tv Jimmy Kimmel Live ABC February 27, 2019 11:35pm-12:37am PST
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>> i'm alma daetz. for larry and sandhya, thanks for being here. china too if it didn't work out. >> reporter: are you concerned if you are not able to reach an agreement that the testing will start again and all of this time he can continuing to develop their program? >> he said the testing will not start. he said he is not going to do testing of rockets or missiles or anything having to do with nuclear. all i can tell you is that's what he said. we'll see. yes, go ahead, please. go ahead, in the back. red, in the red. >> reporter: thank you. thank you, mr. president. jessica stone from cgtn. i have a question about china. you talk about china being willing potentially to help economically and the fact that you will talk to president moon and prime minister abe, how would you describe what has happened so far between
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pyongyang and washington? >> as you know, 93% of the goods coming into north korea come through china, so there's a great power there. at the same time i believe -- i happen to believe that north korea is calling its own shots and not taking orders from anybody. he's a very strong guy. they are able to do things that are pretty amazing, and 93% still come in from china. china has an influence and china has been a big help. russia has been a big help, too. as you know there's a small part of the border but nevertheless significant, about 28 miles, and things can happen there, too. they have been a help. yes, go ahead, please. >> reporter: thanks, president. jen chun with the media group of china. in your meeting with chairman kim this morning and yesterday, did the topic of china come up? if so what can you share with us today? you probably will have the mare
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alargo summit in march or would you like it accomplished the agenda with china? >> we did talk about china a lot. he is getting along with china, and so are we. we look at what happened to our country, we picked up millions of worth, and our unemployment numbers are among the best we ever had in our history. individual groups like african-american women, you just take a look at any group, hispanic, you saw that, it just came out, the best in history. african-american, the best in history. so many different numbers are coming out so good. we have the strongest economy probably possibly that we have ever had. chrysler just announced they are going to spend $4.5 billion in michigan, and they are building
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a plant, and it's actually an expansion of another plant and it will double up their jobs and even more than that. a lot of great things are happening. with china there having difficulties, as you know, and i think a lot of the difficulty is because of the tariffs they are having. in addition to that we are putting a tremendous amount of money -- you saw trade deficits went down last month and everybody was trying to find out why. we are taking in a lot of tariff money and it's going to the bottom line and it has reduced the trade deficit. we will see what happens with china. i think we will have a very good chance. their numbers are down but i don't want that. i want them to do great. we have been losing anywhere from 300 to $500 billion a year with china for many, many years. again, like other things, many presidents should have done this before me. nobody did. so we're doing it.
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go ahead. go ahead, please. right here, this gentleman. >> reporter: specialist from nk news. what is your relationship with president moon that reached the glass ceiling due to sanctions? >> i like president moon very much. we have a great relationship. believe it or not i have a great relationship with almost every leader. a lot of people find that hard to understand, but i do. some take advantage of our country like you wouldn't believe. when they know i know it, which i know in every case, and maybe it sort of freezes them up a little bit. but we have a lot of good relationships. we will be calling president moon very soon, as soon as i get by the phone on the plane and he'll be one of the first calls. i'll be calling prime minister abe of japan telling him about where we are and what we're
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doing. but i will be making those calls. he's working very hard. president moon is working very hard and he would love to see a deal and has been very helpful. okay? thank you. go ahead. yes. >> reporter: thank you, mr. president. i am a reporter from "global times" from china. what are you expecting china to do in the next step to mediation your relationship with north korea? >> to use china? we do. china has been helpful. president xi has helped us -- mike, i would say he's helped us a lot, right? >> yeah. >> i actually called him recently to say, hey, whatever you can do on this. he has been very helpful at the border and helpful with north korea generally. could he be more helpful? probably. but he's been excellent.
