tv Today NBC October 23, 2016 6:00am-7:01am PDT
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i will accept if i will accept if i win. >> that is not the way our democracy works. >> i advise mr. trump to stop whining. >> iraqis have the momentum. >> the cubs have won the pennant! good morning and welcome to "sunday today" i'm willie geist. 16 days until voters choose a new president. all three debates are in the books. by most measures hillary clinton has the lead. we'll dig into the campaign with a guest who says hillary supporters shouldn't be popping the champaign just yet. the champaign is still flowing in chicago. their first world series since 1945 with fans there dreaming of
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the first title since 1908. we are live at wrigley field in a moment. and later, a meal with anthony bourdain. we'll have a seat at the table with the outspoken chef who has shown us the world through food. >> how do you find the places that the rest of us don't even know exist? >> the kind of questions we're asking is, look, what does your soul crave at 2:00 in the morning when you have a little bit of a buzz? >> more with anthony bourdain a bit later in the show, but we begin this morning with a celebration 71 years in the making. the cubs are headed to the world series. let me say that again. the cubs are headed to the world series. they beat the dodgers in game six of the national league championship series 5-0. ron mott is outside wrigley field where i'm sure there's still some partying going on. ron, good morning. >> reporter: absolutely, willie. good morning. wow, what a night in the city of chicago. a night that will never end for a lot of people who have waited their entire lives to hear the
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phrase the cubs are going to the world series. >> out. the cubs have won the pennant! >> and they got there in spectacular fashion. a 5-0 shutout of the l.a. dodgers capped off with a dazzling double play to launch a celebration for the ages. it's been many years, 71 exactly, since fans got to route for the cubs in the world series. there are a few of those fans still out there and with that long streak still over they'd like to see a longer one wiped away, 108 years the last time the cubs were world champions. to put that into some perspective, consider this. this venerable old ballpark, wrigley field, the second oldest behind fenway park in boston was not even around when the cubs last won the world series. neither was fenway park for that matter. fans say it's time to end all of that.
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they also say it's time to let bygones be bygones. steve fan bartman ras the fan in 2003 when the cubs were five outs away from going to the world series when he interfered with a foul ball and a lot of people blamed him for a rally that the marlins then put on to win game 6, turned around and won game 7 and went to the world series instead of the cubs. take a look at some of the folks on twitter. one person writing, it was never steve bartman's fault, but i hope he's sitting somewhere tonight with people who love him feeling a measure of absolution. bartman, you're off the hook. cubs are going to the world series. the cleveland indians will have a little bit to say about which of these two cities, chicago, cleveland will celebrate and last laugh in the next week to ten days. >> a great young cubs team that doesn't seem concerned with bartman, billy goats or anything else game one is tuesday night in cleveland.
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now to the race for the white house. with 16 days to go until the election, the candidates are setting up shop in battleground states. donald trump still claiming the election is rigged while campaigning in ohio and delivering his own gettysburg address. hillary clinton out with her running mate tim kaine. kristen welker in raleigh, north carolina. kristen, good morning. >> reporter: hey, willie, good morning to you. secretary clinton has two campaigns where the polls are tight. she is focused on running up the score while donald trump is trying to run off a major political comeback. surging in the polls, hillary clinton and tim kaine holding a rare late night rally in the heart of philadelphia saturday.
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>> i don't think about responding to that. >> reporter: on the stump casting donald trump's talk of a rigged system as dangerous. >> make no mistake about this, my friends. he is threatening our democracy. >> reporter: the democrats want to win big. surrogates including miley cyrus, katy perry in battleground states. >> running mate mike pence also making a frenzied final push together in ohio. >> this is a rigged system. >> it's a rigged election, believe me. the site of the legendary civil war address trying to cast himself as a uniter with proposals for the first 100 days. >> first i will announce my intention to totally renegotiate
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nafta. >> reporter: his speech turned to retribution for the women accusing him of unwanted advances. >> all of these liars will be sued after the election is over. >> reporter: on saturday an 11th accuser came over, adult film actress jessica drake. >> donald then asked me, what do you want? how much? >> reporter: trump has denied all the allegations, which haven't been verified by nbc news. tim kaine counts him. >> here he's saying in the first 100 days. i'm not changing. i may be president of the united states but i'm going to focus on settling scores. >> reporter: feeling emboldened, clinton and kaine told reporters they will be focused on helping democrats in down ballot races. when asked about reports that her transition team is amping up, she said she's superstition shus and focused on winning the race. >> kristen welker. thanks. let's bring in hugh hewett.
