tv Today NBC October 16, 2016 6:00am-7:00am MST
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this is locker room talk. >> to stand up and say enough is ?? >> good morning and welcome to sunday today. i'm willy dpoois. three weeks and change until election day and trailing in post polls, donald trump is stepping up his charge that the election is rigged, this as a number of women accusing trump of sexual misconduct raises to 9. and more wiki leaks.
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election? we'll talk about it with trump advisor and former new york city mayor rudy giuliani in just a moment. and later, lindsey vaughn at home going home 80-mile-an-hour straight down hill. she hasn't always been comfortable with the stardom that comes with being in the best in the world. >> having your personal life and what you look like and your appearance and all of that be judged on a regular basis, it was a big change. >> we'll spend sometime with lindsey and harry smith a bit later. the race for the white house and another busy weekend already. donald trump at a rally on saturday, warning the election is going to be in his words, rigged, while a new round of hillary clinton e-mails are released by wiki leaks. we're in washington this morning, covered it all. >> hi, good morning. and this morning aurld, donald trump apparently adding snl to that category of rigged media, an argument that he's delivering about election day, that his opponents, even some
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>> wn republican hindu coalition. >> i'm a big fan of hindu and india. >> donald trump lighting a good luck candle. but his more inflammatory moments came hours earlier. >> rigged, rigged, rigged, rigged. >> trump's latest line, perhaps laying the groundwork for a potential loss. house speaker paul ryan immediately pushing back, quote, our democracy relies on confident in election results and the speaker is confident the states will carry out this election with integrity. trump's opponents, blastic him for trying to undermine the election. >> now that he thinks he's going to lose, he's going around and saying the whole thing's rigged. the guy's just a bully. >> another attack, trump without evidence, accusing clinton of being on drugs at the last debate. >> she was all pumped up at the
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test. anyway, i'm willing to do it. >> all of it, as yet another woman comes forward, accusing trump of kissing her without permission in the late 90s, an allegation nbc news has not independently verified and one trump's campaign calls a bogus claim, adding anyone covering this story should be embarrassed. trump's tried to pivot away from his own controversy by pointing to bill clinton's accuseers. now hacked e-mails released show moving to gather information to try and disprove wuneta broadwalk after she tweeted earlier this year about her accusation the former president raped her in the 70s, an allegation bill clinton has denied. the stolen e-mails, which the clinton campaign hasn't authenticated, give new insight into how the campaign prepared for something it didn't address publicly until recently when
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into the spotlight. >> also in the hacked e-mails, the purported full transcripts of speeches hillary clinton delivered to goldman sacks, the speeches, remember, that bernie sanders wanted her to release back during the primaries. these transcripts show clinton's relationships with big bank execs and her -- both candidates overnight getting the snl treatment. take a look,alic baldwin putting on his donald trump shoes, along withicate mckinnen as hillary but at least one viewer wasn't a fan. this morning, trump himself responding on twitter. quote, watch saturday night live hit job on me. time to retire the boring and unfunny joe. portrayal stinks. media rigging election. here's the thing, we know one thing for sure, snl will continue to hit both candidates all the way through november 8. >> donald trump up early
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let's bring in one of donald trump's advisor, ruly giuliani. let's pick up there on the charge of the election being rigged. he said snl is part of it, but he's used it in terms of conspiracy, there's something broader going on and working against him here. a sitting united states senator also saying this week that the process is rigged. i want to be specific about how it's being rigged. >> i think there's a misunderstanding. paul ryan thinks he election's at the polling places are rigged. he's not saying that. there may be a few incidents of that. philadelphia is an example, chicago, but that's not the real problem. what he's really talking about is now 80 to 85% of the media is against him. you look at the new york times. i read the times every day, i don't know why, but i read it every day. first three stories, donald trump was bad in schools, donald trump had a business failure,
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the wiki leaks thing has taken by far a substory to this 8 or 9 women, none of whom have substantiation and two of them have been completely rebutted. so i think what he feels is the establishment is against him, and they're rigging the election against him, not cheating at the polling place, but you've got the times, the "washington post," most of the major newspapers, most of the networks. >> but his supporters are distinction. i want to make you something a boston globe piece, talking about his supporters in ohio. he says, if he's she's in office, talking about hillary clinton, i hope we can start a cue. she should be in prison or shot. that's how i feel about it. we'll have a revolution and take them out of office if that's what it takes. when he talks in broad terms about the election being rigged, something be taken away from him
