michelle would divorce me. [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] so it's useful that i don't have that choice to make. >> jimmy: i know you have to leave but can we keep her for another four years? >> she is spectacular. but i was telling somebody backstage, michelle was never wild about politics. michelle once explained to me, i try to organize my life not to have a lot of mess around. and politics is just a big mess. >> jimmy: yeah. >> she said -- i still remember,
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you know, i think you would make an outstanding president -- and i would work so hard to make sure you were president, you're the kind of person we need, if i weren't married to you. [ laughter ] so she is not sorry. >> jimmy: they are looking forward, all the women in your life are looking forward -- >> all the women in my life are looking forward to being able to live a more normal life. >> jimmy: yeah. but still not entirely normal. obviously everybody's under the microscope at all times. washington, d.c., which is unusual for an exiting president. >> i'm like the old guy at the bar where you went to high school. >> jimmy: exactly. >> just hanging around. it's like shirt's been on too long, still thinks he's cool. >> jimmy: that's one of your friends you're going to be hanging out with. >> exactly right, me and that guy at the capitol hill bar. when's that guy leaving? >> jimmy: that guy's never
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>> sasha is a sophomore. she's doing great in the school she currently attends. our attitude is that if you have a teenager and you really want to make sure they never talk to you again, then pull them out of high school right in the middle of sophomore year. >> jimmy: you're right. >> so look, they've made so many sacrifices. >> they have, yeah. >> i want to make sure that they get the ability to have what's best for them for a time. >> jimmy: do you ever wish were running against donald trump? [ laughter ] do you ever wish you could climb there? the vice president said he wanted to fight him the other day. >> you know, i think hillary's doing just fine. i am enjoying campaigning on her behalf. and also campaigning for senate and house candidates. because look, we joke about donald trump.
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reason you've seen michelle passionate in this election. >> jimmy: yes. >> part of the reason that we get involved as much as we have is not just because we think hillary's going to be a great president, but it's also because there is something equal qualitatively different about the way trump has operated in the political sphere. look, i ran against john mccain. i ran against mitt romney. obviously i thought that i could do a better job. but they're both honorable men. and if they had won, then i wouldn't worry about the general course of this country. i think republicans and democrats have some fierce
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democracy works, we're a big, diverse country. and sometimes it's going to be contentious and noisy. but what we haven't seen before i think is somebody questioning the integrity of elections and the will of the people. what we haven't seen before i think is a politics based on putting down in very explicit terms of muslim americans who are patriots or describing women not in terms of their intellect and their character but on a 1 to 10 score. >> jimmy: right. >> you know, at a certain -- regardless of what your political preferences are and is a certain responsibility and expectation in terms of how you behave, how you present yourself. it doesn't mean that -- >> jimmy: i've heard this speech before, believe me, yeah. >> it doesn't mean that you're perfect. >> jimmy: no, i didn't mean from you, i meant guidance counselors to me. [ laughter ] >> yes, well the point is that -- you know, i said when i was running in 2008, i'm not a perfect man and i wouldn't be a
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to, as best i could, be honest to the american people, to make sure that i was protective of the institutions, that there were certain norms and standards and values and customs that make it work. and if you are willing to say anything and do anything even when it undermines everything that's been built by previous generations, you know, that's a problem. and that's why i take this election very seriously. >> jimmy: you should have sold hats, though, when you ran. [ laughter ] one thing you have to take away from donald trump is that you can make a lot of money selling hats. >> yeah, you know what, we sold a lot of stuff. >> jimmy: we're going to take a break. president obama is here. [ cheers and applause ]
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i know you may have been waiting here awhile. good thing you all had your phones with you. [ cheers and applause ] as the father of two teenaged daughters, i know the whole time you were just like -- and then he said. girl, i couldn't believe it. [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: talking about your daughters, who i assume keep you technology. >> they do. now, sasha gave me instructions on snapchat. >> jimmy: oh, really. >> one night at dinner we're sitting there. and i had read that snapchat was becoming really popular among her age cohort. so i said, tell me about snapchat. so she starts explaining stuff. then you can make little faces on your picture, this and that and the other. and at the end of it, michelle and i are sitting there. i said, isn't this interesting.