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he's a political analyst for msnbc and radio analyst. he joins us from his studio in suburban washington. thanks for being up early on sunday. >> thanks, willie. >> i want to ask you about donald trump's tactics. he laid out a contract with the american voters, all things a conventional candidate would do and then near the end of the speech he says of the women accusing him, quote, all of these liars will be sued after the election is over. does that capture for you some of the frustration with the trump campaign that there are flashes of a candidate who could win over shadowed by a line like that. >> reporter: especially, willie, yes, especially as the real clear politics show the race tightening a tick and it's down 5 and .8. donald trump should stay focused on that. president obama, there are traditional blocking and tackles
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you can do at this point. you don't run the double reverse, hail mary statute of liberty. you don't leave that radioactive to this campaign. mr. trump's speech yesterday, the remarks about his accusers are best left on the side until after the election is over but the election isn't over. there are millions of americans, half million in pennsylvania who are getting massive premium hikes. pat toomey is advantaged by that because obamacare is going to collapse in the face of liberal democrats over the next three weeks and so i wish mr. trump would stay focused on that. some of the corruption stories, but mostly on obamacare. >> pat toomey, of course, the republican senator in pennsylvania in a tight race. you said something interesting there, hugh, this race is not over. i think most of the pollsters looking at it now have come out
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and objectively said it's all but over. if you look at some of the numbers inside the swing states. what are some of the things you're seeing that may go against conventional wisdom and say trump maybe has a shot here. >> one that i just mentioned is most important. absent -- i'm not counting the russian attacks on secretary clinton. there's a lot of interesting stuff in the fsp operation otherwise known as wikileaks. it isn't the kind of thing that can move a needle. if they were to release her private server e-mails, that would move the needle. i look at the obamacare premiums, willie. in pennsylvania they are averaging in excess of 20% rate hike. i see that they are going up in florida, that they are skyrocketing in minnesota. donald trump is not going to win minnesota, but there are other places where exchanges are shooting up. i also define the election as more than the presidential. i think as we mentioned senator pat toomey who is ahead in his re-election bid. kelly ayotte who is tied in some polls. i look at richard burr, he's
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ahead. roy blunt in missouri, he's ahead. joe heck is closing and maybe in a dead heat at this point. even ron johnson in wisconsin is coming back. if i look at the whole election i think over the next two weeks republicans have a lot to focus on in order to secure the house and maintain the republican majority and if mr. trump really focuses like a laser on the fact that americans not only didn't get to keep their doctor or their plan, they didn't get to keep their second doctor or their second plan, there's an opportunity there. i say the rcp poll number, the gap is closing as of this morning. >> he's only got about 2 1/2 more weeks to start focusing on it. it's getting late. before i let you go we've been talking about the cubs. you're a cleveland guy. let's not forget about the tribe. they haven't won since 1948. how about a prediction? >> reporter: the indians in five. >> in five? >> in five, willie. i think you'll see kluber come out and dominate.