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go ahead. please. >> reporter: thanks, mr. president. could you -- did you commit with chairman kim to a next summit during your term? >> no. we'll see if it happens. i have not committed. >> reporter: they are at this point, some would say, a nuclear power. do you accept north korea as a nuclear armed state for the time being? are you thinking about reimposing the military exercises with south korea or will you keep it in a freeze -- >> the military exercises, i gave that up quite a while ago because it costs us $100 million every time we do it. we fly these massive bombers in from guam. when i first started, a certain general said, yes, sir, we fly them in from guam, it's next door, and next door is seven hours away, and then they come
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and drop million dollars of bombs and then go back. we would spend -- we spend hundreds of millions of dollars on those exercises, and i hated to see it and thought it was unfair. frankly i was of the opinion that south korea should help us with that. we are protecting south korea, and i think they should help us with that. so those exercises are very expensive, and i was telling the generals, exercising is fun and nice and they play the war games and i'm not saying it's not necessary, because at some levels it is, and at other levels it's not. it's a very, very expensive thing. we have to think about that, too. when they spend hundreds of millions of dollars on those exercises, we don't get reimbursed. we are spending a tremendous amount of money on many countries protecting countries that are very rich that can certainly afford to pay us and then some. those countries, by the way
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those countries know that it's not right but nobody ever asked them before. i have asked them and we are gaining a lot of money. we picked up over $100 billion in nato over the last two years. $100 billion more has come in. we're doing that with a lot of countries. you will be seeing that a lot. yes, sir, please. one second, please. >> reporter: thank you, mr. president. you have a personal relationship, and i believe vice president pence does with the family of otto warmbier. you talked about kim jong-un kin being your friend. have you or singapore asked him about auotto warmbier's death a why do you call him your friend? >> i have. i don't think it was in his interest at all. i know the warmbier family well and i think they are an
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incredible family and what happened is horrible. i really believe something bad happened to him and i don't think the top leadership knew about it. when they had to send him home -- by the way, i got the prisoners back, and i got the hostages back, and auot autot oo was one of those hostages and he was in shape nthat i thought wa horrorable. the others were healthy. otto came back in a condition that was just terrible. i did speak about it. i don't believe that he would have allowed that to happen. it was not to his advantage to allow that to have happened. those prisons are rough, they are rough places and bad things happen, but i don't believe -- i don't believe he knew about it. >> reporter: did he tell you that -- did kim jong-un tell you -- >> he felt badly about it.
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he knew the case very well, but he knew it later. you got a lot of people. it's a big country, there's a lot of people, and in those prisons and camps you have a lot of people and some really bad things happened to otto, some really bad things. he tells me he didn't know about it and i will take him at his word. yes, ma'am, go ahead. please, go ahead in the back. no, in the back, behind you. thank you. >> reporter: mr. president, you have discussed the issue of possible inspections to north korea's nuclear site -- >> you are going to have to speak a little louder. where are you from? >> reporter: russia's news agency. you have discussed inspections to the nuclear sites in the talks with the chairman.
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inspections. >> why don't you talk about that, mike? >> oh, inspections with north korea. yeah, we would be able to do that very easily. we have that set up so we would be able to do that very easily. the inspections in north korea will take place -- if we do something with them, we have a schedule that is set up that is very good. we know things, as david was asking about certain places and certain sites, there were sites that people don't know about that we know about, and we would be able to do inspections, we think, very successfully. yes, ma'am. go ahead, please. >> reporter: thank you, mr. president. >> there's a lot of people here by the way. a big group of people. >> reporter: con news, israel. you are trying to bring peace to
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the middle east. a peace plan is to be produced in the future -- >> we hope. we hope. we are working hard on the peace plan. >> reporter: i believe you do, as you mentioned before require israel to make compromises to the palestinians. as far as you know is prime minister netanyahu willing to make the compromises which are very much needed. the second question, netanyahu is about to be indicted, and do you wish to tell him something on this occasion? >> he has been a great prime minister, and i don't know about his difficulty, and you told me something i have been hearing about but i don't know what is it, and he has been wonderful, and they pay for things from the united states and $4 billion is
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a lot each year, and they are -- they have been very good. they have been incredible, actually, in many ways. but there is a chance for peace between israel and the palestinians. it's interesting. all my life i heard the toughest of all deals, when we talk about deals, and i like deals, but the toughest of all deals would be peace between israel and the palestinians. i would love to be able to produce it. we will see what happens. we were paying the palestinians a lot of money and i ended that two years ago, and they were not saying the right thing and i said why would we pay somebody who is not saying things about us and not wanting to go to the peace table, and they have bench better. we will see what happens. i think we have actually a good shot peace between israel and the palestinians.