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implications of social media, what all this means. come to find out she was recording us the whole time and then sent to her friends afterwards, "this is my dad lecturing us on the meaning of social media." she took a picture of herself sort of looking bored. >> jimmy: wow. >> you know. >> jimmy: as if you don't have enough security problems right now. [ laughter ] >> michelle of course loved it malia thought it was a riot. they distributed it to all their friends. this is what i go through during dinner. >> jimmy: would you tell young people that they should never write anything in an e-mail that might possibly be controversial in any way? >> it's interesting. i have e-mail, i don't have texting. because my phone function is disabled. i now have an iphone but it is like the phone you give your
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>> jimmy: yeah. >> they can press things but nothing actually happens. >> jimmy: right. >> so my phone has no phone. no camera. >> jimmy: what? >> no music. all it has is the internet and i can send e-mails. i think it has a weather box too. >> jimmy: yeah, right. >> so i send e-mails. my rule has been throughout my presidency is that i assume someday, sometime, somebody will read this e-mail. so i don't send any e-mail that -- >> jimmy: yeah, no. >> that at some point won't be on the front page of the newspapers. >> how's the wi-fi at the white house, is it good? >> we just updated it i think a year and a half ago. and the girls threw a party. it's an old building, the walls are thick. we weren't getting real good signals. >> do we know who hacked netflix friday night? to me, that is an act of war. >> yeah? you didn't know what to do? >> jimmy: what are you going to do? people are sitting down to watch "narcos" or something and
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do we know, do we have any idea who did that? >> we don't have any idea who did that. but what is true is that we are all connected. we're all wired now. and one of the biggest challenges for the next president and the president after that and the president after that is going to be how do we continue to get all the benefits of being in cyber space but protect our finances, protect our privacy? how do we balance issues of security? because people expect the government enough to protect them from bad guys. but they worry that if government is in there too much, then who's going to be protect them from government? and we're going to have to come up with frameworks and some of it's going to involve technology, some of it's going to involve law. this is going to be a big debate we're going to have for a long time. >> jimmy: i bet we will. i want to say thank you to you for being our president. [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you.
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[ cheers and applause ] it has been the privilege of a lifetime. but i do have to remind everybody that michelle and i will still be alive in three months. [ laughter ] and hopefully you invite me onto the show once in a while. >> jimmy: no, this is it. i'm just saying good-bye. >> this is terminal? >> jimmy: it was really nice knowing you is what i'm trying to say. >> well, at least i'll still enjoy watching the show. >> jimmy: thank you. president barack obama! [ cheers and applause ] be right back. [ cheers and applause ]
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>> jimmy: all right. i want to thank president obama. thanks to will ferrell, thanks to joe mchale. apologies to matt damon, we did run out of time. i wanted to make sure we got you on the show before we ended. >> guillermo: thank you very much, jimmy. >> jimmy: thanks for watching, everybody. "nightline" is next, good night! [ cheers and applause ]
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this is "nightline." >> tonight breaking news. a trump accuser stepping out of the shadows. >> that's why i'm here today, to show we shouldn't be afraid. >> the "people" magazine reporter alleg lite with just four days till the election. plus inside the final 30. tarnished trump? are his businesses in decline? >> women are turning their backs on him, women of color are turning their backs on him. >> he's playing a dangerous
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trump versus clinton. >> what is that? >> father/daughter style. >> hello, my left-wing, radical daughter. >> divided houses. will the strong women you raised come back to debate you? >> but first "the ntl 5." >> they can frizz- frizz-free. >> we went to burlington. we sound something for everybody. and the prices are great.
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? good evening. thanks for joining us. we have breaking developments tonight. one donald trump accuser stepping out of the shadows for an on-camera interview. the "people" magazine writer says she's no longer afraid. >> i wanted to talk to the women of this country and of this world. >> natasha her face out of here but she's stepping out to talk about her alleged sexual assault by donald trump. >> why did you decide to sit down today? >> i wanted to show all the women who wrote to me that i could be brave enough to do it. i feel like if i am brave if you have to do it here, maybe she'll be brave enough, too. >> she first penned a letter about the incident last month
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years fearing backlash. >> why didn't you come forward at the time? >> i lose my job, i could be sued. all the things happening now is what i worried about then. i'm older and wiser now and stronger so i can take it it it now. but back then was afraid. >> but she said she felt compelled when she finally came forward when she heard donald trump make this claim. >> are you say being you did no grope or kiss women without consent? >> i have great respect for women -- >> so you did not do those things? >> no, i have not. >> he has slammed stoynov's stories -- >> you take a look at her, you read her words, i don't think so, i don't think so.
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he apparently found me attract of enough 11 years ago. but i don't take a personal insult, but i do take that as an insult to other women. >> she's far from alone. 12 women have come forward alleging inappropriate sexual behavior by donald trump. >> trump has said he is going to sue all the women who have come forward. does that worry you? >> i look a to silence women, perhaps other women coming forward and also to strike fear in the hearts of the women who already have come forward. and unfortunately that tactic works. but that's why i'm here today. to show that we shouldn't be afraid. >> trump has denied the allegations against him.
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along with donald trump's divisive campaign rhetoric that may be doing long-term damage to his businesses. we've seen threats of boycotts to his businesses. we go to "inside the final 30." >> p. >> reporter: posh hotels, condominiums, high-end fashion and one name in common -- trump. >> i'm really rich. >> but now the man that built the empire. >> they're bringing crime and rapists. i don't know what i said, i don't remember. >> grab them by the [ bleep ]. >> but after allegations of sexual assault -- >> it was like he was an octopus, like he had six arms.
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veterans and the disabled, is the trump name an asset or liability? >> this is tim o'brien. has this campaign help or hurt donald trump the brand in. >> he runs a hotel business that depends on people feeling good about being associated with a building with his name on it. women are turning him. it's going to have a seismic influence on him. >> it's already in force. there's an all-out battle to have the brand removed. >> when you moved in four years ago, were you bothered by it? >> i didn't think about it. now i think it.
