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tv   Nightline  ABC  October 13, 2017 12:37am-1:07am PDT

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. the gag was between your lips, is that correct? >> yes, that's correct. >> is this about right? >> no. it was a bit tighter than that. >> how about this, ma'am? >> yes, that's about it. >> jimmy: that is kate hudson in "marshall" with josh gad and chadwick bozeman. >> you can't really -- we've had such a hard time with the clips because you can't give too much of the movie away. >> jimmy: and there's some heavy stuff in the movie. >> there is heavy stuff. >> jimmy: you got 100% on rotten tomatoes with the top critics. >> yes! that was a first. >> jimmy: is it?
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do you even look at -- >> no, no, i can't, i can't. >> jimmy: what about your parents? did they look at their criticisms? >> no, no. >> jimmy: they never do? healthy mentality. >> if you believe the good ones, you have to believe the bad ones. if you believe every one, why am i reading about myself? >> jimmy: but you did know this one had 100%. >> yeah, because your producer told me. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: oh, okay, he told me as well. >> he's like, did you know you had 100%? i was like, what, no, because nobody tells me anything. it was awesome. >> jimmy: i see, i see. >> yeah, it was -- you know. >> jimmy: we talked about this book with the parties and stuff like that. when you were a teenager, did you ever like throw a party that your parents weren't aware of? >> oh, yeah, yeah. i talk about one of them in the book a little bit. and it's -- by thought our parents were out of town. we were older, late teens. >> jimmy: that's the time where trouble happens, yeah. >> we were, you know -- my parents liked to party.
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they're very like open. open-door type of family. so that's how we felt as teenagers. we were like, guys, parents are out of town, come on over. we thought it was going to be like 20 people. but like 50 of our friends were at the house. and we're having a blast. and all of a sudden the door flings open. and it's my mother. and we're -- it was like, rrr! everything just stopped. she was in a negligee. [ laughter ] you know, like -- and she looked around like, really? as you would think she would in one of her films. just like looking around. and then she goes, she goes to the lights, she turns the lights way down. she goes, "kids, lighting is everything." [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] then she left.
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and everybody was like, your mom is so cool! and ollie and i were literally like, no, it's going to be so bad in the morning. >> she was right about lighting. >> she was right. i talk about that in my book. >> jimmy: there's nothing worse than going to a party or a restaurant, it's like being inside a walmart. >> yeah, i'm one of those people that's like walking into a party, where's the food? how do you not have food at a party? just give me something. give me a pretzel. you know. so i have a little bit of that, how do you get people to get cozy and just relax and have a great need to relax? >> jimmy: you go into somebody's refrigerator when you're at their house, open the door and go in. >> yes, yes. i'll be asking as i'm going. can i go get a thing? yeah. >> jimmy: well, there you go. you're much more relaxed than i am. it's very good to see you. >> nice to see you. >> jimmy: congratulation on this the movie and the book too. [ cheers and applause ]
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"marshall" opens in theaters tomorrow. and kate's new book "pretty fun" comes out october 31st. kate hudson, everybody. we'll be right back with jared padalecki. this is google home mini. it's the google assistant for your house, so it gets you. if you mumble. [minions gibberish] it gets you. if you talk like this: man: add worcestershire sauce to my cart. it still gets you. gh: ok adding now. and if you're like: man: hey google, play my love playlist. (truly madly deeply by savage garden plays) uh really? play my love playlist. (pony by ginuwine plays) it's google home mini and the rest of the google home family. ♪ feel the power of thenew power...smax. ...to fight back theraflu's powerful new formula to defeat 7 cold and flu symptoms... fast. so you can play on. theraflu expressmax. new power.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> jimmy: hi there, welcome back to the show. for 13 seasons our next guest has battled hellhounds, dragons, dark fairies and demons of all types as the paranormal peacekeeper sam winchester on "supernatural." it airs thursday nights on the cw. please welcome jared padalecki. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ i heard today, i didn't realize that your show's been on for 13 seasons, that's crazy. >> yeah. >> jimmy: you knew that, right? >> constantly reminded. tonight is our 13th season premiere? congratulations. that's unbelievable.
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[ cheers and applause ] >> i think i still -- i think i still pale in comparison to you, you're 15, 16? >> jimmy: almost 15. but still. [ cheers and applause ] especially for a scripted show. it's a remarkably long time. >> yeah, it surprises me. obviously with today being the premiere and whatnot, there are a lot of texts and e-mails going back and forth, congratulations. >> jimmy: yeah, sure. >> good luck, and it's still -- >> jimmy: are you guys getting along still? usually after the fourth season is when successful shows, the stars of the show turn on each other. >> we do get along. we get along really well. jenson and i are the two brothers in the show. we're texas boys. he was born and raised in dallas. i saw my houston buddies over there. >> jimmy: that's right, right. >> i was born in san antonio, we both live in austin. we're both married to -- actresses. >> jimmy: the same woman? >> yes, yes. >> jimmy: your wife was on the show? >> yes, season 4.
