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amber: popcorn is awesome, and she's a lot of fun. lemonis: she is. ♪ lemonis: amber... amberr did you have a p.a. get it? lemonis: i mean, i asked for them. this episode actually is the first episode you and i ever shot. amber: it's 5 years ago. lemonis: it's 5 years ago? amber: we've done over 70 episodes since then. lemonis: we're still together. amber: we are. we don't like each other that much, but... lemonis: i actually like you a lot. amber: oh, my bad. lemonis: can we start, please? amber: just play it. lemonis: in the last 5 years, i've visited over 70 businesses. it was delicious. and i've traveled the country trying to fix the people... woman: i don't want to be that person that cries on tape. lemonis: ...fix the process... i don't think you guys have any idea what's in your inventory.
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amber: [ laughs ] amber: popcorn. lemonis: what about it? amber: it's the episode. i get started with this, i would eat all of this, like, in one sitting. lemonis: no, you won't eat the sweet one. it's too sweet. amber: okay. yes, i would. lemonis: is this skinnypop? amber: you mean it's planet popcorn? lemonis: no. you know how i know it's not planet popcorn? her popcorn was bigger. amber: oh, really? lemonis: uh-huh. that's one thing that i did learn from sharla is that she used the right kind of corn. in the last 5 years, i visited over 70 businesses. it's delicious. -[ laughs ] i travel the country trying to fix the people... woman: i don't want to be that person that cries on tape. lemonis: ...fix the process... i don't think you guys have any idea what's in your inventory. holy [bleep]. ...and create a few products. welcome to your new store. man: oh, my god. woman: i owe my life to this company. lemonis: that is the reason that i'm here. i spend hundreds of days a year working on these companies. why didn't you do it? man: i thought that we did. lemonis: holy
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amber: [ laughs ] amber: popcorn. lemonis: what about it? amber: it's the episode. d eat all of this, like, in one sitting. lemonis: no, you won't eat the sweet one. it's too sweet. amber: okay. yes, i would. lemonis: is this skinnypop? amber: you mean it's planet popcorn? lemonis: no. you know how i know it's not planet popcorn? her popcorn was bigger. amber: oh, really? lemonis: uh-huh. that's one thing that i did learn from sharla is that she used the right kind of corn. in the last 5 years, i visited over 70 businesses. it's delicious. -[ laughs ] i travel the country trying to fix the people... woman: i don't want to be that person that cries on tape. lemonis: ...fix the process... i don't think you guys have any idea what's in your inventory. holy [bleep]. ...and create a few products.
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amber mazzola. amber: no. lemonis: she's the -- why are you int-- why are you interrupting me? it's not your show. amberthe producer. it's my job to get it right. lemonis: it's your job. and so with me tonight is amber mazzola. she's the executive producer of the show, and quite frankly, been my confidant and my friend for over five years. to say we've been to hell and back would be an understatement. we've seen everything you can imagine, and we've chosen one of our favorite episodes to give you an inside look. worldwide trailers designs, builds, and sells concession trailers, mostly to food vendors. tom etheridge and nancy pappas started the company in 2001 and took it from a backyard start-up to a multimillion-dollar business. nancy: you got 50%, i got 50%. lemonis: tom and nancy were a couple, and although their relationship came to an abrupt end three years ago, they have continued to work together. what people don't know about this whole process is that you know everything about the company before i go, and i know nothing about the company other than their name and what they sell. i don't see fina
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amber mazzola, the executive producer of the show. amber: who else would join you? [ both laugh ] joining you tonight... lemonis: you could be replaced. amber: no, i can't. lemonis: you're probably right, but it's fun to say. should we watch dogworks? amber: all right. this is my favorite episode. lemonis: is it? amber: yeah. lemonis: this is your favorite episode? amber: one of them. i love this guy. i love him. lemonis: la dogworks is an upscale dog boarding facility located in the heart of hollywood, california. andrew: you're a stinky dog. lemonis: founded by andrew rosenthal in 2004, this 24-hour full-service center with 36 employees has everything from grooming to training... andrew: sit. lemonis: ...in a state-of-the-art indoor dog park. this business generates $1.3 million a year, but recently their numbers have started to tumble. do you remember how much it smelled? it was something -- almost like there wasn't the right filtration system in that astroturf, but it smelled like a giant urine building. amber: that was the least of our problem with this episode. lemonis: nearly 50 million households have dogs. i want a piece of that. w
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illegally as well read reach comes in is that amber amber tenders and in order for yo. to the front. facingng growing away from r eyes i've had kept prices and i'm not about i don't know down down in time trax she says a decision and help help environment. many drug resumes i just just. to listen. to or no network plus. buying. a cheap in front lines it's a drug drug dream. with the because because the season yeah. seasons nine months some some possible changing room for local. fuel. and unity not meant many complaints. i know you'll be standing at the right price [inaudible] good the other. hi mike hello hello how com. to six six seven five five five five six talk texas is a resident of my phone and that. this is an unnecessary it's increasingly my finance again my plane change restriction it does there's any change changing those rules reasons that that will not be responsible for xrays ladies change changes. talk talk easily so some shinjin it's a fine line change mclaughlin is mentioned scheidler downtow. doesn't of itself is awfully send sensitive so low low income
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amber, amber this is -- >> we tried, your "closer look" crap. it doesn't work. ♪ if you don't vote this will be the end say goodbye to your cute litt furry friend ♪ ♪ cause i swear to god i'll flush him right ♪ so if you don't votedb then say g i'm going to shoot this tiny baby up into the sky ♪ ♪ i'll strap his little body to cket and blow him to bits ♪ [ laughter ] ♪ please try to understand i'm a desperate woman ♪ 'll getor m addicted to tobacco ♪ ♪ he'll be a smoker it's a long slow deathf ♪u vote then liberty will be your friend ♪ ♪ if you don't you'll never see him again ♪ ♪ so vote right now or i'll feed him poisonpe wr [ audience ohs ] [ ght laughter ] ♪ this song was just a joke the cat is fine ♪ ♪ we just want you to vote but your country might not be ♪ ♪ vote in the midterms or it will be the figurative not literal death of the concept ♪ ♪ not the cat who was fine but the state of ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> go vote! [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: amberattering ] the volkswagen atlas. with available panoramic sunroof. life's as big as you make it. i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. julie means more and i wanted to ask you before i ask her. may i have your permission to marry her? you're marrying her and her whole world shop neil lane diamond engagement rings... at kay. ♪ we can't do it. i'm telling you. it can't be done! we are doing it. it's a done deal. for $40, t-mobile is offering unlimited,ip and the awesomne xr for every line. wah! so, they get the new iphone xr and the plan for $40 bucks. ah! the new iphone xr! that's bananas! what's with the monkey head, fred? where's your memoji? wi kid's been playing my iphone, little monkey. ♪ my love has come along, applebee's new neighborhood pastas. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: welcome back, everybody. give it up for t
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what's also interesting is among the accessories she wore was an amber necklace. amber was associated with classical greece. there were a lot of allusions made by martha washington to ancient greece of course, the first democracy. i will today be basically 170 years in about 25 minutes so i won't have an opportunity to talk about every single one of the first ladies which will in this series i will be covering 1789 today 261, the kennedy inaugural and next week, pamela will be speaking about jacqueline kennedy and nancy reagan and each of our subsequent speakers will also be covering to first ladies each up to the present. but, i will today give you some glimpses i think of the more significant first ladies who use clothing to send a message, political message. and to him that was much interpreted about them. madison is probably the most important in the early years, even though martha washington and abigail adams assumed the public role, they were a little bit uncomfortable with it and it was really just by and large at receptions that they appeared. dolley madison saw
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amber: you know what? lemonis: what? amber: i'm actually 100% in charge. lemonis: no. you can't even deliver with conviction, so, no, you're not. i'm in charge. ambermy show. amber: i'm the executive producer of the show. lemonis: gee, you're right. amber: [ laughs ] ♪ lemonis: in the last five years, i visited over 70 businesses... it's delicious. woman: ah! lemonis: ...and i've traveled the country trying to fix the people... woman: i don't want to be that person that cries on tape. lemonis: ...fix the process... i don't think you guys have any idea what's in your inventory. holy [bleep] ...and create a few products. welcome to your new store. man: oh, my god. woman #2: i owe my life to this company. lemonis: that is the reason that i'm here.
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you saw amber rudd's skills on display, she isa amber rudd's skills on display, she is a very good frontwomant there is a vacancy, perhaps even she thinks she might go for the leadership. that is one interesting thing about this reshuffle, she has brought back two people who might actually end up going quite far. what you had earlier today was steve baker talking about in the event of a leadership contest, hoping to succeed, the brexiteers choosing one brexit candidate... well today theresa may has matched that by bringing ina theresa may has matched that by bringing in a loyalist her to come into the candidate cabinet, giving her a better chance to go for the topjob. one thing he would not be pushed on is who he would prefer. but there are only a few names in the frame, aren't there? there are people in the cabinet who are brexiteers and they would see some of them as being tainted by dipping their hands in the blood of the deal they don't like. they are people watching dominic raab, some of those people who worked for vote leave in 2016 are particularly attracted to dominic raab for the way
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amber a and everything amber does so you're already well down the path of hyper bit quantization we have no plan b. we are all in on the current average right this idea a way into the future now you know everyone is a big client space is quite fascinated by how the old line mainstream economists are freaking out and i saw you recently on pound murielle roubini and you know he occasionally starts becoming outraged and he's like a rageaholic or something seems unhandy just well you know and i you're on stage with them and you're just making eminent sounds just going over the basics there what is going on with people like nouriel roubini and paul krugman what why are they having these breakdowns well i think first of all you've got to put it in context right i mean he's it old school economists is trying to have an up to date modern brit so by attaching him to the crypto space which is not an expert in and being being the naysayer it allows him to have a modern brand which he propagates on social media unfortunately and that having been said some of the points he makes about where because it is from a scale ability perspective i think you could actually have if you wanted to an intelligent conversation about those things be chooses not to do that he just uses nonsense in earth because there are areas that are you can be critical ah but he chooses not to focus on any of those and he instead he goes with his broad strokes on areas that are completely off base right nor does he understand or make the case that all technology improves exponentially over time right because it at its core is simply software and of course the software is going to be radically better ten years from now. just like it's better now taking from ten years ago right here nobody in his world seems to appreciate that just like truman didn't appreciate that the unit itself was going to scale up better twenty years later then he did when he was comparing to a fax machine yeah exactly roubini completely missed the significance of the answer not just like paul krugman completely missed the significance of the era now also the east columnist tend to be fall in the category kings eons where they love to spend other people's money they're not really advocates of hard money right and they are accountability and reason with when it is the hardest money ever occur according to safety now most of his book his book the standard of it's a task but yet he calls it the hardest money ever so yeah speak about that well because i think that's something that's very important these days of hyper inflated deficits and fragility to the global economy right i use this concept in my talks about why it's time for a new commodity standard globally right it is specially if you look at what q.e. one two and three have done to the hyperinflation of the u.s. dollar and you compare that to the hyperinflation of currencies that have been hyper inflated out of existence right like the venezuelan both are i mean i have to say that those charts look eerily similar right now my saying that i guarantee that the u.s. dollar is going to go away imminently but it's not looking good i mean you can only hyper inflate your currency so far before people realize hey you could create ten x. where the what used to have something in theory it should be worth ten x. less than what it used to be and that's what we're blindly doing with the u.s. dollar it makes no sense at some point right paul krugman argues that well the sea agrees the dollar is not backed by anything except the pentagon right and but that trick doesn't work all the time eventually run out of countries to bomb iran to a country that you don't really don't want to bomb could be a russia for example. or china where they might reject the idea of being bombed to support the oh i don't think our government sees the dollar as hard money i think they see it as as the center point for a managed economy right now it's even worse because to me what are the ethics of passing on debt to great grandkids who aren't even born yet so if you want to call it the center of a manager economy what it's like hartley nobody in their right mind can call the u.s. dollar in government got money hard money right so if that's the case who gets the side with the ethics are a passing aren't trillions or whether in the next hundreds of trillions of debt on to people who aren't born yet should be right they don't save and give that any thought not that they're just the data stacking up so in crypto you have two things going on in this i think listen a lot of people got technology and economics right and there's a revolution in both simultaneously right that's where we get lost because you have critics on both sides who are misinformed and they get lost in the middle so you came to the space really did you come to the space oh god i've been working in this kind of world for thirty years i was a cryptographer at the cia i was a quantico woman and i work a lot of fixed income stuff which helped me at abbey road to design the kind of the synthetic currency using because when i worked on certificate authority projects at netscape in the big manti's when we created s.s.l. rights only jump in there for science you know people say oh you know the internet was born when the netscape moment that skate went public and suddenly the browser was born and all that could that was part of that it gave became that i'm going to bolt has big point had that netscape moment is agra that that netscape moment is to extraordinarily easy apple you know while it you can get in the crypto wallet are kind of like to the crypto what browsers are the internet is your gateway into is this is this going to be that the gateway to take us into that netscape moment the average watt i hope so let me give you two perspectives on that one is ease of use of course but the second is what is because its core relative to how people are. when to use hard money in the future i see big coin is t.c.p.