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>> reporter: i am from china. do you believe it's possible the north korea and u.s. could reach -- could it be like the u.s. and vietnam in the future? >> you have to go again? >> reporter: do you think it's possible the relationship between the u.s. and north korea in the future, could it be like the relationship between the u.s. and vietnam? >> yeah. yeah, we have very good relations. you mentioned japan, and we have lots of things happening with japan. we have trade talks started. for japan, it has not been a fair situation for the united states. we are starting trade talks with japan. i think we will have a good deal for the united states. that's been a very unfair situation. prime minister abe understands that and that's fine. yes, sir, please, back there. >> reporter: thank you, mr.
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president. do you think the next meeting could be soon or might take some time? >> i can't tell you. it could be soon or might not be for a long time. i can't tell you. it may be soon, but it may not be for a long time. i could have done a deal today but it would have been a deal that -- it would have been something that i would not have been happy about, and mike would not have been happy about. we had pretty big options but felt it was not appropriate and we want to do it right. yes, in the back. in the back. yes, ma'am, please. >> reporter: icb news. at which point did it become clear to you that you wouldn't be getting a deal here in hanoi? the language from the south and kim jong-un was positive last night and this morning and therefore was it a mistake --? >> no, i think the language was good throughout. the language has been good even now.
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i don't go by language, and we have had the toughest language in the history of diplomacy if you want to call it diplomacy and yet we became very friendly. i don't think there was ever tougher language than that. this was something that should have been handled by other presidents long before me and long before they had the kind of power they have. but it wasn't. i am not just blaming the obama administration, which by the way, it did nothing, nothing, absolutely nothing on north korea. it allowed things that happened and to happen that were very inappropriate. but i am not blaming the obama administration, i am blaming many administrations. something should have happened. i don't think the rhetoric has been bad at all. initially it was horrible and now it's been good. one more. how about you? please, go ahead. please. go ahead. >> reporter: i am from south
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korea. you said we do not practically know when they will be -- when north korea will be willing to come to the table and take actions that is required. if that's the case would the u.s. be willing to strengthen the sanctions and move forward -- >> i don't want to talk about that, and i don't want to talk about increasing sanctions. they are strong. they have a lot of great people in north korea that have to live also. that's important to me. i would say my whole attitude changed a lot because i got to know, as you know, chairman kim very well and they have a point of view also. i don't want to really talk about that. i hope for the sake of south korea and for the sake of japan and for the sake of china -- i was talking to president xi, and
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he gets the respect of a lot of people, and i said you can't love having a nuclear state right next to china, and he really doesn't. he would like to see that problem solved, too. that's it. ladies and gentlemen, i am about to get on a plane and fly back to a wonderful place called washington, d.c., so thank you very much. thank you, fellas. there you have it, president trump making major news this morning here in hanoi, saying he just left chairman kim and saying, you heard it right there, sometimes you have to walk. that was the line of the news conference. he said they had very productive meetings during the second summit. he called kim quite a guy and quite a character and the relationship is strong and in the end we decided not to sign an agreement. when asked if it was more difficult than the president thought, and he said they wanted sanctions lifted entirely and he was not ready for that. he went on to say of the north
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korean dictator, he had a vision, and make no mistake, the major headline out of hanoi seen all over the world there has been no agreement raefeached at this time. and sarah sanders from the white house was saying they look forward to meeting in the future. and i want to get to our white house correspondent. on something that you made news with with what you asked the president about michael cohen, his former fixer, and personal attorney for a decade, you asked him if he thought of what he said, and the president acknowledged on the world stage, i tried to watch as i could and he lasered in on the one thing he appreciated hearing from michael cohen. >> reporter: he did, david. first of all, an extraordinary acknowledgment that while he was here at the high-stakes summit, he tried to watch as much of it
