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tv   Today  NBC  October 23, 2016 8:00am-9:01am EDT

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i will accept if i win. >> that is not the way our democracy works. >> i would advise mr. trump to stop whining. . the iraqis have the momentum. >> cubs have won the pennant. good morning. welcome to "sunday today." i'm willie geist. 16 days until voters choose a new president. 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 champagne just yet, but the champagne is still flowing in chicago after the cubs advance to their first world series since 1945, with fans there dreaming of the first title
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since 1908. we are live at wrigley field in a moment. and later, a meet 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 the rest of us don't even know exist. >> the kind of questions we're asking is, what is your soul crave at 2:00 in the morning when you have a bit of a buzz. more later in the show. we begin with a celebration 71 years in the making. let me say that again -- the cubs are headed to the world series. they beat the dodgers in gauge 6 of the national league championship series 5-0. ron mott is outside wrigley field where i'm sure partying is still going on. >> reporter: absolutely. wow, what a night here in the city of chicago, a night that will never end for a lot of people who have waited their
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entire lives to hear the phrase -- the cups are going to the world series. >> out! oh, the cubs have won the pennant! >> reporter: and they got there in spectacular fashion, a 5-0 shutout of the l.a. dodgers capped off with a doddsling double play to end the game and launch a celebration for the ages. it's been many years, 71 exactly, since fans got to root for the cubs and there are a few of those fans out there. they'd like to see an elonger streak wiped away, 10 years, the last time the cubs were world champions. consider this. this venerable old ballpark, second oldest in major league baseball was not even around when the cubs last won. neither was fenway park for that matter, fans say it's time to end all that and time to let
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bygones be bygones, bye-bye for the curse of the billy goat and forgiveness for the fan in 2003, when the cubs were just five outs away from going to the world series when he interfered with a foul ball. a lot of people blamed him for a rally the marlins then put on to win game 6. take a look at some of the folks on twitter. one person writing -- it was never steve bartman's fault, i hope he's sitting where feeling a measure of absolution. now, the cleveland indians will have a bit to say about which of these two cities, chicago or cleveland, will celebrate and laugh last in the next week or ten days. >> and a great young cubs team that doesn't seem concerned about anything else. game 1 of the world series is tuesday night in cleveland. to the race for the white
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house. with 16 days to go, the candidates are setting up shot in battleground states. donald trump still claiming the election is rigged and delivering his own gettysburg address. hillary clinton out with her running mate tim kaine, kristen welker traveling with the campaign. kristin, good morni. >> reporter: good morning. she has two campaign events in north carolina. she is focused on running up the score, while donald trump is trying to pull off a major political comeback. surging in the polls, hillary clinton and tim contain holding a rare late-night rally in the heart of philadelphia on saturday. >> there is so much at stake in demonstrating uneequivocally that the united states is bigger than donald trump. >> reporter: the first time the two have campaigned together since labor day and holding a joins press appearance on board
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clinton's campaign plane, where clinton all but some of the the gop nominee. >> i debated him for 4 1/2 hours. i don't even think about responding anymore. >> reporter: but on the stump the talk of a rigged system dangerous. >> make no mistakes about this, my friends. he is threatening our democracies. >> reporter: the democrats want to win big. surrogates in battleground states. >> we're also excited for hillary, right? >> reporter: while trump and running mate mike pence making, later saturday. >> folks, it's a rigged system, and it's a rigged election, believe me. >> reporter: trump started the day in gettysburg, pennsylvania, the site of the legendary civil war address, trying to cast himself as a uneuter laying out policy proposals. >> first, i will announce my attention to totally renegotiate nafta. >> reporter: but his speech
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quickly 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 forward, jessica drake. >> donald then asked me, what do you want? how much? >> reporter: trump hayes denied all the allegations which haven't been verified by nbc news. tim kaine pouncing. >> he's saying i'm not changing. i may be president of the united states, but i'm really going to focus on settling scores. >> reporter: feeling emboldened, they also told reporters they will be increasingly trying to rep on downballot races. clinton says she's superstitious and mainly focused on trying to win the race. kristen welker, thanks, let's bring in hugh hewitt, he's