-ip for money a lot of the types of investments in banking applications that people will do with average three four years from now they won't even know they're using because right so they're going to make payments invest in stocks commodities even whole you know not hard money like dollars all using because so the netscape moment will come when there is easy to use apps that hide the complexity of private public keys to the consumer in the background and enable really simple retail basing applications brocker said something interesting that big quiet it's the protocol versus the internet works we're really bunch of apps writing on the protocol what they call in the protocol is leading the revolution chase it became first right i mean in one thousand menu one you had to install it the c.p.p. the stack on a windows computer in order to use the internet so you had to know something about it today nobody knows what they're using it and i think that's what's going to happen a big point over time right so becomes imbedded and you're really unaware of it and it's running the. institutional investors will still drive liquidity right which is what we need for absolute average we need to be liquid in one hundred fifty countries for amber to work correctly but the consumer doesn't have to understand that they just know that it works in our app store an investment contract in a stock or in dollars or whatever asset they're holding now here at the headquarters of the concert party now we're doing a special project we're traveling across the country a project called guns and we are spreading the word of crypto and we're spreading kind of the word of hard money and we're taking a look at the america what makes it tick the you know the the freaks the charlottes and the geniuses the flim flam man you know is donald trump an aberration or is he actually a reflection of who america for it is right. now we need we need we're going to be looking for folks to come onboard and get give us a little bit of a sponsorship we'd love to have average come on board it would. would you consider that absolutely look i mean i think that part of my job as c.e.o. right is to evangelize the fact that we need a new commodity based standard to ma
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tom curley, marc wilson amber rudd shields have just ten caps curley, marc wilson amber rudd shields havejust ten caps in curley, marc wilson amberust ten caps in total. there is more inexperienced on the bench with ben moon and zach mercer set to make their debuts. that is the welcome return of manu tuilagi as a replacement. he will bring power in as england look to beat a resurgent and zach mercer set to make their debuts. that is the welcome return of manu tuilagi as replacement. he will bring power in second half as england look to beat a resurgent unconfident springbok side. wales meanwhile have included luke morgan in their xv for their match against scotland at the principality stadium on saturday. the osprey‘s winger is wales‘ all time top try scorer in sevens, but this will be his first start for the test side. james graham will captain england's rugby league side in the second test against new zealand this weekend. graham takes over from regular skipper sean o'loughlin who's been ruled out with a calf injury for the match at anfield. england can seal the three match series with a win in liverpool. the hibernian manager
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and authorities issued an amber alert for them. an amber alert has been issued for her 11-year-old daughter and 1-year-old son. the children were taken during a family visit with a social worker in san jose. the mother is believed to be driving a gray 2012 mini cooper with california plate 6uwl251. she may be headed to colorado springs. >>> there's an investigation under way right now after an inmate at the martinez detention facility died in a holding room. deputies found the 26-year-old unresponsive late saturday night. the sheriff's office is not releasing his name. investigators have not released any further details. we'll pass those along as soon as we get them. now a check of the weather. hi, mike. >> hi, jessica. never more than 7 minutes away. how to dress when you wake up. uki ukiah, napa, american canyon, rohnert, upper 40s. the rest lee 50s. 48 in lafayette. redwood, 49. everybody else low to mid-50s. tracy, 63 degrees. our roof camera. flags not moving at all. any breezes will be along our beaches. a little bit of caution there.
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she sent amber ruddin reversal of the past. she sent amber last time, really didn't want to go on the front foot. is quite interesting that now she and she has had to plunge to such desperate measures now that she has to do something which we all know will be completely out of her comfort zone, doing something like that. also, the reason why she never wa nted that. also, the reason why she never wanted to do it before was that actually, if you are the prime minister, you have everything to lose. this is a brave decision by the prime minister but also shows a modicum of panic, , the prime minister but also shows a modicum of panic,, that she needs to go out and sell this deal because she is not managing to do it to any of the parliamentarians at all. brexit divided the nation and it will do so again depending on the choice of your viewer. when we had a debate of the last general election it was comfortably beaten by the ratings by britain has got talent. please tell me you especially looked back up. i did look that up. this will be a strange d
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boris johnson, amber rudd, who has just replaced support. boris johnson, ambereplaced esther mcvey, jeremy hunt, david davis, any mordant and dominic raab. i think this interview, as nigel hasjust said, is very much throwing the sort of any crumbs out. he says he is not submitting a letter of no confidence in theresa may, but has made it clear that he doesn't think she is standing up to brussels strong enough. this leadership issue is picked up in the sunday express. tory rebels make their move, big pictures of david davis and boris johnson. the line they are taking is the two of them are trained to work out who should be the brexit candidate. this, if we get dominic raab in there, it could be neither of them. i couldn't think of two people less likely to actually turn up... people less likely to actually turn . i people less likely to actually turn up... i think dominic raab has a better chance than the two have.” think you and i have a better chance! they know he is popular in the party, although, polling is showing he is not as popular as you might think with
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amber rudd could do that.|j borisjohnson or remainer like amber rudd could do that.hunt. there is a lot of unhappiness at dominic raab's running away at this moment. possibly that i think he has behaved with honour in that he has behaved with honour in that he attempted to shift the government position and are tempted to say that the cabinet should try again. position and are tempted to say that the cabinet should try againm position and are tempted to say that the cabinet should try again. if one of these people emerged, how would they have a mandate to go back and do this next negotiation more effectively? in a sense they would have inherited, the second conservative prime minister in succession who has come in part way through, and they would be taking on this challenge. the public is still divided. do they need a general election or a referendum?” divided. do they need a general election or a referendum? i think if the deal passes, which i am sceptical about its passing, but if it does, it will then have such moralforce and it does, it will then have such moral f
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amber ruffin will do a live "amber says what." our guests will be two of our favorites. billy eichner and msnbc's chris hayes. again we will be live so you will hear the very latest results, and possibly accidental cursing. so mark your calendars everybody. we're very excited about that. [ applause ] before we get to all of tonight's guests, republicans have done so little, and what they have done is so unpopular that their only strategy for the mid-terms is to make up a racist scam to scare people. for more on this, it's time for a "closer look." [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> seth: the one constant in donald trump's life from his earliest days in manhattan real estate to now is that he is a scam artist. he literally sold scam products from a vitamin kit that was determined by a urine test to a trump deodorant. and i have to say the last person i would buy deodorant from is donald trump. [ light laughter ] i mean, look at how sweaty he gets. can you imagine the ad for that deodorant? trump deodorant, always let them see you sweat. [ light laughter ] in fact just this week, a new lawsuit was filed in manhattan federal court, accusing the trump family of defrauding investors by selling them get rich quick schemes. >> president trump, three of his adult children, and their company are now facing a new lawsuit over allegedly conning consumers in a quote, "systematic fraud and pattern of racketeering." >> the federal lawsuit was filed today in manhattan, and it accuses trump, his company, and three of his children of promoting get rich quick schemes that have harmed investors, and that includes a telecommunications marketing firm, the trump network, which marketed vitamins, and the trump institute which offered real estate seminars. >> seth: i can't believe trump had an institute. [ light laughter ] i just assumed he escaped from an institute. [ light laughter ] trump's been selling scams his whole life. if he weren't president, he'd be selling counterfeit video games out of the back of "it's an x-b and like the grifter he is, trump just makes stuff up off the top of his head to lure in gullible people. in a fox interview this week for example, he claimed he saved us from a war with north korea that would have definitely happened if president obama were still in office. >> you have news out there that is so fake, and i can do the greatest thing ever, north korea as an example. we would have been going to war. normal would have been going to war with north korea. i think president obama would have gone to war. if he had an extra year, he would be in right now a war with north korea. [ laughter ] >> seth: oh, i'm sorry, i was just dreaming about an extra year of obama. [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] i asked a team of computer ger ntists to estimate how much d look right now if obama had been president for an extra year, and this is what they came up with. [ laughter ] and now, as president trump is just selling his supporters more scam products, he's replaced the vitamin kit and the deodorant things he'll never actually deliver. just take the wall. it doesn't exist. it's never going to exist. so now trump is sending troops to tor claiming that's just as good as a wall. >> you're talking about 10,000, maybe 15,000 active duty u.s. military to the border. >> yeah. >> more than we have fighting the taliban in afghanistan. more than we have fighting isis in syria. >> yeah. >> you're really going to do that. >> it's very important. it's very important. we have to have a wall of people. [ light laughter ] >> seth: that's right, the wall isn't made of bricks anymore. it's made of people. [ light laughter ] "our amazing troops are going to the border where we will stack them on top of each other, tetris style." [ laughter ] republicans -- [ applause ] republicans make stuff up because they can't defend their actual record. for example, the gop passed a healthcare bill in the house last year that would have stripped away protections for i. so now that they're running for re-election, they're just lying about it. >> we can protect preexisting conditions. and you need to understand everyone agrees we're going to protect preexisting conditions. >> i am passionate about protecting people with preexisting conditions. >> we will always protect americans with preexisting conditions. >> republicans will protect people with preexisting conditions far better than the dems. >> the president's health care plan that he's laid out covers preexisting conditions. >> seth: okay first, his plan doesn't cover preexisting conditions. second, he doesn't have a plan. [ light laughter ] the house passed a bill last year. that plan failed in the senate, and then we never heard about it again. sarah sanders managed to cram two lies into one sentence. she's like the rick steves of lying. i'll show you how to pack two [ laughter ] republicans don't want people thinking about their healthcare another. like trump's latest stunt over birthright citizenship. a righsh amendment. automatic citizenship for anyone born in this country is the pillar of our post civil war attempt to build an inclusive democracy. and yet trump claimed this week, that he could just unilaterally change it through an executive order. something he obviously cannot do. >> it was always told to me that you needed a constitutional amendment. >> right. 