tv Nightline ABC February 5, 2016 12:37am-1:06am EST
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this is "nightline." >> tonight, aawl. trump eager to get back on top accusing cruz of dirty tricks. cruz writing that iowa momentum another temper tantrum. >> when you win your opponents want to tear you down. >> are trumpers willing to put more skin in the game and castn ink? from the first centerfold to the last issue. >> i made this magazine for a girl like you. >> playboy doing away with nude ght we're behind the scenes of the remodel. michael jackson took world by storm.
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>> to his signature shuffle. now in a new documentary his journey as a young star to the king of pop on music today. but first the "nightline 5." >> i'm like a big little cub. nonstop. always wants to hang out with his friends. got to be prepared to sit at the edge of your seat to be ready to get up.ch city. definitely not good for my back. this is the point i really don't like. what's that? it's a swiffer wet jet. it almost feels itself. it's kind of fun. that was on my floor? this is deep couch city. >> deep couch one in just 60
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thank you for joining us.ice to the primaries in new hampshire is intensifying and it's a war of words between the gop candidates. with the stakes higher than ever trump is doubling down and rousing his some showing their support in ways they can never take back. here's abc's david wright. candidate here in new hampshire is doing well enough to rate at the clay dragon tattoo parlor in seabrook where the owner bob holmeump tattoos for free. >> this is not your first trump tattoo? >> no, this is my 27th. >> reporter: it's a painful f the passion trump supporters feel for him. >> anybody getting ted cruz tattoos? >> no, no. >> marco rubio? >> no. >> jeb bush? reporter: trump as nearly as much support as his next three rivals combined. he'll be center stage at saturday's abc news debate.of the
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trump! >> reporter: today he told a town hall in exeter he's looking ebate because his opponents seem to be dropping like flies. >> whittling down rapidly, rapidly. which is good. we have more time to speak. >> reporter: his think that's a good thing. >> he's what we need. this is our last chance for this country to get back to being >> reporter: even his opponents can't seem to get enough of him. >> over here you've got all the people that are hoping to get into the rally. over there are the protesters. look at the range of causes.rights, nuclear weapons, protect our wildlife, gay marriage, students against bigotry, all looking for a on from donald trump. >> please join us in welcoming secretary hillary clinton and senator bernie sanders. >> reporter: tonight for much of the democraticnough is enough. if you've got something to say, say it directly. >> reporter: hillary clinton and bernie sanders for once did
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instead focusing on each other. >> one of us voted the right way and one of us didn't. >> reporter: but out on the campaign trail, he commands more than his fair shareion. >> we love you, donald! >> thank you! >> make this country reporter: from the grounds and the the cameras. he's a polarizing figure but draws support from both ends of the political spectrum. >> i have met a lot of up, they felt they lost twice in a row and they shouldn't have. i met a lot of democrats, i remember a family in iowa said to me they were very proudarack obama, and it's the biggest regret of their life. >> reporter: abc news off-air reporter john to almost every trump rally. >> you can call it a movement, awakened, he's hit a nerve. >> if it's a movement what's the movement for? >> i think it's a movement to basically just blow everybody out. >> reporter: when i fir this time last
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>> what's the argument for a trump candidacy? >> well, i know what i'm doing. i'm a very capable obody would have predicted he'd eventually be the front-runner. but already he had his platform in place. >> we have to clean up our border. . we have to build a wall. nobody can build like trump. we need a wall. >> gold-plated wall? >> we need aeep people from just walking in like they're doing right now. >> a message he rode almost to victory in iowa. >> we finished second and i want to tell you nored. >> good shot! >> reporter: the friday before the invited reporters out for an informal session of pheasant hunting. >> doesn't ted cruz have the duck dynasty vote locked down? >> i was with willie and his brother jason and phil last week. willie came out and endorsed us. >> reporter: i asked donald and eric trump how well their dad
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there that your dad might be a sore loser. if he loses iowa, things might come apart at the seams a little that's fair? >> i think we're going to win iowa, i think we're going to win by a lot. he wants to be a guy who wins. is it hard if you ultimately lose?ld take a knock. i think there's going to be a lot of candidates who are going to be very upset coming out of iowa. but i think we win, i think we win by a lot, i think we win, ultimately i think we take the nomination. >> reporter: ever since narrowly losing there, trump has t he was gracious -- >> i want to congratulate ted and i want to congratulate all the incredible candidates. >> reporter: ever since he arrived here it's a new ball game. first victory. >> i think we did really well. we did really well. >> reporter: now he's attacking the iowa winner, ted cruz, >> by doing what he did to ben carson, that was a disgrace. >> reporter: accusing him of
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this to iowa precincthis is the cruz campaign with breaking news. dr. ben carson will be planning to sa suspend his campaign following tonight's cruz has said this. >> when you win in the state of iowa, your opponents want to tear you down. they want to attack you, they want to throw course of your career there have been famous quotes about success and failure. some of them not so flattering about failure. some of them not so second place. which of them best applies to what happened in iowa? >> i just think -- i'm happy with the way we're doing. i just want to continue to do theme, the theme is so important. it's just, make america great again. that's what we're going to do interior make america great ou see all over the place in new hampshire. most unexpectedly at that tattoo parlor in seabrook. today 19-year-old stephanie conner is getting trump'slogan tattooed on her ribs. >> you must really like donald trump.
