tv Nightline ABC February 1, 2017 12:37am-1:05am EST
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this is "nightline." >> tonight, "inside 30: supreme court pick." a decision that could shape generations to come. >> i'm keeping another promise to the american people. by nominating judge neil gorsuch. >> the youngest nominee in 25 years. >> i'll do all my powers permit to be a faithful servant of the constitution and laws of this great country. >> his conservative credentials have some calling him scalia 2.0. will democrats block his nominati nomination? >> this is a very bad decision. >> high drama at the high court. brave wilderness. >> let's go, let's see what we can find. >> he may have millions of fans on youtube -- >> i'm about to enter the sting zone. one, two, three -- arrgh!
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>> but his job bites. showcasing the cued and cuddly and the downright ugly. >> one of the ugliest creatures you've ever seen in your life. a marriage made in primetime. >> will you marry me? >> 14 years later, the bloom is still not off the rose. our reality check-in with tristain and ryan sutter, the first "bachelorette" couple. first the "nightline 5." >> delsym controls your cough on your morning commute, and later when you're joking with beth. even when most cough medicines stop delsym is still working. what's your dog food's first ingredient? corn, wheat? purina one true infant grain-free, chicken is number one. no corn, wheat or soy. support your active dog's whole body health with purina one. >> number one in just 60 seconds.
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good evening. thank you for joining us. it was an announcement that could shape the fate of our nation for decades. president trump revealing his nominee for supreme court justice to thunderous applause of his base. judge neil gorsuch could be the conservative judge they've been waiting for. but the democrats are mounting opposition. here's abc's terry moran in our series "inside 30." >> byron, let the battle begin. tiers a small protest on the supreme court steps. a sign of things to come. democrats spoiling for a fight and so much at stake. for president trump it's a promise kept. he said he would appoint someone who was "a replica of justice scalia." he doesn't quite have that but he's got someone who's very conservative, very well respected. for democrats likely hard to beat. >> was that a surprise?
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was it? >> reporter: in the east room tonight, president trump enjoying the primetime spotlight as he announced his supreme court pick, judge neil gorsuch. >> judge gorsuch has outstanding legal skills, a brilliant mind, tremendous discipline, and has earned bipartisan support. he was nominated to the tenth circuit court of appeals. he was confirmed by the senate unanimously. also -- unanimous, can you believe that nowadays with what's going on? >> reporter: judge gorsuch stepping forward, speaking of the honor of the moment. >> standing here in a house of history and acutely aware of my own imperfections, i pledge that if i am confirmed i will do all my powers permit to be a faithful servant of the constitution and laws of this great country. >> reporter: the colorado native has a top-tier pedigree. undergraduate degree from columbia. law degree from harvard also with honors. doctorate from oxford.
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he went on to clerk for two supreme court justices, including justice anthony kennedy. at 49 years old, he is the youngest nominee to the supreme court in 25 years. >> a judge who likes every outcome he reaches is very likely a bad judge. stretching for results he prefers rather than those the law demands. >> i studied every aspect of his life. he could have had any job at any law firm for any amount of money. but what he wanted to do with his career was to be a judge, to write decisions, and to make an impact by upholding our laws and our constitution. >> this event just ended and it really had a total lights, camera, action feel. this was a campaign promise he'd made, talking about nominating a supreme court justice. he's hoping, he says he has more than one. >> reporter: the response to president trump's pick came in fast and furious tonight. just minutes after he began his remarks the democratic national committee issued their own statement. we cannot afford a supreme court
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justice who doesn't have the utmost respect for constitutional values of liberty, equality, and justice for all." other democratic leaders also weighing in, expressing their strong concerns. from senator chuck smu her to house minority leader nancy pelosi who addressed the pick in a cnn town hall. >> he's come down against employees' rights. clean air, clean water, food safety, safety in medicine and the rest. if you care about that for your children, he's not your guy. >> reporter: throughout the campaign the court a critical issue for president trump and his supporters. >> you have to vote for me anyway, you know why? supreme court judges! supreme court judges! >> reporter: the court has had only eight justices for nearly a year, since the death of justice anthony scalia, known as a towering icon of conservative ideology. the vacancy ignited a political firestorm. last march president obama announced his nominee. >> today i am nominating chief judge merrick brian garland to
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join the supreme court. i have fulfilled my constitutional duty. now it's time for the senate to do theirs. >> reporter: senate republicans stonewalled for ten months, denying judge garland even a committee hearing. >> i do not believe the president should appoint someone. >> we're not going to give up the u.s. supreme court for a generation by allowing barack obama to make one more liberal appointee. >> reporter: causing garland's nomination to languish and expire with the end of the last congress. >> i say to you, do your job. vote for a supreme court nominee. >> reporter: president trump's pick replacing justice scalia won tip the balance of power on the court. if confirmed, neil gorsuch will join the four-man conservative bloc squaring off against the four liberals, three of them women, with justice anthony kennedy, 80 years old, the crucial swing vote. neil gorsuch. what do you make of him? what's he like? >> he's a very empressive person. i think he's someone going to be difficult for the democrats to
