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eight days remaining as buddy buddy modeled on from from. but when we were really really. did you see it and it is full of all the the brick bring full full [inaudible] yes yes. and it isn't it a little bit of light like can women women to two other. thanks so we we try try take a look around. was anyone you would not tell not actually again again and what have you done with the women who want what are you learning and not out of that that we can which each. other because they say that i am saying things to us wall may not. most of the site. he was. one of the visits to change. nine i use these. this women willing it was a good to look. that's it's just. changing just what it's like rice me is sometimes. things to us. engine restaurants as an exercise a listen i take it that that i find out that you're not given time judged all the what working about. it was it was not cultural society to come home and on the on the conference is is like trying to preaching the kingdom all right. so you see your your phone calls from. twenty four now. has his own little world may never to
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so now this perception that trump is buddy-buddy and jared is so buddy-buddy with saudi arabia, while they are seemingly covering up the death of a journalist, while he's attacking journalists still. he was -- >> we actually have that sound bite, let's play it. >> but greg is smart. by the way, never wrestle him. you understand that? never. any guy that can do a body slam, he's my kind -- he's my guy. >> okay, but does this matter? so that obviously is the president talking about fortay who's running in montana who last year did body slam a journalist. but just stay with me on this. does that matter to voters? because those who are not politicos, those who don't watch the news every day, when you just talk to people on the street who are tired of politics who say i want to lead a better life is focusing on something like the president's making a huge mistake backing fortay who body slammed a journalist. do you think voters care? >> i think they've tuned it out. i think this administration has been nothing but drama. i don't think there's going to be a khashoggi effect. the polling has
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i said, buddy, buddy, buddy. [ laughter ] i said, i'm going to be around for a long, long time.ound for when you get married. when you have kids. but you've got to make all that happen in the next five years. [ laughter ] [ applause ] otherwise, you're right. but, you know. but he got it. he goes, no, dad, i'm serious, dad. he doesn't know my name either. [ laughter ] he goes, there's kids at my school, in my grade, their parents in their 30s. and you're 64. i said, whoa, whoa, whoa. that doesn't mean anything. it doesn't. i said, who's to say their parents aren't going to die in a fiery car crash tomorrow? or a murder/suicide? you don't know that. >> jimmy: right, a really good point. >> by the way, who says you're going to outlive me? if you want me to be honest with you. [ audience moaning ] >> no, seriously, some murdering clown could come into your bedroom and smother you with a balloon animal. you could die in the dentist's chair, it happens all the time. happens all the time. i gave him a kiss on the forehead, get a good night's sleep, we'll talk about this in the morning
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all those who indicated this administration is buddy-buddy with russia. here's another example where the administration is putting american is interests first. if you are not going to abide by this agreement and stand in and allow you to take advantage of it. what's being done is what needs to be done with russia. hold them accountable to the agreements they agreed to and if not, we will talk away and hold them accountable in the future. >> put on your hat as a member of the ways and means committee. tax cuts and increases and all of that. the president over the weekend told reporters that republicans are working on a major middle class income tax and goes so far as to say he hopes to have it early november before the mid-term elections. house of representatives is not even in session. there is only 10 days until november. when are you planning to be back in washington with the other 234 republican members of congress to vote on this proposed tax plan that the president has? >> what i anticipate is a proposal coming out, working on tax reform 2.0 and tax
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emerged today only occurred a day after mike pompeo was in riyadh and looking like he was being very buddy-buddy bin salman. and i suspect the turks didn't like that, and so they put this out there basically to encourage the u.s. to be tougher. and i think the u.s. actually needs to be tougher. i mean i think an important point here, don, that gets lost is, you know, people tend to think that mbs is saudi arabia, but the reality is he only became crown prince last year. saudi arabia has been around for decades and decades without mbs as the crown prince. i mean there's a lot of people who are saying we can't afford to sacrifice our interests with saudi arabia, and i agree we do have interests with saudi arabia. nobody is saying we should go to war with the saudis or entirely cut them off, but we need to hold these killers responsible, and it seems like from the evidence we have, the number one person who needs to be held responsible is mbs. he has been very reckless. he has done a lot of things including kidnapping the prime minister of lebanon. they were completely out of bounds. so, he's done
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>> i subscribe to that aanalysis but we know this particular family wants to be buddy buddy with the saudis for their own personal gain. part of trump not intervening, jared kushner definitely dealing with saudis, for a long time for their own pockets. watching the trump family how they abdicate in this humanitarian issue because it will hurt their bottom line. it's actually not about america. >> similar to russia? >> it's personal. all right. when "up" returns, one of the ugliest midterms in recent memory. how things are getting nasty on the campaign trail. when you rent from national... it's kind of like playing your own version of best ball. because here, you can choose any car in the aisle, even if it's a better car class than the one you reserved. so no matter what, you're guaranteed to have a perfect drive. [laughter] (vo) go national. go like a pro. see what i did there? because when you want to create an entirely new feeling, the difference between excellence and mastery, is all the difference in the world. introducing the all-new lexus es. a product of mastery. experience am