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hearing the way you're describing it. >> he always makes it clear he's talking about the reporters. he's never talked about cheating at the polling place. and second a letter like that, i could give you 20 sent to trump headquarters from hillary clinton's people or his people that say crazy things. you've got millions of people, each side has a cup offal of coops. >> will ap election. >> of course, unless, my god, there really is evidence of cheating. but i don't expect the election will process to be rigged, meaning the election to be rigged. but if it is, we'll contest it. that has happened. but what i do think is very, very unfair is the media coverage of the election in which anything said about donald trump goes right to the front. you stay on for 5 days, six days, and hillary clinton says
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thing. >> we've covered all those. respectfully, alley jackson just did an entire section on the wiki leaks. and by the way, they're available to the government. anybody can read them. >> but people don't unless it's pushed on them. and if you look at the new york times, he's up here. she's down here. >> you said just a minute ago of the nine women who have come forward and accused mr. trump. >> yes. the ninth one i'm not really aware of. >> have youd these women? did you the first hand account? >> i'm not his lawyer in the case, but i have seen the rebuttal. >> did you read the accounts from the women? >> is that the woman on the plane. >> the woman on the plane is one of them. she was the first one. >> there was a witness who says it's not true. >> okay. well you're a prosecutor. would you take the witness who said 30 years or ago, whatever it was, was on the plane, a guy who says he remembers because he a has a photographic memory,
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also said that she was able to lift the arm rest. and in those days, the arm rests in first class didn't lift. it's also rather bazaar that you could do that for 15 minutes, that's a long time in first class. you know what first class is like and in those days, first class was even more filled with flight attendants. the allegation on its face is strange. >> you're asking one thing, we should point out the headth actually the arm rests didn't go up and down. i can't believe we're talking about the specifics of 1970s armrists, but he said they did. but did you find any of these stories compelling? >> i find that they all fit a pattern and i find they all come 27 days before an election. and i know how the clintons conduct an election, and they conduct an election about as dirty as it gets. and i find it impossible that
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push these things. >> mr. mayor, what incentive would 9 women have to come forward to expose one of the worst moments of their lives to the public. >> at least one is represented by gloria aldridge so her incentive is to get money. >> so you think they want money and fame? >> you should also put on the relative of the woman who says this woman has said wonderful things about donald trump, what a terrific guy he is, restaurant and turned on him completely. >> so bottom line, you don't believe any of the accounts. >> i've known donald trump for 20 years. i've been almost every situation you can imagine. i've never seen donald trump act toward women other than as a gentlemen, including my wife and my daughters and, in fact, he's courtly in the way he acts toward women. so i find these hard to believe. does he -- does he talk like a guy sometimes when you're
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jokes and stuff like that? sure. but does he act like a gentlemen? absolutely. >> so all 9 of these women are lyingm. >> i don't know if they're lying. i trust -- i don't know them. so how would i know? i trust him. he's my friend. he told me they're not true. i've never seen kbing his conduct, and i've known him a lot longer than they do. and i can the circumstance of it, 27 days before an election, when she's getting bombarded and needs something to save her because the stuff she says in those e-mails is disqualifying from president of the united states. there's a a public hillary and a private hillary. how about she doesn't know that the c on a confidential document means confidential. she shouldn't have been secretary of state if she didn't know that. hillary clinton couldn't pass a background check to get a government job because she was extremely careless in handling
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>> you're suggesting these women have been directed by the clinton campaign, put forward by the clinton campaign through the media to tell their stories to hurt donald trump. they haven't come on their own to these stories? >> i'm saying more than that. i've been a trial lawyer for a good deal, and an investigator. i don't believe in convinces. 27 days before an election, people are talking about things that happened 30 years ago, one of which was totally absurd, to do that on an airplane ago for 15 minutes without somebody saying something or doing something, a lot of the rest are absurd. the woman whose relative rebuts what she says, there are others, by the way, who rebut some of these claims. and second, being in a -- maybe a little different position position than most people, knowing the man and what he's like. he's very, very courtly and gentlemanly toward women. >> you know people who make these claims don't come forward to get rich and famous.