14th amendment. >> guess what. you don't. >> you don't. >> number one. number one, you don't need that. number two. >> i mean that's in dispute. that's very much in dispute. >> you could definitely do -- well you can definitely do it with an act of congress. but now they're saying i can do it just with an executive order. >> have you talked about that with the council. >> yeah, i have. >> so, where in the process are you? >> it's in the process, it'll happen. with an executive order that's what you're talking about. right? >> yes. that's exactly what i'm talking about. >> i didn't think anybody knew that, but me. thoughi was the onne >> seth: yeah, you thought you were the only one because it's crazy. [ laughter ]hoets put in an insane asylum, and when his roommate says, "you know th on me," trump goes, "you too? i thought i was the only one." [ laughter ] [ applause ] and now now republicans who spent years paying lip service to the constitution have been twisting themselves in knots to align themselves with president trump. like texas senator, ted cruz who's fully embraced trump in his tight re-election bid. when cruz, a constitutional lawyer was asked about trump's comments, he said, "i have long supported ending birthright citizenship. i would need to examine the legal arguments behind an executive order, and i haven't seen those yet." so, there you go. ted cruz says he needs to look at the legal arguments. if only he had known this guy running for senate back in 2011. >> the 14th amendment provides for birthright citizenship. i've looked at the legal arguments against it, and i will tell you as a supreme court litigator, those arguments are not very good. as much as someone may dislike the policy of birthright citizenship, it's in the u.s. constitution. >> seth: wow, somehow cruz lying is only the second grossest thing about that clip, after his hair. [ laughter ] i mean look how sweaty he is. is he using trump deodorant? [ laughter ] [ applause ] all of this birthright citizenship talk is an extension of trump's latest attempt to scare people about a migrant caravan heading toward our southern border. in reality, the caravan is a few thousand vulnerable people fleeing poverty and violence who are still thousands of miles, and months away. if they get even here at all. but if you listen to trump, it's an imminent invasion full of criminals and terrorists. >> at this very moment, large well organized caravans of migrants are marching toward our southern border. some people call it an invasion. it's like an invasion. you're going to find ms-13, you're going to find middle eastern. you're going to find everything. these are some bad people coming through. these aren't babies. these aren't little angels coming into our country. it's actually mostly young men, and a lot of rough people, a lot of rough people. john, they're pushing the women right up in to the front, not good, and they're pushing the few kids right up to the front. when you look at that caravan and you look, largely very, you know, big percentage of men, young, strong. >> seth: he sounds like a long island divorcee trying to convince her friends to go out to a club. [ light laughter ] "there will be lots of men, young, strong. [ laughter ] they love to travel." [ light laughter ] of course, implying that they're young strong men is just another racist dog whistle designed to scare people. and in doing that, trump has had the help of a right wing propaganda outlet that exists entirely for one purpose. to disseminate his lies, and whip its audience into a racist frenzy. and over the last few days fox news has gone into overdrive, telling people there might be more caravans and that those caravans might be spreading disease. >> this is an invasion. this is an act of attacking the united states' sovereignty. >> this is a threatening invading force that may well bash its way through our fence the way they did the guatemalan fence. >> and i want to -- >> what about diseases? i mean there's a reason why you can't bring a kid to school unless he's inoculated. >> they're coming in with deseases such as small pox, and leprosy, and t.b. that are going to infect our people in the united states. >> seth: small pox and leprosy? [ laughter ] where is this caravan coming from, medieval england? [ laughter ] the last -- [ applause ] true story. the last naturally occurring case of small pox was in 1977. it really makes your scare mongering a lot less convincing when the only diseases you can think of are f"t trail." [ light laughter ] but the weirdest example of fox spreading this racist hoax was a segment on lou dobbs' show on monday. dobbs might be fox's most virulent conspiracy theorist. after the mail bombs were sent to prominent democrats, he called them fake. he's also been obsessively tracking the location of the caravan, which as we showed you last week, has sometimes given him pronunciation trouble. >> the caravan of mostly central american immigrants is now in ty ogua -- tonight. [ laughter ] >> seth: now, i just wanted to show you that to give you some context for this next clip. dobbs had a guest on who floated a theory about the migrants spreading disease that was so crazy even dobbs couldn't go along with it. >> we simply cannot tolerate the continued invasion of this country when americans are suffering every day. the national debt is exploding. we have diseases spreading across the country that are causing polio-like paralysis of our children. it's one thing after the other. >> well, you can't very well blame that disease on illegal immigrants. we don't know the cause of it. i don't know that that's -- i don't think that's fair. a lot of, you know -- but there are plenty of reasons to keep this country secure. including -- including making sure that everyone is healthy when they are brought into the country, without question, right? is that fair? >> that is fair. but that is part of the problem. we don't know where the diseases are coming from. >> well, that's -- you know, what? i think that with that we're going to leave it. [ laughter ] >> seth: guadalajara. lou dobbs just had that moment that a lot of us had in our 20s. remember you're at a party at someone's house, and you look around, and you go, man everybody at this party is an ass [ bleep ], and then you go, wait, i'm at this party. [ laughter ] the caravan hysteria has spun so far out of control that shephard smith actually had to look straight into the camera this week, and reassure fox viewers that they were not in danger. >> the migrants, according to fox news reporting are more than two months away. if any of them actually come here, but tomorrow is one week before the midterm election. which is what all of this is there is no invasion. no one is coming to get you. there's nothing at all to worry about. [ light laughter ] >> seth: oh my god, fox news has gone so far off the rails that the only sane person who works there has to talk to viewers like children who accidentally saw a scary movie. [ laughter ] "it's okay. there is nothing to worry about. the babadook is not real. and it is not coming to get you." and that's great. the only problem is a few hours later, sean hannity comes on the same network and screams, "the babadook is real, and it's outside your house." [ laughter ] the caravan hysteria is a con designed to distract everyone while trump and his cronies plunder the government for their own personal gain. that's a point obama made over the weekend when he was campaigning in wisconsin. >> they're trying to convince everybody to be afraid of a bunch of impoverished, malnourished refugees a thousand miles away. it's this group of folks, we don't even know where they are. they're way down there. [ laughter ] that's the biggest thing. and you know as soon as the election is over everybody will be like what? what happened? we were being invaded. where did it go? they're giving tax cuts out to billionaires. they don't want to you notice that. look, look, look over there. wait, look, look. it's like a con where a door to door salesmen tries to sell you a security system while his buddy sneaks in the back, takes all your stuff. it's like "home alone." you all remember that movie? >> seth: oh my god. he's right. it is like "home alone," and trump was in that, too. [ laughter ] [ applause ] trump's -- trump's racist fear mongering over immigration is the latest scam from a guy who's been scamming people his entire life. and he's right at home in the modern gop. they're robbing you, and they're they do it. they're hoping you won't notice until it's too late, and then you'll say. >> wha-- we'll be right back with michael moore, everybody.rs a a] ♪ ♪ >> for more of seth's "closer looks" be sure to subscribe to "late night" on youtube. ♪ give joy, get joy... at kohl's! with an extra 20% off! give cozy sweaters get a festive new top - just $19.99 and trim your home! plus - only at kohl's - you get kohl's cash to spend later!... the more you give, the more you get! give joy, get joy - at kohl's. ♪ahahahahaha. hahaha. discover the rainbow! taste the rainbow! what sore muscles? what with advpounding head? .. advil is... relief that's fast. strength that lasts. you'll ask... what pain? with advil. the new lincoln mkc.mix. connecting the world inside, with the world outside. so you can move through both a little easier. dove men+care. the strength test. likthat's why dove men+care bodywash has a unique hydrating formula to leave skin healthier and stronger. for just fifteen ninety-nine at red lobster. you get all the shrimp you want, any way you want them. and now savory parmesan shrimp scampi is back! new sesame-ginger shrimp is here, too. but hurry in, endless shrimp ends november eighteenth. skate into the holidays with up to fifty percent off storewide and thousands of styles from five dollars. need it now? buy online and pickup in-store today. only at old navy. darryl! hey, darryl. hey! hey. how muchoug yodon't want? nothing. is this a test? no. question two:ike getting st? yes. this feels like a test. it's not, it's just why veriget zoe unlimd without paying for stuff they don't. and why verizon gets you six months of free apple music. did i pass? not a test. but, yeah, you passed. yeah! (vo) the music you want, the unlimited plan you need, on the network you deserve. switch now and get $300 off our best phones. ♪ [ cheers and applause ]pplae ] all right this week we've been so lucky to have the phenomenal drummer from grammy-nominated rock icons "queens of the stone age" sitting in with us. the band just wrapped their "worldwide villains" tour. and for more information, check out his instagram @mistertheodore. jon theodore, everybody. thank you. [ cheers and applause ] we had a great week. it was great having you back. our first guest is the academy award-winning film maker of documntaries like "roger & me" and "bowling for columbine." his latest "fahrenheit 11/9" is in theaters now let's take a look. >> 3% of us own over 160 million guns. why would they need all those guns? >> i would take up arms because i think -- i think we need a revolution. i'm not a violent person. i'm even an ordained pastor. >> seth: please welcome back to the show, michael moore, everybody. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ >> seth: welcome back. >> thank you for having me. >> seth: i think this is a very exciting time to have you less than a week before midterm elections. you've been out promoting this film. you've been urging people to vote. >> yes, yes. i've been working for candidates and, at the same time, yes, the film is out. actually i had to go to europe to open it over there. get back here to help the election. and i've been so busy actually -- i'm going to be on the road next weekend. i won't be home in michigan to vote and my absentee ballot just arrived just before i came down here.>>eth: yeah, do you want t vote right now. >> yeah, do you have a pen? >> seth: show people how easy it is to vote. [ cheers and applause ]-- t michigan. thank you very much. >> seth: and have you've done -- you've done all your research? >> yeah. >> seth: okay. >> yeah, yeah. and i -- i know everybody on this ballot. >> seth: you know everybody, yes. >> so we'll put gretchen there for governor. >> seth: uh-huh. >> and, you know, there's so many women on the ballot. you'll notice this when you go to vote next week. there -- just teachers alone, there are 550 teachers across the country that are running for state house or state rep. >> seth: that's really exciting. [ cheers and applause ] >> it's an amazing -- >> seth: while you're voting, i want to say that you -- >> yeah. >> seth:ne of the things you talk about in the film is how the biggest block of voters are those who don't vote. more people didn't vote than voted for either of the candidates. >> it's our largest political party, the non-voters. sad -- sad to say. >> seth: so how do you encourage those? what is the message you give to the non-voters to get them out the door this comingsdng -- the say to non-voters is actually, i don't think it works to, like, shame them or wag your finger at them. i think you should listen to them and find out why they're not voting. don't vote that stay home, do it because they are just -- they have given up, the system has failed them. they don't see any difference between the candidates. it's the same old hacks running. and so they stay home. but i'm going to guess that the majority of non-voters deeply love their country and are deeply patriotic. and it's got to be very hard for them, seth, to stay home and not participate. and i think they'd love to participate. and so what i say to them this year is there are so many people on the ballot this time that are not the party hacks. i mean there is a -- there is a woman running for congress in west virginia -- she's a chicken farmer. there is a bus driver, i think it's in kentucky that's running. there's a librarian where i live that's running. i mean, these are, like -- you know, there's a lunch lady that's running somewhere out in the northwest. >> seth: uh-huh. >> that's running for office. i mean, like, normal people are ru a lot of them are young people. and i think my -- any non-voter is watching this. i'd say give it a shot, just this one time. show up just this one time. i think you'll be surprised by who's on the ballot. and we can throw all the bastards out. >> seth: there you go. >> that's my -- [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: now -- >> oh -- prop one in michigan. >> seth: yeah. >> legalizing marijuana. >> seth: oh, are you on the fence on this one? >> no, do you want to help me fill this one in? >> seth: it looks like it came filled in. >> yeah. >> seth: yeah. [ laughter ] >> the band wanted to vote on this. [ laughter ] no, no. this is all my voting. only i have touched this ballot. >> seth: all right, good. >> because they're watching in >> there we go. thank you for letting me vote. >> seth: so i want to ask about this. the predicted blue wave. you were vthaterca donald trump was going to win. you called it -- you called it state by state. so now i'm give you another chance, how do you feel about tuesday? >> well, i'm not going to make the mistake that someone else made on a late night show a couple nights ago. >> seth: okay. >> a democrat. >> seth: yes. >> who just automatically announced, "we're going to win." >> seth: uh-huh. >> and it's like, my god that's what happened in 2016. everybody was throwing the party for hillary before the election. and i think some people stayed home. i think some people didn't think -- like, everybody said -- even "the new york times" on election day in 2016 in that box where they predict. >> seth: yeah. >> said that there was only a 15% chance today of trump winning the presidency. >> seth: right. >> okay, so you got to throw that out. you