tv Today NBC September 9, 2016 2:07am-3:00am EDT
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>> hi seth. >> seth: it's so good to see you again. >> it's so nice to see you too. >> seth: i saw your movie last night it was fantastic. >> oh my god. >> seth: and i want to talk about that but we were also talking backstage you have an 11 and 12-year-old. >> yes. >> seth: i am a new parent now. 5 months old. >> i know. >> seth: very fun. >> ash. >> seth: baby ash. he's great. >> oh seth. >> seth: but do you remember back now, that you have --i mean you have little adults now. do you remember back when they were newborns and how you were as a parent? because it's trippy when all of a sudden you have a baby that you have never had before. >> it is. it really is. i remember when i, let's my daughter was -- she's 18 months older than my son. but when my son was born i did a part in "marie antoinette" sofia coppola's movie. >> seth: yeah. >> and i really want to do it so i went to work when my son nolan was only two weeks old and i remember i had to wear the make up with the big white wig and white face and i remember nursing him and he looked up like who is this lady? that is weird. and trying to get -- and it was so funny.
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up with this crazy lady. >> yes, yes, exactly. so i always laugh about that. but, no i love being a mom. it's the greatest. >> seth: and your kids, obviously they know you're an actress and they know you're a performer. >> yes. >> seth: and they've come and seen you in some work. you were in hotel translysania 2. >> yes, yes. i went -- i take my kids, i'm always with their friends. and we were in los angeles and we went to go see the movies. we went to hotel transylvania with my daughter stella and her two friends who are twins cella, and sophia and they were like, they were like -- "your part was kind of small." and i was like "yeah." but it's good you got yourself in there. you know? they save a lot to say. >> seth: very adult. >> yes, yes very adult. >> seth: now your son saw a "transparent" billboard and was this --did he do this on purpose? because we had jeffrey tambor on the show yesterday and he was a delight. >> yes my son, you know, where we drive we just go over and we live in hollywood so we always see like movie posters and there was a big poster of
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you know a man, dressed as a woman and my son was like there's mommy. and i was like -- [ laughter ] i asked, that's something that makes me laugh. >> seth: yeah. >> but i asked my husband i was like could you see why he would think that he would say that? >> seth: you know, you've got to check on it. but it's kind of on you because you obviously you have given your kids an active imagination. do you play --this is true that you play truth or dare with them? my rule is always i like to laugh. and as a matter of fact i just went to see the movie "nerve" with my daughter stella and my son nolan and their friend sienna and sienna was like this is such a good movie for us to see because you're always making us to dares so this is like perfect for us. >> seth: yeah so what do you make 11 and 12-year-olds do as a dare? >> i do just sweet stuff that makes me laugh. like we'll be driving and my son will call out to strangers "like monty, karen, hi!"
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it's just dumb. they always have to be nice. >> seth: right. >> we all make sienna, like if we're out for pizza i'll do like i dare you to go up -- i'll go i dare you to go up to that lady and -- just say -- you know make up a name. and we watch from a distance so she'll just go up and go "isabelle, isabelle is that you?" and there's just something about a like, a kid teasing an adult or i make them go in to like i made my son go into fly wheel and ask if there was a gentleman's workout and he's 11. just silly, silly stuff. >> seth: a gentleman's workout? >> yeah, yeah. or we, on the way to school i'll make my son yell out like "top of the morning to you." and we just see who responds. yeah, stuff like that. >> seth: now when you were young, you used to --which is not a place that i've ever heard young people want to hang out. you like to go hang out in hospitals. >> hospitals, i did. with my friend, anne and i grew up in cleveland, ohio. and i think it was my first interest in characters and being in other worlds and so we used
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just go to hospital cafeterias to be around the doctors in scrubs with clogs, getting tuna fish and burgers at lunchtime. the hubbub. like post surgery like quickly grabbing a bite and i liked to pretend i was a doctor. and i still actually really like that. we would just spend the whole day in the hospital atmosphere just walking around in a hubbub as if we were one of them. >> seth: did anybody ever stop -- were you such good actresses that no one ever thought those might be kids? >> nobody ever did. and then we also used to like to go to airports and i used to like to --so we would take the train out and just go to airports and i liked to watch people say hello and goodbye. >> seth: uh huh. >> and i loved girls that were like needy like saying good-bye to like a boyfriend. or like really like "i miss you." like really needing someone. i don't know why i found that interesting. maybe because my mom died. but i was like --i was just like wow, she can really just need