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trevor bower come out and josh conlin. i hate to do that to the cubs fans, but the elite media is clearly favoring, elite media is in the tank. go tribe rally together. >> a new attack on the elite media. hugh hewett, great to see you. the next president will inherit a full plate of foreign policy. they're getting closer to the northern city of mosul. the offensive is the culmination of a two-year effort by u.s. forces to help in the war against the terror group. richard engel has been with the iraqi forces all week right on the front lines. >> watch your step. there is a concern these could be booby trapped. >> and this morning richard is in bashika, iraq, good to take time to join us. richard, always good to see you, my friend. if you could, set the stage for
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our viewers and tell us what's at stake as iraqi troops move into mosul. >> well, when this offensive began a week ago it seemed like it was moving incredibly quickly and the advance on mosul seemed like it could happen within days. it has slowed down. it seemed like it's not putting up much of a fight. every inch na that it takes to to mosul, it's a complex battlefield. you talked about iraqis and americans. in rye at you have iraqi troops that are involved, you also have kurdish troops who are involved. i'm right now at one of the forward kurdish positions. in this mix are american advisors. there are some 500 american advisors who are very close to the battlefield, outside the wire, so to speak, and about 5,000 more who are mostly on
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their bases. the defense secretary ash carter who went to baghdad yesterday paid a visit to northern iraq today, to the city of erbil and did acknowledge in both places that americans are not just sitting back on their bases calling in airstrikes even though they're called advisors. >> everybody needs to understand that there are americans here that are in harm's way. their mission, which is to bring the enormous might of the american and coalition military to the support of iraqi security forces is a dangerous one. >> reporter: the key thing to understand about this is mosul is so important for all of the sides involved here. for president obama, mosul is a way to end his administration showing that he wasn't soft on isis, that he went out with a bang, so to speak, that he managed to take away this important city, a city that once had 2 million people in it from
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isis. for the iraqi army, it's crucial. the iraqi army left mosul two years ago in humiliation. they abandoned their weapons and ran away. now they want to show that they aren't cowards, that they've reconstituted themselves and they are willing to fight. for isis, this is where isis declared its caliphate. if it loses this city, it could lose its caliphate, lose its prestige. so a lot of people have a great deal on the line here and i think that's why we're seeing the fighting getting more intense the closer we get to mow tu -- mosul itself. >> although we're advising, jason feinan was killed this week. richard engel in iraq. thank you. back here at home, big business, at&t reached an agreement to buy time warner for $85 billion. the deal faces big hurdles with concerns about whether or not the combined company would have too much power in the media world.
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all right. di dylon dryer is here. very, very windy yesterday and we're still looking at wind advisories across areas like boston. we could see gusts up near 40 miles an hour. temperatures in the 30s and 40s. we aren't going to warm up all that much this afternoon. rutland near 49 degrees. new york up to 63. we are also looking for warmer weather to work back in across the rest of the cou good morning, everyone. if you enjoyed your saturday, get ready for round two with similar conditions all across the bay area. we're expecting cooler temperatures. here is a look right now at your forecast. 53 in the peninsula. south bay, 51. partly cloudy skies but overall for the most part we should be gearing up for a mostly sunny day before we start tracking those rain chances back in the bay area. here are your expected highs for today. we're going to top out at 72 in san jose, 64 in san francisco.
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i'll have more coming up in just a bit. and that's your latest forecast. >> dylan, thanks very much. stick around for the highs and lows including joe biden slipping free of the secret service to burn some rubber in his '67 corvette. north korea, there's a new attraction as the pyongyang zoo. you've been inundated with ads on tv and online. hallie jackson can't make them go away, but she can give us a look on how they're made. all coming up today. ...even i don't know what it is. turn it off! i'm trying to! this is why i trust tide. it has the power to get out the kind of things we get into... in just one wash. here you go, daddy! ok, let's try it. mmmhmmm. that is awesome. removes over 100 stains in one wash. it's got to be tide.
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and everyone loves it. my wife melania gives the exact same speech and people get on her case. >> donald looks at the statute of liberty and sees a 4, maybe a 5 if she loses the torch and tablet and changes her hair. >> some good comedy writing there. trump was booed a couple of times as he got more personal on hillary. the man became internet famous for the abrupt change of expression from joy to horror. as trump's speech took a turn for the more direct criticism. someone said he's a metaphor for the entire campaign. >> pretty much. >> our first love goes to one man's level of concern this week as flood waters rose around him while he was sitting at a hong kong starbucks with a super typhoon creating torrential rains that spilled into the store. my man does not budge, just
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sits there sipping his pumpkin spice latte and checking the box scores of the paper like nothing was wrong. would you recommend that as a meteorologist or should you get out of the storm waters. >> get out. >> that dude did not care. our next high goes to vice president joe biden and his need for speed. the onion has a long running gag about biden being a blue collar renegade in the white house. one famous ad is shirtless biden washes transam. this week jay leno released a clip in which the vice president gets to drive his beloved 1967 corvette for only the third time in the nearly eight years since he took office and, man, did biden make the most of it. >> sounds good. >> try your brakes.