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>> what i like about him? country. make things better. >> i've been covering a long time -- i don't think i've ever seen something like this. >> you're killing me. >> i bet you're wishing his slogan was "yes, we can." >> >> the rest of her life she'll have this souvenir of the 2016 campaign. a most unusual race i'm mortalized inink. i'm david wright for "nightline" in seabrook, new hampshire. >> you do not want to miss the last gop debate before the new hampshire primaryt right here on abc. next, why "playboy" is doing away with the nude centerfold. the iconico the cover of the last nude issue. later, michael jackson rocking in his journey from
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most famous nudie mag. hidden in lockers, closets -- >> it's one of the at least most in the world. >> reporter: along with nike's swoosh, apple's apple. "playboy" with thisunch -- >> the buck stops in my office if it fails. >> reporter: nudie mag no more. how can that work? what will that look like? here's the cover girl. >> have your parents seen my dad was the first one to be like, you better [ bleep ] do "playboy." he wanted me to be in it. >> what?ause it's historical. >> reporter: more from her in just a minute. but first -- >> hef's on board with this? >> oh r: okay. this 62-year-old magazine is still owned by the now 89-year-old man. what's with the gown? why the gown? >> he is a manure. >> reporter: meet the men and women who make his vision reality. >> chances are we'll just use
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they're really ept they don't call it a conference room around here. we'rehe scenes for the metamorphosis metamorphosis. >> why go nude? >> we relaunched our website as a safe at work nonnude experience and itfic skyrocketed. >> bigger than business, philosophy. >> being a brand that chalts the norms has always been a part of that nudity doesn't challenge the norms anymore it doesn't make much sense to stick with that. >> like nike stopping making could look at it that way. now you're going to read the articles. now your imagination's going to work a lot harder. >> reporter: dani mathers was the playboy playmate of the year. >> it's going to be a jeopardy question someday so remember that. >> this is the photo archive. >> this ever appeared in the magazine?
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these are the original marilyn monroe nudes from the first issue of "playboy."r: and the last-ever naked cover girl? >> you are the last one. pamela.ought? >> a lot of people. >> you are in a sense the perfect playmate. >> i made this magazine for a girl like you, hef used to eporter: this her first and probably last cover. >> would you do it with your clothes on? >> what's the point? >> these days she's making vegan foot wear and her own cooki in the world of magazine and the internet -- >> not only can you see nudity, you can see every sex act imaginable. >> reporter: so "playboy's"f the nudie game. here's how the new clean magazine is shaping up. >> there are still going to be photo spreads? >> yeah, absolutely. it's just that they're not nude.e going to actually be nude, shooting. it's just going to be implied.