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as he could. keep in mind this testimony started just after he finished his dinner last night with kim jong-un, and went on overnight in local time here in vietnam. he must have been up quite late before he went into the meeting today, and the terms he focused in on like a laser is michael cohen said during the hearing he did not have any evidence that trump did not collude with the russians during the campaign, and cohen said at the same time he has suspicions and believes -- he said he believed the president new full well about the trump tower meeting and paul manafort and don junior promising dirt on hillary clinton, and michael cohen under oath said he has no evidence of
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russian collusion. and the president said he lied about everything, 95%, but he told the truth about that. >> acknowledging on the world stage, jon karl, thanks to you that he tried to watch all of the cohen testimony, and he pointed to the one thing cohen said, and he said i would not use the word colluding, and a major signal the president will use when he lands back in washington. i want to get to martha who has been with us every step of the way. martha, you heard what the president said there when it comes to north korea and their nuclear powers. he said chairman kim agreed, no more testing, that would continue, and no more rockets as we have not seen in many, many months now. he said the north korean dictator agreed that would continue. >> reporter: yeah, david. the tests will no longer continue until we don't know when, because i think one of the remarkable things about what the president just said, and mike
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pompeo, there's clearly a fundamental difference in how they understood what happened at that summit last june that we were at in singapore. the u.s. clearly thought north korea was ready to denuclearization, and kim jong-un has a different view of that, he wants the sanctions dropped. you will remember president trump said after the summit they are no longer a nuclear threat. we have had intelligence officials saying yes, they are. aft as stopping the testing, that's significant, it has been stopped but analyst will tell you they could start it up at anytime and they may already have the ability to put the nuclear on a missile that could reach the u.s. i think it's a major fundamental difference about what happened last june at that summit.
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>> martha, stick with us. i want to show our viewers at home the image of the working lunch planned here in hanoi. the empty room and lunch never took place. the news conference took place much sooner than expected. they never went to that lunch. martha, briefly, how do you bridge the divide? you have the north korean dictator saying he wants the sanctions lifted but is not willing to fully denuclearization, which is something the president said they were not willing to give up? >> they clearly have a lot of work to do, david. i also thought it was interesting how often he deferred to secretary of state, mike pompeo, and mike pompeo clearly paid a big role in this and has been negotiating all along and it sounds to me he was the one to say we need to walk away from the deal and we are not getting what we want.
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i think they will keep talking. you heard the secretary of state, mike pompeo, saying they were making progress and hope to have a lot more in the coming months. >> martha, our thanks to you as well this morning. let's get to former homeland security adviser to president trump in the trump white house. great to have you as always. as you know, these some mitummi lot go into them. >> i'm a little disappointed, but i think martha has it right, david. there's lot to be excited about in a sense here, right? i'm very happy the president stayed clear-eyed about his responsibility. i'm very pleased that he understood, in fact, and repeated it there in that really hard to unpack, i think we're going to have a lot to do press conference. he mentioned to us that he knows
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he's the leader of the free world here and he's got a lot of people riding on him, so he maintained credibility and i think he maintained a trusted rapport with chairman kim, and i think he will maintain the resolve of the coalition with the decision to walk away here. >> all right, tom bossert with us as well. tom, thank you, as always. the major headlines to come out of the news conference moments ago with president trump, he has left chairman kim and the summit is over. the president is saying sometimes you have to walk. he said the relationship will continue and the talks will continue and no agreement here in hanoi in the second summit. the major headline question came from our own jon karl, and the president acknowledging he did try to watch while he was here in hanoi the testimony from michael cohen as much as possible, and he didn't like one