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now as msnbc political analyst and radio host. he joins us from his studio in suburban washington. always good to see you. thanks for being up early on a sunday with us. i want to ask about donald trump's approach. he came out, with 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 -- all of these liars will be sued after the election is over. does that capture for you some of the frustration that there shall flashes of a candidate who could win overshadowed by a line like that? >> especially as the clearclear politics averageses shows the races to tightening. the obama care premium increases are hitting across the country. mr. trump should stay focused on that, the fact that middle-class america is struggling after eight years of president obama there are traditional blocking
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and tackling you do. you don't do the double reverse hail mary statue of liberty and leave alone the stores their radioactive to your campaign. while many are cheered by the substance of his 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. as i pointed out, there are millions and millions of americans, about a half million in pennsylvania that are getting massive premium hikes. people like pat toomey are advantaged by that, because -- and so i wish mr. trump would stay focused like a laser on that. some of the corruption stories, bus mostly on obama care. >> pat toomey the republican senator there in pennsylvania in a tight race. you said something many interesting, this race is not over. i think most of the pollsters have objectively said it's all
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but over, if. what are the things you are seeing that may go against conventional wisdom? >> i think the one i just mentioned is probably the most important. i'm not counting the russian attacks on secretary clinton. there's a lot of interesting stuff in the fsb operation, also known as wikileaks, but it's not the kind of thing to move the needle. i look at the obama care premiums, willie. i see in pennsylvania they are averaging in excess of 20% rate hikes. they are going up in florida, 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 presidential. senator pat toomey, who is ahead in any reelection bid, kelly ayotte, who is tied in new hampshire. i look at richar burr, he's
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ahead, roy blunt in missouri. joesh even ron johnson in wisconsin is coming back. if i had to look at the whole election, republicans have a lot to focus on in order to security the house and maintain the republican majority. if mr. trump really focuses like a laser, they didn't get to keep their second doctor or second plan, there's an opportunity there. i say the republican cp poll number, the gap is closing. >> he 'only got about 2 1/2 more weeks. we've been talking about the cubs this morning. you're a cleveland, the tribe hasn't won since 1948. how about a prediction, hugh? >> the indians in five. i'm wearing my red and blue. >> in five? >> in five. i think you'll see kluber come out, trevor bower come, and josh conlin -- we're going to win
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this. i hate to do that to the cubs fans, but the elite media is clearly favoring the cubs. the elite madia is in the tank for the cubs. >> hugh hue wills, great to talk with you as always. >> thanks, willie. the next president will have a whole plate of foreign policy for that issues. they're getting closer to mosul, to root out militants. the offensive is the culmination of a two-year end by u.s. forces to help in the war against the terror group. richard engel has been traveling with american and iraqi forces all week right on you front lines. >> this is one of their tunnels. be very careful where you step. there's a colonel these could be booby-trapped. richard, always good to see you, my friend. if you could, set the stage for our viewers, and tell us what's at stake here, as iraqi troops
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move into mosul. >> reporter: well, when this offensive began a week ago, it seemed like it was moving incredibly quickly. the advance on mosul seemed like it could happen within days. it's slowed down considerably. isis which seemed to not be initially putting up a fight is certainly putting up a fight now. every inch this combined force takes, the fighting seems tore more intense. it's also an incredibly complex battlefield. you talked about iraqis and american. in, much iraqi troops involved. you also have kurdish troops. i'm right now at one of the forward kurdish positions. in this mix are american advisers. there are some 500 american advisers who are very close to the battlefield, outside the wire, so to speak, and about 5,000 more who are mostly on their bases.