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nipples or anything down below. >> we think we'll get eveng and more beautiful women as we're nonnude. >> reporter: a cover girl more interesting than naomi campbell or may done that? but who? to have the most eyes. >> what does a modern nonnude like? after 60 years? >> the girl next door doesn't exist anymore. she's taking selfies, taking >> reporter: this is what a nonnude "playboy" shoot looks like in 2016. sarah mcdaniel, instagram star. famous for flawed beauty.colored eyes. this is her cover. >> the first person to even be on "playboy" was marilyn monroe, so to me it's a huget does playboy mean to you? >> playboy means freedom for women, feminism -- >> really? >> expressing yourself, no holding back. >> it doesn't mean
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the revamp and everything now, i feel it's a completely different thing, it's more about the women rather than just baring it all. >> the philosophy we took the photography really resonates with the younger -- the instagram crowd. >> reporter: note those three words. entertainment for men.ow was the home stretch? okay? >> we were just trying to make the greatest magazine we could. we pushed every envelope we ter: all those great articles still there. >> james franco still handing in columns on time? >> he is, he's three ahead. >> reporter: the idea is you can replay it on a trade, leave it on your blushing. >> i think it's sexier than i thought it was going to be. >> there's a risk that if we didn't go sexy we still -- it's still playboy playboy, we still have to be the sexiest magazine on the block. >> i would argue the same thing. i think it's possibly ever been. >> can i be reading this next to
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auntie bertha's into. >> reporter: also in the first nonnude issue, myla, who takes film camera. hipster retro. >> it's easy to take a beautiful photo with a crotch and boobs. when you can't doat are you going to do? i think it's more of like maybe a boyfriend experience. someone you'd want to hang out with, someone you'd want to be around, someone youup to. it's more personal in that way. it's not just like, that girl's hot! >> i would say that was one of the hardest parts of the process is line was and then walking up to it. because we need to be -- we still have to be who we are. we have be "playboy." that edge, thathow sexy can we get? it's a question we ask each other every day. i can't wait for people to see this.bly smart of them to do. i don't see how they could have continued it this way.
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>> reporter: full nudityn the way, it had to go. >> i can't imagine. it's still shocking to me. >> reporter: me too, pamela, me nick watt for "nightline" in beverly hills, california. and next, before he was king, the documentary taking you behind the scenes of michael from motown to off the wall. s) where are you? well the squirrels are back in the attic. mom? your dad won't call an exterminou back, mom? he says it's personal this time... if you're a mom, you call at the worst time. it's what you do. if you want to save fiftee on car insurance, you switch to geico. r it's what you do. where are you?r it's very loud there. are you taking at
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plenty of legitimate questionshael jackson lived his life. but no one can question what he did with his talent. for generation or more he was as gifted an artist as any of us on the chance to hear or see. and tonight we journey back and explore the makings of this legend. here's my "nightline" coanchor juju chang.r: halfway between the precocious star of the jackson 5, belling out his abcs, and the ghostly middle-aged man chased zzi, michael jackson was evolving into the king of pop. >> reporter: he wrote "don't get enough," his first solo from the album "off the wall," his breakthrough as a grownup. hael jackson's journey from motown to off the wall, the subject of director spike lee's new documentary. are successful at.
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talent heard here on this original demo locked in the now. >> michael's not a trained musician. he cannot read music. but he told musicians, this is part to go. >> reporter: the album still inspiring today's hottest stars, from justin timberlake toend. >> "off the wall" was definitely the one that made me feel i could sing. i found my falsetto because of "off the wall."chael's popularity transcended music, blurring lines in american culture. >> i don't want it labeled black or white, i wanted labeled>> i feel "off the wall" was one of the first albums made possibly by a black artist where culture was almost orter: his diverse fan base catapulted him to superstardom. this newly uncovered footage
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tour. >> reporter: in the nearly seven years since his death, michael's by an estimated $1 billion. >> the main change in things is he's not there spending the money anymore. that was a huge part of the reporter: financial woes and child molestation allegations late in life overshadowing his music. >> his legacy was kind ofhe end because of all the accusations. >> and that's one reason why we decided to do something where we're just dealing with the ther stuff, all the other noise -- let's deal with the music. just speaking for the old eople have to be reminded. a lot of time, you take people for granted. this is a good reminder, i great michael was. >> reporter: for "nightline," i'm juju chang in new york. >> michael jackson's journey
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