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something i didn't know about until i started writing this book are buddy benches, and i learned about this -- >> jimmy: buddy benches? >> buddy family was decided ta when they had gone to visit schools in germany, he saw these buddy benches that if e feeling lonely, they could sit on. and other kids at the school had a responsibility or really the opportunity to go sit down and say you're not alone. like what do you want to talk about and just be a buddy. and so when he came back to the u.s., he asked his school if they could have a buddy bench. basically -- they said yes, and then he started an effort. now there are buddy benches in hundreds of schools in every single state. >> jimmy: wow. [ cheers and applause ] >> isn't that great? >> jimmy: sit on the bench. tell about yourself. you also talk in here about bullying which is really -- it's just an awful thing. i mean especially with social media and stuff today, i just go like, "ugh." and i'm sure you have been a a victim of bullying. >> for as long as i can remember. >> jimmy: you fight back. >> well, i respond with kindness which is i think standing up, but hopefully not
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donald trump's buddy, his buddy at "the national enquirer" launched a smear campaign against ted cruzme. i talked to donald trump and i asked him do you think you might want to apologize to heidi cruz and attacking her looks? well, we never got that apology and i think that's one of the most extraordinary things about it. donald trump has never apologized for what he said about ted cruz but apparently that's okay for ted cruz and what an indication of how transactional our politics have become and the degree to which republicans have been willing to swallow and look the other way, even when it comes to the most personal insults that you can possibly imagine. and by the way, you know, has donald trump changed? is he a different person from the time when ted cruz described him as a pathological liar? now it's apparently okay. >> kimberly, he is obviously in texas, a place where the immigration debate is always pretty much front and center but i think we can guess pretty easily that in addition to maybe saying nice things now about ted cruz and bad things for sure about o'rourke, he is g
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buddies, hollywood buddies. when he became the republican he put aside those childish things. he's a different type in what he was 11 years ago. >> guest: i agree. >> host: those of us who are of a forgiving nature, you know, but you've got to be remorseful if you done something in the past, but but i saw what you sd about how doing something for others could keep you positive. i thought about, he's with making america better, like you talked about, the low unemployment. so maybe that is playing into what you said. he's getting his optimism making america a better place tragic i think he loves having, i believe that's the sole reason for its existence. i asked and hope it's okay if i say this, in a private moment with one of his helmet moves that i'm close to, i asked what was the plan before you decide to run for president? this person who is innocently told me he has a cough place over scotland. his dream was to retire there. i believe last year or this year. and to golf and to all his buddies. the guy was a king in his own little -- he didn't need this. you have to ask yourself, why would he do this, if it weren't for giving back to the country that gave him so much and passing it down to his children and his grandchildren? i don't think anyone would question he loves very, very much. you can criticize them all you want. that family is precious. it are good tight solid comfort give us an end up with he loves america and he wants to give back to all of us. >> host: i couldn't agree more, but i thought about as i read through your take on his mental status, you know, nixon wasn't under near as much fire and not near as much being pursued by the justice department as this president has been. i would submit illegally so. but yet he stays positive when nixon allegedly was going and talking to ghosts at the white house and the paintings on the walls and whatnot. this president still proceeding optimistic high gear, so -- >> guest: you would never know. if you did know what was g
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buddy. come on, buddy. give it up for brockhampton, everybody. good to see you, buddyate night with seth meyers." thank you for watching. have a great night. i hope to see you tomorrow. bye-bye, everybody. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> announcer: from 30 rockefeller plaza in new york, it's "late night with seth meyers." tonight -- wanda sykes, comedian david cross, author nafissa thompson-spires, featuring the 8g band with thaddeus dixon. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ladies and gentlemen, seth meyers. >> seth: good evening, i'm seth meyers. this is "late night." how is everybody doing tonight? that's great to hear. in that case, let's get to the news. president trump held a campaign rally for senator ted cruz in texas last night and spoke for
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buddy. come on, buddy. give it up for brockhampton, everyby. good to see you, buddy. [ cheers and applause ] brockhampton.ies, voting them billions in tax breaks while voting against lowering the cost of prescriptions and voting against protections for pre-existing conditions for the people he represents. brat serves his donors' interests. we need someone who's for us. patrick morhe admits it.obbyist for opioid companies. well, i was a private lawyer, and we did do some lobbying work. then, as attorney general, he went easy on opioid companies like cardinal health, who paid his wife to be their lobbyist. your wife's firm has made roughly a 1.5 million bucks from cardinal. you'd have to talk and take a look at those numbers. the person who makes the best case against patrick morrisey... some lobbying work. ...is patrick morrisey. smp is responsible for the content of this advertising. ♪[ eers and applause ] >> jimmy: myorhanks to troah, lucas hedges, gigi hadid, brockhampton once again. t cheers and applause ] and the roots riere from philadelphia, pennsylvania. stay tuned for "late night with seth meyers.