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the defense secretary, ash carter, who went to baghdad yesterday paid a visit to northern iraq, and did acknowledge in both places that americans are not just sitting back on their bases, calling in air strikes, even though they're called advisers. >> serve needs to understand that there are americans here that are in harm's way. their mission, which is to bring enormous might of the american and coalition military to the support of iraqi security forces is a dangerous one. >> reporter: what's -- 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 he wasn't solve on isis, he went out with a bang, so to pell, he managed to take away this important city, a city that once had 2 million people in it
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from 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 they aren't cowards, they reconstituted and are willing to fate. for isis, this is where isis declares its caliphate. if it loses the city tucked lose the caliphate, lose its prestige, so a lot of people have a great deal on the line here. i think that's why we're seeing the fighting get more intense. >> and important to underline something that richard says, though they are advising, americans are in harm's way. richard finan was killed this week. back hot, the the deal face is big hurdles with concerned about whether or not the combined company would have too much power in the media world. dylan dreyer is here with a look at the weather.
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good morning. >> chilly out there today, huh? >> it is. >> the winds picked up after this area of low pressure raced through the northeast. we're still looking at wind advisories across areas look boston. temperatures this morning are down in the 30s and 40s. rutland staying around 49. new york gets up to 63, and then we are also looking for warmer weather to look back in, with good morning, with your first alert forecast i'm meteorologist krystal klei. looking at neighborhoods today, temperatures are going to be a little warmer than yesterday. into the 60s. at 63 in center city. and 60 in lansdale. 61 for allentown. sunny to mostly sunny. here's the problem, still going to be windy today. and that's across the region. where we can see gusts of 25 to 35 miles per hour. 63 your temperature in trenton today. though. 64 the high for ocean city. and 65 the forecast for smyrna.
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and that's your latest forecast. >> thank a lot. stick away for the latest highs and lows of the week. and as you prepared for your next family trip to north korea, there's a new attraction at the pyongyang zoo. plus you've been inundated about political ads. hallie jackson can't make they go away, but a behind the we re not worried... ...about the laundry. so today we're going to make their secret recipe. which is so secret ...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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my wife melania gives the exact same speech, and people get on her case. >> donald look at the statue 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 times as he got more personal. the man sitting next to the lectern became famous from the interrupt change of expression from joy to horror, as trump's speech took a turn for the more direct criticism. someone set he's a metaphor for the entire campaign. our first low goes to one man's level of concern, as floodwaters rose around while he was sitting as a hong kong starbucks with a super tie fooling, my man does not budge,
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sits there checking the box scores of the paper like nothing is wrong. would you recommend that as a meteorologist? >> i would say get out before the floodwaters ever come in in the first play. >> that durd just did not care. our nest hike to vice president joe biden. the onion has a long-running gag about biden being a blue-collar renega renegade. one headline, it is satire, but he often lives up to the fictionalized version. this weeks jay leno released a clip from his show, in which the vice president gets to drive his beloved corvette for only the third time in nearly eight years of being in office. and man, did he makes the most of it. >> sounds good. [ tires screeching ] >> try your brakes. >> i shouldn't say it on
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television. i like speed. >> he likes speed and he likes burning rubber, but he couldn't have done it any other way. he also said he would like to fight donald trump out behind the gym in high school. the next logo to the big attraction at the zoo in north korea, zoo officials say she rips through a pack a day, but they're quick to point out that, like bill clinton, she doesn't inhale. asaulia's trainer throwing her a lighter, and the zoo recently was renovated reopened at the insistence of the dear leader kim jong-un. >> so many other tricks you could teach the animal. the good news is 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, the permanent
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secretary say she gave up trying to reach him after days of unreturned phone calls. he's out on tour, was on stage, but didn't mention it, the only sigh he knew he would be become a laureate was the quiet addition that said "winner of the nobel prize in literature." even a day later that was removed. one academy many person called him rude, but no, he's just cool. dylan dreyer last week posted this throwback photo as an awkward teen. in what's become a weekly tradition, she posted another gem. police explain in eight seconds what's happening he gary, gary, gary... i am proud of you, my man. making simple, smart cash back choices...
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republican party bosses looked to find brian fitzpatrick. nearly three thousand miles - that's how far away they "hand-picked" him to run for his brother's seat. but all mike and brian fitzpatrick share is a name. brian fitzpatrick supports a radical republican agenda, including defunding planned parenthood, just like donald trump. a hundred and sixty miles down the road in dc, brian fitzpatrick will put his party first, not pennsylvania families. house majority pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. nbc 10 news starts now. just about 8:27.