got to quit this kind of -- the predicting nonsense and you just got to do your job as a citizen. we may not get another time. he's actually talked abo postpone an election because there's -- i can't do the voice that you do. >> seth: no, you're doing great. [ laughter ] >> okay. this is -- this -- [ laughter ] >> seth: by the way, you're like the only person who can't do trump. [ laughter ] >> right? this is you with a cold. >> seth: okay, yeah. >> but it's -- people have to -- look, i think obviously one of two things can happen. and i heard steve bannon lay out his blueprint of how they think they're going to win on tuesday. and they think they're going to keep the house by one seat. and anybody who doesn't trust that, please remember that donald trump outsmarted us. he outsmarted us in 2016. and won the white house by losing the election. gius to fi. >> so don't think for a second that come tuesday, they don't have every intention of holding on to the house and the senate. and they are good at what they do. that -- that they are able to get away with this. they got away it with gore when he won. we didn't do anything about it. they got away with it when hillary won. we don't do anything about it. they know we us. >> seth: yeah. >> they know we're busy and we got other things to do. [ light laughter ] but they are fanatical about this because they know their time is up. and it's sort of the angry white guy, which actually i'm really trump's demographic. >> seth: yeah. you're a michigan angry white guy. >> i'm an angry white guy over 50 with a high school education. [ light laughter ] so that's me. >> seth: yeah. >> so if i could just speak to my fellow angry white american guys who are semi-uneducated like me. [ light laughter ] dudes, give it up. [ laughter ] we've been running the show for 10,000 years. [ cheers and applause ]like we in a long run as men running everything. and, you know, the yankees could never win as many pennants as we've won in these 10,000 years as men. >> seth: right. >> so why don't we just take a break.show. >> seth: just see how it would go. >> what are you scared of? women actually like us. [ laughter ] most of us. you know, so -- so i just think there is just this -- trump is in there trying to whip up, as you were showing earlier, that all the fear and all that "here come the hordes," and doing this and that. it's like, you know, people -- hopefully people have not fallen for it, not the majority. the majority are with us. the majority believe in the liberal agenda. every poll shows this, seth. whether it's climate change. equal pay for women, raising the minimum wage. the majority of americans agree with all those things should happen. and we've got to trust that. and start to feel that we have the power and that we have to exercise it on tuesday. and you got to get five five people that doesn't vote. and we've got to get -- bring five people to the polls with you. have a party afterwards. bring beer. do whatever you've got to do. but let's pack those polling places on tuesday. >> seth: all right, we're going to be right back with more from michael moore. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ julie means more and i wanted to ask you before i ask her. may i have your permission to marry her? you're marrying her and her whole world shop neil lane diamond engagement rings... at kay. ♪ ♪ here we go. wait. move your head towards mine. scoot over! scoot over! my arms are not long enough guys. try it again. yada yada yada... waah!!! ♪ we're livin' on the edge ♪ boys, we gotta back up. just a little bit, back up. back up. back up. stay in the frame. just stay in the frame. willow, just stay in the frame! uh... ♪ oh! oh! did you see that? move your arm. we're not gonna fit. we're not gonna both fit. just move your arm. move your hand! just move it over! hey mitch, could you uh... moscoo ito take a selfie. just move it over! oh wait, one sec. oh! alright, three...two...one. smile! ♪ yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah... there comes a point when you realize the bathroom you used to love needs a makeover. let a professional rebath design consultant help craft the look you want. call 925-233-6471 and save $1000 off your complete bathroom remodel ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: welcome back, everybody. we are here with michael moore. this is not a laughing matter. but i know that you are a enjoyer of gallows humor. so, i do want to ask about this. it was terrifying last week when we saw images of the mail bomber's van. and he had images all over it. cross hairs on some people, including you. what was it of ali tan like thi? >> yeah, i'm -- well i was -- actually i was watching cnn e hostly i have to say my first thought was that -- that's a really good picture. [ laughter ] i mean he could have use a much worse picture. >> seth: yeah. >> and the other -- my second thought was the bull's-eye, the target he put over me wasn't all over my face. it was just down here like, on my neck and shoulder. so, you know, i gave him a little bit of credit, not really. >> seth: oh, i gotcha. >> yeah. but, no it's -- i mean look. this is a very serious time. >> seth: and did law enforcement contact you? >> yup. well, the fbi knocked on my door. >> seth: wow they really -- >> yeah. >> seth: wow, they did physically knock on your door. >> this is a couple days after they caught him. >> seth: sure. >> and they said we need to talk to you because we've gone through the van and through his laptop. and there was a quote, according to them, an abundance of research he had done on you. and he had all this material on you in his van, and on his computer. and frankly we're kind of surprised. we don't -- we assume that one of the bombs was coming to you because of what he had in the van. and can't seem to find it. and then -- and then the other fbi guy made some joke about the postal service. [ laughter ] kind of an interfederal government thing. >> seth: yeah. it was like, "never miss a chance to burn the post office." [ laughter ] >> yeah, right. in front of me. >> seth: in the front of you. >> like, "where is your bomb? you're supposed to have a bomb." [ laughter ] >> seth: you met the pope. that must have been pretty cool. >> two weeks ago. >> seth: two weeks. what was your interaction with the pope like? >> i went to the weekly audience, and then he asked to speak to me privately. it was an amazing moment and i asked him if i could ask him a question. and he said, "yes." an economic system that benefits the few, the wealthy at the expense of the many is a sin?" and he said to me, "si" in italian. and i said, "so you believe capitalism, the kinda -- the capitalism we have now is a sin?" he goes, "yes, it is." he said, "the poor must always come first." and then he grabbed my hand and he said, "please, pray for me." and i said, "i will, and please pray for me. and he said, "no, you have to make more movies." [ laughter ] and i'm like, "i just wanted a prayer." [ laughter ] he's like, "no, you go back to -- you go back work." he has a sense of humor. >> seth: the next time -- the next time, you meet with producers you are going to be like, "so you know, the pope wants this." [ laughter ] >> yeah, right. that's right. yes >> seth: yeah, there you go. hey, thanks so much for being here. it's always such a pleasure to see you. >> no, thank you for having me. [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: michael moore, everybody. >> everybody vote. let's go. >> seth: "fahrenhiet 11/9" in theaters now. we'll be right back with paul dano. 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(bat hits ball) opportunity is everywhere. all you have to do to find it is get out...here. ♪ chp -- were all on hand...but there was still bad behavior in the stands -- while the 49ers blew out the raiders on the field. you can see how it all played out on our homepage. plus - an east bay woman is calling out bart. she says her 11-year old son was kicked off the train on his way home-- because he was 40 cents short of the fare. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] o s golden globe nominated actor you know from films like "love and mercy" and "little miss sunshine." he's starring in the upcoming showtime series "escape at dannemora" later this month. he co-wrote his directorial debut "wildlife", which is in select theaters nationwide now. let's take a look. >> talk to your father. tell him not to act like a fool. >> i'm not being foolish. i put my name on a list. i waited for my chance and now they finally have a place for me. >> you don't know anything about fires. you'll get burned up. >> i've been reading about them. i know enough. >> you've been reading about them? you've been studying up? >> don't turn my words on me, jean! >> dad, what's going on? >> your father is leaving to us to go and fight those wildfires. >> what? >> seth: please welcome to the show, paul dano, everyone. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ >> seth: how are you? >> i am great. >> seth: congratulations on the film. >> thank you. thanks. >> seth: this is -- i know it's your directorial debut. also, your writing debut. you co-wrote it with it your wife. zoe kazan. >> mm-hmm. >> seth: and i'm always fascinated by the process of people who collaborate on writing. as a married couple, how did you figure out? were you sitting in a room together at the same time working on it? >> no. so i think most peopgine pacing behind the computer. >> seth: yes. >> the other person's typing away you're just having an -- that, i mean, simply would not work in a -- when we live together and go to bed together and wake up together. >> seth: uh-huh. >> we actually discovered a super natural work flow which i hope we get to do again someday which is we simply traded drafts back and forth. so i would take it away for a while. we'd go over it. we'd be each other's editor in a way. and then she would take it. and it was really actually fun. >> seth: did you ever have to watch the other person read the draft? because that would be very stressful. >> yeah, but i learned my lesson the first draft i wrote. >> seth: uh-huh. >> i waited for her to read it. it was an eternity. and she had a lot of notes. [ laughter ] >> seth: so, carey mulligan who's one of the stars and is fantastic in it. you sent it to her. she did not wait a long time to read it. >> no, probably the fastest read i'll ever have. i mean, luckily i know carey so i call her. i said, "i'm going to send you the script tonight." and the next morning she clein go. and she is a really great actor. so to have somebody like that respond that immediately to the character, to the script, was just a great burst of energy and was such an important step in the process. >> seth: yeah, because nothing is worse than when you give somebody something to read, if each day that passes you just, in your head, think that they're coming up with a way to phrase how little they liked it. >> totally. [ laughter ] >> seth: yeah. >> well, also being friends. >> seth: yes. >> you know, when we have to let somebody down, it's the worst. you know she'd pacing around her room. "oh, i got to go call paul and let go of this somehow." and so, yeah. >> seth: you shot in oklahoma and montana. it's a beautiful film. i know you and zoe went out to the northwest. did you drive out there? >> so we did -- the family in the film moves from monna. so we thought, "let's go do the road trip that the family does." a beautiful part of the country. so we took, like, a little vacay writing trip, stayed in bed and breakfasts. so zoe wanted to go on a hike one day out to this waterfall we heard about. >> seth: are you hiking people? >> no. >> seth: okay. >> we live in manhattan. [ laughter ] >> seth: you live in manhattan. yeah, that's not -- >> we're city dwellers. >> seth: yes, okay, gotcha. >> and it's, like, bear season, apparently. it's like end of august, early september. >> seth: yeah, that would be something i wouldn't know, i would have to be told. yeah. [ laughter ] >> no, we were told this. >> seth: okay, gotcha. >> but the bears are apparently, like, storing up for winter. so they're hungry. they know what's coming. so i asked the woman at the bed and breakfast, "hey, we are going for this hike. you know, the bears?" and she happened to be a woman who worked at the san diego zoo for, like, 30 years. she said, "well, you don't want to run into a bear because they pin you down and peel you like a banana." >> seth: uh-huh. [ laughter ] >> she was like, "if you're going to run into something, you know, a lion is better because they go straight for your throat." [ light laughter ] i was like, "thanks." [ laughter ] >> seth: yeah, this seems wildly unhelpful. yeah. [ light laug >> so i said to zoe, i was like, "let's go to, like, the mountaineering store, the trail store." see, i don't even know what to call the -- >> seth: yeah. >> the store one goes to, to like, buy, you know. [ light laughter ] >> seth: right. >> hiking apparel. >> seth: both of those sounded pretty good. yeah. >> and i said, "let's go talk to them." and i said, "hey, the bears." you know. >> seth: yeah. >> "you know, do i worry about this?" and they said, "no, you know, like, don't shower -- i mean, don't shampoo, condition, don't wear deodorant, you know. and if you're on your womanly times, you know, they can smell that." and i looked at zoe and that morning she had taken a bath, shampoo, conditioner, deodorant. [ light laughter ] she had put on sun screen on every inch of her body. and she was on her period. >> seth: there you go. [ laughter ] that's the hat trick for bears right there. [ laughter ] >> i -- you know, it was like a cartoon when my wife turned into this little edible bear treat. [ laughter ] you know, and they said, "just make a lot of noise as you walk." so we started on our hike. and so, she's having a great time bopping around the trails. and i'm just seeing her like this animated bear treat. [ laughter ] and so every five to ten seconds i [ laughter ] just kind of letting them know i was here. >> seth: that sounds like the least relaxing hike that's ever taken. [ light laughter ] >> i'm so embarrassed to say that i was terrified the whole time. >> seth: yeah, no. i think that is very accurate. and i think you behaved the right way and you both made it back. and congratulations, you just had a baby girl. so everything worked out great. >> yeah. [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: and congratulations on the film, it's really wonderful. thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> seth: paul dano, everybody. "wildlife" is in select theaters nationwide now. we'll be right back. 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"look what she's accomplished... she authored the ban on assault weapons... pushed the desert protection act through congress, and steered billions of federal dollars to california projects such as subway construction and wildfire restoration." "she... played an important role in fighting off ...trump's efforts to kill the affordable care act." california news papers endorse dianne feinstein for us senate. california values senator dianne feinstein it was time to update the bathroom but we wanted to work with a company we could trust and rebath made it effortless. a rebath design consultant came to our home and presented us ideas and products in a way that made our decisions simple. they took away the old installed the new and gave us the bathroom we've always wanted. call 925-233-6471 and save $1000 off your complete bathroom remodel [ applause ] ♪ >> announcer: next tuesday, "late night with seth meyers" is live with special editions of a closer look, amber night with seth meyers" podcast. you'll get a closer look and more downloaded it right to your phone. 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amber ruffin will do a live "amber says what."s will be two of our favorites, billy eichner and msnbc's chris hayes. again we will be live so you will hear the very latest results, and possibly accidental cursing. so mark your calendars everybody. we're very excited about that. [ applause ] before we get to all of tonight's guests, republicans have done so little, and what they have done is so unpopular that their only strategy for the mid-terms is to make up a racist scam to scare people. for more on this, it's time for a "closer look." [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> seth: the one constant in donald trump's life from his earliest days in manhattan real estate to now is that he is a scam artist. he literally sold scam products from a vitamin kit that was determined by a urine test to a trump deodorant. and i have to say the last person i would buy deodorant from is donald trump. [ light laughter ] i mean, look at how sweaty he gets. [ laughter ] can you imagine the ad for that deodorant? trump deodorant, always let 'em see you sweat