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say publicly. what would be the incentive? >> as a prosecutor, i found you have to apply a 50/50 test here. the whole idea that all victims should be believed, which she didn't apply to her husband, she elected not to believe those victims. but the idea that every victim to be believed, that's nonsense. >> let's flip that the around. why do you believe those victims of bill clinton and not invictims of donald trump? >> i don't necessarily believe them or not believe and attacked them and she's a feminist. hillary clinton is on record saying women should be believed, almost no matter what they say. all of a sudden women come along and say bill clinton raped me, molested me, took advantage of me, and she goes and attacks them. that means she is what she says in the wiki leaks. she's a phony. i don't agree with hillary clinton. i don't agree that every victim should be believed. i had a lot of victims that
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distinction, between what should be believed and what shouldn't? >> look for corroboration. does she have corroboration? does he. >> many of these victims do. contemporaneous. >> that's not corroboration. eyewitnesses, people who remember it. anybody can say anything to anybody. people can say, actually, that's all hearsay. that's not even admissible in a trial. >> well, i appreciate your time. we've gone long. thank you sflooefrp and i really wish that chris wallace spent clinton's stuff, three minutes of donald's stuff, and all the rest of it on taxes, isis, and the real issues because hillary's passed and donald's past isn't what affects us next year when our taxes go up and our taxes go down. >> mr. mayor, thank you for your time this morning. other news this morning, a horrific accident overnight in san diego after a truck drove up the side of a bridge, crashing into dozens of people below. four people killed, at least 8 others injured.
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of alcohol at the time. he's been charged with vehicular manslaughter. overseas the uss mason, the navy destroyed currently in international waters came under attack again on saturday. the ship was not hit and did fire counter missiles in retaliation. this is the third time in a week the us mason was fired upon by missiles from rebel controlled areas in yemen. president obama ordered missile strikes against radar strikes in yemen after a previous attack this week. > saturday. former new york jets defensive end dennis bird who inspired so many people with his battle to walk after an onfield injury was killed in a car crash in oklahoma. bird fractured a vertebra during a came in 1992 when he collided with a teammate. doctors said he might never walk again, but he made a triumphantant return to the field the following year on his own 2 feet as honorary captain. bird was killed when a driver coming the other way crossed a
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on. >> dillon is here now with a look at the weekend weather. good morning. we had a nasty weekend so far. wind gusts around 80 to 100 mile-per-hour. several inches of rain, as well. the storm is losing a lot of wind. we could still see wind gust said near 50 miles per hour, but most of the heavy rain is isolated to southern oregon and northern california where we could see an additional 3 to 5 inches of rain through the day today and into tomorrow. that's a l across the country. now here's a peak out your
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thank you very much. stick around, if you will, for the highs and lows of the week, including the man in the red sweater, seven days in the life of ken bone as we enter the bone zone. plus, the podium gets ugly as the jeopardy host just can't contain his disdain for one person's personal life. and the city beneath the city, all coming up on sunday today. start by taking care of families for 70 years. be there for america's toughest and help, when help is needed america's #1 isn't a status earned overnight. it's earned in every wash, and re-earned every day. tide, america's #1 detergent does your makeup remover take it all off? every kiss-proof, cry-proof,
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we're going to go through the highs and lows of the week. and our first high goes to ken bone, the undecideed and pistachio voter when he asked a president about energy policy about the president debate a year ago and became a national sensation based on his general cuddliness. it paim even cozier when mr. bone revealed later that he only wore it because he split the pants on the suit he had planned to wear that night. before the debate. 7. as of this morning, he has 248,000. there's now a line of ken bone t-shirts, even a, get this, sexy ken bone halloween costume, dillon. >> i got my idea, now. >> bone did get his first dose of celebrity come up when people went digging through old reddits post of his and found some not so adorable comments.
