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tv   Today  NBC  October 10, 2024 2:09am-3:00am PDT

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around, and this the reason why. governor ron desantis simply too dangerous saying within the hour, it's too dangerous to evacuate safely. he said, hunker down because this storm is simply too dangerous at the moment, and, lester, i know you've seen this. st. petersburg and the tampa area, those mandatory evacuation zones are a ghost town and shelters are filling up. at that same press conference, we heard close to 100,000 people estimated to be in those shelters around the state of florida. here where we are in hillsborough county, we know that six of the roughly two dozen shelters are at full capacity. and, lester, i will point out, we have seen branches starting to fly as we went out further that way getting knocked around by the wind and lights flickering, 500,000 without power in florida. we might be among them soon, lester. >> all right, marisa, thanks very much. we are in a covered area, so i'm not getting the full brunt of the storm, but i'm getting plenty.
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certainly the water, the wind being mitigated somewhat by the situation we set ourselves in here to remain safe. i want to go to my colleague, tom llamas, now in sarasota. tom, the eye wall has been approaching sarasota tonight. the word now is that the hurricane has just made landfall. can you describe what you're seeing? >> reporter: yeah, right now, lester, we're in the middle of an incredible weather phenomenon. we are, what appears to be, in the eye of hurricane milton right now, and that's why it's absolutely calm here. there are no hurricane force winds. there's not even rain right now. we essentially are in a calm night in sarasota, but it's not going to last this long. on the back side of hurricane milton, we're going to get the most powerful hurricane-force winds that sarasota has experienced in years. that is still a few minutes away, but you can see behind me here, absolute darkness, just homes that have and hotels that have generators. i'm going to get out of the street because now that we are actually in the eye # wall, people are coming out, they're coming out in their suvs and their pickup trucks, and they're doing donuts in different parts of sarasota. we've been avoiding these trucks and these cars that are just
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driving around. from what police have told us, that's illegal. you shouldn't be on the street right now. in fact, police aren't even on the street right now, because the wind conditions were too severe. they pulled their emergency response off until after the storm, so these people know that and come out here and are driving recklessly. it's one of the dangers right now, but, again, because we're in the eye of the storm, lester, this is incredible. just maybe 20 minutes ago we were feeling those hurricane-force winds and now absolutely nothing, and then maybe in 20 or 30 minutes, we're going to feel that hurricane once again. they have cut off access to the barrier islands. it's just too dangerous. we're also waiting for that storm surge, the bay, you can't see it because it's too dark. it's maybe about 100 yards from here. they're expecting the storm surge to push the bay into sarasota, but, again, that's going to happen over the next few hours and we'll know more when the sun rises tomorrow. lester. >> all right, tom, amazing. we're not all that far from each other and what a different world we're living in right now as that eye passes over. we've been following
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this shifting track of the storm all evening. al roker joins us now. al, again, it just made landfall. you saw tom there in relative calm. >> that's right. it happened at siesta key, lester, and so now it is making its way to the northeast 15 miles per hour with 120-mile-per-hour winds, and right now you can see, siesta key is the spot, landfall now, it will continue to make its way across the state between orlando and melbourne as a category 1 storm eventually and then out. now, as far as the winds are concerned, we are talking right now observable wind gusts, 59 in tampa. 47 miles per hour in sarasota. gainesville, 31. we're expecting upwards of 129-mile-per-hour wind gusts in sarasota, lakeland, orlando, 61 miles, captiva, 63, and then the storm surge, anywhere from 6 to 9 feet around tampa, sarasota, 9 to 13 feet, fort myers beach, 8 to 12 feet and on the other side, look right now, fort myers, 34.4-foot storm surge.