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i'm ted greenberg. a chilly start to our sunday. first alert meteorologist krystal klei is here with your neighborhood forecast. >> pretty chilly out there this morning. now, numbers on the board don't look terrible, 47 philadelphia. 48 in northeast philly and 46 in pottstown. but, because the winds were up as well this morning the feel-like temperature, the feels-like conditions are lower right around 40 to below 40s currently over most of the map. so that's what it feels like if you step out the door. if you're going to the eagles versus vikings game today, 52 this morning for tailgating. sunny at kickoff, 60 degrees and 63 by end of game. still going to be breezy to windy through your afternoon. >> new this morning, three people are in the hospital, one of them seriously hurt following a row home fire in philadelphia. that fire started around 4:30 this morning on memphis street in port richmond. investigator will be looking for the cause. here's a live look from the exclusive eagles nest camera at the linc. the eagles host the vikings today at 1:00. remember, nbc 10 is your
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official eagles station. our coverage begins with "eagles gameday kickoff" at 9:30 this morning. we will cover the return of quarterback sam bradford, and have an exclusive conversation with malcolm jenkins. that's right after "nbc 10 news today" this morning at 9:00. and we will be back in about 30 minutes. more of the "today" show is coming your way next. i'm ted greenberg. we hope you have a great sunday. most people owe the bank.
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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! sorry, sorry. i've been playing along here, and i got it. i have bad hombres, rapists, miss piggy, they're all living in hell, and if she wasn't my daughter. >> they're back again taking on the third and final presidential debate. big night with tom hanks and lady gaga and musical guest. if you have watched any of anthony bourdain's popular tv shows, you know how far he'll go
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for a good meal. he's become somewhat of a one-man food guide all over the world. for bourdain, the settings is almost as important as the food. he took me along as he cruised one of his favorite food strips here in queens, new york. ♪ >> okay. i got to get you on the record on a couple things. >> sure. >> pumpkin spice -- >> who is eating this stuff? there some vast demographic of people hanging outside of whatever the pumpkin outlet is, like a methadone clinic? the farm to table bothers me, too, you're a restaurant. i'm pretty sure your vegetables grew on a farm, do i really need the t-shirt? >> anthony bourdain never leaves you wondering how he feels. >> i'm thinking, really?
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are these prime fishing waters? i don't know about this. >> that blunt personality combined with an end-led cure yossy illustrate about food has made him a global star. for decades on a nearly constant culinary tour of the world. from historic rome. >> i want that. >> to war-torn libya. >> so basically a crossbow that fires malatov cocktails. >> and challenging our appear tide anything you've had on the show where you are you're liked, good god, never again. >> yeah, they do in fermented fish in iceland. it's a hazmat situation. >> here's the tongue. >> yeah, good. >> i'm eating tongue with anthony bourdain.
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bourdain currently is in the ninth season of "parts unknown." . you didn't wake up an start in this business as the famous and well-known anthony bourdain. >> i wrote an article, and my mom said send it to "the new yorker" and they said we'll. >> "conform confidential" wasn't a cookbook. at the pulled back the restaurant industry and detail his personal temperature struggle with drug addiction. >> what was the next lead from the book. >> some delusional crackpots walked into the restaurant and off me a tv show. they showed up reeking of garlic with a really bad attitude and i said i have a great idea, hum, i travel around the world dover whatever i want in every cool
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place and you pay, how does that sound? >> yeah, we'll take 13 of those. >> even if you were a doctor or a lawyer or a teacher, you can work only in the camp. >> it's nice to know who we're talking about when we talk 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. >> there's no place he won't go. >> did you maggots load the chickens? no matter how dangerous. >> im not going full heragerald but i'm curious about the world. if there are manageable risks in return for satisfying my curiosity about a place, i'm willing. >> i will walk you through it. >> you're going to have to walk me through this. >> he counts among hi millions of fans, the president of the united states. >> those of us who work in the news business, we're covering
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the president's trip, sits down at a table in a little restaurant with anthony bourdain. >> it appropriate to pop one of these in your mouth. >> people were walking up in tears. they couldn't believe that the president ate their humble local specialty. they says pho we could understand or pring rolls, but he came to our and drank a hanoi beer in a place we know. >> what was it look for you? >> he seemed to want to be there enjoyed drinking the beer in the bottle. when i asked him a tricky and potentially perilous question -- is it every acceptable to put kitchen upon a hot dog, both people would say both have virtues and i respect and admire people, and you get some wishy-washy answer. he said no, never. >> no, never.