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host alex trabec, we fans of the show have grown accustomed over the years to trabec's ooh, sorry, condescension. this week, he took it to a new level. during that part of the show when he visits the podium, trabec had thoughts about one player's social life. >> i think it's very fun. it's called 93rd core hip hop. >> 93rd core hip hop. >> it's people who identify as 93rdy rapping about the things they love, fiction, having a hard time meeting remote partners, you know. it's really catchy and fun. >> losers, in other words. >> well -- sure. >> i'm teasing. no, i'm teasing you. >> translation, you're a loser. i watch jeopardy every single night. it was just so funny. >> trabec burns. all right. our next high, we're going back to the second presidential
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hand held mics and the roman candidates give the debate kind of a feel of a karaoke feel. well, this gem was put together. ?? ? no, i never felt like this before. yes, i swear, it's the truth. and i owe it all to you my life. >> this is what's going on through the minds of other countries as they watch our presidential debates. >> exactly. as they distract themselves. >> our next low goes to the attempted implosion of bridge in little rock. clouds gathered to say good-bye to the 93-year-old broadway bridge. let's see how that went. >> still standing.
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was not ready to go. as the charges exploded, the bridge stayed right where it was. it then took the demolition crew five hours to pull the sucker down with the help of a crane. they need stronger dynamite. >> we'll end with our final high, bob dylan won the 2016 nobel prize for literature. dillon was considered a long shot to win, not even a serious candidate by many because a musician had never won the award. but the nobel peopl g work, saying he's a great poet in the english-speaking tradition. he's the first american to win since 1983. the 75-year-old dillon adds his nobel prize to 10 grammies, a pull it's prize and a grammy award. >> we'll be right back with lindsey vaughn. lindsey vaughn. this is lulu, our newest dog. mom didn't want another dog. she said it's too much work.
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(doorbell) mom, check this out. wow. swiffer sweeper, and dusters. this is what i'm talking about. look at that. sticks to this better than it sticks to lulu. that's your hair lulu! mom, can we have another dog? (laughing) trap and lock up to 4x more dirt, dust and hair than the store brand stop cleaning. start swiffering. is that ice-t? nope, it's lemonade. is that ice-t? lemonade. ice-t? what's with these people, man? lemonade, read the sign. lemonade. read it. ok. delicious. ice-t at a lemonade stand? surprising. what's not surprising? how much money marin saved by switching to geico. yo, ice-t! it's lemonade, man!
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hey, facebook live, good sexual assault and rape. out-of-control corrections officers arrested. but not one served a day of time. sweetheart deals, because, with county attorney bill montgomery, making us all less safe. there's a better choice -- diego rodriguez, a career prosecutor who believes in tough sentences for violent crime and equal justice under the law. vote for diego rodriguez.
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[ applause ] ?? "saturday night live" can kate mckinnon taking on the handshake that wasn't during the second presidential debate. as the country counts the days to election day, lindsey vonn has another date circled, the day of the opening ceremony for the winter olympics in is i don't think change, south korea south korea.
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would have been eight years until she won her gold in vancouver. she agonizingly had to sit on the the sochi games with an injury. now recovering from another injury this year, vonn is obsessed. we got together at tank on the green to talk about her new book. >> up in the start house, lindsey vonn. >> this is the woman with the most super-g >> you obviously love speed. reach, what, 80 miles an hour? maybe a little more. >> yeah, probably more. >> what does that feel like to the rest of us humans who will never go down a mountain at that speed. >> it's fun, very freeing. when i say you're driving down a highway, stick your head out the window. ought wind in your face. it's so nice.