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naples bay, 4 1/2 feet, so it's start of 18 in before this is all over, so flooding beginning. the storm surge just starting and, again, with the heavy rain, we are going to be talking about upwards of 18 inches of rain before this is all over, so flooding is going to be a major problem. lester. >> all right, al, thanks very much. they are bracing for a major storm surge in fort myers. that's also south of where i am, and sam brock is there. sam, it's already been a very dangerous day there. >> reporter: it sure has, lester. tornadic activity, at least one reported tornado by the weather service here in fort myers, as you mentioned, but the storm surge and all eyes on the caloosahatchee river behind me, and it reached street level. there are images of damage from that tornado. there are a half dozen emergency services right now, the cities that control them, lester, that have suspended going out and trying to save people. the reason being, once you get to 45 miles an hour or faster of sustained winds, they to say it's just too fast, we cannot do it. in lee county where we are right now,
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deputies at last check are actually still out there on the streets. there are 800,000 people who live here. about 400,000 of them are under mandatory evacuations. that extends all the way west about ten miles to those barrier islands like fort myers beach and sanibel island. you'll remember a couple of years ago for hurricane ian, they were absolutely decimated, lester. you had boats, yachts that were rising up 15, 20 feet above electric poles, so that's the kind of thing we're thinking about as they're just now trying to rebuild. lester, back to you. >> all right, sam brock, thank you for that account. the coastal parts of florida not the only ones that will be hit hard by the storm. earlier inland, orlando could face more than a foot of rain and major flooding. priscilla thompson is there for us tonight. priscilla, tell us what you're seeing. >> reporter: lester, here in orlando, the wind is starting to pick up, and already we are seeing water beginning to pool on some of these roads, and officials are saying that now is the
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time for people to shelter if they are not already before the worst of this storm moves in across the city. we have seen businesses closing early including major theme parks like universal and disney, and as you may remember, during hurricane ian, orlando saw devastating flooding, and milton is expected to be far worse with up to 14 inches of rain in some areas, which is expected to cause catastrophic flash flooding. the city is also bracing for up to 80-mile-per-hour winds here and is currently under a tornado watch. now, county officials say they distributed more than 200,000 sandbags, and they have also been working to lower the levels in bodies of water here, and they're also pre-positioning pumps so that they are able to get that water out. tonight residents here tell us they are prepared but still worried, lester. >> priscilla thompson,
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thank you, and as this monster storm began to batter florida's coast, earlier today my team and i were out in it as the race to save lives entered its final hours. tonight, hurricane milton on a collision course with florida's gulf coast unleashing crazy rain. 120-mile-per-hour winds. >> that is crazy. >> reporter: and a destructive outbreak of reported tornados. this one jumping the interstate while a massive tornado appeared to tear across fort pierce. this video shows a officials say at least likely twister ripping through a front yard in fort myers. officials say at least 20 homes were damaged in st. lucie. >> about ten minutes ago, a tornado came ripping through here. it was a devastating tornado that took out that 10,000-square-foot red iron building. >> reporter: and now drenching rain and powerful winds are bearing down. power is out for hundreds of thousands. emergency services already suspended in several counties. >> the storm is here. it's time for everybody to hunker
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down, and we've got massive amounts of resources that have been prepared for this storm. >> reporter: and conditions are expected to continue to deteriorate. it's around 10:45 in the morning. we're already seeing the first signs of flooding along treasure island, sunset beach specifically, but what i really wanted to show you is this image. if you squint your eyes, you almost think you're looking at the aftermath of a new england blizzard. it's not snow, of course. it's sand. this sand was driven off the beach during hurricane helene, literally burying cars and parts of houses. this is why folks are so concerned about the power of storm surge, that it can do that, lift all that sand and dump it here in the street. tampa mayor jane castor hopes her city will be spared the worst, but storm surge remains her biggest fear. >> as you've seen, the area is saturated completely. we just can't take that storm surge, because it comes into tampa bay. there's nowhere for it to go. >> and then power is
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going to be a big deal. >> power is going to be a huge deal. >> reporter: today with the clock ticking down towards landfall, crews race to clear more debris from helene, and hospitals made last-minute preparations. >> it's looking like the storm of the century. >> reporter: several shelters reporting they are at capacity, but many are staying with loved ones. at a gas station in orlando, nbc's priscilla thompson met terry burke clutching her rosary, her home in st. pete was ripped apart by helene. >> we lost everything. >> in her home. her home was devastated. it's awful. >> reporter: now she's had to evacuate two hours away to stay with family. >> i think it's just cumulative, you know. it's just you start to pull out, and you get pretty overwhelmed. >> reporter: as we drove through tampa today, we found only a few people remaining stocking up on essentials. >> so, you're sticking around, or are you -- >> no, i'm going to higher ground, a nice stable house that has a generator already installed.