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>> i shouldn't say it on -- i -- i like speed. >> he likes speed and he likes burning rubber. >> clearly. >> he couldn't have done it any other way. >> no. >> biden also said this week, by the way, he'd like to fight donald trump out behind the gym. >> a white t-shirt on, pack of cigs rolled up. >> pyongyang, north korea, the azalea, the smoking chimp. zoo officials say the 19-year-old chimp rips through a pack a day. they're quick to point out that like bill clinton, she doesn't inhale. she throws her a lighter and she fires up a smoke to the cheers and laughter to the crowds gathered around her. the zoo recently was renovated and reopened at the insistence of the dear leader, king jong-un. >> so many other tricks you could teach. >> bob dylan won the nobel prize. the bad news this week is that the nobel people couldn't get ahold of dylan to tell him.
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the permanent secretary said she gave up trying to reach dylan with the news after days of unreturned phone calls. his location wasn't a mystery. he was on stage in vegas the night he won. he didn't mention it. the only sign dylan knew was the quiet edition on his website that read, winner of the nobel prize in literature. a day later that had been removed from his website. one nobel academy called dylan impolite and arrogant. >> he's just bob dylan. our final goes to another nobel prize winning dylan. last week she posted this throw back thursday photo of herself as an awkward teen dressed in unintentional camouflage. in what's become a weekly tradition. dylan, please explain in eight seconds what's happening there? >> i'm more surprised that you called these lows. these are the highlights of my life. >> a color of a financial magazine.
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is a proven way to make sure she never smokes. that's why i'm voting yes on 56. s f good morning. thanks for waking up to us. you're taking a live look at san francisco from the san bruno mountains. thanks for joining us. we have a look at the microclimate forecast. >> today we're looking at a similar day just like yesterday with the exception of rain tonight. 51 degrees, partly cloudy skies in the south bay peninsula. 53 in san francisco. but not everybody is going to get rain. at least not tonight. it looks like we're tracking a storm system that could be bringing some rain pretty early on. so find out where and how much rain we're expecting over the next couple days. i'll have that coming up in the full forecast. today our temperatures will stay
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similar to what we saw yesterday. yesterday we hit the predicted high of 73. today we're topping out at 72, 73 for san jose. 64 in san francisco. overall, it will be very similar to yesterday. enjoy the sunshine before the clouds take over. >> enjoy it while you have it. thanks so much. turning now to election day. the presidential candidates are hitting the campaign trail hard and courting the latino vote nationwide. last night in san jose the hispanic foundation of silicon valley honored those who had given back to their community. but the buzz offstage was all about the presidential election, including concerns over how trump and clinton would handle immigration reform and education. >> a lot of hispanic families are concerned about their safety here in this country. a lot of them are immigrants from -- obviously from latin america, and they're concerned about being able to live here freely like they have.
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>> many at the event are still undecided, some telling us despite trump's promise of aggressive immigration reform including that wall at the u.s./mexican border, they're not completely sold on the idea of a clinton presidency either. election day is two weeks from tuesday. gone but not forgotten. a community held a prayer vigil for a teen involved in an officer-involved shooting in sonoma county. it was held yesterday afternoon in santa rosa in the same lot where the shooting happened three years ago. 13-year-old andy lopez was shot after a sonoma county deputy misstook tmi mistook the teen's pellet gun for an assault rifle. the deputy was cleared of any wrongdoing but protesters say justice has not been served. >> when i look at his story, it's about a child who has been killed by a system that is set up to essentially demonize him.
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>> lopez's family is suing sonoma county in an ongoing wrongful death suit. and coming up this morning on "today in the bay," we'll show you why getting to and from yerba buena island and treasure island just got a whole lot easier. that plus all your top stories coming up at 7:00. we hope you join us then. for now, we'll send you back to the "today" show.