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to hold your breath crashes. another in 2013, at the world championship, where she sustained career-threatening injuries. >> does being airlifted off the mountain plant a seed? >> no. >> why not? >> that's part of the job. i accept the risk that at any time i could get in an accident and e kill myself. ski racing is a very dangerous sport, but i love it. i don't want to be doing anything else, so i accept the risk. if it happens, it happens. >> that fearlessness helped vonn become one of the best in the world. it also made her a celebrity off of them. >> the olympics in 2010, that changed my career.
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all of a sudden people knew who i was. there had never happened really before. >> the attention that came with a gold medal in vancouver meant the woman who had spent her life worried only about going fast downhill began to worry about her image. >> rep carpets, paparazzi following you, that couldn't have been easy for someone who was use to being famous for her ability on a ski mountain being judged some other public. >> it was hard, having your personal life, what you look like, your appearance, all of that being judged. it was a big change. red carpets, i was like, my gosh, this this is so cool i good et to dress up, put on a nice dress, and then i get out there, and i'm like, i don't know about this. >> the spotlight got much brighter when in 2013, lindsey
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years. >> did you hear all the noise? comments sections on web sites? people were saying about the way you looked, about your relationship with tiger? did you get into that or did you block it out? >> i tried really hard to block it out. tiger really helped. before i met him, i was reading too much, and he said you have to block it out. it doesn't exist. i've gotten to a place being okay where who i am. just, you know -- >> yes? [ laughter ] >> this is the "today" show. >> we can bleep. time to be in new york city. >> "trong is the new beautiful" is the product of her getting to that place. she hopes her story will help readers feel good about their bodies in a way she didn't until just recently. >> you talk a lot in the book
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thinking about your own body. someone as healthy and filth and athletic, where does that insecurity come from? >> growing up i was always thin and made fun of because i was too thin. then, you know, i turned 18 and gained a bunch of weight and then i was too big. i looked at pictures of myself, a couple years ago and my face was like this big. >> i don't know anyone who would look at a that. >> my friends gave me grief. my head is like an m & m, perfectly round, large, and my friends tell me i look like a frozen turkey. >> wow. tough love. >> tough love. >> from your friends. i always wasn't the most popular kid growing up either, so that didn't help. >> was that because you were skiing all the time, or was it
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i had a perm, braces and glasses all at the same time. >> her parents made a life-changing decision. they told hair dream house in minnesota, and moved with their five children to colorado, all so lindsey could chase her dream. >> i'm thinking about that for a 13-year-old girl, that's some pressure. >> it was a lot of pressure. it was a really heart thing for me to deal with. my parent didn't the more i realized how much they had sacrificed for me. >> were there tough moments with your brothers and sisters? did they resent you at all? >> no, they have always been amazing. even though this day they thought i was meant for something bigger, and they all didn't want to ski. they're happy that i did it and not them. s. >> two days from her 32nd
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korea, but she knows life after skiing is just around the next turn. >> i have to have a backup plan, things lined up, so i'm working on some things. >> like what? >> like i can't tell you. >> one step at a time. >> one step at a time. >> when we got together she had just returned from skiing in chile to test the knee she fractured in march. the test went well, she said. she was skiing against the men's team and south korea, to ski competitively against men. the book is "strong is the new beautiful." it's out in and out, to her her diet of champions, click on today.com. here one-word hint -- bacon. you can't say no to anthony, so you'll see me eating a tongue taco, among other things, next week on "sunday today."
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look. have you ever tried a tongue taco. >> i'm gets to forget the tongue taco and go back to bacon. it's going to be unsettled in the pacific northwest, more rain, even into tomorrow. we're looking at report heat up until about wednesday through the plains up through the mid with evident. late in the week there's a cold front moving eastward bringing scattered showers and thunderstorms. the eastern great lakes, but the good news, it is going to be d rain. that's a look at the weather across the country. now here's a peek out your
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and that's your latest forecast. >> dylan, thank you very much. next, the sub-tropolis 6 i laugh, i sneeze... there goes my sensitive bladder. sound familiar? then you'll love this. incredible protection in a pad this thin. i didn't think it would work, but it does. it's called always discreet id to gel, for incredible protection that's surprisingly thin. so i know i'm wearing it, but no one else will. always discreet for bladder leaks ?? 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.