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>> reporter: the mayor of nearby treasure island, tyler payne, says he's relieved so many in his community also heeded the warnings. >> properties can be replaced. we can rebuild, but saving people's lives is, of course, the most important thing. >> reporter: tonight, his is among the communities bracing for the worst. >> these are kind of anxious minutes and hours right now. what's going through your mind? >> yeah, i don't know. my mind is fried from just going through a huge storm and preparing for it. it's really surreal to be staring this down just feeling for our residents that have already gone through so much loss and now having to prepare for it again is just unfathomable. >> yeah, that note of resignation is one i heard from a lot of people we've talked to the last couple of days. they've been through so much, and they said to me, that was a glancing blow we got from helene a couple
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of weeks ago. this is a much more direct and more powerful blow. in 60 seconds, it's not just the physical damage people are so worried about here in florida. we'll look at the financial pains so many now face as insurance rates go through the roof right after this. . iberogast indigestion iberogast bloating iberogast thanks to a unique combination of herbs, iberogast helps relieve six digestive symptoms to help you feel better. six digestive symptoms. the power of nature. iberogast. what do people want more of? the power of nature. more “oh yeah!” more laughs. more hang outs. more “mmmmm, so good!” yeah, give us more of all of that little stuff that makes life so great. but if you're older or or have certain health conditions, you also have more risk from flu, covid-19 and rsv. but vaccines help keep you from getting really sick. and that, is huge. (♪♪)
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(♪♪) voltaren... for long lasting arthritis pain relief. (♪♪) in addition to the lives at risk and the potential devastation, hurricane milton could have another impact, disrupting florida's already difficult market for home and flood insurance. stephanie gosk joins me now. stephanie, we are really feeling the wrath of this storm now. that's bad news for homeowners. >> reporter: yeah, it absolutely is, lester. you know, hurricane helene was really a water event, and as you say, we are feeling what hurricane milton is right now. it is wind, and it is water, and that means that those insurance claims could be complicated and large. >> reporter: in the middle of hurricane helene -- >> we saw the water
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come into the house. we immediately filed the claims. >> reporter: er pediatrician dr. megan martin was already worried about insurance, showing the damage to her home on social media. >> and now you have milton barreling in. >> luckily as an er doctor, you know, when the crisis hits, that's when i go into my focus mode. >> reporter: this is what her st. petersburg, florida, neighborhood looks like after helene. >> what have your premiums been like in recent years? >> we've lived in our house for eight years, and both our homeowners and flood premiums have tripled in the time that we've been there. >> reporter: florida residents pay the highest premiums in the country, on average nearly $11,000 annually for homeowners' insurance. flood insurance is separate, and it's not going to pay for everything. dr. martin says she is covered for $25,000, but facing 75,000 in damage, and that's all before milton hits. her neighborhood is facing a complicated thicket of claims. helene was a water event. milton is going to be a wind and a water event. different insurance covers different things. how are they going to determine what was damaged by which storm?
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hurricane ian from two years ago may be an indication of what homeowners are up against. after massive damage on florida's west coast, a "washington post" investigation found that some policy holders received less than 20% of what they claimed in damages. some insurers have even pulled out of florida altogether. the director for the national center for disaster preparedness at columbia university says the insurance market is under pressure due to climate change. >> we're seeing hurricanes intensifying more quickly, carrying more rainfall, and unless we get ahead of that, there's really no possibility of creating an insurance market when you're constantly being battered and having to have record payouts. >> reporter: fixes, he says, include changing where and how buildings are constructed, but that's not going to help dr. martin now. >> you have to brace yourself for the storm, and then you have to brace yourself for higher premiums. >> yeah, we're going to be pricing ourselves out of this community, unfortunately. >> there is
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state-backed insurance in florida sometimes called the insurance of last resort, but even those premiums are going up. they could go up as much as double digits, lester. >> all right, stephanie, thank you for that. we're going to take a short break and then how this volatile hurricane season is making for a stormy campaign trail. separating fact from fiction is next. stay ahead of your moderate-to-severe eczema. and show off clearer skin and less itch with dupixent, the #1 prescribed biologic by dermatologists and allergists, that helps heal your skin from within. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes including blurred vision, joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. ask your eczema specialist about dupixent.