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amber says what. >> seth: give it up for amber, everybody!back for billy eichner. ♪ i've slain your dreaded dragon. for saving the kingdom what doth thou desire? my lord? hey good knight. where are you going? ♪ ♪ climbing up on solsbury hill ♪ grab your things, salutations. coffee that is a cup above is always worth the quest. nespresso. tis all i desire. did thou bring enough for the whole kingdom? george: nespresso, what else? with the roomba robot vacuum. only roomba uses 2 multi-surface rubber brushes to clean all your floors. and with patented dirt detect technology, roomba finds dirt throughout your home. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba. the cold and flu fightings. machine. you put in your machine. press the button to brew up powerful relief. to defeat your toughest cold and flu symptoms fast. new theraflu powerpods. press. sip. relief. i'm always going to be a maker. and i think a company is the coolest thing you can build. i'm adam, and i make robots. you never know when inspiration is going to strike. so i take my surface
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one of them is amber rudd and she's only just been taken back into the cabinet. amberto move away from brexit to the independent. thank goodness you are here. paris burns and fuelled riots. 23% increase in the year of diesel which were not fred couples use. —— a lot of french ca i’s fred couples use. —— a lot of french cars use. these protesters were forbidden, i think the english translation is high vizjackets, rather than yellow jackets. it sounds nicer in french. they are a very angry mix of people, the latest figures i have a 130 arrests, 20 injured just on the most beautiful avenue of the world, 106,000 protesters across —— 106 protesters across paris. they say once they have got their wages may for the absolute basics, they have been squeezed by government after government. they are notjust angry at present macron, and wanting him to go, he was a direct hit in may of last year so he has got some time before him. but this is very bad news. this is a group that doesn't have a leader, it is a group of very angry people that seem to be coming at it from different ang
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amber rudd returning to the cabinet a5 amber rudd returning to the cabinet as work and persons —— pensionsout these key individuals, nigel farage and boris johnson having drink5,. thi5 taken on the most turbulent day of there5a may's past week. not sure where it was taken but that was then having a get—together 5omewhere. was taken but that was then having a get-together somewhere. something 5lightly get-together somewhere. something slightly more personal in the daily mail. it is saying that the prime minister has told the newspaper how 5he minister has told the newspaper how she has come through the toughest week of her prime mini5tership, thanks to her husband, philip. she has paid tribute to" —— her rock. he 5ay5 has paid tribute to" —— her rock. he says he feels pain of the abuse from her mp5 says he feels pain of the abuse from hermp5 are than says he feels pain of the abuse from her mp5 are than she does. says he feels pain of the abuse from her mps are than she does. the times going on, if you have been following closely, regrouping has happened within cabinet with those new appoin
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so here to comment is one of our writers, amber ruffin. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> all aboard! >> seth: amber? >> i'm driving the train. >> seth: what train is that? >> the redemption train. now sometimes, public officials say crazy racist things. but that doesn't mean they can't get back on track. so, all aboard the redemption train! [ cheers and applause ] all you have to do is release a statement that says, "i'm sorry." so cindy hyde-smith released one that said, "any attempt to turn this into a negative connotation is ridiculous." okay. [ laughter ] not exactly an apology. but she can still keep the redemption train on track by holding a press conference where she acts really sorry. take it away, senator! >> we put out a statement yesterday. and we stand by that statement. [ laughter ] >> try again. >> we put out this statement yesterday. and it's available. and we stand by that statement. >> not quite. >> we made a statement yesterday. and we stand by the statement. and that's all i'm going to say about it. >> repeat after me. i'm sorry. >> i put out a statement yesterday. and that's all
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amber: yeah. lemonis: yeah. awesome. want to come over tomorrow and watch another one? amber: is this your home, the green screen? lemonis: i don't know where my home is because of you. amber: [ laughs ] ♪ lemonis: tonipatrick: hi!profit"... lemonis: the owner of an l.a. clothing company is known for his witty designs. lemonis: how much longer do you think kanye sells for? patrick: until he becomes president. [ both laugh ] lemonis: but the way he runs his business is anything but funny. your liabilities exceed your assets. his limited product offering has put a crimp in sales. woman: you guys have hoodies, or no? patrick: not right now. lemonis: his struggling storefront has been a drag on earnings. patrick: this is like my office. this is like my home. dan: but it's an expensive house. lemonis: despite his family's best efforts... kelly: he's the little brother. we're always trying to take care of him. lemonis: ... he's too afraid to tackle the problems. this is reckless. if i can't force him to face up to these hard truths... patrick: i mean, i don't want to be, like, sitting here just... lemonis: ...working? ...his brand won't just go out of style, it will go out of bu
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amber lee is live where votes will be counted. amber? >> reporter: we are inside of the officers club where senator dianne feinstein's party is it's to start at 8:00 when the polls close. we want to show you what it looks like you're inside. crews have been busy the past few hours setting the stage. you can see tables, chairs, balloons set up. there is a podium for the senator to speak at. when she is expected to speak later this evening. large screens have been set up so people can monitor results. hundreds of people are expected to attend. they close friends, family, and longtime supporters. we are also told that democratic party leaders will be here including former mayor willie brown, state assemblyman david schu, and, state senator scott weiner who is already here. again, hundreds of people are expected to attend and we will be here through the night to bring you the latest developments. >> amber lee, live in san francisco, thank you. >>> new york city and a washington, d.c. suburb are reportedly the front runners for amazon's new dual headquarters. crystal city, virginia has been reported to be one favored in part because it's near washington, d.c. amazon house t and owns the washington post. long island, new york is also reportedly closing in on a deal. according to "the wall street journal," amazon thinks having two smaller headquarters will ease concerns about housing and transit in the house -- those cities. >>> the u.s. commerce department said last year, online purchases represented 30% of retail sales, meaning 87% of purchases were made in those old-fashioned brick and mortar stores. >> ktvu's tom vacar reports on how despite the closing of many traditional retailers, famous internet brands are popping up and trying to cash in. >> to be here around the holidays and really connect with our customers, i'm excited to see what people think about the brand. >> reporter: thi
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amber rad back into the cabinet as work and pensions secretary. —— amber rudd. meanwhile questions remain over how many mps have submitted letters of no confidence, after leading euroscepticjacob rees no confidence, after leading eurosceptic jacob rees mogg announced he had. leading brexiteer and environment secretary michael gove said he will not resign. late this afternoon stephen berkley and amber work and pensions secretary. we have been discussing where this last week has left the prime minister and the brexit process. the strain of brexit is beginning to tear apart the fabric of westminster. the governing party does not want its leader to be prime minister but does not have any idea about anyone that can do a better job. a significant minority of the governing party do not like the deal and want to tear it down, and the labour party see they are going to fall against it. it is an historic week. jim callaghan for example managed to negotiate a bailout from the imf and spending cuts with no minister resigning, we are now in a porous state of politics. by the end of this process nearly every tory mp could be... like the labour front bench. given that suit berkley has been moved up... people are googling. his face is familiar. i have heard him speak in the house of commons. i went out for a walk yesterday and wished i had not because so many people had left theirjobs by the time
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amber rudd. a high profile. so the balance has shifted a bit in favor of the eu, which reflects the deal that may has brought back. what does it mean domestically that she has appointed amber rudd to the cabinet? does that mean there is a shift or maybe she has a deal with amber labor will be pleased with this. means, really, the most immediate consequence, i suppose, that a time when she is already in raging the brexiteers, replaced one brexiteer in her cabinet with a high profile remainder, so in a way it is a high-stakes strategy when you are already fighting a potential leadership challenge. is a long time loyal ally of may. she quit over a scandal that many thought was not her fault, i suppose it wasn't obvious appointment in many ways. the person amber rudd is replacing was a brexiteer. the short-term consequence is the balance has shifted. vonnie: right now sterling is stronger relative to the dollar. thank you. u.s. commerce secretary wilbur ross is poured cold water on a trade deal. he says they still plan to raise china in january and says not to expect too much from a trump- xi meeting later this month. ross tends to pour cold water on things but how much is he controlled in what happens between the president and xi? really doing here is lowering e
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amber lee is in commission were gavin newsom had some high- profile support this evening. amber ?>> reporter: the event was held at the venue behind me called the chapel. organizers say 1000 people rsvp including campaign volunteers and supporters. >> reporter: a long line of supporters waited at the venue hosting gubernatorial candidate avenue some -- gavin newsom. his bus arrived at the event following a day of campaign stops in los angeles and modesto. he spoke with me as he headed into the rally. >> seven days on this bus tour. it has been three years campaigning. this is exciting. >> i think all of you for believing in gavin from the start. you for everything you have done to get us here and everything you have done to make sure tomorrow brings the biggest blue wave. >> reporter: to do -- to democratic heavy hitters also spoke. >> you need an internet -- energetic visionary new governor. >> we need our strongest soldiers on the field. we need gavin in office.>> reporter: he got his start in politics in san francisco and california set an example for the nation and. >> what makes the city and california great is that we don't tolerate diversity, we celebrate diversity.>> reporter: he says the state believes in growth and inclusion and he will fight for social mobility and that income equality is the defining issue of our time. >> it is decisions not conditions that determine our fate and future and we will take back the house of representatives and god willing i will be your next governor. thank you very much. >> reporter: newsom plans to vote tomorrow at the masonic lodge verified. his election night party will be held in los angeles. frank? >> thank you, amber. his opponent john cox was in the east bay in his green bus stopping at an auto body shop in berkeley. he spoke to the owner and employees about the lack of affordable housing and what he >> dealersin the state. we have to do what we can to encourage a lot more building. >> if elected, he says he would call a special session to devote hundred% attention to the housing crisis. >>> a northbay jail goes on lockdown for time. the disturbance by one in mint that sent him and 20 others to the hospital.>>> new information on a shooting at a detox facility in moran. how the suspect was identified and taken into custody.>>> we are tracking the forecaster election day and beyond. we will see you after the break. four years ago, we rejected marshall tuck and his billionaire backers for superintendent of public instruction. and their handpicked candidate, former wall street banker marshall tuck. tuck's billionaires have spent over $25 million distorting tony thurmond's outstanding record on educa
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amber frey, the girlfriend of scott peterson, who murdered his pregnant wife. kessinger allegedly searching for how much much frey made on her book deal. and, "did people hate amber frey?" before watts pleaded guilty to all three murders, he would blame his wife for murdering the u understand me? >> and you choked her, or -- >> that's just, it's rage. >> good god almighty, son. >> reporter: we spoke to the family of chris watts today. they tell us they still believe his version of the story and say they still love and support him. david? >> clayton, thank you. >>> there's still much more ahead on "world news tonight" this friday. the search for the escaped inmate. >>> and the crash in the heartland. >>> the health warning involving popular medication. and the possible cancer risks. >>> and the postal worker seen throwing a package. and the issue of theft at your front door. the new a easy ways to track it all, to protect your packages. k.ght after e if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and a high risk for fracture now might not be the best time to ask yourself are my bones strong? life is full of make-or-break moments. that's why it's so important to help redu