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thing, he would not call it collusion. we will have more on this on "good morning america." of course i will see you on "world news tonight." have a good day. >> announcer: this has been >> announcer: this has been a special report from ab >> dicky: from hollywood, it's "jimmy kimmel live"! tonight -- oscar winner, lady gaga, adam carolla, and music from maná. and now, all right, jimmy kimmel! ♪ [cheers and applause] >> jimmy: very nice. welcome, everyone. hi, i'm jimmy. i'm the host of the show. thanks for watching, thanks for coming. if you're joining us, i know a
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lot of you are here from like out of town and you're probably not watching tv, but today was a very dramatic day for the government of the united states >states. the president's former lawyer and fixer, cohen testified before the house oversight committee. you just like the oversight committee? michael cohen had a statement that mentioned both the hall cau holocaust and a porn star. he called his former boss a racist, con man and cheat. but he worked with him because he said it was intoxicating, not like wine but cocktails with
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cosby kiech cosby kind of thing. >> last fall i mpled guilty in federal court to felonies at the direction of and in coordination with individual number one. and for the record, individual number one is president donald j. trump. >> well, you know, the thing is, he hears number one, he can't help but get excited. the republicans were relentless in their blind defense of the president. their strategy seemed to be we don't believe this liar. we believe the other liar, okay? as if being a liar wasn't the main reason trump hired michael cohen. the job interview went something like this. will you lie for me, michael? yes, mr. president. welcome aboard. but i have to say, seriously,
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and this is -- [ applause ] i watched the whole thing. it is disturbing to me that these republicans in the house. not all of them, one of them, named justin amash from michigan seemed to be reasonable. almost none of their questions were about dronald trump. if i was president and was accused of something i didn't do i would want a full investigation, i would want them to ask real questions. instead, they had this image of trump raging around in his underpants. it was quite a show evof outrag and bluster. i haven't seen acting like this since "jingle all the way." >> how can we believe anything you say? the answer is we can't. >> you lie on your taxes.
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you lie to banks and have been convicted of lying to congress. >> i've represented many several thousand men and you remind me many of them. >> he's going to prison for lying to congress. >> it's a shameful mockery. >> there's not much that you won't lie about. >> was it exhausting, keeping track of all the lies you were telling these people. >> tax evader and all around liar. >> liar, liar, pants on fire. >> jimmy: this guy was so loyal to donald trump he took out a loan on his house to pay off a porn star he didn't even get to have sex with. imagine refinancing your mortgage so your boss can sexually disappoint someone for two minutes at a golf tournament, okay? only the best people. [ applause ] so michael cohen dropped a
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number of bombshells and few mcnuggets. he said the president is currently under investigation for crimes we don't know about yet. he says as far as he knows, there's no russian hooker tape, no tape of donald hitting melania in an elevator. he fears if trump loses in 2020 there may not be a peaceful transfer of power, the president may hide in the lincoln bedroom under a bucket of chicken? will someone get this guy e-mail and teach him to text? during the campaign he listened in on roger spophone on speakerphone talking about wikileaks, which is bigly, because trump told the "new york times" he never talked to stone about wikileaks. and the claim that he wasn't personally involved in covering
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his relationship with stormy daniels, he brought a copy of the check from donald trump. >> i am bringing a copy of a $35,000 check that donald trump personally signed from his personal bank account on august 1st, 2017, when he was president of the united states, pursuant to the coverup, which was the basis of my guilty plea to reimburse me. the word used by mr. trump's tv lawyer, for the illegal hush money i paid on his behalf. >> and by the way, look at that signature again. he signs his name like, it's like he's trying to scrape stucco off the side of a house or something. but, if that check was hush money reimbursement, it's proof of a very serious campaign finance violation. not only did he ask cohen to cover hayis bad deeds but his b
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grades. >> i'm talking about a man who declares himself brilliant but directed me to threaten his high school, his colleges and the college board to never release his grades or s.a.t. scoring. >> jimmy: don't anyone panic, but he's talk about the guy negotiating a nuclear arms agreement right now. our president is a 72-year-old man. [ applause ] who still worries about his s.a.t. scores. don jr., djtj got a shout out. >> his son don jr. had the woirs judgme judgment of anyone in the world. >> jimmy: so, you see there are things we can agree on, on both sides of the aisle. this is courtesy of jim jordan.