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daddy's puppy. once we got on the farmer's dog he just attacks it, it's incredible. they're so tuned into you and they have such, such personality. being without a dog, i don't know, can't imagine it. [laughter] we turn now to the we turn now to the political storm over disaster relief and the federal government's response to these hurricanes
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with vice president harris criticizing former president trump again. here's gabe gutierrez. >> reporter: with hurricane milton churning in the gulf, tonight president biden is ramping up his criticism of misinformation ahead of the storm. >> it's un-american. it's not who the hell we are. >> reporter: meanwhile former president trump in battleground pennsylvania today attacking vice president harris. >> she's just led the worst rescue operation in history in north carolina. >> reporter: an intensifying political storm as both presidential campaigns battle over federal disaster relief. >> they had no money. you know where they gave the money, to illegal immigrants coming in. >> reporter: that's false. fema says that more than a billion dollars it distributed to shelter migrants is from a different government program, not disaster relief. harris on a late night show slamming trump for pushing misinformation. >> and it's crude. have you no empathy, man? no, for the suffering of other people.
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>> reporter: the former president also falsely says fema will only give storm survivors $750. trump's claims drawing pushback from other republicans. >> those rumors are totally unsubstantiated. >> reporter: still, north carolina congressman chuck edwards says there are legitimate questions about fema's response. >> it was more than three days before we ever saw the first folks in here from fema. >> reporter: though several governors now say the feds have provided the aid they need, some survivors are still desperate for fema's help. >> why aren't they here? why aren't they helping the people that need it? >> reporter: ahead of hurricane milton, a federal watchdog tells nbc news that fema's staffing is running on a razor's edge. for example, of the more than 1,200 workers who specialize in disaster recovery assistance, just 3 are listed as available, but the fema administrator insists the agency can handle multiple disasters saying, it has a layered staffing approach. lester. >> all right. gabe gutierrez, thank you. we'll take a break
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here. when we're back, we're with al roker and a late update on the path of milton. that's next. so when i had carpal tunnel syndrome, lower back pain, and shortness of breath, i thought that's what getting older felt like. thank goodness... ...i called my cardiologist. i have attr-cm, a rare but serious disease... ...and getting diagnosed early... ...made a difference. if you have any of these warning signs, don't wait, ask your cardiologist about attr-cm today. (♪♪) one hundred republicans who worked in national security for presidents reagan, both bushes, and for president trump. now endorsing harris for president. she came up as a prosecutor, an attorney general, into the senate. she has the kind of character that's going to be necessary in the presidency. vice president harris is standing in the breach at a critical moment in our nation's history. we have a shared commitment
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getting really sick. and that, is huge. before we leav before we leave you tonight, we want to check in with al roker for one last look at the forecast as hurricane milton roars ashore. al, what's the latest? >> that's right, siesta key, lester, is the spot. it has made landfall and now is making its way across the state, 120-mile-per-hour winds moving northeast at 15 miles per hour, pushes through and
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then makes its way out the eastern coast of florida sometime late tomorrow morning, and then it's gone, but in the meantime, we've got winds to deal with. so far we've seen 64-mile-per-hour wind gusts at tampa, sarasota as well. those will go up, then we're looking at storm surges anywhere from 9 to 13 feet from sarasota to fort myers and, of course, we're looking at major flooding with 18 inches of rain possible. lester. >> all right, al, thank you. that is "nightly news" for this wednesday. join for extended hurricane coverage all night on nbc news now. thank you for watching, everyone. i'm lester holt. please take care of yourself and each other, and good night from tampa.