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more you know that amber rudd is backin more you know that amber rudd is back in the cabinet replacing esther mcvey who resigned over the brexit deal. amberdraft brexit agreement. is this d raft the draft brexit agreement. is this draft deal better than the eu membership we have now? well, since we had the eu membership, since we have eu membership, we have had the referendum. we have to deliver that andl referendum. we have to deliver that and i think this version sounds to me like it does deliver on the things that are important to many of us who were in parliament and to me, thatis us who were in parliament and to me, that is making sure we protect the jobs, businesses and manufacturing in our communities but we take the opportunity is leaving the eu has. i represent a fishing town in hastings, and it is a great opportunity for them and us to be outside of the common fisheries policy. that is better and everyone will tell you, and those committed to the eu, that the common fisheries policy has not been a success for uk fishermen. i'm looking forward to making sure we can have real improvement when we leave the eu for the fishermen. thi
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amber alert, san jose police say that this>>> also in the bay area, and amber alert is issued for woman suspected of kidnapping her --children. authorities issued the alert after friends and family could not reach her. the mother was upset that her children had spent months in foster care. >> reporter: and amber alert on bay area highways for the whereabouts of this woman, 33- year-old diana, please say she kidnapped her two children, a one-year-old and an 11-year- old, it is here at the park that the objection took place, at 5:30 pm friday evening, the mother was visiting her children, a social worker was with them, the social worker took the daughter to the restroom, that is when the mother and son disappeared. when a social worker went to find them, the daughter also went missing. a friend of marrero says she is not worried about the safety of the children, but she had been upset when her children were placed in childcare. she is reportedly driving a car like this --they say that moreira was unhappy that her children was in the foster system. >> i just want them every day, she would say i want to see my kids every day, she didn't know they believe she is headed towards colorado springs,she said to be driving a gray mini cooper, similar to this one with the license plate of six u w mac l 25
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amber dubois. and carrie now ran a search organization, team amber, in memory of her daughter. she couldn't know, back then, the role she was going to play, the events she would set in motion. for now, it was who she knew. >> i put him in touch with marc klaas because it was up in northern california and they were up in the same area. >> marc klaas, a rare man with a rare skill -- how to find the missing. >>> coming up, a man who knows how it feels to lose a daughter and had learned from personal experience how to lead the search. >> we needed help from the police. and when we pressed them why should we be looking there, they said that's where the cell towers take us. >> when "dateline" continues. [ telephone ringing ] -whoa. [ indistinct talking ] -deductible? -definitely speaking insurance. -additional interest on umbrella policy? -can you translate? -damage minimization of civil commotion. -when insurance needs translating, get answers in plain english at progressiveanswers.com. ♪ -he wants you to sign karen's birthday card. it's a high honor. moderate-to-severe eczema, or atopic dermatitis, you never know how your skin will look. and it can feel like no matter what you do, you're itching all the time. but even though you see and feel your eczema on the surface of your skin, an overly sensitive immune system deep within your skin might actually be causing your eczema. so help heal your skin from within. with dupixent. dupixent is not a steroid, and it continuously treats your eczema even when you can't see it. at 16 weeks, more than 1 in 3 patients saw clear or almost clear skin, and patients saw significant reduction in itch. do not use if you are allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you have new or worsening eye problems, including eye pain or changes in vision. if you have asthma, and are taking asthma medicines do not change or stop your asthma medicine without talking to your doctor. help heal your skin from within. ask your eczema specialist about dupixent. help heal your skin from within. with advil liqui-gels, what stiff joints? what bad back? advil is... relief that's fast. strength that lasts. you'll ask... what pain? with advil liqui-gels. i am a techie dad.n. i believe the best technology should feel effortless. like magic. at comcast, it's my job to develop, apps and tools that simplify your experience. my name is mike, i'm in product development at comcast. we're working to make things simple, easy and awesome. keith morrison: the vigils, the reward, the facebook campaign, >>> the vigil, the reward, the facebook campaign, the fire, the detective all kept michelle biz and hopeful. they were nowhere and it was just at that point when mark stepped into the light of the family. >> i met the family in a dingy motel on the side of the freeway in hayward, california at about 11:00 o'clock in the morning, and they were all huddled inside this little room. to the le family, klaas was like the cavalry riding in. >> we were all in our pajamas, like disheveled. and we were all together on our laptops, trying to edit press releases, trying to organize all the interviews and -- reading the news, trying to talk to the police. >> and i looked around and i said, "the first thing you people need to do is get out of this room." >> dark and depressing? >> it was horrible. it was horrible. and they were so downtrodden. they had absolutely no idea of what to do or where to go. >> and he -- he sat down and gave us a list of what to do. we had to find a search center. we had to get volunteers. we had to position media in this sort of light. he was just giving us all sorts of tips. >> reporter: it made a world of a difference emotionally and on practical levels. >> reporter: but what marc klaas didn't do was burden the le family with his own story, didn't tell them about his own daughter polly, kidnapped two decades ago. >> that was the worst time in my life. it shattered me. it shattered my heart. >> 12-year-old polly klaas was snatched from her room in petaluma, california in the midst of a slumber party. polly's body was only discovered when her killer, arrested at a traffic stop two months later, showed detectives where he'd buried her. >> do you still live that awful week? >> yeah. >> all these years later? >> my work is my therapy. my work is my therapy. >> and that work -- through the klaaskids foundation -- is to help families find their missing loved ones. by providing families with a now proven, professional, methodical approach to their search efforts. >> you have to basically start in the center and work your way out, letting -- following statistics that the vast majority of people that are missing are going to be found, a, within a half-mile radius of where they went missing or, b, within a five-mile radius of where they went missing. >> boy, this is dismal work you do. >> it's not dismal. no, nothing that we do is dismal. it's hard work. it can be heartbreaking. it can be so sad. but it's not dismal. it's really good work and it's important work and there's just not enough people doing it. >> possibly because it's work that lays bare wounds. hundreds of times now, since polly's death, marc has shared his experience, learned through his own parental grief, with families just like michelle's, adrift and in shock. and the first order of business, said marc -- repair the relationship with the police, which had become very frayed indeed. >> we needed help from the police. and they slowly started to let us know where they thought we should be looking. and when we pressed them, "why should we be looking there? why should we be looking there?" they finally said, "well, because that's where the cell towers take us." >> michelle le, it turns out, went on a strange journey on the evening of may 27th, 2011. or at least her cell phone did. in the two hours after michelle abruptly left a training session here at the kaiser hospital in san francisco's east bay, that phone of hers left its indelible footprints through the congested streets of the east bay and then it turned onto a two-lane backroad and then a major freeway and then it pinged its way right back along the very same route back to the parking lot at the very moment the nursing instructor saw michelle's car drive into that parking lot, then rapidly reverse course and speed away into the dark. a puzzle. but getting that cell phone trail from the police was also a huge break, said marc klaas, who was now deeply involved in the search for michelle. >> it enabled us then to really hone in on what we needed to do and why we needed to do it. it was to prepare viable search locations for search teams. >> but the area was vast. much of it rugged, rural. the search for michelle would be tough, labor-intensive work. just the sort of thing marc klaas' organization knew how to do. >> when we saw the machine in motion was when we felt that, wow, this guy and this foundation has really got it together. we would have never thought of that on our own. >> klaas even flew in his director of search operations, who was one of the first volunteers to look for polly years before. >> we're going to be dealing with some pretty treacherous terrain today, as well as tomorrow. canyon areas, lots of rocks into the ravines. >> this was day 49 since michelle disappeared. and once again her san diego relatives loaded into cars around midnight and drove the 8 hours north to the san francisco bay. "dateline" was there, watching, as they gathered for a morning briefing to prepare them for the long day of searching ahead. >> if you take nothing else away from this presentation, take this portion right here, okay? every single search that we put you on today, tomorrow, we consider a potential crime scene. >> the police suggested a zone to be searched. but that's all about all the information they provided. >> we don't know exactly why but they say it's based on all the evidence in their timeline, they believe that something might have happened in this area. >> the area -- a narrow canyon in the hills east of the san francisco bay. as the search party made its way up the canyon, they tied off, here and there, pink ribbons. >> we've got a system of tape marking that we use and we report in to the investigators and they follow up. everything we're doing here is to support the police effort in bringing back michelle. >> a complication -- this area is a haven for the homeless. it's also a notorious dumping ground for murder victims. here, one of the searchers found an encampment -- and inside, a sleeping bag. >> ian, do you want to check out there's like a sleeping bag. >> you want me to pull this bag out? >> yeah. >> the bag was empty. but deeper inside the encampment something else was uncovered -- a large bone. this creek canyon, it soon became apparent, had been well-traveled by both creatures great and small. >> it's an animal, some mammal. >> but there was another bone at a creek crossing. searchers had already passed it by when our producer noticed it lying there. cow bone probably. and yet -- >> where do you think it could be from? >> i'm not sure. i think i'll have ian come check it out. that does look like a thigh bone. a hip joint. hey, ian. come take a look at this for me. there's no other bones around it, which is kind of interesting. >> it's big. >> it's pretty big, huh? >> that's just a really big ball. looking at a bone from a large mammal. >> let's tag it and let's do a more thorough article search around here, just in case. and then we'll get somebody to get the gear. >> you think you can scamper up to that little piece of rebar, whatever, is there, and tie a pink ribbon on there for us? >> the bone was tagged, sent off to a lab, examined. and yes, it was from the leg of a large mammal. in this case, a human. coming up, while michelle's friends and family are searching, police are making discoveries of their own. is one tiny clue a key to the mystery? >> we found an identification card from the nursing school. but it was not michelle's. not b. i mean, the game is all i know. you think back to your draft. it felt like a fantasy. but the second you know you can't compete anymore, you owe it to yourself, to your team, to find a fresh start. so, yeah, that's why i did it. that's why i walked away... from my fantasy league. 