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you!" you know, i like that. >> seth: i feel extra bad for that person. because not only were they missing their boyfriend but if they look just a little over they'd see young molly shannon just staring watching this whole thing unfold. this is very exciting you're in the new hbo sarah jessica parker show "divorce." >> yes, yes. >> seth: so tel us about that. >> that's a great show with sarah jessica parker. tracy letts plays my husband. thomas haden church, talia ls it's created by sharon horgan. it's about marriages and all kinds of things and people questioning their own marriages. it's a i would say a dramedy. it's really good, it's really juicy. it's a show i would definitely watch. >> seth: that's great. >> yeah. >> seth: that's very high praise. >> yes. >> seth: and you --i know it's about people in different stages of you know divorce and trying to date again and you used to work for a dating service. >> i did. >> seth: so what was your role at the -- because this is back
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they would have people could would come in to this dating service and they would video tape themselves and then they would request girls that they were interested in and then they would call to see if that girl responded back. >> seth: girls would be shown their videotape. >> they would be shown the guys video or whatever. and then if they called back they could either not find out why or they could ask for the reasons why they were rejected and i would have to read the reasons over the phone. and they were numbered, like number three, baldness, number four, personality and i would read, i'd be like -- and i would feel so bad and i 't the heart to do it and i would go in the bathroom and cry every time because i felt so bad. >> seth: yeah. >> i was like people looking for love and trying so hard and it's so brave to show up and date. i mean come on. yeah, i don't know. >> seth: yeah. absolutely, putting yourself on video tape too. that is --you realize now online dating seems putting yourself out there but back in the day when someone had to go and somebody had to like frame you up and light you and stuff. that's awful. >> i know. >> seth: and then we're going to take a quick minute. "other people" this is a beautiful film. written and directed by chris kelly is going to come out. >> yes.
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who goes to sort of spend a year with his mother she is very sick and sort of spend time with her in the time before she leaves and was this a difficult role? i mean there's very funny parts but this really is a drama. was it difficult to take it on. >> i really, i just felt so excited. chris is such an amazing writer like you and i just felt so lucky to be given such a great part and i was more just excited. like this is so good and he wanted to hire comedians too because there's so many funny things that happen in dealing with death and how this family copes with this thing. so i just really just felt more excited than scared. i felt lucky, lucky. >> seth: well that's great. >> yeah. >> seth: well i felt lucky to see it. and we'll bring out chris after this commercial and talk about it a little bit more. >> thank you seth. >> seth: more with molly shannon and chris kelly after this. [ cheers and applause ]
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>> i thought you didn't want to try medical marijuana? >> well i tried it! >> i see that. how much butter did you use? >> just one stick. >> you used a whole stick? >> how do you know how much goes in there? >> because i spoke pot. i'm stoned right now. >> drink some water. >> good for you david. live your life. >> i will. >> live your life. you too norman. when i die you've got to live your life except you can't date
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date that slut who came to the door today. >> as in lisa the one that brought you a pie? >> only a slut would come to the door with dessert. you're supposed to bring a lasagna or something like that. >> seth: welcome back to late night. that was a clip from the upcoming film "other people" starring molly shannon and we're actually bring out our next guest as well, he was recently named co-head writer of "saturday night live" he was also the writer and director of the film, please welcome to the show chris kelly. [ cheers and applause ] ? ? >> seth: how are you? >> good i feel like a fancy man. >> seth: you're a fancy man on a talk show. i want to talk about your incredible movie. >> oh my god, thank you. >> seth: but i want to congratulate you i was head writer when you were hired at snl and now you're co-head writer, congratulations. >> thank you. it's cool. it's very weird. it's good.
