tv Today NBC October 21, 2016 7:00am-9:01am EDT
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good morning. dinner served cold. donald trump and hillary clinton trade jabs at a charity event. >> i took a break from my rigorous nap schedule to be here. >> this is the first time ever -- ever -- that hillary is sitting down and speaking to major corporate leaders and not getting paid for it. >> but some jokes fall flat, even drawing boos. >> hillary is so corrupt, she got kicked off the watergate commission. >> this morning, we'll talk to
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he called the iciest place on the planet. casualty of war. an american service member killed in iraq as the battle to take back mosul began. overnight, iraqi forces pushing them to within a few miles of the city. this morning richard engel is on the front lines. chiropractic mystery. autopsy results show a popular model's death was the result of injuries suffered during a common procedure. how did it happen? and, life's ruff. after a 31-year run with metlife, snoopy gets the boot. the marketing makeover that's left the peanuts gang crying good grief "today," friday, october 21st, 2016. >> announcer: from nbc news, this is "today" with matt lauer and savannah guthrie, live from studio 1a in rockefeller plaza. and good morning, everybody. welcome to "today" on a friday
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matt this morning. can you imagine being where cardinal dolan was last night, seated between the two rivals, fierce rivals, for the presidency? that would take all the skills, all the spiritual skills, all the diplomatic skills. >> if anyone can do the small talk, it's cardinal dolan. but what a predicament he was in there. and of course when the two of them speak, it wasn't actually funny faults. >> wait until you hear what he said occurred privately between these two candidates. with just 18 day t tensions in the campaign spilling into that high-profile charity dinner with harsh jokes and jabs from both trump and clinton. >> a new poll this morning shows the race is now a dead heat in ohio. trump and clinton tied in that battleground at 45%. trump's led by three points in that same poll one month ago. >> clinton is going to be in ohio tonight holding her first rally since the debate, while her husband stumps for her in florida. trump has rallies today in north
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national correspondent peter alexander who starts our coverage this morning. hi, peter, good morning. >> reporter: hey, savannah, lester, good morning to you. can you say awkward? this is a night that's billed as a place where the candidates put partisan politics aside. but like everything else this campaign season, this year's dinner was one of a kind. true to their form on the trail, hillary clinton, a bit more polished, donald trump, more unconventional. >> reporter: fresh off their fiery final debate, a scene, at times donald trump less light hearted, more heavy-handed. >> hillary is so corrupt she got kicked off the watergate commission. >> boo! >> here she is tonight in public pretending not to hate catholics. >> reporter: trump stunningly booed by the crowd, a first at the al smith dinner, a catholic charity gala, that's traditionally celebrated as a
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one-liners. >> it is amazing i'm up here after donald. i didn't think he'd be okay with a peaceful transition of power. >> it is great also to see mayor bloomberg here. it's a shame he's not speaking tonight. i'm curious to hear what a billionaire has to say. >> reporter: despite their smiles, their dislike for each other unmistakable. trump and clinton separated this time not by a moderator but a cardinal dolan. clinton's jokes self-deprecating. >> i took a break from my rigorous nap schedule to be here. >> reporter: others, biting. >> donald looks at the statue of liberty and sees a "4." maybe a "5" if she losses the torch and tablet and changes her hair. >> reporter: trump's best moment, roasting his wife.
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and everyone loves it. my wife, melania, gives the exact same speech, and people get on her case. >> reporter: the night, a rare break from the heat of the campaign trail where trump thursday defiantly doubled down on his shocking remarks about next month's election. >> i will totally accept the results of this great election -- if i win. >> reporter: trump's unprecedented position creating a new political headache for vulnerable congressional republicans. pennsylvania's pat toomey calling it irresponsible. new hampshire's kelly ayotte again trying to distance herself. >> i don't believe that there is a rigged election system. >> reporter: clinton's top surrogate, michelle obama, in arizona. >> he is threatening the very idea of america itself.
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taking aim, too. >> when you try to sow the seeds of doubt in people's minds about the legitimacy of our elections, that undermines our democracy. >> reporter: back on the dias, the politicians. >> this is the first time ever, ever, hillary is sitting down to speak to major corporate leaders around not getting paid for it. >> every year this dinner together a collection of sensible, committed mainstream republicans. or, as we now like to call them, hillary supporters. >> reporter: ultimately, donald trump did clarify his comments thursday about the election results saying he'll accept the results if they're fair, while reserving the right to challenge or contest questionable results. back at this dinner, lester and savannah, it was icy at times. at least by night's end, there
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the two candidates shook hands. something they didn't do in either of the last two debates. back to you. >> peter alexander, thank you so much. nicolle wallace and steve kornacki are with us. they shook hands right before this live shot. we can be officially depressed, even a charity dinner to benefit catholic charities. it devolves a little bit. i don't want to make too much of it, but it is interesting to see the dynamic there. >> yeah. the last two republicans who lost use t different way. they used it to sort of restore their personal credibility. and comedy isn't easy, but it's simple. you make fun of yourself. i talked to one senior trump advisor who said -- i say why did he bomb so badly? he said, well, it was bad. but there are not a lot of funny people at trump tower. >> steve, these are two individuals that are not extremely likable, according to the polls. they do themselves any favors? >> honestly, i thought that
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these are the two least liked candidates we've ever seen and clinton is more disliked, i think you saw that on display. jokes are supposed to strike the balance between being humorous, taking some shots at the other side but being good spirited. the delivery i think from both of them had a mean edge to them. >> trump not only got booed but in a room you would consider his crowd. >> you got a lot of sort of wealthy people who might be republicans his punch lines i think read a different way, might not have sounded quite as mean. but both of them didn't just have the spirit that event traditionally has. >> seems like the crowd was not really with either one of them. let's plof on move on to yes big news which is of course this notion that he was walking back his statement at the debate that he would hold the world in suspense as to whether he would accept the results of the election. then he said in a rally yesterday, i'll accept them -- if i win. and then went on to say, i'm
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moi mount a legal challenge if we get there. as clean-ups go, did that get it done? >> here is the problem. what he said was just -- we talked about it that night, you and i. all of us talked about it. it was a lights-out moment in american politics to say i am not going to accept the results of an election. >> did he fix it? >> no, he did not go far enough to fixing it because the audience for that debate was so much bigger than anyone that heard his clean-up. even if you hear the clean-up, it is all of the china and comes back with a tea cup. >> i was wondering if he was joking when he said i'll accept the results if i win. at first i heard it and thought he was joking. then i wondered, maybe not. >> i call it trolling. he was trolling his critics. he was trolling the media. he was trolling everybody who got on his case with it and he knew -- i think he was also playing to the crowd in that room. he knew that phrasing it that way and putting that punch line at the end, they would love it because he was basically giving it to his critics.