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stay unified in opposing. young, 49 years old, heck serve three decades if confirmed. very conservative, a judge in the mold of scalia, which is what donald trump promised to do. >> you look at scalia and you can do that, duplicate that as far as i'm concerned, it would be absolutely perfect. >> reporter: big night. tamil jaffer is one of the judge's first law clerks and the a personal friend who's spent time skiing and fishing with him. he was at the white house tonight. >> what was it like over there? >> awesome, a really neat moment. there was a lot of suspense in the room. >> what can you tell us about neil gorsuch? >> this guy is a normal dude. right? the guy you go out for a beer with, right? he skis, he fly fishes, he's a normal guy. he's got a wonderful wife, two beautiful daughters. just a family man. just a kind human being. really genuine. >> conservative? >> conservative, absolutely. mainstream. right in the heartland of mainstream, right? you're not going to get a nonconservative judge from
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president trump. >> hey, hey, ho, ho, gorsuch has got to go! >> we hear this crowd of protesters. this is a process that demonizes people no matter who you are. how is he going to handle that? >> he's going to come here, do his job as a judge, find the right case, decide the case on the law, on the merits, and move forward. >> reporter: while the ninth seat has remained unfilled the supreme court has been evenly divided between conservative and liberal justices, resulting in deadlocks. >> if he is concefirmed how doe he fit in? >> he'd essentially restore the balance on the court that existed before scalia's sudden death last february. no major upheaval in the law is likely as a result of this nomination. the big question is if there's another vacancy. >> reporter: the justices who sit on the court have long had a lasting impact on the cultural fabric of our country. during the obama administration, affirmative action was upheld. gay marriage was legalized. and the constitutional right to abortion was defended.
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the court's agenda in the coming years expected to address some of the most controversial and historically significant issues of our time. from abortion rights cases to battle to overturn roe versus wade still raging. >> abortion rights, the debate about contraception, they're very, very old questions that most people think should have been settled. the anti-choice movement is proving they're not settled and that's going to put it front and center. >> we're not out there to reduce abortion, we're out there to end abortion. we want this to be over. >> reporter: the court is also likely to hear cases of grave magnitude driven by president trump's nationalist agenda. >> this is what democracy looks like! >> reporter: immigration and refugee issues, including the president's controversial executive order. several federal cases aimed at blocking it could end up in the nation's highest court. and voting rights. especially as the president claims massive electoral fraud. and the scope of presidential powers. >> thank you very much. >> reporter: for president trump, as for any president, the nomination of a supreme court justice is one of his most
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lasting legacies. reaching into the decades beyond his presidency. for "nightline," i'm terry moran at the supreme court. next, he's been bitten by a snapping turtle and tarantula hawk. but now this internet adventurist is facing is sting of the world's most painful insect. later, the first-ever bachelorette couple is still married. so where are they now? hink abou. what about the people i care about? ...including this little girl. and what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i asked my doctor. and he recommended eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. yes, eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. both made me turn around my thinking.
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coyote peterson has gains millions of fans posting videos of dangerous animals biting and stinging him, literally using his own body as click bait. i would say don't try this at home but you probably don't have an alligator snapping turtle. here's abc's nick watt in our series "social stars." >> this is the most nervous i've ever been to take a sing or bite from anything. >> reporter: real life as one of the millions of kids who watched this dude might say. >> i'm coyote peterson and i'm about to enter the sting zone. arrgh! i can't move my arms! >> reporter: his job full-time. >> some will think it's crazy. >> reporter: fairly lucrative. naturalist, wildlife show host, connoisseur of venom and bites. >> aah! geez, yeah. >> reporter: he has his own youtube channel, brave wilderness, with over 5 million subscribers. he posted a new video twice a
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week, every week of the year. >> that feels like big needles going into my forearm. >> reporter: don't try this at home. he researches and there are medics on hand. >> the pain kept lasting and it would come in waves. like this rushing heat going through your arm. >> reporter: coyote does not exact revenge. >> you're not killing anything? >> absolutely not. there is never an animal ever injured on any shoot that we have done. >> eww! >> reporter: and these are kids posted by fine brothers entertainment on facebook -- >> that must be painful. >> reporter: reacting to coyote's antics. >> why is he doing this? >> reporter: his viewers are apparently also hearing a message. >> you will take away a more understanding perspective of this overly vilified arachnid. really the goal is to introduce the younger generation to animals. there are a lot of kids that don't have the opportunity to go out in some of the environments we explore in. >> reporter: he's trying to get
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kids interested in nature, but first he lures them in with a little click bait. >> aah! >> the term click bait makes it sound like you're going to click on something and not see what it is that's being promised. we give you a thumbnail. we're saying, stung by a bullet ant! you better believe coyote's going to be stung by a bullet ant. >> reporter: he's a self-taught naturalist driven by enthusiasm and curiosity. >> for me it really started when i was about 4 years old. and i've loved animals ever since then. a lot of times my friends would be out going to parties, playing sports, and i was actually in the woods behind the house catching snapping turtles and snakes. >> reporter: outside columbus, ohio. not exactly where you'd expect america's steve irwin to hail from. is the hat really necessary? >> yeah, absolutely. it defines exactly what we do. because you remember. you remember the hat. >> reporter: and he's not really named coyote. >> my real name's nathaniel. >> reporter: coyote's taking me tide pooling in san pedro, california. >> real gent. right in the middle.