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she wants open borders, and that's crazy. people are just pouring into this country from mexico, and a lot of them are very bad hombres. >> oh, bingo, bingo, i got >> bingo, bingo. i've got bingo. i have bad hombres. rapists, miss piggy, they're all living in hell and if she wasn't my daughter. >> kate mckinnon and alec baldwin taking on the third and final presidential debate on snl. big night in studio 8h with tom hanks as host and lady gaga as musical guest. if you ever watched any of anthony bourdain's popular tv shows, you know how far he'll go for a good, authentic meal.
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raised as a chef in the kitchens of new york city, bourdain has become something of a one man food travel guide taking viewers along as he stops in every local joint he can find all over the world. for bourdain the setting is almost as important as the food. anthony took me along as he cruised one of his favorite food strips here in queens, new york. >> i have to get you on the record on a couple of things. >> sure. >> pumpkin spice. >> who's eating this stuff? is there some vast demographic of pumpkin crazed, you know, people hanging outside of whatever the pumpkin outlet is, like a methadone clinic waiting for them to open up so they can get their pumpkin spice. the farm to table bothers me. >> right. >> i'm in your restaurant. i'm pretty sure your vegetables grew on a farm and i'm pretty sure i am going to eat it on a table. do i need the t-shirt. >> reporter: anthony bourdain never leaves you wondering how
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he feels. >> i'm thinking, really, are these prime fishing waters? i don't know about this. >> reporter: that blunt personality combined with an endless curiosity about food has made the chef a global star. >> wow. i'm in love. that's good. >> reporter: for decades bourdain has been on a nearly constant culinary tour of the world. from historic rome. >> they have one of the best. >> i want that. >> reporter: to war torn libya. >> i'm a fighter. >> a crossbow that fires molotov cocktails. >> tnts. >> reporter: leading viewers off the beaten path and challenging our appetites for the exotic. >> tongue taco. >> reporter: anything you've had on the show where you're like, good god. >> a funky fermented fish in iceland, it's a hazmat situation. >> reporter: here's the tongue. yeah? >> good. >> reporter: i'm eating tongue with anthony bourdain.
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>> reporter: bourdain currently is in the ninth season of his hit tv show "parts unknown." >> reporter: you didn't wake up and start in this business as the famous and well-known anthony bourdain. >> i wrote an article. my mom said, you should accepted it to the new yorker. the next day i got a call. i'm dunking french fries at the age of 44. >> reporter: "kitchen confidential" wasn't a typical cookbook. the best seller pulled back the curtain on the restaurant industry and detailed bourdain's personal struggles with drug addiction. to date more than 1 million copies have been sold. >> reporter: what was the next leap from the book. book becomes a huge success. >> some delusional crackpots offered me a tv show. i said, look, i have a great idea. i travel around the world doing whatever i want in every cool
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place i ever dreamed of and you pay. how's that idea? >> sounds like, yeah, we'll take 13 of those. >> even if you were a doctor or a lawyer, a teacher, you can't work only in the car. >> it's nice to know who we're talking about when we're talking about places with really complex problems. some knowledge of, you know, who people are when they're sitting at home with their family eating instead of just statistics. >> reporter: there's no place anthony won't go. >> can you load the chickens. >> reporter: no matter how dangerous. >> if i'm not going full giraldo but i'm curious about the world and if there are manageable risks in return for satisfying my curiosity about a place, i'm willing. >> all right. you're going to have to -- >> i will walk you through. >> you have to walk me through it. >> reporter: bourdain counts among his millions of fans the president of the united states. >> those of us who work in the
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news business were covering the president's trip, sits down at a table in a little restaurant with an though think bourdain. >> is it appropriate to pop one of these whole suckers. >> people were coming up recognizing me from the news photos in tears. couldn't believe that the president ate their humble local specialty. they said, we could understand, spring rolls we would expect this. he ate this. he came to our city and drank hanoi beer and a place we know. >> what was it like to sit with him for an hour and a half. >> he seemed like a guy that wanted to be there and enjoyed drinking a beer from the bottle. when i asked him a tricky and potentially perilous question. is it ever acceptable to put ketchup on a hot dog. he would say ketchup and mu mustard. you would get some wishy-washy answer to not piss off all the people. he said, no, never.