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have to decide how you're going to lose. we all know donald trump can read a poll. for some moment, at least for john mccain, the losing campaign i work on, you have to decide how you're going to lose and he is going down in a ball of flames. >> thank you both so much. by the way, we'll talk to cardinal dolan, the man on the hot seat last night. he'll talk about what he observed, including a private conversation that he had, the three of them. we'll hear what he has to say about that coming up. let's turn right now to the battle raging in iraq for control of u.s.-backed iraqi forces are within striking distance one day after the first american was killed since the offensive was launched. nbc's richard engel is on the front lines. richard, good morning. good to see you. >> reporter: good morning. the pentagon announced that an american soldier was killed here in iraq. he was one of the soldiers that was involved in assisting this operation to drive mosul -- to drive the isis out of not just the city of mosul, but all of
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near one of the front line positions. we've been launching them in advance. so far advance is moving more quickly than anticipated. >> reporter: isis today hit back with a sneak attack on a government complex in the city of kirkuk where they exchanged fire with security forces. isis may be trying to slow down the assault on mosul. it doesn't seem to be working. iraqi troops said today they've pushed to within just four miles of the city. the isis capit the biggest battle was for control of the town on mosul's eastern doorstep. to reach the front there, we climbed into an iraqi special forces old american humvee, shot up and nearly blown up, the driver said, by an isis bomb. iraqi troops brought in their heaviest weapons. isis fought back with suicide bombers. but all this was music to the
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"we'll win, god willing. we'll be in mosul in days," the soldier said. isis does seem to be retreating from some of its positions. the soldiers showed us a tunnel and bunker complex they just discovered. >> be very careful where you step. there is a concern these could be booby trapped. >> reporter: dozens of fighters could have stayed down here. corridor stretched for about half a mile. at the far end we came out into an isis headquarters. food still in the kitchen area. chemicals for more. and on the wall what has become one of the most infamous symbols anywhere. the isis logo. more often than not, when americans were standing in front of this, they were about to be beheaded. isis brutally kill many more iraqis. today it was their turn to have isis on the run. but reaching mosul, the isis stronghold, may just be the easy part. getting to mosul, however, may be the easy part.
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iraqi troops enter the built-up urban areas. today the u.n. warned that isis has been gathering more than 600 families from the mosul area, civilians and is using them as human shields. the american who died in support of this operation has yet to be identified by the pentagon. >> richard engel in iraq, take care of yourself, pal, thanks. a contractor charged with taking a huge volume of top-secret documents from the nsa will appear in federal court today as the government is against him. nbc's justice correspondent pete williams has the latest on that. hi, pete, good morning. >> good morning. the government calls it an astonishing amount of highly classified information. and more than a month since the arrest -- the fbi says that agents are still going through it to figure out what's there, a process that is says may take five more months. inside this suburban baltimore house, federal prosecutors now say, the fbi found a staggering
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martin, a contract employee, of stealing it all. an amount of digital information equal to 500 million pages of text and images which would make it easily the largest theft of official secrets ever. dwarfing what the fbi says was stolen by edward snowden, also an nsa contract employee. among documents found, the justice department says, plans for a top-secret operation against united states. some of the classified documents, prosecutors say, were lying openly in martin's house and in the back seat and trunk of his car which he parked in the driveway. the government wants him held in jail pending trial, saying if he's released, he could be a target for a foreign government because he knows so much. and they say he had access to guns and once told his wife he might end his life if "he thought it was all over." but, in a letter to the judge, his lawyers say there is no
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his country and no grounds for denying him bail. so far all martin is charged with is stealing the material and taking it home. intelligence officials say they still don't know whether he passed any of it along to anyone else. savannah? lester? >> pete williams, thank you. the u.s. government is confirming another death due to a defective airbag made by takata. officials say a 50-year-old woman died last month in riverside county, california. she was driving a 2001 honda fatality attributed to takata airbags. they can inflate with too much force causing their metal interior to rupture and shoot shrapnel into the vehicle. the problem touched off the largest auto recall in u.s. history. a florida state trooper helped save a bald eagle after it was hit by a jeep on a busy highway. check out this dash cam video. you'll see the eagle is it issiis i sitting there on the shoulder of
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bird and carries it back to his patrol car. the eagle stayed perfectly still in the back seat. then the trooper drove it to a bird sanctuary. amazingly, we are told, there are no broken bones. experts do believe it will likely fly free again. >> i love that. >> we need this story! >> that's why it is the national bird. it just stayed still in the back of the car. >> yes. serene and majestic. >> followed the rules. >> like dylan in her weather forecast. >> we are rain for parts of pennsylvania. take a look in clinton county, pennsylvania yesterday, in north central pennsylvania. the rain was coming down very, very hard. we picked up four to six inches of rain in a very short period of time. lots of lightning. power went out for a time in that area and gusty winds, too. and today we are going to see the threat of more rain in that same area. we do still have flash flood warnings in effect as this heavy rain just trains over the same area. it comes down so hard and so fast that the water really has
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flash flood watches in effect as well. this area of low pressure along with this cold front will slowly move to the east. we'll tap into some moisture off the atlantic leading to snow in parts of central and northern new england tomorrow especially in higher elevations as colder air starts to wrap around. we could see as much as four to five inches of rain, especially across upstate new york. but look at how much snow we could see. some parts in the adirondacks could end up with six inches of snow as
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>> bri: good morning, everybody. we made it to friday. but itself a foggy start to this friday and quite damp as you step out the door, going with mostly cloudy skies today. the heavier rainfall certainly to our west right now. but it will work in this afternoon. and it could make for a few isolated downpours. look how mild our temperatures are, though. 68 to 74. raincoat? i don't know so much about that. why spread half an inch to an inch with localized downpours an then it gets windy for the weekend. a look at shows chillier >> and that's your latest forecast. >> all right, dylan, thank you so much. coming up, the mysterious death of a "playboy" model now being blamed on a chiropractic procedure. this morning, a warning that her family wants everyone to hear. parents pushing back against one school's decision to cancel halloween. are officials taking safety concerns too far?
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i just want what's best for my kids. when i hear arguments that massachusetts needs more charter schools, i think: what about the students in all of our schools? every new charter takes away more money from the existing public schools. that's 400 million dollars, just last year. we can't afford to drain even more money from our kids' schools because they're already losing so much. i'm not just standing up for my own kids; i'm fighting for yours, too.
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spent 21 years in the navy, defending america. if i only showed up half of the time, i'd have been court-martialed. but that's what senator kelly ayotte did. she missed nearly half of her homeland security hearings. vo: on critical homeland security hearings, ayotte was mia... even missing a hearing the same day she went to a washington fundraiser. for ayotte collecting campaign cash comes first. bob hillery: when it comes to fighting terrorism, fifty percent doesn't cut it. afscme is responsible for
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imagine if your child were trapped in a failing school. imagine if your child couldn't read or write at grade level. imagine if your child were stuck on a waiting list. 32,000 kids want to go to a public charter school. but they can't. if you like your public school, question 2 won't affect you. but for kids stuck in failing school districts, choose something better and give all our kids hope. please vote yes on question 2. >> this is 7news now. ism good friday morning, everybody. 7:26. i would say a live look over boston, but it's really hard the see with all that fog out there. >> bri: it's there though, i
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can't see it very well. we have system damp weather working through. we hold off on the steadier rainfall until later this afternoon, maybe even into this evening, but, yes, the fog is with us, reducing visibility, as you saw in that shot there, so make sure you add a few extra minutes to your morning plan. scattered showers, even a few downpours as we get enter this afternoon, but temperatures stay mild today. >> sarah: a man will be in court today to face charges after police say he raped a 13-year-old girl in lawrence. officers say the man grabbed a girl as she walked to school on her into an apartment where he allegedly raped her and held her against her will for two hours. two new hampshire men will face a judge today in connection with an explosion in salem. police say a 23-year-old and a 20-year-old man put explosives inside the newspaper box for the rain betime -- "rainbow times," an leg let publication.