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way to attack him. >> beth bernstein said she booked conferences and weddings at a conference in chicago for years. that was until news broke of this infamous recording. she wrote in her blog -- >> i simply cannot walk in the doors any longer. i will be following up with my >> i'd really like to buy you everything, if that were possible. >> the man and the brand, inseparable from each other but iconic as well. >> the scale is what brings the people, the on u lens, the size. >> casino.
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not always successful but daring and different, constantly redefining, reshaping, barrelling into the presidency with "the aand even roo. >> what we don't know is how it could impact his presidency. it's not clear what donald trump would do with his business if he became president of the united states. he's talked about putting it into a blind trust. >> i would probably have my children run it with my executives. and i wouldn't ever be involved. >> the idea behind a blind trust is that a third party takes over your portfolio so there are no issues and conflicts of interest. now, in this case trump's portfolio is his business, it's his name. so what happens there? it's unclear. >> reporter: also unclear, how all of this impacts his net
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>> a total net workt, $8,377 million,54,000. >> caller: that number has been disputed, in part because of his refusal to release his. >> been through the boycott. >> shannon coulter says her hash tag has been used by more than 125 million people, a movement large enough to have gotten ivanka's attention. >> i wonder what you say to the women who started this grab your
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wallet, but i we fer to talk about the women that inspire the brand. >> what was the core product in the trump brand. >> if you think about his portfolio, his target would really really. >> donald trump is essentially the 1% and he lives a very rarified lifestyle. he has products that are luxury brands. they aren't pitched to working class americans. but his core base is working class americans. >> tonight the trump organization telling abc news that the brand, quote, remains incredibly strong. we are seeing tremendous success across business units, adding,
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once-a-day latuda was proven effective for many people with bipolar depression. latuda is not for everyone. call your doctor about unusual mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. elderly dementia patients on latuda have an increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about fever, stiff muscles and confusion, as these may be signs of a life-threatening reaction, or if you have uncontrollable muscle movements, as these may be permanent. high blood sugar has been seen with latuda reme cases can lead to coma or death. other risks include decreased white blood cells, which can be fatal, dizziness on standing, seizures, increased cholesterol, weight or prolactin, trouble swallowing and impaired judgment. avoid grapefruit and grapefruit juice. use caution before driving or operating machinery. being there for the people i love means i get to be a part of life's little moments. and that means so much to me. ask your doctor if once-daily latuda
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if you're the father of a voting age daughter, it probably feels like just yesterday that you brought your little girl home from the hospital, you fed her, clothed her, gave her unconditional love and now that little traitor is cancelling out your vote. here's a look at families caught up in the political crossfire in our series "inside the final 30." >> she's o her dad. >> we've always been pretty close, we're both physicians. now that my dad is in new york and i live in florida, we don't spend as much time together. i'm a little nervous. >> the presidential election is sparking a family feud. >> he's been posting on facebook about his support for trump. that's made me a little uncomfortable. >> i don't remember the last time you came to new york without mom.
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families this years, caught up in the divisive -- >> basket of deplorables. >> nasty woman. >> -- fight for the white house. because he's with him and she's with her, it can be hard to see eye to eye. >> we can argue about that all day long. >> how is he going to direct that passion? >> can we talk? >> sure. >> think of this about an intervention because mara concern about your facebook page. >> when i was home in florida, my dad was giving the boys a bath. i go in and they're laughing hysterically but dad is teaching them to say "make america great again" and he posted it on facebook.
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narrowing down her sources. >> i had women wanting to talk and the joke was that we need a support group for this. >> me, my sister and brother were raised to believe we can do anything. i know that about my dad. >> donald trump does that for ivanka. >> would i support someone who is criminally >> i had thought not. >> that's what i thought. >> but he is that. that's where we disagree. >> this is what it would look like if voters only under 29 voted and only people over 65 voted, a different sorry. >> i think the big divide is the gender. we know women are supporting hillary clinton in big numbers.
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>> i'm kathy. >> my name is kevin lynch. >> my dad is supporting trump. >> my daughter, katherine, has decided to support hillary clinton. >> kevin's a north carolinian. >> second only to my rifles and my pistols is my harley. >> he's now the trump train. >> hello my radical left-wing daughter. i want you to tell me how many jobs hillary clinton or any other democrat has created. the answer is zero. >> wrong! >> why don't we get some gouy wo has created jobs? >> if your car isn't working and
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they can't fix it, you don't take it to a plumber, you take it to a better mechanic. >> this was my birthday present to me. >> but they rationalize it differently. >> i don't want to be judged my whole life's work based on the stupid things i've said, nor do i think trump should be treated that way. >> locker room talk is more about check out her legs or that woman's beautiful but advocating sexual assault. >> each agree the other is stuck in their ways. >> there is absolutely no way could i ever chang his mind. >> i love you. bye-bye, sweetie. >> bye. >> for mara and ed katz, blood is thicker than politics. >> what will thanksgiving dinner be like? >> it was my husband's
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