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[cheers and applause] ♪♪ how are you doin' where have you been ♪ ♪ i've been practicin' this moment for like 20-somethin' years in my head ♪ ♪ it's nice to meet you that's what i said ♪ ♪ you said baby this is gonna be some movie [bleep] we'll never forget ♪ ♪ sometimes i re-run those 16 seasons for the rush ♪ ♪ these are the eras of us a story of love ♪ ♪ stealin' the air right from my lungs ♪
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♪ girl of my dreams forever we're young ♪ ♪ remember it just the way it was the eras of us ♪ ♪ i didn't mean it when i said i was numb ♪ ♪ 'cause i'm feelin' every feelin' cuttin' straight to my guts ♪ ♪ but the problem is that i'm just an adrenaline [bleep] ♪ ♪ yeah i said it so what ♪ ♪ lately i've been swingin' fists and startin' a fight ♪ ♪ i've been tryna kill the memory of you in my mind ♪ ♪ it's a cross i'm gonna bear until the day that i die ♪ ♪ yeah i said it ♪ ♪ i miss the eras of us a story of love ♪ ♪ stealin' the air right from my lungs ♪ ♪ girl of my dreams i [bleep] it up ♪ ♪ we had it all and now it's just ♪ ♪ how are you doin' where have you been ♪
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♪ i've been practicin' this moment but i never thought i'd see you again ♪♪ [cheers and applause] >> kelly: welcome to the kelly clarkson show, give it up for my band. that was errors of us -- bands on my sirius xm channel told me about her a while back and i have been obsessed with her, i think she's so cool, her tone is so cool she's fascinating. there is nowhere to breathe in that bridge, screw you on that one. let's get our first guest out here she is in ne, tony, and golden globe winning actress you know from incredible performances in "12 years a
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slave," ratchet, and the people versus o.j. simpson. her new film is called hold your breath streaming now on hulu, say hello to the lovely sarah paulson. [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] i didn't know if you would remember. >> kelly: remember you? >> we met at the golden globes or something? >> yes. and you came up my name is sarah and i love you. >> kelly: you made me feel so good i felt so out of place. i was nervous -- i don't get nervous singing but i get nervous presenting awards and doing that kind of thing. you grew up here in new york and he went to the famous
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laguardia high school? >> the sane school, the weird thing to call a school. i would feel so cool. i went there and i didn't maybe go to class all the time. it's so embarrassing to my mother, she's a teacher. >> my mom was not a teacher, i got away with a lot. >> it didn't go well at my house. that's a fun school you were acting at a very young age. >> what i was not doing at a very young age was singing. this is a school for acting, dance, visual arts. vocal is what they call it. i was not a vocal major. >> kelly: did you want to be? >> i want to have the thing that comes out of your head come out of your head and it doesn't happen that way. >> kelly: i would love to act like you. >> we can trade? >> kelly: today make you -- not to make you but do they have you go in different classes to
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stretch you? >> i had a lot of friends in the vocal department who were like -- >> kelly: that was good to. >> no it wasn't, that was a lie. one time on stage i've done a lot of plays and i had to sing happy birthday on stage with a group of other people, it did not go well. because happy birthday for me is a hard song to sing. i have a picture problem. >> kelly: i want to get you to sing happy birthday right now. >> you want me to humiliate myself and you could maybe make it better? go for it. >> it's so embarrassing. >> kelly: you are a parent, just -- >> kelly: i am very good at constructive criticism. >> i'm so scared. what notes? >> how dare you. [laughter]
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okay, wait become >> kelly: you are an alto. >> happy birthday ♪♪ happy birthday ♪♪ [cheers and applause] >> kelly: that just came in this mic. >> you're not going to want to hear this but guess what you are going to get it. >> kelly: yes! ♪♪ happy birthday to you ♪♪ you have pitch. ♪♪ happy birthday to you ♪♪ that was bad ♪♪ >> i was terrified i was genuinely terrified. >> my friend was like ask to
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help you teach pitch -- can you make it to be like since you've been gone -- >> i jump around and sing that song. >> kelly: that's a great song to do too, you don't have to be perfect. >> i like having this microphone. when people do karaoke do believe it's better for them to not be great singers and let it out, or do you like people who have been like i've been waiting for this moment my whole life and they sing and you're just like this is boring your cow >> kelly: have a little fun with it, you can be good your cow i also think comedy is fun. i've got to tell you, i find you hilarious by the way. why don't you do more comedy? speak to. >> because no one has asked me to. they want me running from a clown, i'm a crazy nurse, i'm a prosecutor with bad hair. nobody is asking me -- >> kelly: you are great and all that. >> i find the ones who can
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handle the dramatic roles are actually the ones were funniest. >> listen, it is my mic on. >> it's on. thank you very much. all i want to say is somebody should ask me to be in a comedy. [cheers and applause] >> kelly: we will take a quick break -- >> i have a big thank you for sarah when i was a teenager i stayed home from school sick in bed and watch the entire "american horror story" series i fell in love with her performance but also i fell more in love with the horror genre. it inspired me to become a horror filmmaker myself. more with kelly and becerra after. ♪ ♪ (jason) i want this! (vo) jason is really fired up for the cinnamon toast crunch challenge.