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>> reporter: how do you find the places that the rest of us don't even exist. >> the kind of questions we're asking is look what douse your soul crave at 2:00 in the morning when you have a bit of a buzz? more often than not that goes right to the heart of the culture. >> reporter: let the buzz guide you essentially. >> yeah. are you ready for -- >> reporter: what are we looking at specifically here? what's unique about it? >> this is very, very difficult to make, but the crispiness and the spiciness, there's something magical about it. >> reporter: what's the secret on the skin? how do you do that? >> i tell you but then i'd have to kill you. >> reporter: and he just might be able to deliver on that threat. at 60 years old, bourdain has a blue belt in jujitsu. >> i get to feel the will to live drain out of their body as i choke them. >> reporter: you have a sick, perverse pleasure out of that. but what makes bourdain happiest
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is just cooking at home with his family. >> whenever possible, you know, that's a true moment of terror. the first time you hand a chef knife to a 7-year-old and watch thei little fingers. you know, i -- >> reporter: is she a tough critic of your cooking? >> she's brutal. i cannot get anything past her. no, daddy, it's too salty. no, it's not. it's -- but, you know, secretly i know, yeah, she caught me. every -- every time. >> reporter: cooking at home with daughter arianne inspired the new book "appetites." >> it's a book that tries to bring to bear what i learned in 30 years as a professional to the sort of stuff that you cook at home. the strategy and tactics of successfully executing a traditional holiday meal like turkey, you know, turkey and stuffing, cranberry sauce without violence or mayhem, you're actually able to spend, you know, your thanksgiving with your guests instead of sweating
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it out in the kitchen stressed out. >> reporter: which is what everyone does. >> yes. >> reporter: you disappear for eight hours in the kitchen. >> i tried to be a little useful this time around. >> reporter: for "once." >> it's fatherhood. it softens. >> reporter: our big thanks to ufc unidentified flying chickens in jackson heights, queens, for the ridiculously good meal. the tongue tacos from the truck, not bad either. anthony's new cookbook is "appetites." where he goes in disguise and more on his $6 meal with president obama check out our web extras at today.com/extras. justin timberlake, baby boy and his evolution from "bye, bye, bye" and boy bander. i just saw your eyes light up when i said justin timberlake. >> between justin timberlake and tongue tacos. i'm excited for next week. that's why my eyes lit up.
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it is going to start off wet and windy in the pacific northwest and then by the middle of the week the rape and storms make their way to the west. unseasonably warm across the south. it will be chilly early this week in the nice, peaceful sunday expected across the bay area with temperatures similar to what we saw yesterday. we are expecting to hit those highs in the 70s. for the south bays 60s. for the san francisco area, south bay, 51 degrees right now. east bay at 53. we are seeing a few clouds in the forecast right now, but we are expecting mostly clear skies through the remainder of your sunday afternoon. by sunday night we are expecting to see a change as we begin to track those rain chances. i'll have all of that coming up in "today in the bay." and that's your latest forecast. >> dylan, thanks very much. see you in a minute. coming up next on "sunday today," the making of a presidential political ad. hallie jackson introduces us to
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the minds that make the artful attacks. call me tomorrow? i'm gonna send a vague text in a couple of days, that leaves you confused about my level of interest. i'll wait a full two days before responding. perfect! we're never gonna see each other again, will we? no-no. wouldn't it be great if everyone said what they meant? the citi double cash card does. it lets you earn double cash back. 1% when you buy and 1% as you pay. the citi double cash card. double means double. choose effortless glide from side to side. choose knee-loving, underarm-caring, bikini line-bearing. choose venus swirl. with five contour blades and a flexi-ball, it pivots with every dip and divot. choose to smooth. venus swirl. americans are buying more and more of everything online. and so many businesses rely on the united states postal service to get it there. that's why we make more ecommerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. the united states postal service. priority: you
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a presidential campaign can be defined by and remembered for a single tel remembered for a single television ad. some are down right apocalyptic. who's dreaming up the ideas that shape the campaign? hallie jackson went to find out. >> for all the hand they shake, bumped fists and most americans will meet the next president in the living room. >> i'm hillary clinton. >> i'm donald trump. >> and i approve. >> this message. >> reporter: political ads, a long standing american tradition. >> vote for president johnson. >> reporter: part of an air war played out ad knaus yum, ads we hate. this was a winner back in the primaries even if the candidate