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7:30 now. it is friday morning, 21st of october, 2016. i guess we're going to have a rainy day here in the northeast, but our plaza friends are in an we've got lester in for matt today. normally you'd be wrapping up "nightly news" after a half-hour. >> we've got so much more show to get to. let's start this half-hour with the headlines. course, the chicago cubs now one win away from their first world series trip in 71 years. they beat the dodgers last night. they take a 3-2 lead in the nl champion series. game six tomorrow, and the
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champs, cleveland indians. . donald trump is saying again he may not honor the results of a presidential election. at a rally in hoe owohio, he sa wants to reserve the right to challenge the outcome if there is a questionable result. hillary clinton and donald trump shared the same stage last night at an annual fund-raiser for catholic charities. some of the jokes drew jeers and boos. >> hillary got kicked off the watergate commission. >> both candidates got a boo from time to time. candidates, though, did end the night by shaking hands. that's something we did not see at the debate. as we mentioned earlier, timothy dolan, the cardinal, was right between trump and clinton. listen to how he described that seat. >> pardon my congestion and cough, i'm afraid i'm coming down with a cold.
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that for the last two hours i've had a seat between our two candidates in what is probably the iciest place on the planet. where is global warming when you need it? >> cardinal dolan joined us earlier this morning and we began by asking him if he had fun last night. >> thanks for that interpretation. >> we were just watching some of it. i have to say, it looked a little awkward on tv. there were some boos. is that how you felt in the room? >> well, i don't mind telling you, i was kind of nervous going flu it. you know the nature of the al smith dinner. it is to be an evening of unity and friendship and joy. and being the host of it for the archdiocese, it is like a family dinner where you are just hoping that everything goes well. and in general, hallelujah, the evening went very well. but there were some awkward moment. you guys know, you're pros.
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little anticipation, is this going to work or not, is this going over the line, is this bringing people together. i tell you what wasn't awkward even though we teased about it, is being very close to the two of them. i was very moved by the obvious attempt on behalf of both secretary clinton and mr. trump to be courteous, to get along, to say nice things privately to one another. i was very moved by that. that was pleasant because i was there with them, not only at the >> some of the jokes -- in fact there were some boos. that surprise you? >> this is my eighth al smith dinner, lester. the audience is a good indicator. you can kind of tell. the audience has a good sensitivity, first of all something's funny, secondly, if somebody's a bomb. but thirdly, if something is a little out of line. there were some boos last night. the audience more or less accurately, i think, reflects the sentiments that are going on. >> we talked about the hot seat.
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said there was some friendliness among the two. did you try to engage a group conversation? >> let's just say i'd rather be sitting between you two. no, i did. you can tell the two of them are kind of awkward together. that's not new. four years ago i was with governor romney and president obama. you could tell there was a little iciness. but the purpose of the evening is to break some of that ice and thanks be to god it works. the al smith dinner, by its nature, literally tries to -- i'm sit t to be kind of a bridge to bring these two people together. and i try my best. there were some very touchy moments. when we were going in, i said can we pray together as we were waiting to be announced. and after the little prayer, mr. trump turned to secretary clinton and said, you know, you are one tough and talented woman. and he said this has been a good experience, this whole campaign, as tough as it's been. and she said to him, and donald,
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work together afterwards. now i thought, this is the evening at its best. >> but anybody who was watching in the audience or watching any of the coverage would think this confirms these people really don't like each other. some of those things just weren't funny and they were cutting right to the heart. >> you got something there, lester. so i would find that amity that i just described maybe wasn't as present during the both addresses. here's what we got though. somebody afterwards, a professional entertainer said, this is kind of the natur comedy today in that it is very tough for people to be self-deprecating. when you got -- if you look at the history of the al smith dinner, when you got a guy like john kennedy or a fellow like l like ronald reagan, they bring the house down. they are the butt of their own jokes. see in last night, the two candidates, the butt of their jokes was the other person. the characteristic of the evening is self-deprecating, humble humor. and that seems to be a tougher
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for all of us. >> cardinal dolan, sounds like you had quite a private moment with them and we'd love to see that spill into the public. on behalf of all the american people. >> i hope it was an example. >> cardinal, thank you. is there see you soon, i hope. >> our conversation with cardinal dolan a little bit earlier. let us get a check of the weather from miss dylan. >> we were talking about the winter outlook. noaa has issued their latest winter outlook for the upcoming winter. it is going to be average across ploefmost of the southern half of the country. little cooler than average in the plains and upper midwest. where it is cold we are looking for a wetter than average season which could mean more snowstorms. where it is warmer, it also means a dryer than average winter. this could be a good thing for parts of the gulf and down through texas maybe sparing you from the ice storms. right in the middle though is where it is going to be right about average for what you'd expect in a typical winter.
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warmer temperatures up and down the east coast. this cold front has produced already four to six inches of rain across western pennsylvania. parts of western new york dealing with some of the heavier rain as well. this will move eastward as we go through the day and eventually increase the chance of rain across the eastern seaboard. back lined it, it clears out. lots of sunshine. >> bri: good morning, everybody. we made it to friday. but itself a foggy start to this friday and quite damp as you step out the door, going with mostly cloudy skies today. the h but it will work in this afternoon. and it could make for a few isolated downpours. look how mild our temperatures are, though. 68 to 74. raincoat? i don't know so much about that. why spread half an inch to an inch with localized downpours an then it gets windy for the weekend. a look at the 7 on 7 forecast shows chi >> and sunday night is "football night in america."
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phoenix stadium. i'm sure you know that weather is not really going to be much of a factor. looking at just a couple of clouds around for the afternoon. really nice and warm, temperatures almost hot. topping out in the upper 80s. don't forget, catch the seahawks and the cardinals, coverage begins at 7:00 p.m. eastern with "football night in america." >> announcer: this "sunday night football" weather is brought to you by verizon. introducing verizon lte advanced. powering america's largest fastest 4g lte network. better matters. coming up, it happened again. the terrifying moment another great white shark tries to break into a shark cage and the exact same spot of this unforgettable scare. and coming up next, a chiropractic procedure that's now being blamed for a popular (announcer vo) the new pixel phone by google.
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technology is useful. i just bought a book. e book, i downloaded a song. oh, and full disclosure, when we were just chatting about that song thing, someone arranged a date. guilty. the point is, life is digital. so, carmax, created a site where you can reserve a car online. come in when it's convenient, your car will be waiting. just another thing to make buying a car better for you... reads this tweet that i just posted. oh, that appears to be trending.
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back now at 7:43 with new developments in the mysterious death of a model and mom known as the queen of snapchat. >> nbc's gooadi schwartz has mo. the l.a. coroner is being very specific about what caused her death. they say it was neck manipulation by chiropractor that triggered a deadly >> reporter: from snapchat to instagram, katie mae was adored by millions faps ns online. >> i'm so sad katie won't get to see her grow up and she won't have her mother. >> reporter: now the public posts and newly released details from the los angeles coroner's office offer a timeline leading to her death on january 29th. the post, pinched a nerve in my neck on a photo shoot and got
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on the 31st, responding to a fan, may wrote, it still hurts. going to a chiropractor tomorrow. on february 4th, she went to get adjusted. hours later the coroner says she suffered a stroke. the report listing a cause as blunt force injury of the neck and her death as the result of a chiropractic procedure. research shows the kind of chiropractic injury may suffered is rare happening in roughly 1 in every adjustments. we asked this chiropractor to give us an idea of how this could have happened. >> looking at this, this is the art are i that goery that goes brain. >> yes. the vertebral artery. >> what would cause a stroke? >> kinking or pressure or pinching of this artery. >> and this did. >> what happens is there is some type of tissue that's lodged. the adjustment, a trauma occurs,
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>> reporter: he says it is up to chiropractors to listen to patients and conduct thorough examples before deciding on treatment. >> the adjustment is a beneficial part if it is done properly for the right reason. >> reporter: may's family hopes their story will save others. >> listen to your body, question things when they don't feel right. do research. also like speak out. >> no charges have been brought against katie may's chiropractor. the dea accident. may's family says they are still processing the findings of this report and so far no legal action has been taken. savannah? >> sad story. go gadi, thank you very much. coming up, how bob dylan finally acknowledged his nobel prize for literature. and how one star made ?