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[cheers and applause] >> kelly: welcome back everybody we are here with sarah paulson, give it up! i want to say congrats on the tony. >> the thing for me as a young person -- [cheers and applause] >> kelly: it's so weird, i love this. >> as a young person growing up in new york city i would walk through times square and i would see all of these sparkly lights and all these actors and all these pictures of these actors and i dreamt and dreamt of doing it. i never really imagined having a television or film career i couldn't imagine it because i grew up here in the theater was the thing that seemed possible to me. i have won and any and i golden globe all of these things
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that are sparkly and cool and thrilling. but the tony award for me was -- meryl streep doesn't have a tony award, you know what i mean? [cheers and applause] >> kelly: well said to. eight nobody better than meryl streep. you know i don't know her from adam but i sense that she's competitive. you know she's at home going watch this. >> kelly: shall be on broadway next year. because of what you said to. certain ones do have a different gravity or wait to them. for me it was the grammy, growing up -- we grew up in a time where it was still mysterious. it was still crazy. >> you would watch them, you admired them and there they were in these gowns and statues in this one is thin, it's really
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cool -- you can it's interactive. >> was not broken? >> is it broken? >> that's the only statue i keep anywhere near me that i can see because it also says best performance by a leading actress in a play. [cheers and applause] i will forever be nerdy about that experience, because it was the greatest thing that ever happened to me. it was a thrill of a lifetime. >> i get that but also your move, meryl streep. i want to talk about the new movie because it's called hold your breath -- it's scary -- >> the reason i was drawn to it is it's not your average scary movie, it's more of a psychological thriller. but at its core it's a story about a woman in the 1930s left alone to care for her family in the middle of the dust
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storm at that time. a lot of which were man-made and since we were over farming the land. terrible drought, nothing to let the ground stick together. >> it's a good thing we have learned. >> so she is left alone to fend for herself her husband has gone off to try to make a living on the railroad and she is in the middle of grieving her youngest child that she lost to the scarlet fever, she's in a heightened state of panic to try to keep her children safe and things just don't go her way. there is maybe a descent into some kind of -- and she goes a little nutty. but at its core it's a story about a woman who is desperate to keep her family safe. it's not just the thing we were talking about during the break of "nightmare on elm street" or jason or freddy krueger, all of these things that are actually -- >> kelly: it's almost more terrifying because it actually happened. >> we went through this at the height of covid, the air
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itself -- you had to wear a mask. the idea is the air itself could kill you. she is covering all the cracks and nooks and crannies in her home, these homes were built in a rudimentary way. all the air from outside gets in and there's nowhere for them to go. it's really scary, it's tends to talk about it makes me nervous. i'm like try to take a breath. >> speaking of dust, i did a video once with all the dust and i got so ill. >> you got sick from the dust there was no clean air of. i was the freak on the set -- there were three fans blowing 7a guy with a giant hose was just funneling dirt and i was like more wind! i was like give it to me. instead of getting blown back, we had a hand signal when we were like i can't see anything. we were running into each other.