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this guy's head is so far up donald trump's ass. he brought out a twitter account called women for cohen. >> you created the fake twitter account, women for cohen and paid for them to post tweets like this one. in a world of lies, deception and fraud we appreciate this honest guy @michael cohen, #tgif. #handsome, #sexy. was that done to protect the president? >> i didn't actually set that up. it was done by a young lady that worked for red finch, and during the course of the campaign, which you would know, it's somewhat crazy and wild. we were having fun. that's what it was, sir, we having fun. >> jimmy: we're just crazy and wild people, i don't now. guillermo, go start a twitter account. make sure you use #sexy
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and #tgif. congratulations are also in order for the chairman of the oversight committee, elijah cummings for providing us with the joke of the day. >> every one of us in this room has a duty. >> jimmy: well, those things do go on for a while. [ applause ] this is interesting. michael cohen said back in 2013 there was an art auction at which the president directed him to use money from the trump foundation, their charity, to secretly pay a bidder at the art auction to make sure his portrait, that portrait of donald trump, there were a bunch being sold, trump wanted to make sure his got the highest price of all of them. and then, after he secretly bought his own portrait with money from the charity, he
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tweeted, just found out that at a charity auction of celebrity portraits in east hampton, my portrait by artist william quigley topped list at 60k. yeah, because you paid the 60k. he lies for no reason. [ applause ] who cares? who cares which portrait at an art auction in east hampton sold for the most? it's not like he painted it in some sort of competition with some other -- cohen also went after trump's achilles heel, the terrible bone spurs that prevented him from serving no doubt bravely in vietnam. >> mr. trump claimed it was because of a bone spur. but when i asked for medical records he gave me none and said there was no surgery. he told me not to answer the specific questions by reporters but rather offer simply the fact that he received a medical deferment. he finished the conversation with the following comment.
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you think i'm stupid? i'm not going to vietnam. and i find it ironic, mr. president, that you are in vietnam right now. [ laughter ] [ applause ] >> jimmy: i wish i could have been in vietnam to watch that with him. the president is in vietnam. he's having a summit with kim jong un, and you can see there they are. the world's two most famous victims of super cuts. nervous. kim jong un looks nervous. [ applause ] kim jong un looks like he showed up for a tinder date and the guy doesn't look anything like thinks profile picture. so trump and kim jong un had a private chat for about 30 minutes, a four-course dinner and an exceptionally awkward handshake. look at this, watch this here. here, ah, there we go. that's right. he calls that one the slice. the president did take a break
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from the sum toyota twemit to t retweet, michael cohen was one of many lawyers who represented me unfortunately. i had other clients. he had two other clients, one of them sean hannity. he was just barred by the state supreme court. he did bad things unrelated to trump. he is lying to reduce prison time, using crooked's lawyer. what a sad thing this is to see. long before donald trump had this relationship with kim jong un, michael cohen was his guy. so we thought it might be fitting to take a look back at the friendship that was. >> i'm obviously very loyal and dedicated to mr. trump. i think he's going to be not just a good president. i think he's going to be a great president. >> michael cohen is a very talented lawyer. >> he's a man of great intellect, great intuition and great abilities. >> they broke into the office of one of my personal attorneys, good man. >> i've never come across a
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situation where mr. trump has said something that's not accurate. >> there are, seriously? >> yes, seriously. >> breaking news, michael cohen will testify to the senate. >> i understood michael cohen very well. turned out he wasn't a very good lawyer, frankly. >> i'm done being loyal to president trump. >> and he's a weak person. >> since taking office, he has become the worse version of himself. >> michael cohen is lying, and he's trying to get a reduced sentence for things that have nothing to do with me. >> [ bleep ]. >> you do not want to [ bleep ] with me! >> look at this! donald trump, druonald trump, drurgets oh, my god! >> jimmy: those two can't make
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it. we have a great show for you tonight. are you excited about the show? >> yeah, very excited. >> jimmy: tonight on the show, music from maná, adam carolla is here, and we'll be right back with lady gaga. so stick around! [cheers and applause] ♪ se] ♪ abc's jimmy kimmel live brought to you by vrbo. you by vrbo.