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(upbeat drumming) the ninja foodi, the pressure cooker that crisps. the ninja foodi, (nicki palmer) being a verizon engineer is about doing things right. and there's no shortcut to the right way. so when we roll out the nation's first 5g ultra wideband network, it'll be because we were the first to install the fiber-optics and small cells, and upgrade the towers that will change the way we learn, work and live. and i'll always be proud that we're not just building america's first 5g network. we're doing it right. [music playing] it's been months now since michelle le vanished >>> it's been months now since michelle le vanished from a hospital parking garage. her family remains hopeful she is still alive. police have been tracking the electronic trail, video, audio, text messages, cellphone pings. so many clues that seem to have picked up signs of michelle but also signs of someone else. here again, keith morrison. >> 49 days after michelle le disappeared, we stumbled over a human bone in the same area where michelle's cellphone had briefly pinged off a nearby tower. >> there are shorts here. >> but as the searchers scoured the immediate area, they understood it couldn't be her. the bits of clothing weren't right. and the bone was bleached by the sun, must have been there a long time. and, when they looked closer. >> that's a six-foot something it's not a 5'5" female. >> appalling, some other poor soul wound up here. but relief, too. it wasn't michelle. so the search and the mystery wore on for days and then for weeks and by the middle of august it all looked to be losing steam. on a typical san francisco summer afternoon as the fog rolled in krystine and michael brought us up to date on their efforts to find michelle. >> how long has it been now? >> twenty-seven -- it's been over two months. it's been about 72 days. >> how are you doing, the two of you, with all of this? i mean, how are you holding up? >> it's just weird. just trying to stay active and just trying to keep the word out. i'm trying to stay positive. >> right. >> it's just really-- trying to stay positive is the hardest part. the hardest times for me are at night. getting in bed and thinking, like, "gosh, i wish michelle was in -- i hope michelle's a bed." >> yeah. >> i mean, you clearly have decided-- you've decided she's still alive. >> uh-huh. it's not over, and it's not going to be over until we get her home. >> and so that very evening, they hosted a fund raising event at a nearby restaurant and a few days later on august 20tth, the 85th day of michelle le's disappearance, the san diego family again piled into their cars just after midnight and made the long drive up the coast to launch their eighth search. time had faded the posters taped to their cars. the creek bed to be searched seemed desperately far away from any place where a body might be dumped, or a woman might reasonably be held captive. still -- >> her cell phone last pinged there, so you know, they tracked where her cell phone ended up after she disappeared and it's all around rural east bay and it's such a huge area. >> it was 100 degrees in the waning days of summer, and it seemed to have impacted turnout. as the number of volunteers dwindled. suddenly the search leader called in a discovery, some female clothing partially buried in the sand. >> connie, i'm down by the creek. there's women's underwear by the tree. almost like light pink white. >> it is, it turns out, another false lead. so they pack up another fruitless day in a case gone cold, or so it seemed to michael and krystine. but oh, what they did not know. that during all those weeks and months in which the family had been searching for a living woman, a police murder investigation had been very active indeed. and now, in the last days of august, inspector fraser ritchie was in fact closing in on a very hot target. but to understand how he got there we need to go back almost to the beginning. it was minutes before midnight may 28th, 29 hours after michelle le disappeared. ritchie had gone to pay a midnight visit to michelle's old high school friend, giselle esteban. >> how long has she been missing? >> since yesterday. >> and have you guys tried calling her? >> mm-hmm. >> i have no idea how to help you at that point -- i've actually been trying to look for her. >> since when? >> for almost a week now. to tell her to stay away from my daughter. >> so clearly there was some animosity between giselle esteban and michelle le. and so inspector ritchie and his partner brought giselle downtown to the police station for a more in-depth conversation. >> i understand at one point, you and michelle were close friends. is that right? >> i considered her my sister. >> and then what happened? >> she made a mistake. scott made a mistake. >> and that -- was that when you were with scott or had you guys broken up, or -- >> no. we were still together. they made the mistake twice. >> and then giselle told a strange little story. she was pregnant, remember, with her second child and said she went to the hayward kaiser hospital for a pre-natal check up just hours before michelle disappeared. she said she spotted her old friend at a distance. >> were you surprised to see michelle there? >> yes. >> how did it make you feel when you saw her? >> at first surprised and then annoyed, and then i thought, okay. keep your blood pressure down. otherwise, you're going to lose this baby. >> strong feelings. but giselle esteban herself was not so strong. tiny and pregnant. hardly seemed physically capable of overpowering and murdering the larger michelle le, let alone finding a way of disposing her body. so they sent her home and later that afternoon finally got a look inside michelle's car, as we did much later when the detective showed it to us. nothing had changed. nothing was touched. here the morbid sense we were somehow violating a sad and very personal space. this is what inspector ritchie found -- a crime scene. >> once we get the car opened, you can see there's blood wiped across here in the plastic, a little bit on the floor mats. and then you can see there's more droplets or blood dropping down going in a straight down pattern. >> police also found some blood smeared on the floor of the garage where michelle's car had been parked. were you able to make a judgment about what would have happened when she got to her car? >> she was attacked most likely here. because from the looks of it, it looks like she ended up being placed in the back seat. there was a bloody confrontation here and then there's more blood back there. that you can see here it's been moved around a bit. it's a little bit smeared up. and there's more than one location. >> clearly a very violent and physical assault. who could have done this? a fresh look at the surveillance tapes may offer a clue. watch what michelle does as she walks to her car, parked to the far right-hand side of the lot. michelle makes a wide sweeping turn to the left, away from the car, then walks back to the right. a few seconds later it appears she stopped. what happened? did she see somebody she knew? or somebody she didn't want to see? ritchie felt he may have answered that question when he found on the passenger seat of michelle's car, a little piece that would end up fitting into a very large puzzle. >> we found a identification card from the samuel merritt nursing school, that michelle was attending. but it was not michelle's. there was no reason for that to be there. >> the name and face were plainly visible on the card partially wedged into the seat cushion. as if somebody had left it there by mistake. so ritchie called the school. and was told -- >> oh, that's our new instructor that's starting in a week. and then i could hear in the back of the phone -- "her i.d. card's gone. it's missing from my desk." >> the card had been stolen, but by whom? here's the thing about these identity cards. they are actually key cards. this is mine at nbc here. and whenever i'm in the headquarters building at 30 rockefeller plaza i use them to swipe the key card on that little box there. it makes an electronic recording of the use of the card at that moment in time and at this place. and then of course i'm being watched by a security camera at the same time. in fact, you can't go anywhere in this building without being seen by security cameras. the security team at the nursing school did the same thing. they just looked for the computer record of the key card being used and they pulled up the security video from that moment and that place, and voila, there was their thief. >> so i had him -- had them send me the still photographs. and when i looked at it, i immediately identified that it was giselle esteban. >> the picture was dated may 26th, one day before michelle le disappeared. so what else did she do that day? ritchie got a subpoena for all the school's security camera footage from may 26th. what he saw on those videos was both strange and disturbing. and moved giselle esteban to the top of the list of persons of interest. >> coming up -- the strange video trail of giselle esteban the day michelle disappeared? >> it shows her walking around with a lab coat on pretending to be an instructor. >> what was she up to, when dateline continues. when dateline continues ♪ wingardium levitoga ♪ wingardium leviosa ♪ thanks. the perfect gift isn't just about getting something. it's about getting someone. nobody knows the wizarding world like we do. barnes & noble. kleenex was made for this. strong... with a soft, soothing touch. kleenex soothing lotion. america's softest lotion tissue. you're going to do your thing. and no period is gonna slow you down! with tampax, you get protection that moves with you for total comfort. choose pearl for your chill, pocket for your moves, and active for your hustle. do your thing with tampax. 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[ready forngs ] christmas? no, it's way too early to be annoyed by christmas. you just need some holiday spirit! that's it! this feud just went mobile. with xfinity xfi you get the best wifi experience at home. and with xfinity mobile, you get the best wireless coverage for your phone. ...you're about to find out! you don't even know where i live... hello! see the grinch in theaters by saying "get grinch tickets" into your xfinity x1 voice remote. a guy just dropped this off. he-he-he-he. keith morrison: what you're watching is far better than any eyewitness-- what you're seeing is an exact record of a strange moment in time. >>> what you're watching is far better than any eyewitness. what you're seeing is an exact record of a strange moment in time. this is giselle esteban at michele le's nursing school the day before michelle vanished. why she was here was a mystery. but what she did? that inspector ritchie pieced together from giselle's electronic trail, which picked her up in the morning at the nursing school posing as a prospective student. while there, she stole an instructor's key card, then appeared to test whether it would work by entering this break room. >> and then at 5:30 in the evening when the -- the campus is closed she gains access through the back door using that electronic key card. >> same swipe card? >> yes. throughout the campus there are -- in the classrooms and in the hallways there's -- there's cameras. and it shows giselle walking around with a lab coat on, her glasses up. and she's going around turning on computers. >> weird. >> yeah. >> giselle can also be seen with a class roster stolen from an instructor's office. >> and you can see the class roster because it has all the students' photographs on there. so it's not just -- just typed, it's photographs. so you can see that it's a class roster. and it looks like she's walking around, as if she's pretending to be an instructor or something like that. she's in samuel merritt for an hour and a half or so and then she leaves. >> all of this the night before michelle le disappeared. what was giselle doing? and then ritchie learned, from questioning witnesses, that on the morning after michelle disappeared esteban went, with her daughter in tow, to an apple store. and sure enough, there she was on the store's security camera. that's her there at the top left of your screen, having one of the employees unlock an iphone. >> she told the apple employee that her daughter had put a code into the phone and locked it. once he unlocked it, the phone started binging and ringing. >> and just at that very moment, as cell phone records showed, michelle le's iphone began pinging on a cell phone tower not far from the apple store. now it was a matter of following the signal. which led to this chuck e. cheese restaurant a few miles away where the phone turned up again. >> giselle was seen on a video, showing a white iphone. remember, this is the day after michelle's disappearance, when her friends and family were frantically calling and texting her. and look at this surveillance footage. looks like giselle is sending out text messages. and at that moment, as records show, michelle's iphone was pinging off a nearby cell tower. to ritchie it seemed quite clear. giselle esteban was the one using michelle's phone to send those creepy text messages to worried friends and family and to him. and giselle did all this while on a shopping trip with her daughter. >> and she's on that phone roughly the same time that she's getting text messages from the classmates and family members. and things like that. and then i sent her a second text message at -- roughly at 3:15 in the afternoon saying, "this is not a joke. this is the police department. you need to contact me right now." that was the last contact. that's when her phone went off. >> the evidence was mounting. so ritchie stepped up his surveillance of giselle. >> we placed a tracker on her car. >> why? >> to see if she would take us to a location that michelle would possibly be. >> but that didn't happen. not to say, though, her behavior wasn't suspicious. remember the vigil the le family held a week after michelle's disappearance, the one attended by giselle's ex-boyfriend, scott? it turns out giselle was there too -- sort of. the tracking device showed giselle circling the block as michelle's family pleaded for help. and later it showed her driving past scott's house. why? ritchie was all but sure now. giselle had something to do with michelle's disappearance. the question now was did she have some help? >> it was something that we had to look at. >> and if so, who? >> yeah, dive into her life, who's her friends, and who can we talk to that knows giselle? >> ritchie consulted an alameda county assistant d.a., a guy named "butch," butch ford. >> some of my colleagues, their response was, "well, who helped her do it," because she's a woman, she's pregnant. in order to do this, she had to have help. >> prosecutors had a hard time believing esteban was physically capable of killing michelle le all by herself. >> we encouraged them to make sure they eliminated any possible suspects, such as the father of giselle's child. >> that would be scott the ex-boyfriend, butch is referring to. and so everybody's antennae went up in late july of 2011, 63 days after michelle's disappearance as the le family searched the hills for her, detective richie got a very strange phone call from scott, who sounded out of breath. >> saying that he believed that he had found michelle's phone. i asked him, "where did you find michelle's phone?" in the back seat of his car. >> coming up, at first police doubt scott's story. >> had we missed something? is he the other part of this? >> or could he be giselle's next victim? >> did you have any concern about scott's safety? >> yes. >> you deserve to die for your lies. this is your last warning. >> when dateline continues. >> when dateline continues once i started looking for it was a no-brainer. i switched to geico and saved hundreds. that's a win. but it's not the only reason i switched. the geico app makes it easy to manage my policy. i can pay my bill, add a new driver, or even file a claim. woo, hey now! that's a win-win. thank you! switch to geico®. it's a win-win. you can check off your to-do list and wish list. the moment you realize, at lowe's you can satisfy both your lists on a single budget. ♪ (gasps) ♪ (coughs) ♪ (coughs) (sneezes) for real cold and flu protection. you can't protect them from an imaginary cold. but with lysol, you can help protect them from the real one. lysol disinfectant spray kills the #1 cause of the cold and clorox wipes don't. lysol. what it takes to protect. >>> happy thanksgiving. today president trump warned there could be a government shutdown next month over the border wall. the president suggested he could hold up a funding deal if the congress doesn't pay for his key campaign promise. >>> and tennis legend king celebrated her 75th birthday today. she's known for the influence of her passage of title ix, the 1972 law that banned sex discrimination in education and sports programs. back to dateline. >>> it's hard to tell from this video, but the prime suspect in michelle le's disappearance, giselle esteban, is tiny, barely 5'2." and at the time she was questioned by police she was three months pregnant with her second child, which made detectives wonder. >> is there somebody else involved with her? >> it was a question often repeated at the alameda county d.a.'s office. >> we have an able-bodied young lady who disappears from a public place. so automatically, our minds went to, "were there more -- was there more than one person involved?" >> and so when ritchie got a call from giselle's ex-boyfriend claiming to have found michelle's