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we are back. 7:49. tamron is in the orange room for carson. we have a great airport find. >> good morning, everybody. actor and now author bryan cranston was in dallas promoting his new book called "a life in part" when he pulled off the ultimate airport surprise. one lucky traveler named mckenna was browsing an airport newsstand when she picked up cranston's book and found a note inside from none other than cranston himself. the note reads -- hey, thanks take this book yourself -- free. really. i just bought it. see the receipt? i hope you enjoy the read. cranston then signed it with the date and time saying "have a nice day." it was like 9:45 in morning. mckenna shared it on her social media. she's received thousands of likes. this tweet from nick says reason number infinity why bryan cranston is the best. another tweet said -- this is such a cool way for the artist
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bryan cranston on the show and on the set. he's such a nice guy. >> he's one of our favorites. >> i never met him so i can't attest. but he seems like a nice guy. >> trust, but verify. >> you troublemaker, lester holt! >> thank you so much. just ahead, guys, no costumes, no candy. what is behind one school's to cans halloween. jenna sits down with reese witherspoon.
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americans... ... 83% try to eat healthy. yet up 90% fall short in getting key nutrients from food alone. let's do more. add one a day women's gummies. complete with key nutrients we may need... ...plus it supports bone health with calcium and vitamin d. one a day vitacraves gummies. i spent many years as a nuclear missile launch officer. if the president gave the order, we had to launch the missiles. self control may be all that keeps these missiles from firing. i would bomb the [ beep ] out of 'em. i want to be unpredictable. i love war. the thought of donald trump with nuclear weapons scares me to death. it should scare everyone. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. i had frequent heartburn, but...my doctor recommended prilosec otc 7 years ago, 5 years ago, last week.
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i'm a republican, but this election is so much bigger than party. my son max can't live in trump world. so i'm crossing party lines and voting for hillary. i don't always agree with her, but she's reasonable. and she's smart. she can work with people to solve problems. i want to be able to tell my kids that i did the right thing when it really mattered. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. uh, first of all, i plan to vote for donald trump. when it served her purpose, ayotte buddied up to trump, even calling him a role model. would you tell a child to aspire to be like donald trump? oh absolutely, i would do that. but she kept playing politics and flip flopping around.
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- to keep something she values. - i know. kelly ayotte. the politician. looking out for herself. independence usa pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. >> this subpoena 7news now. >> christa: good morning, everyone. this is 7:57. this is route 9 in framingham. definitely a day the take you time on the roads. very foggy out there. here's bri eggers with your forecast. ful. >> bri: right, christa. fogg damp out there and wet leaves can be quite slick. keep that in mind, too. we have scattered showers moving through the area, but this is what will bloom in our direction as we make it into the late afternoon, early evening hours that. will bring some beneficial rainfall to some spots. keep in mind, that fog sticking around for a while. but our temperatures this afternoon quite mild. take the umbrella with you. >> christa: all right. bri, thank you. check of your top stories this friday. man will face a judge.
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thursday. according to police, he grabbed her inside an apartment, raped her and held her against her will for two hours. also man due in court in connection with a shooting that happened in chelsea. 19-year-old kristin garcia opened fire at a park wednesday night. one of the bull es hit a 13-year-old, juan lopez delgado, in the shoulder while he was sleeping in bed. he's now recovering. when i listen to families across new hampshire, all i hear is that washington is locked into a system where the special interests come before people. where drug company profits come before affordable medicine, the koch brothers and big oil come before clean energy, and powerful corporations beat out entrepreneurs looking to grow their small businesses. i'm maggie hassan. washington won't change overnight.
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who puts your priorities ahead of special interests can make a difference. and that's why i approve this message. imagine if your child were trapped in a failing school. imagine if your child couldn't read or write at grade level. imagine if your child were stuck on a waiting list. 32,000 kids want to go to a public charter school. but they can't. if you like your public school, question 2 won't affect you. but for kids stuck in failing school districts, question 2 will let parents hing better and give all our kids hope.
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it's 8:00 on "today." coming up, cheers and years. hillary clinton and donald trump trade jokes and jabs at a high-profile charity dinner. >> hillary accidentally bumped into me and she very said, pardon me. >> donald looks at the statue of liberty and sees a "4". >> as trump takes off the gloves and hears it from the crowd. >> hillary is so corrupt -- >> boo! >> so, was the republican nominee out of line or is it all fair game? plus, southern charm. jenna catches up with
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weise witherspoon to chat about getting back to her roots. >> tell me something good. >> start the day with something good. "today" show. and, pop stars and politics. ? nasty nasty boy ? >> why janet jackson's top hit song is soaring on the charts today, friday, october 21st, 2016. >> it's our birthday and our birthday's wish is to be on the "today" show. >> happy birthday to my beautiful wife. >> that's me. >> hey, mom -- i love you! >> woo! ? don't let me go ? ? don't let me go ? >> celebrating lola's birthday. woo! >> good morning, north dakota! >> birthday divas celebrating
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woo! >> how are you? good morning. thanks for coming. and welcome back to "today." it is 8:00 on a friday morning. it is the 21st of october. we're starting to see some grey clouds sweeping into the city. but lester holt is here for matt this morning. >> i love this. i need this. >> you don't get this on "nightly news." >> you brought the big look at this crowd! >> you're all here for lester, right? >> lester! coming up, gold medal winner scott hamilton is one of the big names joining a new campaign by u.s. figure skating, and he wants you to get involved. scott will tell us all about it. fantastic. we're putting a gourmet twist on football favorites inspired by the teams playing in sunday's big game. who's playing?