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tomorrow night, our gets include ellen pompeo. so please join us for that. this sunday night, millions of women around the world became furious with their partners for never looking at them the way bradley cooper looked at our first guest during their show-stopping musical performance. she is a brand-new oscar winner for her work in the movie "a star is born" which returns to theaters for one week only starting friday. please say hello to lady gaga. [cheers and applause] ♪ >> jimmy: good to see you. you look beautiful. [cheers and applause] i'm so happy that you're here. >> i'm so happy to be here. >> jimmy: thank you for coming.
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it's -- >> actually, before we even get started, i just wanted to say a big thank you to you. you made a donation to my mom and i's foundation, the born this way foundation. >> jimmy: born this way. >> thank you so much. it's for empowering youth to build a kinder and braver world. and thank you so much. >> jimmy: thank you for doing it, of course. that's nice of you to say. what do you have in the bag there? what's going on? you brought your luggage? >> i brought, well, you know, i'm security. so, you know, it's been a, quite a week, so [cheers and applause] >> jimmy: oh, yeah. that's pretty good. >> i don't know why you gave me these. but they were back stage, but apparently, oscar has some undies. >> jimmy: yeah, you got to put
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those on oscar. oh, boy. >> don't shame him. he's naked, and it's okay. >> jimmy: you're right. congratulations on that. let me see what they did here. music, lady gaga. i was wondering if they would write stephanie on there or lady fw gaga. do you get to decide what they put on there? >> no. you get one, and this is what it is. >> jimmy: what have you been doing since, what has happened since sunday night? >> you know, it's just been incredible. i swear, when we won, it was like my whole artistic journey flashed before my eyes and i saw myself sitting on my stoop of my studio apartment in new york city on the concrete with my keyboard next to me, trying to figure out how i was going to lug my keyboard again up my walkup. it's incredible. this was hard work.
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>> jimmy: yeah, sure. >> i said it in my speech, and i'll say it again. if you work hard and don't give up, you can do anything. [cheers and applause] >> jimmy: i can tell, i know you put a lot of work into everything you do. and that performance that you and bradley gave. that was really one of the great performances in the history of the oscars. >> thank you. >> jimmy: it was like, we were watching it at home, we were like, oh, my, what's going on between these two. did you feel like, well, i know it caused this big controversy because it was such a, you had such a connection with bradley that instantly, and i guess this is a compliment, people started saying oh, they must be in love. >> yeah. okay. first of all, like, like social media, quite frankly, is the toilet of the internet. >> jimmy: yes, it is. >> and what it has done to pop culture is just abysmal.