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buddy. hi buddy. oh, i missed you. hi buddy. let me show you guys around here. and tour. we are on the universal lot. this is where we shoot "the voice." this is also where they shoot many, many movies. they will come in and light all this up, bring in bus loads of extras and make these streets come alive. yes, you are doing so good. we headed inside "the voice" sound stage. look. closed set, sonny, but you are getting the inside scoop, buddy. come on. so sonny could check out my trailer. sonny come on in. look. this is where i take all my naps and relax. look, i read all my scripts here for "the voice." and look my whole family is here. there is my children, and look, sonny, there you are. he showed me what he has been learning from the guide dog foundation. sonny, bring. good job, sonny. what do you want to watch? sonny, can you push? good job. i have one more thing for you. check this out, buddy. yeah. it is official now. hear that? it's the audience. do you want to meet the coaches? leash. good job. let's go. we headed backstage to meet up with adam levine, b
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buddy. safe travels, buddy. >> jimmy: welcome back, olivia hamilton and dua lipa are here but before we getsomething unbelievable. he climbed a 3,000-foot rockface called el capitan without a rope. which was such an amazing feat it inspired our very own guillermo to achieve a similar goal. >> hi, i'm guillermo here with alex honnold, the star of "free solo" where he free solo climbed el capitan. to celebrate i'm going to climb to the top of el capitan theater. you get it? el capitan theater? and you climbed -- >> yeah, i get it. i want to see you climb it. >> before we do it, can we have some tequila? >> i think that's probably a bad idea. >> oh, all right. alex, if i wear this north face jacket will i be a good climber like you? >> i think you will, that's all it takes. >> i'll see you at the top. >> no, wait, you should plan out this building the way you would a mountain. when i free soloed, i spent a year and a half mapping the moves, figuring out how to climb it -- guillermo? >> up here! >> whoa, how'd you get up there? >> i don't know.has not you do , alex! alex, what are you waiting f
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buddy! [ cheers and applause ] "harlan & alondra" is out now. we'll be right back. buddy! [ cheers and applaus buddyost awarded network for internet and tv service satisfaction for the past 10 years, and why we've been ranked #1 in customer satisfaction compared to cable. and if you order online, you'll get a $100 visa prepaid card. but hurry, this is your last chance, because this offer ends october 31st. go to getfios.com today. 100% fiber-optic network. 100% phenomenal. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: myanhanks to tihaddish, useve kornacki, buddy! [ cheers and app] and the roots right there. [ cheers and applause ] stay tuned for "late night with seth meyers." thank you for watching. have a great night. i hope to see you tomorrow. bye-bye everybody. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> announcer: from 30 rockefeller plaza in new york, it's "late night with seth meyers." tonight -- gerard butler. host of msnbc's "deadline: white house," anchor nicolle wallace. comedian, louie anderson. featuring the 8g band with thaddeus dixon. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ladies and genemen
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buddy! i missed you., buddy. le on t unive lot. make these s come alive. you're doing so good. headed i ag look, closed set, sunny. bu you getti the inside c on in. is where i take my naps and a read my scripe for voice , my whole family is here. is my child , sunny, there you are. he me what he has been from the guide d bring. do you want to watch? push. job! on 's t audie to meet the cch? l right. job! headed backs to meet up adam shelt jennir , i wanted you to meet is sunny our guide dog at it was "the youet sunny when he was male on the group this is sunh s potty trained. sunny, come he. shake it. , yeah! , right happys everyt ♪ a that' smart i feel like we n. unani. chairs turned for sunny u c s he is stille pride. u can catch an all new episo vois vois comin right on nbc on monday and tut here on the peaco. greed to have our y -- it was great to have did he have a if favor kel foro and her sonere selecd be the myste reade of the at their son's kinde as disgud d up as a pig and . ve ty couldt kee idents secret for . took off t
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buddy! [ cheers and applause ] "harlan & alondra" is out now. we'll be right back. buddy! [ cheers and applause ] i'm dianne feinstein and i approve this message. "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 ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: my thanks to tiffany haddish, steve kornacki, buddy msnbc's "deadline: white house," anchor nicolle wallace. comedian, louie anderson. featuring the 8g band with thaddeus dixon. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ladies a gentlemen, seth meyers. >> seth: good evening. i'm seth meyers, this is "late night." how's everybody doing tonight? [ cheers and applause ] that's great to hear. in that case, let's get to the news. at a campaign rally last night, president trump bragged about his response to the multiple