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>> jimmy: explain what happened. >> it gets a little tricky, right? so i have a 5-year-old boy and a 3-year-old boy and they call jenson uncle jenson. a baby girl who doesn't yet make words, necessarily, but i'm sure -- >> jimmy: she will call him uncle jenson. >> likewise his daughter j.j. calls me uncle jared. my wife was on the show, we met, went out, fell in love, all that. at the end of season 4, daddy and uncle jenson killed my wife. so they don't watch the show yet but that's going to be a very -- it's going to be -- >> jimmy: how did daddy and uncle jenson do it? >> i held her by the arms while he stabbed her. >> jimmy: yeah, no. [ laughter ] >> honest to god i'm sort of like, uhh -- >> jimmy: they must never see that. not even in their 30s should they see that. >> honestly, it would still be a little frightening. >> jimmy: which one is most likely to look it up and watch it?
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>> shep, my 3-year-old. he's got -- we call him drunk jared. >> jimmy: what? [ laughter ] >> he's not mean, doesn't have a mean bone in his body. he's just kind of like, ha ha ha, ha ha ha! doesn't really realize it. >> jimmy: little drunk jared is going to be excited to see this. >> i haven't seen that. >> jimmy: you're on the cover of "entertainment weekly." [ cheers and applause ] not only that, you are alone on the cover of "entertainment weekly." [ cheers and applause ] that's kind of cool, right? >> that's really cool. >> jimmy: yeah. you hadn't seen it yet? >> i had seen pictures. i hadn't seen it in person. >> jimmy: you want to touch it? it's shiny. >> couldn't hurt. yeah. >> jimmy: well, there you go. that's pretty good. >> yeah. i was even joking. my parents still have their "entertainment weekly" subscription. it's not something i would have imagined in a million years. for those of you guys out there -- >> jimmy: your parents are going to be psyched when it shows up
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at the house. do they know it's coming? >> oh, yeah, they know before i know. "hey, we just found out you're doing a photo shoot." really? i don't have an e-mail yet. >> jimmy: are they very involved in your life? >> they are, and they're very, very excited. they tivo everything or dvr or whatever? you shoot to show up in vancouver. >> right. >> jimmy: do you get a lot of time off? >> we get -- we basically film a school year. we go in july, we get thanksgiving, a couple of weeks at christmas and new year's, finnish april. we pepper in three-day weekends. but by and large. >> jimmy: that's great, that sounds like a good deal. >> it as good gig. vancouver, any canadians in the house? [ scattered applause ] >> jimmy: sometimes they sneak in, we haven't built that wall yet. >> it's a beautiful spot. >> jimmy: yes, it is one of the great cities in north america, yes. >> it it really is. >> jimmy: i'm not joking, it is. >> yeah. >> jimmy: why would that be a joke? >> he said north america.
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maybe they didn't hear north, they heard "america." >> jimmy: i see, i got it, yeah. >> hey, hey, hey. >> jimmy: you're doing 13 seasons of this show. i heard -- one of my producers told me that you won a debate contest, national debate contest in high school. >> i did, yes. when i was in high school, in san antonio, back in the late '90s, i did speech and debate. and we -- my specific -- what i did wasn't lincoln/douglass, it was duo interpretation. it was a really weird, strange -- if this was a scene in a movie, you and i are talking, looking at each other. if we were doing the duo interpretation version of this scene between us, we'd be looking straight forward and i'd be saying, jimmy, how are you? i'd grab something off your cheek and you'd hit my hand away. so you react. >> jimmy: are you arguing with the other person? >> sure. we have -- in our scene he hits me, i react to it.