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>> didn't you see my big "football night in america" tease? that's how good i do it. >> she preps for that all week. first let's get to the news at 8. we begin with the race for the white house. i'm kristen welker from white plains. hillary clinton will depart from here later today and head to battleground, ohio. it comes after she faced off with donald trump at the alfred e. smith charity dinner here in new york. it is normally light-hearted and fun but like all things in this race, the mood got ugly quickly. >> reporter: initially not acknowledging each other or shaking hands. donald trump taking the stage first, poking fun at his wife melania after her convention speech replicated a few passages
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>> michelle obama gives a speech and everyone loves it. it is fantastic. they think she's absolutely great. my wife, melania, gives the exact same speech, and people get on her case! >> but things quickly took a chilly turn. >> hillary is so corrupt, she got kicked o commission. >> boo! >> here she is tonight in public pretending no the to hate catholics. >> reporter: clinton, who sat stone-faced as the audience booed, taking the podium moments later. >> this is such a special event that i took a break from my rigorous nap schedule to be here. >> reporter: but her speech also biting as she swiped trump who prior to running for office was known for rating women on a
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liberty and they see a proud symbol. donald looks at the statue of liberty and sees a 4. maybe a 5 if she loses the torch and tablet and changes her hair. >> reporter: the nature of the night underscoreing the historically bitter battle, all capping a day in which trump doubled down on refusing to say whether he'll accept the reaks results. >> i will of this great and historic presidential election -- if i win. >> reporter: throughout the day, backlash from republicans. >> i don't believe that there is a rigged election system. >> reporter: and clinton's top surrogates. >> that is not a joking matter. no, no, no. i want everybody to pay attention here. that is dangerous. >> reporter: now, even ted cruz,
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election results should be respected. as for that dinner, clinton and trump finally shook hands at the end of the night. likely the last time we'll see the two interact with just 18 days to go until election day. savannah? lester? >> all right, kristen welker, thank you. let's turn now to a controversial decision by one connecticut elementary school that isn't sitting well with everybody. >> good morning, guys. halloween celebrations have been canceled at lilly b.ai elementary school, the principal pulling the plug out of respect for cultural and religionest beliefs. there will be no costumes and no halloween this year at this school in connecticut. dressing up with classmates, not allowed on school grounds. >> i think it is a little overreaction. knee-jerk sort of sense. >> reporter: the decision, the principal says, made with input from staff. a letter sent home to families this week reading, "this decision was based on many
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exclusion of students, with increasing societal safety concerns, the number of adults who attend this event, some in costumes, poses a potential safety threat." although it is not mentioned in the letter, security concerns come amid the national attention to recent clown sightings. >> i guess that's what i would assume. >> reporter: sean has a daughter, a nephew and two nieces at the school. >> i think they're disappointed, bu i to them the reasons behind it. >> i would say that it is not a bad decision. it is right because, you know, somebody could dress up and can hurt the kids and hurt the parents as well. >> reporter: the school says the costume ban is about more than safety. adding in its letter, "past students have been excluded from participating due to religion, cultural beliefs, and we believe school day activities must be inclusive for all students." >> it was a fun party to have,
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comfortable coming to school, think it can be celebrated outside of school. >> reporter: celebrations still will be taking place at the school. the theme -- fall. some parents worry about not celebrating halloween. >> i think it is a shame that they're canceling it. i think it shows a sign of not wanting to be diversified and learning about other cultures, about people's traditions. >> reporter: these 8 year-olds already picked out their costumes. >> i think it really stinks that they're canceling it this year. >> i'm kind of sad because i i had a really cool costume this year. >> nbc news reached out to the school district for comment. officials did not provide one beyond the letter we read there. another connecticut school attempted to ban halloween last year infewuriating parents so tt decision was overturned. >> willie, thanks. >> kinds of sad. willie, thank you so much. overseas now, militants
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explosives attacked targets in the northern iraqi city of kirkuk today. isis quickly took credit for that assault experts say is likely aimed at diverting attention from the battle to retake mosul in the north. in one militants attacked a police compound. there were no immediate reports of casualties. some strong new guidelines this morning about how much screen time your kids should be getting among the recommendations from the american academy of pediatrics. parents should avoid use of digital med younger than 2 years old and for children ages 2 to 5, limit screen use to one hour a day of high-quality programming. watch shows or digital content with your child and help them understand what they are seeing. avoid using media as the only way to calm your child and set a rule -- no screen time an hour before bed. >> that goes for adults, too. right? more proof this morning that those cages divers use to look at sharks probably could be redesigned. this video was taken off the
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mexico. watch as a great white swims right through the bars, into the cage, yes, with divers inside. the shark gets stuck momentarily, eventually swims away. thankfully, nobody was injured. this video was taken in the same area of mexico as that other terrifying close encounter with the shark that we showed you last week. >> i did that one time and i thought -- i was perfectly safe in that cage. >> and you weren't, turns out. >> so message -- don't do it makeover that has snoopy looking for a new job for the first time in three decades. and lobster dinner, cocktails, free baby-sitting. how some theaters are changing the movie experience to speed with streaming services like netflix. hey, guys. jenna's catching up with actress-turned-entrepreneur reese witherspoon to talk business, family and southern style. but first, instead of going to the usual commercial break, right now let's get right to.
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over at american express. hey, hoda. what's going on? >> good morning! >> the gang is all here. 8:11 now. let's do "trending." any of us have trouble falling asleep? >> i think that is not the problem we have. but for those who do, this is called napflix. only here is the thing. it shows you a host of really boring vid will lull you to sleep. here are some of the options. i love this. one of the videos has the front line of the supermarket checker. they've got a tutorial on quantum theory. a tropical beach get-away. there is a video of a ten-hour timer. and this -- okay. one of them, the last one -- this is kind of sad actually -- the brad pitt movie "tree of life." isn't that kind of mean?
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>> no. >> the ten-hour timer, i'd want to know what happens at the end of ten hours. >> what puts you guys to sleep at night? what works? >> the pillow works for me. >> you know what? i actually have a real theory about this. i love "the new yorker" magazine but it puts me to sleep. like in a really good way because it is that combination of really interesting but also kind of boring so it is not too interesting. >> reading anything for me. it is funny, you can be in a great novel and go two pages then after the fourth time, like this isn't working. >> it took me three years to finish that steve jobs one, the biography. same way. >> you know what works for me? "law and order" reruns. there's something weird about it. >> you love the show but it puts you to sleep. that's so true! >> you have to absorb enough to catch your interests but kind of boring. now to a story that has
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peanuts fame a personal friend. perhaps even a childhood hero. so you can understand why she is personally insulted that snoopy is getting the boot by metlife insurance. . the company announced that after more than 30 years it is retiring the character. they say retire, i say fired. listen to this -- feeling he is no longer relevant to its business. snoopy isn't the only casualty of the new marketing strategy. metlife says it is also phasing out those blimps that you big sporting events. >> when you read that story, i could hear "wah wah wah"". >> probably snoopy was pricey. >> no. they said insurance companies have this hard-edge, impersonal, and snoopy made it more approachable. >> are they going back to hard-edged? >> we'll see if they go back to snoopy. >> i'm sad! okay. does everyone here consider
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>> these are the three fastest fingers i have. >> lester's been bragging. >> i wasn't bragging. i can keep up with my little -- i don't do this whole thing. >> well, actually one of the big controversies is like do -- the hunt and peck. can they go as fast as those of us who do the whole ten finger. >> tapping. yeah. >> those folks get mocked sometimes because they think that -- some people think it's slow that way. but now a new study says one finger typists are in fact almost as fast as those who type with multiple fingers. researchers at vanderbilt who looked into this said that typing with one finger does slow you down by requiring to keep your eyes on the keyboard. >> that's true. i can look off and -- >> you're one of those that can do this? >> yes. >> so they're almost as fast. >> look what we have here,
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>> what are you going to type? >> you go first. >> all right. lester and i have been trash talking each other all morning about this. >> i think i'm going to use three fingers. >> we've got a timer on. these are the two sentences. three, two, one -- go! ? lester! come on! >> lester! come on! >> it looks more newsmanny. >> come on, lester. yes. is that it? >> lester, i graduated and got a master's degree in the time that you typed that. >> savannah?
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spellcheck out here? >> ready? go! >> and she's spelling correctly. that matters. ? >> no, but that's because -- >> i'm a faster typer? >> wow. it's the little things. >> no, there was a lot of prsu >> this looks more news manny. >> i don't know. >> tim is giving me that look. >> you were nowhere close. >> actually, really. >> i will say though, i feel like i, too, was under pressure. it is hard to type. >> we have a rematch coming up.
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"popstart!." here we go. first to jay leno, he's getting ready for the new season of his cnbc show "jay leno's graarage. for one episode takes the seat next to one man who is not even allowed to drive. joe biden. the car is a '67 corvette, after getting the okay from the secret service, biden clearly excited about it. >> >> try your brakes. >> i shouldn't say this. i like speed. >> the vice president has a need for speed. by the way, that 1967 corvette was actually a wedding gift biden received from his dad 49 years ago! jay leno's garage premiers november 9th on cnbc. next to bob dylan and the mystery surrounding his nobel win is deepening this morning.