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wasn't -- >> failed. >> reporter: so what does work? >> sometimes a candidate's own words. >> deplorables. >> for better and for worse. >> does she have a good body, no. does she have a fat ass, absolutely. >> other times it's another voice. >> does donald trump really speak for you. >> reporter: that's grace gonglefsky and that's dennis steel. >> we can go there, too. >> reporter: both hired guns and masters of the dark arts. >> make your voice go as low as you can. he's for washington but he's not for us. >> world washington. >> donald trump has both loads of liberal positions. >> reporter: but they're equal opportunity insulters. >> i'm an actor and i do mayonnaise commercials and i don't eat mayonnaise. that's what i do. i did one of sarah palin. she's one of us. >> no, we didn't know. >> we knew. >> reporter:. 300,000 ads this cycle, 80% have been for clinton with trump relying more on free media. that's unconventional and so is
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what we're seeing in the ad evolution this cycle, not what's on tv but in the palm of your hand that matters. how fast has global advertising changed? >> not fast enough. >> reporter: andrew bleaker is the brains behind bully pulpit, now the biggest force in digital for democrats. >> before we were digital teams on campaigns we were the internet team which was confused with i.t. >> reporter: would people come to you for printer help? >> sure. >> reporter: now digital media is big business in your facebook feed, on snap chat and instagram. it comes with a cost. >> it has to be interrupted which, yes, is annoying. >> reporter: invasive. >> like anything else you have to cut through at the end. that's where creativity comes through. >> reporter: we put the company's creative team to the test with, well, a first-time candidate. >> so we're your campaign consultants. >> reporter: hello campaign consultants. >> hello. >> reporter: my team explained consistency is critical.
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>> we have this chunk of voters that we're going to go get for you. aspirational, positive messaging. >> you have to make it instantly captivating. you have to get their attention. >> reporter: the final vote. >> hallie jackson loves coffee but not nearly as much as she loves america. that's why she's running for office. she'll fight for us and the issues we care about. the choice is clear, vote hallie jackson for america. >> reporter: recognize that voice. listen again. >> vote hallie jackson for america. >> reporter: it's grace gonglefsky. can i afford to be against my opponent? that's the key thing, beat willie. that sour look on willie's face, too. >> it was just there. >> we've done our opposition research and we've heard willie geist does not like snap chat. >> reporter: that's true. >> you're losing the snap chat war, willie. >> reporter: i'm hallie jackson and i approve this message.
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>> and hallie joins me now live. i'm not going to dig any phi your attacks. they're false and i think it's unfortunate that your campaign has taken on such a negative tenor. >> i brought you something for your office, willie. your very own campaign poster. cool to have your own gear. >> it was cool how they explained the font, the graphics and the colors. like it's all very intentional when they put it together for a political candidate like myself. >> and the voices who don't always know who they're voicing it for. >> my mom saw it, i told her about the piece, she actually said she was going to have difficulty choosing who to vote for. >> wow, i could win over your own mother. >> embarrassing. >> i should point out she's only been in her home district 22 days. sure, it's because she's working her butt off. if that's how want to vote for. good to see you. >> you too, pal. the artist who cannot see or hear now teaching others to feel art the way she does. thers
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there an accident of her sight is teaching people to experience art the way she does. morgan radford has her story. >> reporter: what do you smell? what do you hear? what do you sense when you look at this painting? >> a lemon peel. a rolled up perhaps piece of paper. >> reporter: this is how emily gaucio leads discussions at new york's metropolitan museum of art. >> when we look at it we see what looks like a luxurious banquet. the artist is also saying we also have to remember that it's not permanent. >> reporter: emily knows just how fleeting things can be. the budding painter lost her sight when she was struck by a bus while riding her bike in college. that's why now emily experiences and shares art with a multi-sensory approach. >> what's interesting is all our senses are connected in our brain. it's really for you to trust and interpret your own senses.