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>> jimmy: it's scripted? >> it's a script. >> jimmy: it's not debate with punching? >> no. like the russian chess boxing. >> yeah, make it a lot more interesting. >> it actually would, i'd watch that. >> jimmy: this is a script. really you guys were acting? >> acting but it was like acting to a green screen. and these days, because "supernatural" has a lot of visual effects, i'll do a lot of my stuff are as you know, speaking to a camera, to a tape mark on the inside of a camera box. >> jimmy: right, monsters and all that stuff. >> yeah which is strange but they haven't created the visual effect monster yet. so had i not kind of done that for years in school. there were two things, as a matter of fact -- >> jimmy: you learned something in school. >> i did, i did. >> jimmy: this is amazing. [ laughter ] >> and even kind of more strangely, i took latin in school. so i could do better on my s.a.t.s because it teaches root words. oh, i heard you take latin, raise your iq, maybe i can get some scholarships. all the while i took latin in
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high school, no offense to any latinophiles, latin fanatics, but i knew i would never, ever use it in my life. now i'm always saying some latin incantation or exorcism. >> jimmy: the only nonpriest in america who put your latin to use. >> regularly uses latin. >> jimmy: that's great. [ cheers and applause ] that's a great lesson fo for .00004% of kids out there. well, it's great to meet you again. congratulations on the show. "supernatural" airs thursdays at 8:00 p.m. on the cw. jared padalecki! and we'll return with comedian ismael loutfi. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ jack: why am i sitting here at
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jack: this ridiculously long table in the middle of nowhere? jack: to invite all my friends in the industry to try this. jack: fast food's first ever ribeye burger. jack: made with 100% ribeye beef, grilled onions, a red wine glaze and creamy havarti cheese. jack: ahh, here comes the competition now. jack: and of course, since they work for my competitors, i've obscured their identities jack: except for this guy. jack: he is so screwed. jack: try my new havarti & grilled onion and all-american ribeye burgers.
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(dog panting) another 2am stroll, huh? i'm worried. i have this medical bill. dave, you have anthem, and they have people to talk to who are empowered to help answer any question you... (dog grunting, panting) is... is he okay? real people? living and breathing. hopefully not breathing like that. for all the things that keep you up at night, anthem blue cross has a solution. >> jimmy: our next guest can be seem performing all over the los angeles area, making his television debut tonight. please welcome ismael loutfi! >> huh, wow, wow, good to see
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you! hello. good to see you. okay. good, all right. so i'm a cutie patootie. i'm a sweet young man with a kind face. ethnic, not ethnic enough to disappoint anybody's parents. you know how hard it is for me to scare white people? i can't. i can't do it. i look like the guy on the cover of every "welcome to college" brochure. just give me a backpack and a cardigan. hi, my name is nonthreatening minority. i'm here to tell you that your state university is both inclusive and safe. just ask my best friends, black nerd and asian wheelchair girl. [ laughter ] watch us ride around campus and fight crime, we're superheroes.
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our super power, white guilt. [ laughter ] i'm a muslim. that hasn't been fun. i don't know if you've noticed the last 16 years have been pretty stressful for us. i can't watch the news, just the way they talk about us is so demeaning, the buzz words, talking about moderate muslims. that's their go-to. i want to see one moderate musl muslim, show me one moderate muslim denounce terror. like, screw you, dude. who came up with moderate muslim? what an objectifying label to give 1.5 billion people. moderate muslims, mild muslims, your sweet and sour muslims, your lemon pepper, teriyaki. and also, we do denounce terror all the time but nobody puts a camera on that, nobody wants to see people be moderate, that's boring. you want to see people up and down and be craze. the point of the news system is to sensationalize everything. makes me so mad.
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i just want to blow stuff up. [ laughter ] [ applause ] i get so angry! anybody else have that instinct in their blood? i don't know. [ laughter ] i don't know what that is. probably nothing to worry about, all right. okay, it's been tense. i think we can all agree it's been a tense year ever since the dude became the thing. [ laughter ] the guy with the -- yeah it was weird. i think that was weird night for everybody. for me, at the time of the election, i was on a road trip from tennessee to atlanta, georgia. and as the election results became official, as it was like official, donald trump won, it was 2:00 a.m., middle of the night, my car died. my car just dead on the side of the highway. so i get out of the car. i look at it for no reason. i call the tow truck company. they're in a great mood. i'm like, hey, i'm brown and i'm stranded in tennessee, i need to go to atlanta.
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they're like, don't you worry, we're going to send heath! heath is gonna getcha! that's the scariest way you could have said that but not much i can do about it now. heath shows up in his tow truck. heath is this big old southerner, big camo jacket, camo hat, a big beard full of bramble and leaves. i get in the truck. it's a six-hour journey by the way. six hours through the deep south. all right, so the first hour is just complete silence. me and heath are just -- whoo. interesting day, okay. and then heath starts opening up to me, starts talking. he's like, so -- where you from? i'm like, florida. he's like, oh, yeah, sure, okay, yep, all right. i'm like, and syria. like, i know what you want to hear. you don't want to hear florida. i get it, i understand, i know.