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'cause yeah you were my -- you were my like head writer. and so i was like that's what a head writer is to me and i'm like "i've got to be that." >> seth: oh, it's a pretty low bar. it's a pretty low bar. >> no, i truly -- i mean no i truly remember when i would like, because you're first season when you're like a writer you don't know like what the hell is going on. you're like scared to death and i remember come to you at 6:00 in the morning and you're writing your own sketches too. because like you're the head writer. but, you still have to write your sketch and manage all these people and i would come to you at 6:00 in the morning and i would be like i broke my skit. i don't know how to finish my skit. like a little baby with a toy that i had broken. and i was like i don't know what to do with my skit and you were so like --i don't know. it was cool to watch because you obviously have to write a lot of sketches and help the newer writers. >> seth: well that's -- welcome to your new life. that's what you've got to do. >> i don't want to! >> seth: because there's a lot of babies there who break a lot of [ bleep ]. yeah. >> oh, no i started off by calling them babies on a talk show. no, but i mean it's a huge responsibility. it's like, i'm excited. because you get to keep writing.
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the show as a whole. and like, i don't know. >> seth: well, here's the thing and i'm jealous of you. more impressed, i should say. but jealous because in the summers at snl i would never do anything, i would just take it off. >> yeah. >> seth: and i'm so impressed that you wrote this film and you directed it over the course of the summer and it's beautiful. and obviously this is an autobiographical film. >> yeah, yeah. >> seth: about your mother and spending time with her before she passed away and it's very funny but it's a drama. was it completely -- it must be completely different writing this than what you do for your day job. >> yeah it was weird. when i wrote it i had no intention of like this is going to be a movie that gets made. i just wanted to kind of flex a different muscle or see if i could write something a little more tonally different or like you know at snl, i've also written for "broad city" and stuff they're just hard comedies and i was curious of what it would feel like to try to write something that was a little more more dramatic and the fact that it got made was such a surprise. i was like great, you know. but yeah, and it is a drama but then i also, like molly you had
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it wasn't like drama nonstop. >> seth: yeah. >> so that it wasn't like a slog. >> seth: and i have to imagine because of how personal a film this was the most important part was casting your mother and -- >> yeah. >> seth: i know molly was your first choice and is it true, molly, that when you guys first met that you invited chris to a taco party. >> molly: i did. i had a taco party at my house, that's right. >> seth: was that a taco party you were already having and then you invited chris or were you like you met chris and said i have to throw this guy a taco party. >> molly: i love it. i was already having it. parties. >> molly: yes, yes. it is a famous taco party. >> yeah. >> molly: but, anyhow but i did invite you and you didn't you like that there were like kids running around. and the whole family. >> yeah it was just nice, i don't know. this is so like cheesy. i truly like --you know the movie is autobiographical but it's not 100% true. and so it's like i don't like -- when i watch the movie i'm not like that's exactly my sister or that's exactly my dad. but the role of my mother i really cared about. and so i do see my mom up there and i wanted to, and so i went into this taco party everyone
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in the movie. she is so talented but they were like aside from being talented she is the nicest person you'll ever meet. and i truly like was in the car on the way like back from the taco party and i call my sisters and i was like i think the woman that plays our mom is going to be very nice. i like that both of my stories end with me crying. >> seth: yeah. >> molly: that's so sweet. >> seth: i almost always cry after taco parties as well. but it's always i ate too many tacos. so the pot brownie scene that we saw coming into this. >> yeah, yeah. >> seth: must have been so much fun to shoot. was that super scripted or was that -- >> no, it was great. because it was -- there definitely days where you'd look at the call sheet and be like "ooh, this is going to be a sad one." all day long. >> seth: yeah. >> and there were some days where you'd be like "okay great this is the scene where molly tries medical marijuana for the first time. this will be fun." it was like watching a one woman show it was so fun and she was -- the whole crew was just like so excited to just like kind of sit back and relax and just watch what she would do and
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we were talking about this earlier. it's based on a real thing. my mom is like a wonderful but like conservative woman. she had never tried drugs. she would never dare to try drugs, or at least that's what she would tell us. and i was in new york at the time in the real version of it, so i wasn't there. and she was home with my dad and my sisters. and she called me and she was like "chris i'm going to do drugs." she didn't like want to do medical marijuana but she was like i'm going to do it and she was so confident. and so she called and left me a voice mail was like your mom is a bad ass and now she is about to take drugs. i was like -- and i got the voice mail and i was lik"i wonder how that will go" and then i went underground to do some ucb shows all night and i was underground for like hours and then when i came back up i had all of these voice mails from my mom and i was like what could have happened and the voicemails were like here we go. and then number two was like i don't feel a thing. drugs have nothing on me. and then the thihird one was li, uh-oh. and the fourth one is like your
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he's not looking at anything. like he's looking but he's not. and then the fifth one was like we may have to go to the emergency room. it was like so funny to just have this like full narrative displayed. and so then for the movie i just i took that and put myself into it. >> seth: well that's fantastic. seriously. it's such an accomplishment for both of you. it's a beautiful film. >> thank you. >> seth: really everyone you must see it. it's fantastic. molly shannon and chris kelly everybody. >> thank you. >> seth: "other people" is in select theaters and available on itunes friday. we'l r cenk uygur. ? [ applause ] ha-ha-ha! um-hmmm! hey! nikki! what are you doing here? you tell me, stephen. what? i'm snapping. you've been streaming my videos all morning. now you're with this thing?