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>> reporter: i put my finger inside a sea anemone because coyote told me to. i mean, he's done this. could i really be scared of a squidgy anemone? >> aah! >> you flinched. >> i did flinch. so it's a wild animal putting its things right in my hand. what's wrong with you? >> there's nothing wrong with me at all. it's actually not something we intended to do, to get bitten and stung by things. in arizona i got stung by harvester ants. >> ah, one on my neck! >> we thought, it would be interesting to show people what the reaction is to a human body to certain stings. then our audience actually kept asking for, why don't you try this, try that? we're like, uh, don't know if that's a good idea. >> aah! >> then when they really felt like, this is good for us, this is educational. >> yep, he definitely bit me. >> reporter: back to those tide pools. >> the coolest thing we could find would be an octopus or
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brown sea hare. all sorts of creatures. >> reporter: we're pulling what looks like alien life forms out of the brine. little stars. >> like a sea star with a little more ambidexterity. >> reporter: sea stars. >> run your finger through, feel how soft those legs are. it won't bite you. >> something gross? >> oh, yeah. yucky like a massive, fat slug. >> it's like a big booger, isn't it? its body completely goes bla like that. like this joker from batman -- >> that's a beautiful purple color, my word, look at that. >> actually, there's two more right here. >> is that not one of the ugliest creatures you've ever seen in your life? sorry, mate. you are a bit ugly. >> reporter: ugly but not scary like the frotarantula hawk. >> do you get haters, people saying you're an idiot in a hat
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and you shouldn't be doing this? >> yeah, there's a fair share of people saying, oh, this isn't the right way to be presenting animals. people are always going to have an opinion. believe it or not our positive rating on youtube is somewhere around 98%. >> reporter: back in the tide pools -- >> start rolling, he's got an octopus wrapped around his arm, come, come. oh, geez louise! >> that's the biggest october pulse i've ever caught. oh, man. wow, that is a really big two-spot october pulse. don't bite me, don't bite me, don't bite me, don't bite me. that is a monster october mulls right there. let's have you hold it. >> no, no, no, no, no -- >> put your hands out flat. >> you said he has a beak, i'm not interested in beak action. >> nick, you can see he's not beaking me at all. >> reporter: that's the secret to coyote's success is enthusiasm is totally infectious. >> that is one of the weirdest feelings i've ever -- and not unpleasant. >> reporter: next up, coyote's off to south america and australia where he hopes to be bitten by a whole new bunch of
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insects. >> one, two -- >> reporter: good luck. >> three -- ow! ow! >> reporter: i'm nick watt for "nightline" in san pedro, california. >> wow, oh, ew! and next, from the first season to their second child, inside the off-camera life of the original bachelorette couple. their secret to 14 happy years of marriage. per roll more "doing chores for dad" per roll more "earning something you love" per roll bounty is more absorbent, so the roll can last 50% longer than the leading ordinary brand. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty, the quicker picker upper
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finally tonight, it may have started as reality tv, but now it's just their reality. here's abc's abbie boudreau. >> reporter: she's the first-ever bachelorette. finding lasting love 14 years ago when she gave firefighter ryan sutter her final rose. >> will you marry me? >> reporter: now two adorable kids later -- >> yay! >> reporter: trista and ryan are still in love and defying the odds. >> simon cowell sat on the couch with me and he's like, i give it two weeks. oh, yeah.
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>> this is gorgeous. >> thank you, we love it. >> reporter: choosing to move away from the spotlight, the sutters live in a small town near vail, colorado. >> it's an awesome place to raise kids. >> reporter: ryan is still a firefighter and recently started a blog. >> you're going to be turning 10? >> reporter: tris ta an author and busy mom. >> what is the secret to a happy marriage? >> forgiveness is a big one because no one is perfect. >> reporter: as for bachelor nick's dramatic season, the couple has advice are starting with corinne. >> eventually it has to get like serious if you want it to get serious. she's got to go she's just a distraction. >> what was your take on nick? >> he was a standup gentleman. based on some of what he's done in the past -- >> maybe not, that's true. >> working toward it. >> making progress type of situation. >> a gentleman? >> progress. >> reporter: while it's no secret most reality couples don't last for long, trista still has hope. >> 100% hope. >> i love it. >> 13 years
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