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>> how do you find the places the rest of us don't even know exist. >> the questions we're asking is what is your soul crave at 2:00 in the morning when you have a bit of a buzz? more often that not, it goes right to the culture. >> let the buzz guide you. >> yes. >> what are we looking at specifically? what's unique? >> these very, very difficult to make, but the crispiness and spicyness, there is something magical. >> what's the secret on the skin? >> i tell you, but then i would have to kill you. >> he just might be able to deliver. he has a blue belt in jujitsu. >> every once in a great, i feel a 22 years old's will to live as i choke them. that makes me happy. >> boy, you have a sick per verse pleasure out of that. but what maim him happiest is
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cooking at home with his family. >> whenever it's possible, that's a true movement of terror, the first time you hold a knife to a 7-year-old and ware that fingers. >> is she a tough critic? >> thee brutal. i cannot get anything past here. no, daddy, it's too salty. no, it's not, but i'm secretly, yeah. she caught me. every time. >> cooking at home with his daughter inspired his new book "appetites." >> it's a book that trying to bring to bear what i in 30 years as a professional to the sort of stuff you cook at home. the strategy and tactics of successfully executing a traditional holiday meal like a turkey, you know, turkey stuffing, cranberry sauce without violence or mayhem, you actually will be able to spend your thanksgiving with your guests instead of sweating it out in the kitchen stressed out. >> which is what every always
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does. you disappear for eight hours in the kitchen. >> yeah, actually try to be useful this time around. >> for once. >> for once. it's fatherhood, it softens, you know. our big thanks to ufc unidentified flying chickens for the ridiculously good meal. the tongue tacos from the truck, not bad, either. his cookbook is "appetites." to hear about his favorite fast food spot in disguise and more about the $6 meal with president obama, check out our web extras. next week, justin timberlake, we talk about his netflix project, his baby boy and elf usa from bye-bye boy bander to solo superstar. that's next week. i just saw your eyes light up. >> between justin timberlake and tongue tacos, i'm craving tongue tacos and excited for next week. let's look at what's going on this week. it will start off wet and windy,
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and then by the mid of of the week, the storms make that i way to the midwest. it will be chilly in the northeast this good morning. with your first alert forecast i'm meteorologist krystal klei. today, temperatures will be a little warmer than yesterday. into the 60s. 63 in center city and 62 in lansdale. 61 for allentown. sunny to mostly sunny. here's the problem, still going to be windy today. and that's across the region. 25 to 35 miles per hour. 63 your temperature in trenton today, though. 64 the high for ocean city. and 65 the forecast for smyrna. is. and that's your latest forecast. >> wee see you in a minute. coming up, the making of a presidential political ad hallie jackson introduces us to the minds minds minds and voices that make thor
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minds minds and voices that make thor i had a wonderful time tonight. me too! 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 television ad. daisy girl, morning in america, willie horton, the 3:00 a.m. call. some are hopeful, some are downright apocalyptic. who is dreaming up the ideas that shape the campaigns? hallie jackson went to find out. >> for all the hands they shake and selfies they take, bumped fists and babies kissed, most merges will meet the next president in their living room. >> i'm hillary clinton. >> i'm donald trump. >> and i approved. >> this message. >> reporter: political ads, a long-standing american tradition. >> vote for president johnson. >> reporter: part of an air war played out ad nauseam. some do get through. this was a winner back in the primaries. even if the candidate wasn't.