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and yes. people saw love, and guess what, that's what we wanted you to see. >> jimmy: yes. >> this is a love song, "shallow." the movie, "a star is born" is a love story. we worked so hard. we worked all week on that performance, bradley, who, i like never relinquish control about a live performance. i've done about a million of them. he directed this film and the musical moments in the film and obviously "shallow", the moment in the film. so i knew he had the vision for how it should go. i was like, what do you think, bradley? and he laid it all out. everything that you saw, the way it was shot, the way they pushed the piano out, you saw them put the piano together and -- >> jimmy: no intro. >> all of that, that was all him. he even also was the one that was like, i think the audience should be lit, so that we're not
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just lit, the audience is lit. so then i called roy bennett who i work with, we need to light the entire room with amber lights because bradley wants honeycomb, and we got to give him what he wants. it was just great. and from a performance perspective, it was so important to all of us that we were connected the entire time. look, i've had my arms wrapped around tony bennett for three yea years touring the world. when you sing love songs, that's what you want people to feel. >> jimmy: are you having an affair with tony bennett? be honest. >> no, no. i'm an artist, and i guess we did a good job. and, fooled ya! >> jimmy: yeah, you did a good job. bradley did a great job. it's one thing to go on stage and sing on the oscars, that's terrifying to start. but then to sing with you and be
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trading lines with you in a movie, you can pick and choose, but on live television, was he terrified? >> no. >> jimmy: no. >> because we practiced and worked hard. bradley's a musician. my favorite thing about the whole experience was i was just so excited for people not only at home but our peers in the room to see him sing live and know -- >> jimmy: to see that he can sing live. >> that he sang every take in this movie live every single time. all of it. there's no lip synch. and i was so excited, and i was in the moment. but, you know, when we started and he started singing "tell me something girl", the whole audience was cheering, and i was like, yes, bradley, keep going, we've got this. >> jimmy: if you were acting, you could have that same connection with me if we singing that song? [cheers and applause]
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>> yeah. >> jimmy: tell me something, girl. are you lonely in this great big world. >> that's not the words. >> jimmy: something like that, though, right? >> that's close. that's close. >> jimmy: yeah, i guess not. i know bradley, it's hard. i fall in love with him when i look at him. it's hard not to look in those eyes and get lost. >> i don't feel like i won. i feel like we won. >> jimmy: i'm going to get a sharpie and write his name on there. lady gaga is here. a star is born is in theaters. we'll be right back. l be right back. >> dicky: portions of jimmy kimmel live are brought to you by the container store, where space comes from. comes from. the right tech can move you.
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time around ♪ >> jimmy: that is lady and bradley cooper in "a star is born." which that is, that was not in the version of the movie that i saw. that is additional, you've add some footage to this new version. >> i didn't add it, bradley add it. it's 12 minutes of additional footage, a "star is oncore. he w he was working on the version you see when you buy it at home. >> jimmy: have you seen it at the movies? >> yeah. >> jimmy: with real, paying customers? >> yeah. >> jimmy: sometimes you see it at big theaters. >> i'm squatted in the back with popcorn hiding. and the end of the movie is so sad that i can't take it. so i'm crying with my popcorn.
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>> jimmy: is there a new ending with the 12 additional minutes? they move tole vall the valley adopt a few kids? >> you have to go see it. it's only out for one week. >> jimmy: is this speech something you ever imagined yourself giving at the academy awards? >> i had a job since i was like 14 years old, because i wanted more money than my allowance, and, yeah. >> jimmy: what were you getting from your parents at that time, do you remember? >> like $20, which is ---ibl considerable. >> jimmy: a week? >> a week. in new york, it's like five grand, i was 14. you have to save it all until friday. you can't take a taxi. that $20 was my friday night. it wasn't usable. i got a job, and
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hostess, and my mom and dad would go to the bar with their friends who were artists, and i would be standing there with nothing to do, and i'd go, i'd like to thank the academy for this tremendous honor, i've wanted to be an actress my whole life. i would practice my acceptance speech and everyone at the bar would howl with laughter. like, that's never going to happen. >> jimmy: oh, really. i hope they were watching your acceptance speech, by the way, not that you don't have -- you've won a lot of awards, all deservedly so, but we have something for you. guillermo, bring this in. this is to celebrate the fact that your album has gone platinum. [cheers and applause] >> thank you. >> jimmy: and not only. >> oh, my goodness. this was your idea? >> jimmy: guillermo is going to go to your home and hang it on
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the wall for you. >> more security, that's all i need. >> jimmy: it is wonderful to have you hire. thank you so much for coming. congratulations on, the movie is great, it's called "a star is born" returns to theaters friday for one week only. lady gaga, everybody. we'll be back with adam carolla. ♪ ♪(oh oh oh oh) it's taking over.♪ ♪there's no escape... ♪...you better get moving. ready or not♪ ♪...it's about to go down here it comes now♪ ♪...get ready (oh oh oh oh), get ready♪ ♪...moving. ready or not ♪...get ready (oh oh oh oh) new galaxy. free buds. music to your ears. get free galaxy buds when you pre-order galaxy s10 or s10+.
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