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i got sick. >> the things coming out of my nose and my ears, i'm wearing a wig -- it was dirt and the sand. the worst beach day ever. i get in the bed there's nothing i could do about that -- you're on a sand pile. >> kelly: i love that you were full on beyonce. >> give me more wind! >> kelly: we have a clip, here is sarah paulson in hold your breath. >> he's not of this world. he's been sneaking into our house, moving things at night, trying to hurt the girls. he can get through locks, closed windows come apart like dust.
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you can breathe him in. [cheers and applause] >> hold your breath is streaming on hulu right now. if you like to be scared, watch it. we will be right back. ♪ ♪
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[cheers and applause] >> kelly: welcome back. a few years ago this next guy blew up on youtube when he posted a cover of him singing shania twain you're still the one. this video has gone on to get over 180 million views. dominated the billboard hot 100 chart with his single lose control on his debut studio
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album i have tried everything but therapy part one trend. is releasing i've tried therapy -- he hasn't done that yet. he's releasing that in january, you can see him on tour in the same name. give it up for my friend teddy swims! [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ you look so cool! >> definitely a woman, this was all for the walk. thanks for having these bad boys. >> kelly: thanks for singing with me last time. the whole six seasons -- everybody talked about that.
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>> i ask about you all the time, from the top to the bottom this whole show, it's a culture that they built. such a beautiful thing. >> kelly: you are crushing the game right now. your name is on everyone's mouth. coming out of everyone's mouth. we didn't discuss this last time i didn't know you are a football player before hand. then all of a sudden you switch to music. >> look at that serious face. >> kelly: i would have chosen you for fantasy football. that sounded weird but it's not. [laughter] what made you switch over? >> my pal jesse hampton we had been playing music -- we have known each other since we were in sixth grade to. we started dabbling, i think 5-7
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wasn't really happening for a defensive tackle. at least i can break my leg and do this. i remember when i first stopped playing my mom pulled out my old trophies and memorabilia when we were kids why would you do this to us, we are a football family. my first full theater play was -- my mom her two lines i did. i'm so sorry, this is where you belong. i was like yes, i love you. she is so supportive. >> kelly: that is so cool. he just announced i tried everything but therapy part two trend. did you already have those songs recorded, you know apart 2 was coming? or you were still working on at? >> we were still working but i think there's good to be a little more closure in it. i was in the situation of the time, i hope maybe a part 2.
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there's going to be a little more healing to it. >> kelly: we all are, that's all right. >> learning to navigate better. >> kelly: and at least profit off of it. you were also on tour i feel like you're on tour every time i see you but where you going right now? >> we are still cooking. we've got north carolina tomorrow, a few more dates to the 22nd of october. staying with it. >> kelly: do have a favorite place? >> australia is my favorite place in the world. [cheers and applause] new zealand too, that whole area. everyone is so kind. i think everybody believes in the inherent goodness of people and when everybody believes that the world isn't so cruel and mean. >> kelly: that's what i like about it. i almost wanted to move to
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new zealand. >> it's definitely different from new york. >> kelly: look for teddy's new album, it's coming out in january and go online for tickets and info on his tour. up next we celebrate hispanic heritage month with the filmmakers of netflix is "going varsity in mariachi," we'll be right back. take an ekg from anywhere, but with 6-times the data. can your smartwatch do that? introducing kardiamobile 6l, the fda-cleared ekg that provides six-times more heart data than any smartwatch, and it detects three of the most common arrhythmias in just 30 seconds, including atrial fibrillation, bradycardia, and tachycardia. kardiamobile 6l is on sale now for just $99 during prime big deal days at kardia.com or amazon. (♪♪) ♪ there's a light. ♪ ♪ a certain kind of light ♪ ♪ that always shines on me. ♪
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♪ there's a way ♪ ♪ everybody say. ♪ ♪ oh... ♪ ♪ you must know what it's like. ♪ ♪ baby, you must know what it's like ♪ ♪ to love somebody. ♪ ♪ to love somebody. ♪ ♪ the way i love you. ♪ ♪♪
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from nbc news, this is a special report. here's savannah guthrie and hoda kotb. >>

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