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so what does work? sometimes a candidate's own words. for better and for worse. >> does she have a good body no? does shall he have a fat ass? absolutely. >> does donald trump really speak for you? >> that's grace, and that's dennis steele. >> we can go there tao. >> reporter: both hired guns and masters of the dark arts. >> make your voice go as low as you can. he's for washington but not for us. >> poor old washington. >> reporter: but they're equal opportunity insulters. >> i'm an actor. i do mayonnaise commercials. i don't ease man nailed. i did one of sarah palin, she's one of us. >> we didn't know. >> we knew. >> of the 300,000 ads this cycle 80% have been for clinton with trump relying more on free media. that's unconventional. so is what we're seeing in the
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ad evolution this cycle, not what's on tv, but in the palm of your hand that matters. how fast has political advertising changed? >> not fast enough. >> andrew bleeker. >> before we were digital teams, we were the internet teams, which was confused with i.t. >> were people coming to like for printer help? >> issue. >> now media is big business. more targeted, which helps candidates, but it comes with a cost. >> it's got to be interruptive. yes, it's annoys. like anything else you have to cut through at the end. i think that's where create activity comes in. >> we put the team to the test with a first-time candidate. >> so we're your campaign consultants. hello, campaign consultants. >> my family explained consistency is key, the colors, the lettering, no matter which platform it's four.
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>> aspirational, positive messaging. >> you have to may it instantly captivating. you have to get their attention. >> the final result? >> announcer: hallie jackson loves coffee, but nearly as much as she loves america. that's why she's running for office. she'll fight for us and the issue wes care about. the choice is clear. vote hallie jackson for america. >> reporter: recognize that voice? listen again. >> announcer: vote hallie jackson for america. >> it's grace, yes, positive, but can i afford to be against my opponent? >> that's the key thing. beat willie. >> that's right. >> that sour look on willie's face on purpose, too? >> it was just there. >> we have done our opposition research and we've had heard that he does not like snapchat. >> it's true. >> so we can highlight that. >> you're losing the snap chat vote, willie, watch out. >> i approve this message.
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i'm not going to dignify your attacks. they're false and it's unfortunate that your campaign has taken on such a negative tenor. >> i brought you something for your office. your very own campaign poster. >> it's kind of keel to have your own gear, and it's cool how they explained lice the font, the graphics, the colors, it's all very intentional. >> and the voices who don't always know who they're voicing the ads for find out later on? >> my mom -- i told her about the piece, she actually said she was going to have difficulty to choose for you or me. she's a big fan. >> by your mom? >> she's only been in hoo are her home district about 22 days this year, sure it's back she's working her butt off covering the campaign, but that's who you want to vote for. >> good to see you, my friend. >> you too, pal. the artist who can't see or hear, now teaching others
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that was invigorating! you're probably wondering why i've just carved a giant wooden tiger. well, the answer is that a real one would maul me. i've crafted dr. whiskers here as a visual aid to show you that should you visit the lot, carmax associates will not pounce like tigers because people don't like that. come here to buy a car. dr. whiskers won't pounce. nobody will. ♪ lose yourself in a rapture of sweet oat temptation, and cascades of chocolate. kung fu flavor. well actually it's fiber one, not kung fu flavor. fiber one, so delicious it should have another name. only abreva can heal it in as few as two and a half days when used at the first sign. it penetrates deep and starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells.. don't tough it out, knock it out, fast. abreva.
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pat toomey and donald trump: they're just wrong for the women of pennsylvania. "new fallout for donald trump..." "should a woman be punished for having an abortion?" "there has to be some form of punishment." "for the woman?" "yeah, there has to be some form." "i would support legislation in pennsylvania that would ban abortion, and i would suggest we have penalties for doctors who perform them." pat toomey and donald trump: they're not for you. priorities usa action is responsible for the content of this advertising.