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turks." he is the executive producer of "the young turks" on fusion which premieres september 12th, please welcome to the show cenk uygur. ? [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: how are you? >> awesome. how are you doing seth? >> seth: i'm very happy to have you here. so this show, "the young turks", millions of subscribers online but it's also -- >> not a big dl. >> not a big deal. >> seth: not a big deal at all but also now, a television show on fusion. so explain how this is all going to work. >> yeah, so "young turks" is online every day two hours. easiest watch is probably youtube.com/tyt. "the young turks." now we got a fusion show on television monday nights at 8:00 and it's going to be fantastic. it's going to be super high energy. it's on college campuses. we're going to harvard, usc. all these wonderful colleges all across the country and it's going to be awesome.
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of the upcoming election and how college students are interacting with it. were you politically active when you in college? >> i was actually, but back then i was a republican. [ light laughter ] >> seth: you're very progressive now and it's interesting because usually people become more conservative the older they get and you went the other way. >> it's a mistake, by the way. [ light laughter ] >> seth: how did this happen? what was the shift? >> yeah, so, lets be honest, i was a dork and i wore a little bow tie. >> seth: oh, that's a dead give away of a young republican. [ light laughter ] >> no, it's actually worse. i did not wear a bow tie, it wasn't that bad. but i did -- i literally held a pro-war rally. >> seth: a pro-war rally? >> yeah, yep. >> seth: that's as far right as you can go. >> yeah, pretty much. >> seth: for no reason? you just wanted one? >> we weren't having one and i was like come on. when are we going go to war? i'm a republican. let's invade something and then grenada happened. it was during the persian gulf
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liberals, oh no, lets not go to war. and i was like, no, lets bomb some things. >> seth: gotcha. >> and so i'm doing the rally and you know who shows up? fox. >> seth: fox must have been so excited to see you. >> yeah, now back then there's no fox news but it was local fox and they show up they're like, you're for war? they're like, we got to have you on and that was my first ever tv appearance. >> seth: wow, that's fantastic but then you shift and now your first tv show that you had you took a learning annex class. >> yeah. >> seth: on what? what was the class? >> so i finished law school and a friend of mine said you should take this class on how to start your own tv show. >> so that was the actual title of the class? >> that was the title. right? and i'm like, that's mental. like, there's no way that's true. she's like, no it is, it is. go take it. and i sat there for 45 minutes. the teacher, it was almost like trump university. [ light laughter ] the teacher was like oh you go to your local public access and they have to give you their own tv show. >> seth: so legally he was
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that's true. i'm already jingoistic and i'm like i love america and i'm like but they can't give out tv shows. that's the craziest thing i've ever heard so then i get a law job in washington. i leave the first day early so i can take orientation at the local public access like she told me in the learning annex course. so i go down there and i'm like i would like my own tv show and they're like okay, here, here's your tv show. i'm like what? this is amazing. america is the greatest country ever. >> so how fast after did you have a working tv show? >> like a month. >> seth: wow. >> yeah, i mean "working." >> seth: but still, that's a good place to start. like a minor leagues for television. >> are you kidding me, seth? i went on there and i went with three of my friends. the first show was an hour long. half on politics and half on philosophy and everybody else was like eh, and i walked out thinking yes, nailed it. i'm like that's what i'm going to do the rest of my life. >> seth: that's perfect. now, you were a vocal supporter
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and stuff. did you get a chance to hang out with him behind the scenes at all? >> i did a little bit. i did. the first time after one of his rallies in l.a. we went to dinner together. and i got in the motorcade and it was super cool and we get to cut through all the la traffic which is like the greatest thing that ever happened to me. >> seth: also, it's so great in l.a. because it's such a hollywood town when a motorcade comes by you know people are thinking brad pitt and tom cruise and then it's bernie. [ laughter ] >> which, by the way they're slightly more excited about. >> seth: i bet, yeah. >> like i remember one time we were in berkeley, we went to dinner again and like the place was going crazy. it was like elvis was in the building they're like bernie! they're like ripping their hair out. so we're at a some what fancy italian restaurant in l.a. and it's the first dinner and i'm like i wonder what he's going to order. and i'm sitting right next to him and his wife is on the other side and he looks at the menu, looks at it and i'm like is he going to go with the gnocchi? what are we going to do here?