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organizers were having hard time contacting him. they weren't sure if he was even going to show up to claim the prize. but then an eagle-eyed observer noticed this on dylan's official website, an acknowledgement that he is the winner of the nobel prize in literature. but then we checked this morning and reference is gone. it's been taken down. so the plot thickens. >> what did it say? >> it acknowledged that he won. then it just vanished. >> why? why isn't >> just says winner of the nobel prize in literature. and now it is gone. it is like when you write with invisible ink. >> has anyone found him yet? >> well, he had a concert. the day it was announced he was on stage but he didn't acknowledge it. >> maybe the person who actually typed it in the website was using three fingers. >> so it takes longer? >> exactly. so log back on later on. it's a theory. >> i love the way you think,
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success this morning because of donald trump. yeah. it stems from wednesday night's debate where trump called hillary clinton a "nasty woman." on social media, that reminded people of a classic janet jackson song. ? no my first name ain't baby. it's janet miss jackson if you're nasty ? >> that's the 1986 hit "nasty." spotify says streams of that song s comment and it inspired one twitter user to mock up this album super imposing janet's face with hillary's. >> i have tro teo tell you. we were in the debate and the minute he said that, that song came into my mind. >> would you like to sing it? >> no. but i think people should have seen the two of you. >> it was not pretty. >> we do the best we can. >> lester's constantly singing janet jackson.
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now time for another check of the weather. >> announcer: more today is sponsored by the blue cash every day card from american express. it's more than cash back. it's backed by the service and security of american express. >> and we've got a big cooldown trying to move into the eastern half of the united states. we've got an area of high pressure building back through the midwest. winds will be out of the northwest. we're done with the record breaking temperatures for a little while. look at highs today. pittsburgh, 55 and lots of rain. asheville, 58 degrees. it is going to spread eastward on saturday, temperatures mostly in the 50s and 60s but it should warm up back again through the >> bri: good morning, everybody. we made it to friday. but itself a foggy start to this friday and quite damp as you step out the door, going with mostly cloudy skies today. the heavier rainfall certainly to our west right now. but it will work in this afternoon. and it could make for a few isolated downpours.
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68 to 74. raincoat? i don't know so much about that. why spread half an inch to an inch with localized downpours an then it gets windy for the weekend. a look at the 7 on 7 forecast shows chi >> and that's your latest forecast. all right, dylan. thank you so much. this morning on "today's style," reese witherspoon is an oscar winner, a mom, and n beginning of reese witherspoon's popular southern inspired brand, draper james. when i heard that reese was down in my hometown of dallas, i couldn't resirs getting down there for a breakfast date with reese. reese witherspoon is a fixture in hollywood. but ask anyone who knows her, she feels most at home in the south. >> when you start to talk southern, how long does it take? immediately? >> well, yes. my kids do this whole thing
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he didn't done do. he done did that. they're like what? why are you talking did done? my little 4-year-old will be like he did done do. they think it is hysterical. >> they're copying you. >> you can't do if you're trying to do you can't done. >> by the way, i don't understand what you're saying. >> i don't always know what i'm saying. sometimes people do. >> reporter: turns out she is making sense, and dollars, too. with her latest passion project it is a lifestyle brand with a southern twist. >> i wanted to celebrate the traditions and the people who raised me and gave me so much of who i am. >> reporter: reese makes the transition from actress to entrepreneur look seamless, but she's taking her latest role as seriously as any. >> was there ever a transition from reese the actress to reese the business woman? >> actually, yeah. when we were raising money for the company, i had to go into lots of different meetings with
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and talk about the company. that was a scary time because they don't care who you are. it is whether your business is viable and it's robust. i think that was kind of the performance of my life. >> reporter: her dedication is no act. reese is the majority shareholder in the company she helped build from the ground up. >> if you never try, you'll never know. so i'm always putting myself out there and i always say to the kids, you know, sometimes you just have to jump two feet into maybe it is going to pay off, maybe not. but you have to take a chance. >> i like that expression. that's a southern one. right? >> i don't know. we'll stitch it on a pillow and it will be a saying. >> reporter: reese designed her stores to look and feel like her own home. >> when you go into your closet, is there one thing that you think all women should own? >> i think it is really important to have one dress that you know you look good in. so make sure you ask your
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you feel good. >> i like that you just said ask your girlfriends. sometimes i'll walk out and say honey, do you think this dress looks good? he's like, how is that different from the other one? >> i dorpt an't ask too much. i usually ask my 17-year-old daughter, does this look good? no, you do not look good. you cannot wear that. so i depend on her brutal honesty. >> reporter: it is hard to imagine reese looking anything but picture perfect. her social media feeds give a behind-the-scenes look at her every day life. family, friends, fans, fun, and lots of draper james. one of her favorite things -- napsh napchat. >> i have two teenagers. they will snapchat me back but they won't call me back. >> i don't really understand. am i too old? >> no. i love this filter because you always look good. this is kind of cute.
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>> i'm jenna bush hager. we're here in texas. >> doing an interview for the "today" show. >> reporter: whether sn snapchatting or just chatting, reese witherspoon is putting the charm in southern charm one y'all at a time. >> i love her. i just love being able to say y'all so freely. >> your iphone case says y'all. >> it says howdy y'all. this is a draper james! you know what? when she taught me who you home. i love reese so much that sometimes it is scary. >> you look like besties. >> i pretend we're besties. i get home like this is it. she's going to call me this time. >> i like when you said snapchat, i thought you were going to tell me she taught you the bend and snap from "legally blonde." >> we actually should have done a play on that but we didn't. next time. but she's really uplifting. you know what i like about her style?
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herself. i think that's super important. what do you think about that? >> i with a is going to say the same thing. >> lester looked at me like -- what are she saw the boots and fell for fall all over again. was she expecting to find the perfect designer boots at such an amazing price? no. you never know what you're gonna find,
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>> this is 7news now. >> christa: good morning, everybody. 8:27 your time. that's the city of boston. i could barely make out the bunker hill bridge there. it's very foggy bri. >> bri: it is. definitely a damp start to the day. damp showers are working in from the south. that's the beginning of it, though. i't first part of the day. you see what's on the way for the late afternoon and evening hours. there's our fog, still reducing vulnerability as you saw in that picture. keep that in mind if you're heading out the door this morning. mild temperatures. be sure the grab the umbrella. >> christa: check of your top story. police say a 23-year-old and 20-year-old man put explosive inside the newspaper box for the rain betime, which is an l.g.b.t. publication.
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the men are facing charges of destruction of property. the search for a missing mother from burlington has come to an end. tanya condon-frieden was found in the woods overnight. she had been missing for 30 hours. officials say they don't know how or why she went missing. and police in methuen are looking for a suspect wanted for an armed bank robbery. surveillance video shows the man pointing a gun at a teller, grabbing money and then taking off. an initial search for the suspected forced nearby schools to go into lockdown, as well. if you're headed out the door, join us for "today in new england" at 9:00 a.m. right after the "today show."
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imagine if your child were trapped in a failing school. imagine if your child couldn't read or write at grade level. imagine if your child were stuck on a waiting list. 32,000 kids want to go to a public charter school. but they can't. if you like your public school, question 2 won't affect you. but for kids stuck in failing school districts, choose something better and give all our kids hope.