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it's hard to imagine walking through an art museum and studying a painting or culture any other wait than by looking at it. one artist robbed in an doesn't of her sight is teaching people
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to experience art the way she does. morgan radford has her story. >> what do you smell? what do you hear? what do you sense? >> a lemon peel. >> yeah. >> a rolled-up perhaps piece of paper this is how she leads discussions at new york's metropolitan museum of art. >> we sook what looks like a lux injureual bang we want. the artist is saying we also have to remember that it's not permanent. >> 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 multisensory approach. >> what's interesting is all of our senses are interconnected in our brain. it's really for you to trust and interpret your own senses. >> a lot of what i depend on is
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recalling colors and recalling shapes of objects and what things look look. >> reporter: emily's work has shifted towards sculpture. is this where you feel most yourself? >> yes, this is where i feel like i can forget about everything, work and by myself. >> fellow artist daniel has known her since before her accident, has followed her work as a mentor, providing her space to create. >> you know, having her in the studio allows of rest of us to understand space in a different way by watching her interact. >> maybe we should blindfold you while you work. >> even doing this is interesting. you're right. i would completely use my vision otherwise. doing this is forcing me to feel it differently, frankly experience it differently. i never would have noticed the
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weight or the depth. >> the textures. >> let's see how i did. >> other wow, this is really good. >> seer? >> it's not so bad. >> what do you want mime to think of you as an artest. do you even want want them to know you're not sighted. >> it desert matter if they know i'm blind or have some or disability. i think being able to touch art or experience or imagine art, i'm able to connect with did on a deeper level, understand it and think about it in different way. 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 american music with the blues at its foundation would have been very different.
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he was cofounder of chess reports, the legendary blues level that was home to muddy water, etta james, and a guitar player named chuck berry. the man who emigrated from poland is credited with bringing blues music from bar rooms to radio stations around the world. the great buddy guy once sen he was cutting the time of music no one was paying attention to. he gave us the rolling stones, too. a keith richard saw a stranger named mick jagger holding two chess records on the train, one by muddy waters, another by chuck berry. they connected then, and formed the band after a muddy waters song. chess died this week in tucson, arizona. he was 9 why am i so devastatingly handsome, i'm in a fragrance... ...ad, and my sweethearts gone sayonara.
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this scarf, all that's left to remember. what! she washed this like a month ago! how's a guy supposed to move on! the long lasting scent of gain flings. ♪ ♪ and now...i'm in bristol, inia. tennessee. on this side of the road
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is virginia... and on this side it's tennessee. no matter which state in the country you live in, you could save hundreds on car insurance by switching to geico. look, i'm in virginia... i'm in tennessee... virginia... tennessee... and now i'm in virginessee. see how much you could save on car insurance. or am i in tennaginia? hmmm...
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all right. dylan, let's close this thing down with some predictions. 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 day, and take the dolphins against the bills. you would never bet on football, would you? never. game 1 of the world series on tuesday. if the indians were to win, it would be the first time since 1948. the cubs of course last one 40 years before that. right next door to the stadium, lebron james and the cavaliers
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host their championship banner. if they win in the same year as the city had won none, the write-in ticket of lebron james and coco crisp will win the state of ohio. and on thursday it's the opening of the guesthouse at graceland, a new resort, the rooms are made to have the feel of the inside of the graceland home where he lived from 1957 until his death in 1967. his widow presilla presley helped redesign the suites. we predict in keeping with the elvis authenticity guests will change the channels by casually shooting the screen with a 22 caliber handgun. you're too young to get it. elvis used to shoot the tvs. student for "meet the press" chuck todd joined by tim kaine. dylan thank you. >> t
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pat toomey: he was a founder of this pennsylvania bank and owned stock worth as much as a million dollars. under toomey's leadership, the bank used a controversial foreclosure practice called "confession of judgement" to take away homes from people across pennsylvania. the practice is banned in 35 states because it's considered predatory, but pat toomey didn't care. pat toomey the banker: he's really not for you. senate majority pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. 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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fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. wind causes a big problem for firefighters trying to put out flames on the roof of row homes in west philadelphia. plus, sam bradford is back in philadelphia to take on his old team and its new quarterback. we're live at the linc. and celebrating in the streets of chicago after the cubs beat the dodgers, sending the team to the world series for the first time since 1945. >> nbc 10 news starts now. good morning, everyone. welcome to nbc 10 news today i'm ted greenberg. thank you so much for being with us. it is now 9:00 a.m. on this sunday morning. lots of sunshine out there. still pretty chilly arntd the region. first alert meteorologist krystal klei h

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