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and she's like no honey, they don't have spaghetti and meatballs, they have lasagna. he's like i'll take the lasagna. [ laughter ] >> seth: a man of simple taste. >> yeah. >> seth: now i know we both made the observation that when bernie talks it looks like he is trying to get the waiters attention. >> oh, yeah, i love that. >> seth: i've said he's trying to signal for the check but i think i like yours more. >> lemon wedges, i need lemon wedges. [ laughter ] >> seth: because bernie would only ask for stuff that's gratis he doesn't want to order stuff that'sng he wants free lemon wedges. [ laughter ] >> and if anybody's paying for that it's the government [ applause ] >> seth: there you go. a lot was written. the narrative was to some degree that bernie helped pull hillary to the left. you are skeptical though as far as how progressive she would be if she finds her way to office. >> yeah, they're not going to like this. no, i don't believe it. i'm not going to believe it until i see it. i think it's just a ruse, like
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sure i'm against the tpp. obama can you go ahead and pass it right away? i'll have to see it. but i don't think she's a real progressive, no. >> seth: another thing you've talked about is how trump is running on being a business man. that is sort of his claim to fame and yet you've pointed out not great at it. >> no, he is horrible at it. what's interesting is that republicans love failed businessmen. so george w. bush couldn't make money il couldn't make money running casinos. there's a saying, the house always wins. and he bankrupted himself running three casinos. like it's never been done before in american history. he is a record breakingly bad business man. so one time he's applying for a loan from deutsche bank and he's like oh i'm worth $3.5 billion. and yeah, this is a loan, you actually have to actually prove it and so later in a deposition when they asked him why'd you write $3.5 billion when you
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i based it on psychology and my own feelings. [ laughter ] that's not a thing. that's not a thing. you can't like my own feelings on a bank loan. >> seth: for $3.5 billion. >> he's like, i feel like a billion bucks. [ laughter ] >> seth: i will say this, i can't wait for the three debates. the vp debate, do you think anyone will watch this? do you think it will be the lowest rated vice presidential debate ever? >> i think there's some chance that the vp debate already happened. >> seth: yeah, that's a good point. [ laughter ] us [ applause ] we'd have to find tape of it. 'cause i'd like to see how it went down. congratulations on the show and all of your success. and i'm looking forward to the fusion. >> thank you. thank you seth. [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: cenk uygur everybody. "the young turks" on fusion premieres september 12th. we'll be right back. ?
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? >> carson: welcome to "last call," i'm your host carson daly. coming to you tonight from 230 fifth. we've got a good one for you. coming up we've got actress and comedian cameron esposito, the music is diiv we'll do that one at fonda but first the breakout series that i love so much. "narcos" returns for a second season as does the show's star wagner mora, who earned huge praise for his gutsy portrayal of the colombian drug lord, pablo escobar. for more we're going to send you right now to the hudson in west hollywood, for tonight's "last call" spotlight. ?