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8:30 now, the 21st of october. friday. okay. dylan, did you tell us it was going to rain like right now? >> what is happening! >> let me tell you ksh. >>. >> i'm so sorry! >> this is crazy. we walk out here and we said, looks like it is going to rain. and it started pouring. downpour. >> for the record, it is not
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all right, guys. lots coming up in this half-hour. wait until you see how some theaters are really going upscale to get you to stop watching movies at home and get to the theater. speak being of great movies, we have a behind the scenes peek at the new comedy, "keeping up the joneses." and we have two delicious dishes inspired by sunday night's big game between the cardinals and seahawks. and we'll catch up with one of the original figure skating, our good friend scott hamilton. how about our audience, troupers? >> they seem more prepared than we were. i'd say this was no irony, dylan. now let's get a check of the weather. >> tell us on the record. >> keep those umbrellas handy because it is going to rain today across the northeast. but if you're headed out to see some fall foliage this weekend, we are going to see it already past peak across northern new
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starting to move into central new england. just watch out because saturday it is going to rain, too, and it is going to be windy. a lot of the leaves will be falling off the trees. unseasonably mind temperatures working back into the plains and midwest, too, with temps getting back into the 70s and 80s. on sunday it clears out for the most part across the northeast. a few leftover showers possible, especially in the morning. temperatures rebound back into the 60s. looking at 70s and sunshine through the middle of the country. more rain in the pacific northwest. >> bri: good morning, everybody. we made it to friday. but itself a foggy start to this friday and quite damp as you step out the door, going with mostly cloudy skies today. the heavier rainfall certainly to our west right now. but it will work in this afternoon. and it could make for a few isolated downpours. look how mild our temperatures are, though. 68 to 74. raincoat? i don't know so much about that. why spread half an inch to an inch with localized downpours an then it gets windy for the weekend. a look at the 7 on 7 forecast
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>> for your latest forecast 24/7, check out the weather channel on cable. >> i wonder if the weather channel would have told me it was about to sprinkle on the plaza. dylan, thank you. all right, couch potatoes, listen up. there is a new push to get you off the sofa and back into the movie theaters. nbc's jo ling kent is showing us how some theaters are trying to compete in watch movies anywhere. >> reporter: it was once such a glamorous affair. even movies celebrating going to the movies. >> come on, let's go to the movies! >> reporter: the popcorn -- the big screen and magic of hollywood. well, you don't have to leave home for any of that anymore, and americans don't. >> the movie industry is really facing a crisis right now. this summer they were saying that ticket sales were on track to be lower than they have been since the 1920s. >> reporter: and overall,
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at a 19-year low, down 15% in the last decade. increased competition from on-demand streaming services, on top of the dropping price of high-quality home entertainment centers, also added to the dramatic decline. so now movie theaters are rolling out the red carpet to win those customers back. >> we took something that was very ordinary and turned it into a real extraordinary experience. >> reporter: this is the ceo of i-pick entertainment, a 15 luxury theaters nationwide that are doing something very different. >> you have a kitchen in your house. you still go out to restaurant. movies are the same thing. the reason that we stopped going to the theaters was because the experience wasn't good enough. >> reporter: how is he luring them in? customers at his theaters expect flat-bed seats that rival a first class flying experience. a chef serving farm to table
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favorite cocktails. >> take a look at the pros and cons of going to a netflix movie theater. pro, it's just like watching netflix at home. con, except you have to put on pants. >> reporter: other theater chains are pulling out all the stops to pull you through the doors, too. in phoenix, no baby-sitter, no problem. this chain staffs nannies and a play center for parents to enjoy movies kid-free. and in new york, imax introducing a new fitness class inside of it takes the audience on a virtual bike ride in surround sound. >> thank you. ooh, the plate's warm. >> reporter: customers seem to be loving the new features. >> what's the experience been like? how is it different? >> it feels like super first class. >> reporter: so far, it is working. at least for ipichlt. x. the ceo says the average customer is spending $40 per visit. for today, jo ling kent. >> pass the popcorn.
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this price is so low. trying to make me eat my greens? no, just trying to save you some green. whaaat?! thousands of blue tags. thousands of low prices. my stop & shop. . we're back at 8:38. if our to head to the movies this weekend, "keeping up with the joneses" opens today. >> nbc's joe fryar recently sat down with the cast in los angeles. >> hi. >> we're the joneses. >> reporter: on screen, they're neighbors. but off screen, just how neighborly is the cast of "keeping up with the joneses." >> we clearly don't like each other at all. so it's been difficult. this is actually very difficult.
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quite close, a bond cemented bizarre chasm. >> we have known each other since -- >> milan. days of milan. >> the runway scene. catwalk. >> i was doing chanel and dior. zach was doing levi and was it old navy? >> they were wrangler cut-offs. >> reporter: in the movie, they play a suburban couple whose lives are turned upside down by their neighbors. spies. >> there is some real adrenalin. >> no one needs a stunt double, right? >> never. >> zach did. >> just for my acting. >> your character is in human resources. so you had to create something called hr face. is that right? >> yeah. yeah. the hr face was this thing that was in the script where it is just a guy that holds his face
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you. kind of like that. exactly what you're doing. which is just a fake face. give us your best nod. i'll just say something very like -- so, my parents, they have a silo across the street from their house. >> that's it. see, that's basically an hr face. >> honey, is that you? >> mama wants to cuddle. >> reporter: fisher is of course a comedy veteran, for for this movie is a way to break into the funny business. like in this scene. >> have you no clothes on. you're on the phone. i'm going to go. >> to be continued. >> it was fun. it was our last day. >> you did "fast and furious." you're "wonder woman." how was it trying to do a comedy? >> it's hard. because being wonder woman, it's tricky. because we both play wonder woman. i played it in the '70s.
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their first project together. >> my guest today is john hamm. >> reporter: hamm was one of the first guests on "between two firms." >> it was a fun opportunity to go and be goofy and do some weird stuff with your friends. >> as secretary, how many words per minute could you type? >> you just had a guest that a few people have heard of. hillary clinton. how was it interviewing hillary? agrees to go on. because i feel like people half her age tell her go on the show and she doesn't really know what it is. >> what happens if you become pregnant? were we going to be stuck with tim kaine for nine months? >> if you don't know someone and you know you have to be rude to them and you're -- >> yeah. >> -- it gets a little bit tricky. >> reporter: with so many projects on all their plates, it really can be hard "keeping up
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news, los angeles. >> don't you want to see that? >> it looks very good. >> in a luxury theater. "keeping up with the joneses" is in theaters today. if not a movie, how about football? we have a perfect pairing. football and chili. the recipe you're going to want to try before sunday's big game. but first, there is "today" on
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narrator: planned parenthood provides many kinds of healthcare. woman: i depend on planned parenthood for birth control. woman: i had my annual physical there. woman: the cancer screenings at planned parenthood are so important. narrator: still, chris sununu cast the deciding vote to eliminate state funding for planned parenthood. chris sununu put partisan politics above women's health care.
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parenthood and got it done, because women's health care should always be above politics. back now at 8:44. sounds like a football game breaking out. but "today food," we're getting for sunday night when the seattle seahawks face off against the arizona cardinals here on nbc. >> matt is officially neutral wearing both jerseys at the same time. >> take a stand, man. >> exactly. executive chef of pig beat chair in new york. you have a great recipe for the game.
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represents seattle. it is about a five-pound chunk. start with the rub. all good barbecue starts with a good rub. onion powder, garlic powder, salt, pepper, and coffee. i'm using instant coffee because it doesn't leave that grit. dump that all in the bowl and mix that up. >> i think i am up for that task. got it. >> just do a real quick mix it. >> almost as good as i type. take our rub and sort of generously put it all over our meat. both sides, all the corners and whatnot. then transfer it. we're going to do this at home in an oven and at 250 degrees. we're going to do both sides. give it a good flip. make a little bit of a mess. got that coffee, onion. garlic. nothing better to wake up in the morning to. transfer this to a baking rack.