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jules verne novel. harry smith takes us to subtropolis. >> inside a hill in kansas city is a place you have to see to believe. decades ago limestone was mined here. what's left is space, a lot of space how much space is down here? >> what's down here right now, we have 6 million square feet of buildings leased to 55 companies. there's 1700 employees that run around here and go to work every day. >> reporter: it's a massive industrial park, all underground. this is almost like a science fix-y sort of thing, but you're down here. do you ever worry? like the world could come to an end upstairs, and you guys would be down here. >> we would be safe. >> just toil away, right?
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is basically disasterproof. another selling point, subtrop his is all 65 degrees, always. what better place to put a room of computer servers. >> what made you they being underground would be a great place to put a cloud. >> computer equipment, you need to pull it. it generates heat. it's easy for us to cool the equipment down here and we're sheltered. >> reporter: turns out there's a lot of cool stuff, especially in a company vaults and storage. what are you going to show us? >> we're going to show you hollywood. >> reporter: inside, aisle upon aisle of tv and movie treasures. sent here for safekeeping in a room that feels a bit like a refrigerator. >> the temperature helps to protect that film from what they call vinegar syndrome. it starts decaying the film.
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hollywood classics it's here. >> they have important classicses, and then even more important stuff like scooby doo and the roadrunner show. from the national archives to food distributor parrish brothers, the occupants praise the predictability of doling business in a place where the sun never shines nor sets, where every day inside looks and feels exactly the same. >> it's like groundhog day. subtropolis. next a football coach and her extraordinary team i asked my dentist if an electric toothbrush was going to clean better than a manual... he said sure, but don't just get any one. get one inspired by dentists, with a round brush head! go pro with oral-b. oral-b's rounded brush head cups your teeth to break up plaque and rotates to sweep it away.
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football is religion in the south, and it's on display every weekend in the fall. fans flew their colors at tailgates, filled huge stadiums from tennessee to texas again on saturday. it's on a quieter field in s.e.c. country where dylan found the best football story of the season. >> it is about the size of your heart. you want to leave them a tradition of winning, of playing
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heart, you play for those people. >> reporter: as summer turns to fall, fields that laid dormant comes to life. and in baton rouge, louisiana, history is made every time coach susan grimle young takes the field. >> c'mon, c'mon. >> reporter: the first woman to coach high school football here since world war ii what are your goals on for this >> win a championship. >> reporter: hands down? >> hands down. >> reporter: every thursday night we take the field. this is our field, our house. nobody comes into our house and beats us. >> reporter: leading the school for the deaf in battle. when she came here as assistant coach 15 years ago she could barely communicate with her own team. let the scoreboard talk. >> i picked on signs when i
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pretty intimidating to coach a new team with this new language. >> yes, and football where there are no women. yeah. >> during the games she's really tough. >> jordan howard, shut your mouth. >> when we make mistakes, she says c'mon, move forward, we got to look past that and keep playing good. >> reporter: on the gridiron they like up with eight players. the quarterback starts the snap by touch challenge. >> we have to be very sneaky. if it is another deaf school, they will try to steal our signs. >> tell the line to block ten yards, move it. >> reporter: there's nothing easy about football. no amount of practice could prepare the team for this season in august the rain came, flooding many of the school's students and staff out of their homes. >> i felt scared.