iphone, he was worried. >> i was very concerned that -- had we missed something? is he the other part of this? then it's why is he telling us this? if he is another part of this, why is he finding this and telling us about evidence? >> and that was the key question. why would scott admit to having incriminating evidence? was he trying to outsmart the cops by pretending to be helpful to have found michelle's iphone when he had it all along? or was he afraid? afraid somebody was trying to set him up. which might have been the reason why scott shared this document with detectives. this is a temporary restraining order. against giselle esteban. in signed declarations both scott and his mother told how their family was awakened early one morning by scott's car alarm. scott went to investigate. >> and while he's out front he hears his mother screaming. he goes inside. giselle is inside of his house. she's inside his room tampering with his computer. >> sound familiar? it was the same thing esteban was doing at the nursing school. >> and when was this vis-a-vis the murder? >> four days before, on the tuesday. >> but there was something else. a piece of evidence you have to hear to believe. scott told the detectives that four months before michelle's disappearance giselle harangued and threatened him. verbal attacks so alarming, he recorded some on his iphone just in case something bad ever happened. this one in scott's car, their small daughter sitting in the back seat listening. you listen closely. you're about to hear the real giselle esteban. >> i asked you can we just be honest about michelle because she's the one issue that i really, really am having a hard time dealing with. >> that's not what you said. >> yes. >> we didn't talk for days. >> okay. starting from now, we are going to be honest about michelle. do you understand me? whether you sleep with her, whether you share food with her, whether you talk to her, you will be honest with me. look at me! you will be honest with me regarding her! otherwise, i will take your life and hers. and you can take that to the grave with you. >> why? >> why? because you lied about her so many times that it's hard to believe that you didn't sleep with her and knock her up. you deserve to die for your lies, as does she. and you will. if you do it again. this is your last and final warning. >> why? >> do you understand me? it's your last and final warning. >> inspector ritchie listened to giselle's tone careen from aggrieved to furious to threatening, all in less than a minute. this was far from the subdued woman he'd met back in may. >> it was apparent that she was a violent person. >> did you ever have any concern about scott's safety? >> yes. and we advised scott that. if it is giselle, you have to be concerned for your safety as well. >> that he might well be a target? >> yeah. >> esteban, it was clear in the recording, had become fixated on her old friend, was convinced michelle had somehow broken up her relationship with scott. and yet, as ritchie took pains to discover -- >> michelle and scott were nothing more than just friends. she had a boyfriend. scott was just -- just one of the many friends that she had. but the only person in this world that seemed to think that there was more to it was giselle. >> prosecutor butch ford heard the audio too and read the 1,500 pages of texts and emails scott gave police. >> for the better part of six years, she had an obsession with michelle. her text messages were filled with hatred towards michelle at every step of the way. and then towards the -- the last four months or so, they were filled with hatred towards scott, wishing him -- wishing his death. >> wow. >> they were just filled with hate towards the two of them, with blame towards michelle for ruining her relationship and essentially breaking her family. >> do you think there's any truth to that at all? >> only from the standpoint that giselle believed it was michelle's fault. so if, in terms of responding to that question, the answer has to be, "yes, there's truth to it." >> from her perspective -- >> but from giselle's perspective, because she had to blame somebody. >> this is a very disturbed individual. >> yes. there's no question about that. from my perspective, when we're dealing with in particular murders, my position is that they're all sort of screwed up. >> yeah. >> because the normal person doesn't react that way. i mean, we have to believe that, right? >> right. >> the normal person does not react that way. so at some level anytime somebody -- one person commits a murder, there's something that's -- that's loose in their head. there has to be. >> butch ford may know more than most about the parameters of human nature. he helped raise eight younger siblings while growing up in south central l.a., worked his own way though law school. and now as a prosecutor seeks out sound advice from someone who has seen it all -- his own grandmother. >> i have dinner every wednesday at my grandmother's house. >> the first female african-american judge appointed in alameda county. >> i've never had a case that i haven't spoken to her about, and run ideas by her in terms of trial presentation, closing arguments, things like that. i always run it by her. >> but this case was special. ford's grandmother was struck by the les' devotion to michelle, by their determination to find answers. but it was clear there were still too many questions to take this case to court. >> the theory was that giselle had done something to bring about her demise. it was just was a question of -- >> what. >> yes. of what and how we'd prove it. >> in fact, without a body, how could they prove there was a murder at all? >>> coming up -- in a strange twist of fate, the mother of amberlle along with her new dog. >> she jumps up on me and takes off again. i followed her and noticed rope sticking out of the ground. >> a dramatic discovery, when dateline continues. dateline continues can be tough on his body. that's why he wears dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles. they provide all day comfort so he has the energy to keep moving. delivering joy every step of the day. dr. scholl's. born to move. what's the #1 new skincare product in 2018? olay whips. absorbs faster than the $100, $200, and even $400 cream. feels amazing. i really really love this. i will 100% swap up my moisturizer. can i have it? olay whips. [church music] keith morrison: all saints catholic church in hayward, california-- >>> all saints catholic church in hayward, california. hardly the sort of place a detective would expect to get a hot tip in a murder case. but that's exactly what happened. it was the priest who called the police, wound up talking to inspector ritchie, and told him a story about an o
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£29 endowment fund full stop former home secretary amber rudd put some money towards that, in the net. —— endowment fund. and former home secretary amber that it brings me back to that day where i got stabbed, so it makes me feel a little paranoid in a way. if there we re little paranoid in a way. if there were more officers there, perhaps the criminals would recede?” were more officers there, perhaps the criminals would recede? i would like more police officers to be able to do more than we do now but we are never going to be on every street, every day, and i think that's a slightly different point.” slightly different point. ijust wa nt to slightly different point. ijust want to say i spoke to our minister for policing. my name is saundra, andi for policing. my name is saundra, and i spoke about cuts. there is one in bedfordshire. making people aware of the consequences of carry a knife. they need to be aware of the bad character rap when you go into the courts. it is life limiting. why are to be teaching our kids about the life limiting opportunities if they get a bad rap by carrying a knife? have to read this message then we will h
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amber: right. right. lemonis: and i give her a lot of credit for being resilient. popcorn is still good. amber: popcorn is awesome, and she's a lot of fun. lemonis: she is. ♪ . >> tonight on the profit... >> marcus, nice to meet you. >> i go inside jacob maarse, a high-end florist and gift shop in pasadena, california that hasn't earned a profit since its founder died in 2010. how much money will this business lose this year? >> close to 200,000. >> sloppy business practices... do you have an inventory system? >> no. >> together with lax management has driven down sales and piled up debt. so are we going the right way? >> i believe so. >> we need to know where we're going. if they don't make changes, this 47-year-old family business will be forced to close its doors. this business is a total mess. i'm fighting against time to light a fire under these people... this is the thing that will help us go from the red to the black in one month. before this business crumbles and dozens of employees are out on the street. you don't know how to manage this place. >> well...[blathers] >> my name is marcu
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amber rudd?” have had several very good conversations with amber rudd. recently and she has gone into the cabinet and things change but i've been pleased to see what she has been talking to me and others about as a backbencher is converting now interaction with the important position she has in the important position she has in the cabinet. it's time to stop putting party first, let's put the country first and get the coalition of mps together to have a deal that delivers on the referendum and is the only deal has a chance of reuniting our divided country. 0ne reuniting our divided country. one more question, lots of people will say it has stephen king and got the answer that has eluded everyone. explain what this norway plus a deal is and how you would get it through because you later what a general election before that would be a possibility. two things, first of all, we primers the's deal, if she puts it to parliament, —— the prime minister's deal. let's assume that fails, then there is various options, i do not see a general election, i don't see us
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amber, she's the breaking news editor at the daily caller and we will start there with broward county, amber, look, so they missed the machine recount deadline by 2 minutes. so election night number stand, they completed the state mandated hand out in two hours, are voters themselves up in arms? >> well, they should be. seems like broward county election supervisor brenda snipes has not been accurately counting all of the votes that should be counted. from the beginning to have process there's been absolute disaster in addition to number of allegations of misconduct in ms. snipes' past, she's been accused of not giving information to both parties involved in the case including how many ballots they were left to count in initial ballots, how -- in terms of -- in addition to that brenda snipes -- excuse me -- arthel: that's okay. hold that thought for me because we will go back to dr. snipes? a moment. look, a deadline is a deadline or is or can any group contest that the recounted votes by machine in broward county won't count because of two minutes, you know, if you pull up an app on your phone you call a car service at least they'll wait 4 minutes for you? >> right, i'm not sure who would actually contest this because when you look at the results of the recount there would be more votes going to rick scott in this case -- arthel: listen, and understand where my perspective on this, it's about voters having confidence in the system, not about the outcome, i understand as it looks at this moment what we do know that the votes may not be in favor of senator nelson but that aside, i mean, people have said your one vote counts get out there, to hear and peter doocy's report just now dr. snipes saying, i think the number was like 2,000 votes, you know, that were set in the wrong file or they weren't counted, you know, what are people to make of what's happening? >> right, there's no doubt that voters should be concerned that their votes are not being counted in this election, broward county is not the only place where ballots have gone missing. after the initial machine recount in palm beach they discovered that they were missing so many votes that this could not have been due solely to recount and certain precincts of their county that were not included in recount and were trying to figure out where those were coming from. voters should absolutely be concerned. i hear people talk about the integrity of the elections, democrats are still talking about the 2016 election with president donald trump and saying that that was illegitimate because of russia -- arthel: wait, amber. no, no, stop, don't do that. don't mix those up. we are not talking about russia and we had proof from our intelligence agencies that russia did interfere in our election. >> but not that they changed any votes. arthel: incompetence, that's what we are talking about by people from america, don't confuse the two. regarding broward county there have been major, many complaints over the years, i ask you what is the future of dr. brenda snipes who is the supervisor of elections in broward county and also, i mean, is there any real talk of fixing the antiquated and dysfunctional voting systems in florida and across the nation for that matter? >> right, in terms of the machine recount what they used there are these automatic standard machines in my opinion those should be used in the first place as opposed to hand-counting ballots, seems much more efficient way as machines don't overheat. jeb bush was the first who first appointed brenda snipes and he's now calling for her to be removed an
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amber rudd was let down by her officials. how do you see it? all credit to amber rudd because she did the honourable thing and the deal with the british civil service has long been that civil serva nts service has long been that civil servants give their best professional advice to ministers and if things go wrong, ministers take a hit and responsibility. too often in the last few years ministers have avoided that and left officials to ta ke avoided that and left officials to take it. they can‘t defend themselves in public. i admire amberand this tells worrying story about the level of professionalism within the home office. level of professionalism in what sense? deliberately so, orjust inept? not deliberately so, but i'm afraid it was all in the detail of the report. but it sounds like there isa the report. but it sounds like there is a whole litany of things that went wrong, of poor communication will stop so it does sound like the home secretary, at a very difficult sensitive moment, had a level of real professional support she needed. why that happened, i think the home office need to answer. it doesn‘t feel to me like the problems have yet been sorted out, but i‘m sure there are lessons in this report that the home office should be learning. there are two dimensions do what she was saying this morning. being let down by officials by not getting a proper briefing on something is one thing. when she talks about deliberate lea ks when she talks about deliberate leaks against her that were designed to damage her, tha
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