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i'm cool with it. so i told him syria. and he was cool with it. he was really cool. and i know that because then he started telling me about his life. he was like, i used to live in shanghai, china. i was like, oh my god, heath. that's kind of cool. he was like, yeah, i lived in beijing for two years. oh my god, beijing, what's that even about? then we just started talking about china. we talked about the cuisine, the culture, communism, the pollution, the poll tibs. it felt good, it get like america was going okay, like our conversation was a band-aid being put on the wound left by that divisive election, right? and then out of nowhere he was like, i don't like chinese people. i'm like, dammit, heath, are you serious? [ laughter ] you were doing so good, come on, man. [ applause ] then he literally goes, no, no, i mean like asians. that was his correction. he went bigger. what?
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no, i don't hate 1 billion people, i hate 4 billion people! what are you doing? he's like, they're sneaky. you can't say that 4 billion people are sneaky, man, come on. plus i had just told him that i'm from syria. syria's in asia. i'm an asian. but he didn't know that and i didn't want to tell him. so -- i just held it in for five hours. just not going to mention that. now looking back on it, me not telling him that i'm asian, pretty sneaky asian [ bleep ]. he was actually kind of right about that. thank you so much, bye-bye! appreciate it! >> jimmy: very sneaky, you were very sneaky. ismael loutfi! i'd like to thank all my guests and apologize to matt damon. we ran out of time. "nightline" is next. thank you for watching, buenos noches!
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conjoined twin girls. little eva and erin sharing a body but with two healthy hearts. >> one, two -- >> one, two -- >> this parents' anguish as one grows stronger and the other weakens. >> you talk to them, you're going to get strong, you're going to survive this. >> could they survive separation surgery? >> knowing the girls and what they've gone through -- they're fighters. >> tonight the dramatic, risky procedure with two lives on the line. >> a prayer for brace. >> linsey davis on one family's emotional journey. >> was there ever a part of you that thought this might not work? >> and the moment that brought everyone to tears. >> this special edition of "nightline," "becoming two," will be right back.
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this is a special edition of "nightline." "becoming two." >> reporter: from the moment they were born, you couldn't see eva sandoval without seeing her sister erika. conjoined twins. they have never known life apart. tonight we take you inside the
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complicated and risky surgery to separate them. >> have we anticipated all the potential risks? are we prepared to deal with a bad outcome? >> reporter: these two little lives on the line. was there ever a part of you that thought this might not work? the sandovals' journey begins in sacramento, california, in the spring of 2014. with three children almost out of the house, 44-year-old aida sandoval and her husband of 25 years, art, were looking forward to becoming empty nesters. but little do they know they're about to receive some life-changing news. >> i was having pain. then i told art about it. and he's like, go to the doctor, i think it's your ulcer. i said, i don't think it's my ulcer. >> reporter: to her surprise, aida finds out she's pregnant with not one but two babies. so what was your reaction? >> whoa. >> shocked. >> shocked. shocked, like okay -- >> he was pretty quiet. >> we're not kids anymore.
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>> reporter: one month later, aida's doctor recommends she sees a specialist. she assumed because of her advanced age. >> it felt an eternity by the time the doctor came in. he said, we do find some abnormalities. they are twins. and he goes, they are conjoined. >> reporter: conjoined twins are a rare phenomenon. their chances of survival even rarer. about half are stillborn. only 35% survive beyond the first day. >> i think when you're hit with some news like that -- he didn't know how to deal with it. i didn't know how to deal with it. you don't know who to turn to. >> reporter: the sandovals went to dr. gary hartman at stanford lucille packard children's hospital. >> this is erika's pelvis -- >> reporter: an expert in the world of conjoined twins. but despite having six successful separation surgeries under his belt, he says every case presents itself own challenges. what did you say to them then? >> we were pretty blunt. what we told them was we didn't know that they could be separated. we weren't real optimistic about
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quality of life. >> reporter: doctors gave them the option of terminating the pregnancy. did you ever have a moment where you thought, should we do this? >> i didn't. >> what was it that made you think, this is never an option to end this pregnancy? >> i feel it was my faith. >> we talked about it, like let's give them a chance. you know, if it's meant to be it's meant to be. >> reporter: after 33 weeks of pregnancy, the sandovals welcomed two baby girls into the world. erika rose and eva victoria. they are joined from the sternum all the way down to the pelvis, and they share a third leg. but they have two healthy hearts. >> you see them and they have tubes, they had the little covers over their eyes. they did ask us, you can't carry them, they're very fragile. you question yourself, are we doing the right thing? you talk to them, you say, you are strong. you're going to get through this. >> reporter: right from

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