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>> for me as a brazilian we all thought, even i thought, the olympics were going to be a disaster. it ended up doing well i mean. >> and without ryan lochte it would've been perfect. >> that was the -- yeah. that was the only bad part of it. >> and that's not on you. the crazy thing is that when he said that he was robbed, and i was like [ bleep ]. but when he started to talk about this. yeah so there were guys dressed as policeman and they said "go to the ground" and i said "i'm not going to the ground" and i go "this is not, no." and you're still alive? this is not how brazilian criminals act, dude.
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>> four thousand soldiers. tens of thousands of rounds fired. there was no way pablo escobar was getting out of this one, right? [ speaking foreign language ] ? >> when i was invited to play pablo, i think i have read basically everything that was written about him. but i did that in order to create my own version of him. i didn't try to imitate him. what i like about it, is that not only pablo is portrayed as a human being of course he's a mean awful man, but he was a man who had a family. pablo wanted to be loved. he wanted to be accepted but also he wanted to be the president of colombia. do you know how crazy this is?
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[ speaking in foreign language ] ? >> i arrived in medellin, colombia five months before the crew, i mean netflix didn't even know i was being considered to play the part, and i was already there. >> you didn't have the part yet right? didnou it was -- sometimes it was like "what are we doing here?" you know this was the craziest thing i have ever done as an actor. because, i'm brazilian i was really skinny i didn't speak spanish. it's a horrible case of miscasting.
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[ speaking in foreign language ] >> it's all shot in colombia. 90% of the things that you see there really, really happened. we wanted to be as respectful as we could with the colombian history. the whole thing is shot in locations in colombia, never did a studio scene ever. ? >> if you're going to make an authentic story -- >> yeah. >> the very first thing you have to do is have the character speak in the actual language they speak. >> i guess so. when i was a kid i was always fascinated when i watched second world war films, where german people spoke english with a german accent. and was like that doesn't make any sense, these guys they don't speak english they speak -- they are german people. and the german accent was the
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it was a very emotional moment, for all of us when escobar got killed. and the fact that we did that, in the very same place where the real guy was killed. few times in my life as an actor i felt that you know, how do you call when your -- >> yeah, goosebumps. >> yeah, it was all the time. all of us. ? i was a teenager but i remember, really clearly the image of the t and i remember thinking like "wow this guy is really fat." you know "he's really big." as much as i was eating like crazy i would never get to that point. so in that scene we had to have a prosthetic. i mean the first season covers like fifteen years of pablo's life from the first day pablo actually seized cocaine to the day he escapes from la catedral. so i was getting bigger with pablo, because when he was
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together. he was going and i just couldn't follow him. >> i have limitations -- >> i have natural limitations, yeah. ? >> carson: that was wagner mora. who is incredible in "narcos." season two, thank god, is out. it's available now on netflix. coming up the music tonight is diiv. they'll perform at the fonda and we'll be right back. ? ears. you named it brad. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends, three jobs... you're like nothing can replace brad.
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i don't think that's how they're made. klondike hooks up with tasty flavors... the best ice cream bars ever conceived. my moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis made a simple trip to the grocery store anything but simple. so i had an important conversation with my dermatologist about humira. he explained that humira works inside my body to target and help block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to my symptoms. in clinical trials, most adults taking humira and many saw 75% and even 90% clearance in just 4 months. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common,
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? ? shots ringing out i'm soaking eardrums shaking years start weighing me down ? ? buried deep in a heroine sleep floating deeper underground ? ? passing out running in place you're the sun and i am your cloud ? ? burning down running in place got so high i finally felt like myself ? ? ? ? ? would you give your 81st year for a glimpse of heaven, now it's here ?
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for a glimpse of heaven, now it's here ? ? shots ringing out i'm soaking eardrums shaking years start weighin' me down ? ? crawling out from a spiral down fixing now to mix the white and brown ? ? passing out running in place you're the sun and i'm your cloud ? ? burning down running in place got so high i finally felt like myself ? ? ?
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i'm soaking eardrums shaking years start weighing me down ? ? buried deep in a heroine sleep floating deeper underground ? ? passing out running in place you're the sun and i am your cloud ? ? burning down running in place got so high i finally felt like myself ? [ cheers and applause ] >> carson: that was diiv. "is the is are" is the titled name of the bands sophomore record and it is out now. stick around, cameron esposito's gonna get our spotlight treatment right after this.
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