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degrees. it is about generally speaking an hour per pound. this is a five-pound brisket so it will take about five or six hours, low and slow. but the patience is what pays off in the end. once is gets to internal temperature of 155 degrees, wrap in foil and get it to 190 or 200. ov overnight let it rest. >> oh, my gosh! it looks so good. >> this i >> we got our tasters downstairs. >> i hope they're hungry. >> it is so good! >> it has such a nice, smokey flavor. >> take all of this, dice it up and move ourselves down to the next segment. >> what's next? >> this is where the magic starts to happen when we make the chili. we are starting with an incredible cut of meat with all this flavor already in it. in our pan, start with a little bit of bacon. bacon just makes everything
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next step is add in chopped garlic. we will cook the garlic until it is nice and aromatic. add in the rest of the onions and cook until they're nice and soft and tender. this is the smell to wake up to in the morning. best thing ever. forget about it. in this pot we have the bacon, garlic, onions all cooked down really nice. next step to making chili is good tomatoes. we're just going to pour these right in. this is the part that'sd like getting back to my italian roots for making what's a really great tomato sauce. couple tablespoons of worcestershire sauce.
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>> does it have a kick to it. >> i generally leave my chilies more on the milder side, mass appeal so everybody can eat it. but if tu wayou want to make it spicy, add diced jalapenos or other hot chili sauce. we see our chili and tomato has come nice together. smell that. just smells like great chili. we did this for about 30 minutes to get a spices to come out. now we add in all of our diced brisket meat. >> you got black beans there. >> some black beans. yes, sir. little black bean brisket coffee brisket chili. this will simmer another 15, 20 minutes to let all those flavors come together. then you are left with a delicious play on a brisket coffee chili. i just like to simply garnish it with a little dab of sour cream
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bring out all that flavor. >> that's our seattle. we cannot leave my home state of arizona out. >> the home of the chimichanga was invented. >> mix together pico de gall that cheese gets gooey. >> tasters, what do you think of the chimi? >> fantastic! we are so happy. >> it is crispy. >> this is amazing. >> my favorite words of all. >> i got to try this. thank you so much. matt, thank you. restaurant is called pig beach.
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today.com/food. while there, you can sign up for the today food club and get a special deal on cookware sent straight to your in box. again the cardinals host the seahawks sunday night on nbc. coverage begins at 7:00 eastern. up next, skating legend scott hamilton is with us on "today." it's not uncommon for autistic kids to flap their hands. and so when i saw that, that was completely disqualifying. i'm a republican, but this election is so much bigger than party. my son max can't live in trump world. i don't always agree with her, but she's reasonable. and she's smart. she can work with people to solve problems. i want to be able to tell my kids that i did the right thing when it really mattered. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message.
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this is a pretty shot of the rink at rockefeller center. open for business for another season. which brings us to our next guest, scott hamilton. >> scott's here to tell us about u.s. figure skating's new campaign and a big competition this weekend. >> nice to see you. >> this is called the get up campaign. tell me about it. >> the first thing i learned in my skating academy, i first thing i teach my kids is y so get up. it's become kind of this thing in my life, you fall down a lot, get knocked down a lot, you get up. it is kind of great because it really speaks to everyone. how many people in this couch have failed? there you go. but it is getting up. we all get up. we all get up. so it's a great thing to not only promote u.s. figure skating, but it is also a way to bring everybody in to say what was your get-up moment. >> yeah. have you big name figure skaters
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>> it is the entire skating community is all part of this. they got competition season starting up again soon. and everybody's getting ready for the last year before the next olympics. it's a big deal. >> i love your motto. not only does get up work for small things like just having an attitude issue, it also works for big things. we know you were battling at one point you battled cancer and you're stronger than ever. that works for both things. right? >> i have this unique hobby of collecting life threatening illness. it's not just the get up, it is how you deal with the get-up. what do you do next and how that empowers you. if you have cancer and you survive, a part of you has been awakened that is kind of more aware and you know what you are capable of doing. you're almost more awake, more alive than you were before. so the get-up campaign i think is really important because i think everybody will relate to not only get involved and look at the figure skating part of
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get past it. what did i do next. >> before we let you go, have you a big competition this weekend. >> this weekend in chicago, skate america. the big rivalry in the u.s., gracie gold and ashley wagner will go head-to-head. return of jason brown. he sat out last season with an injury. but by all accounts, he's going to unveil his two quads. we'll see how he fares going into this last season before the olympic games. >> how a year out to the olympics? i was looking at the calendar the other day. >> i just got over jet lag from sochi. come on! already? now i got to go all the way to korea. >> thank you so much, scott. >> always great seeing you. for more on the get-up campaign, check out wegetup.com. catch the progressive skate america tomorrow at 4:30, and sunday at 12:30 eastern on nbc. but on sunday, you have to start with willie's show, first
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>> we're obviously going to be all over the presidential campaign. in this campaign though i don't know what that means because that's 48 hours from now. who knows what's going to happen. we also have a conversation with anthony bauourdane. i went on a walking tour of his food world. >> anything you've had on the show like, good god, never gun? >> yeah. they do this funky fermented fish in iceland. it's just -- it's just a hazmat situation. >> yeah? >> that's good. >> i'm eating tongue with anthony bourdain. >> anthony ordered for you. he says we're having tongue tacos. who's going to say no? it wasn't bad. if i didn't know it was tongue, it would have tasted like chicken. >> it never taste like chicken. >> he also reveals his favorite fast food. he goes into a fast food restaurant in disguise. people don't know he is eating fast food. really good conversation with anthony.
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that's free of all that nonsense. no fees. no minimums. no gotchas. at capital one, your money stays your money. what's in your wallet? when i listen to families across new hampshire, all i hear is that washington is locked into a system where the special interests come before people. where drug company profits come before affordable medicine, the koch brothers and big oil come before clean energy, and powerful corporations i'm maggie hassan. washington won't change overnight. but sending a new senator who puts your priorities ahead of special interests can make a difference. and that's why i approve this message. next on 7news at 9:00. >> we have breaking news a woman found safe overnight. we live. >> called quart the man police say behind alarming assault on
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going before a judge. >> and also in court the man who police say fired a stray bullet that struck a 13 year old in chelsea. the charges he is now facing. it was supposed to be an all if good fun but presidential candidates got as many jabs as jokes at charity dinner new york. >> foggy start and wet wet bother is working in. bother is working in. we have all of that and did you know your business doesn't have to suffer from slow internet? comcast business now offers blazing fast internet speeds up to 150 mbps. that's 10 times faster than dsl. get internet for as low as $59.95 a month. call today. comcast business. built for business. did you know that sharing wifi with your customers could leave your business exposed? only comcast business offers wifi pro. two separate networks - one that's private for you, and one that's public for your customers. upgrade to wifi pro for only $19.95 a month. call today. comcast business.
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>> we begin breaking news aburlington woman missing for nearly 30 hours is found. police investigating the circumstances surrounding her disappearance >> he was are following breaking news oversees multiple explosion and gun fire erupting in iraq. group targeted and the attack. >> and jokes and jabs. donald trump and hillary clinton roasting one another. at charity event. hear the jokes that put this high society crowd a whitt on edge. >> this england. good friday morning. thank you for joining us today. >> and we have much more on our your forecast with bree is talking about fog and maybe some rain later today. >> still some locally dense fog. beverly through new bedford badge through worcester. visibility still reduced to about three miles in boston so it might still be slow go if you have yet to head out of the door. cup see wet weather that's working in for us. some light scattered showers
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