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>> a lot of what i depend on is recalling colors, recalling shapes of objects and what things look like. >> reporter: emily's work has shifted towards sculpture and she invited us to see some of her work in the studio. >> reporter: is this where you feel yourself? >> this is where i feel i can forget about everything and work and be myself. >> reporter: fellow artist daniel archan has known emily since college before her accident providing her space to create. >> having her in the studio, it allows the rest of us to understand space in a different way by watching her interact with not only her work but the space in general. >> maybe what we should do is we should blindfold you while you work. >> reporter: even doing this is interesting because, you're right, i would completely use my vision otherwise. doing this is forcing me to feel it differently. frankly, you know, experience it differently. i never would have noticed kind
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of the weight or the depth. >> the texture. >> reporter: the texture. let's see how i did. >> okay. let me see. oh, wow. >> reporter: did i do okay? >> this is really good. >> reporter: i'm going to take off my blindfold. >> see? >> reporter: not so bad. what do you want people to think of you as an artist and do you even want them to know that you are not sighted? >> it doesn't matter if they know that i'm blind or if they think that i have any other kind of disability. that's not what my art is about. i think being able to touch art or experience art or imagine art, really i'm able to connect with it on a deeper level and understand it and think about it in a different way that i think to me is a lot more meaningful. >> morgan radford reporting. this week we highlight another life well lived. without phil chess, the sound of america music with the blues at
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its foundation would be very different. he was founder of chess records. chess maintained chuck berry was the real king of rock and role. the man who immigrated from poland as a child and served in world war ii is credited from bringing blues music from barrooms to radio stations. the great buddy rye said chess was cutting the type of music no one else was paying attention to. chess gave us the rolling stones. in 1961 keith richards saw a stranger named mick jagger holding two chess records. the boys connected then and there and formed a band naming it after a water song. phil chess who helped bring the blues to the world died this week in tucson, arizona. he was 95 years old. why am i so devastatingly handsome, i'm in a fragrance...
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is a proven way to make sure she never smokes. that's why i'm voting yes on 56. all all right, dylan. let's close this down with some predictions from the week ahead. this afternoon president obama will campaign in las vegas for hillary clinton one day after early voting began in the state of nevada. president obama has been active on the trail telling donald trump this week to, quote, stop whining about the election being rigged. we predict the president will do what we all do on a beautiful fall sunday in vegas, sit in the dark sports book at bellagio and take the dolphins as a nice little three point home bet against the bills. you would never bet on football, never. on tuesday cleveland indians host game one of the world series against the chicago cubs. if they were to win it would be the first time since 1948. the cubs of course last won 40 years before that in 1908. right next door to the stadium tuesday night lebron james and
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cleveland cavaliers hoist their championship banner. we predict if the cavs and indians win, the write in ticket of lebron james and coco crisp will win the state of ohio. >> very possible. >> and on thursday it's the grand opening of the guest house at graceland. new resort next to elvis presley's home and resting place in memphis. the rooms are made to have the feel of inside of elvis's graceland home where he lived from 1957 until his death in 1977. elvis ace widow priscilla presley designed the suites. we predict in keeping with the elvis authenticity guests will change the channel on the tvs by casually shooting the screen with a 22 caliber handgun. you're too young to get it. elvis used to shoot the tvs. stay tuned to nbc this morning for "meet the press." chuck todd joined by democratic vice presidential nominee tim
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bay bridge from trsure land good morning. thanks for joining us. you're watching "today in the bay." we're taking a live look at the bay bridge from treasure island. thanks so much for waking up with us. we're going to get our first check of our microclimate forecast, and we do have some wet weather heading our way. >> it looks like if you're up in the north bay, you could be seeing an early morning wet commute as you head to work on monday, but for now we'll enjoy the sunshine. partly cloudy right now. a few lingering clouds but have no fear, we should be clearing out quite nicely. 52 degrees in the east bay. san francisco 54 and theig
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