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>> the water came in, and i really thought it was nothing. when saturday came, my house was gone. we lost everything, but we have to keep on going. i've got to support myself and my mom. >> reporter: co. g demands that her team place for each other before themselves. this year they play for someone who isn't in their stands. >> my mom passed away this summer. the kids are helping me to dedicate the season to talk about it. y'all promised you would all help play for my mom. you sat the stickers? that's my mom's initials. my mom would be proud. how we play this season is for her, you know? so the kids know that this is important to me, because this is the only time they'll see me tear up like this. >> reporter: in the shadow of lsu's 102,000 seat stadium, they're playing arch rival
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last year, but this year the war eagles score early and often. >> got in, got in, you got the pile on. >> reporter: after the game, the rivals meet together at the 50 yard line, where she gives words of wisdom to both teams. >> y'all are young, y'all are talented. y'all have time on your side. huddle up, go and shower, y'all stink. they give me my best, i'm satisfied. i know they can be sat themselves. that's our goal is to get that out of them. that's what's special about football ref and you've had that impact on them. >> yes, and they've had the impact on me. it goes both ways. wow, dylan. what a story. among the many extraordinary things about that story is coach g had to learn sign language. >> she didn't know an ounce of sign language before. this is one of those coaches you've always wanted. she tough on the guys, she nose football, but shies
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different hardships. can i just point out? they're 6-0. they're not just winning games. 42-0. 56-0, 52-6. i mean all in all they have scored 316 points this year. >> i was watching them play. they're good. they can play some ball. what a great story, dylan. another life well lived. jack greenberg was 24 years old when thurgood him, the organization he would later lead. he grew up in new york city and served in the navy during word war ii, landing on the shore in iwo jima. he was troubled by the fact all the officers were white, all the stewards black. he went to law school to change the inequality he saw. still in his 20s, he argued two of the cases that led to the supreme court's decision in brown versus the board of
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when thurgood marshall became a supreme court justice in 1961, he named greenberg to succeed him as director of the defense fund. he held the position for 23 years. in 1963, greenberg was on the defense team for martin luther king jr., after king was james in birmingham. jack greenberg died at his home in new york this week. he was 91 years old. when cold and flu hold you back try theraflu expressmax,
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i learned as a police officer and a businessman you should never abuse people's trust. unfortunately, today too many politicians either serve their party or themselves, and arizona families suffer. the arizona republic called paul babeu a disgrace. babeu spent $28,000 of taxpayer money at a five-star resort for using public money to promote himself. o'halleran: i'm tom o'halleran, and i approve this message, because you deserve leaders you can trust. we close this morning, as we always do this time of week, with some predictions for the week ahead. beginning monday as the ongoing effort by obama administration
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cuba, president obama has many critics of his effort to bury the hatchet with the castros, but perhaps for this one. under the new rules travelers can purchase unlimited quantities of cuban rum and cigars in any country they're sold. we predict by tuesday, cuba will have the world's largest economy. i mean, it's out there, as much as you want. wednesday night hillary clinton and donald trump get together for their third and final pr campus of the university of las vegas. it's likely the last time in their living they'll be face-to-face. the moderator is chris wallace of fox news. we predict as part of the new rules put forth by the commission on presidential debates ken bone once again will have his seat on the front row. >> red sweater? >> always. meanwhile, that same wednesday night in vegas the rolling stones are playing a show. mick, keith, ronny and charles
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concerts. donald trump plays their music, and they acknowledged this week there's nothing they can do legally to stop him from doing so. even with the presidential debate and stones show, we predict the biggest act will be gary busey. it's the hauntic illusion of chris angel, and prop quality of gallagher, and apparently he's wearing a skirt throughout. stay tuned to nbc this morning for "meet the press." chuck todd is joined by vice president biden, and the man who hopes to fill his position in january, governor mike pence. be sure to watch the third and final presidential debate wednesday 9:00 eastern. dylan, thank you and thank you all for spending part of your weekend with us.
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accuse donald trump of sexual misconduct -- >> he grabbed my shoulder and began kissing me. >> trump keeps denying the stories, all of them. >> the stories are total fiction. >> this morning with vice-president joe biden. >> what he said is aextbook definition of sexual assault. >> and with the republican nominee for vice-president mike pence. now that trump says the shackles are off, how damaging has this episode been? the latest numbers from our brand-new nbc news wall street journal poll. the great american divide. we go to one county that's all in for trump. >> hillary has so much stuff against her.
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