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. >> he also suggests that beginners start out with a workout buddy who has similar goals and abilities. >> i worked out with a buddy before, it didn'ork out for me. >> all about accountability. >> good stuff. there you go. thanks, aaron. ♪ >>> aoc singer in battle on "the voice." what happened after the performance didn't go as he planned. we'll show you coming up. >>> plus, wakin up a billionaire. we have the results of the massiveega millions jackpot. >>> seeing the dog up for austin. perfec day to adopt a dog. chilly, breezy, nnsuy. find out the washington post said amie hoeber is a standard issue partis with no fresh ideas. bu's the ideas she does have that should scare us. defund planned parenthood- leaving women without access to cancer screenings. repeal the affordable care act- devastating families ws.h pre existing conditi and cut federal funding to combat opioids. repeal the affordable care act- david trone will support woman's reproductive health. fully fund the very personal fight against opioids. and strengthen the affordable care act. i'm david trone and i approve this message. >>> "news 4 today" star
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buddy. keep talking, because guess at. know you, buddy. this up. this is a lie. is that right? [ cheers and applause ♪ i love you, man. i know you, dude. i know you love cars. [ cheers and applause ] john cena, everybody! oh, my goodness. his new children's book "elbow grease" is out now.le maggie gaal joins us after the break. stick around. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ i'm captain obvious and hotels.com rewards me basically everywhere i stay. so why am i stomping grapes with aerobics enthusiasts near this b&b? or doing goat yoga at this mountain resort? or treating a destination wedding to the sweet sound of pug bongos? because hotels.com lets me do me. where my dogs at? oh, here they are. hotels.com. you do you and get rewarded. take it away henry. take us downtown, waze. waze integration- seamlessly connecting the world inside with the world outside. making life a little easier. ♪ the new well-connected 2019 lincoln mkc. it only takes a second for an everyday item to become dangerous. tide pods child-guard pac. helps keep your laundry pacs
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with laughter, ran into her dressing room, got a razor, and told buddy: "it's your idea, you shave it off." and believe it or not, buddyack the rest of that afternoon. good morning. i brought you breakfast. are you the new butler? don't you remember last night? well, well ... what happened to godfrey? i'm godfrey. oh, you look so different. what happened to those nice whiskers? turn around, let me look at you. you're the cutest thing i've ever seen. thank you. one of the reasons that they do last, and aren't outdated is they don't come out and say, "this is what we're about, we're about where women are now, in society, or where..." they don't address sex head-on, or gender issues as we might say today, but they're all about them; it's all there. in the case of "his girl friday," it was a career woman, and that was exotic, it was an exotic creature then, is a general malaise now. (molly haskell) "his girl friday" was originally the play "the front page" by ben hecht and charles macarthur with a male newspaper editor and his male star reporter. i've got some news for you. yes, yes, i got the interview all right, but i've
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buddy. but experts warn, people should choose their buddies wisely and follow some important guidelines. >> be open and honest. studies have shown you increase your chances of success when you involve someone along with you as you chase that goal. when you find someone that has more proficiency than you, you have an opportunity to improve. but again, you have to be honest. >> now, recent studies show more and more people are turning to the so-called money buddiesnstead of more traditional financial advisers. >>> beekeepers across the country are reporting what they call an alarmingly low number of honeybees here in the u.s. so now one major airline is jumping into the bee business to help ramp up the honeybee population. fox's emily ee get tahas the story know from you atlanta. >> reporter: there is a new sound at the world's busiest airport. >> all this is honey under here. >> reporter: from honeybees. >> ready to be eaten. >> reporter: 150,000 of them. how is it? >> it's good. sweet. >> reporter: with the aviation industry responsible for nearly 10% of transportation greenhouse gas emissions, christine says delta's beehives are one way the airline is making amends. >> carbon emissions is something that as an airline we recognize as an environmental footprint that we have and we do lots of things are to try to offset that. >> reporter: the yellow and black pollinator is being welcomed in unusual places like this across the country all to comb
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buddy. -give me five. -lisa: this is his buddy. -giovanni: there you go. -lisa: there you go. giovanni: how old was he when you adopted him? lisa: he was only 5 days old. giovanni: sorry, it's been a crazy couple weeks for him. he's got to have surgery next thursday. lemonis: what's wrong with him? lisa: his tonsils and adenoids need to come out. he's had a hard time breathing at night. lemonis: you can tell that all their love and attention is on this baby. and the fact that their son, sebastian, isn't healthy right now clearly would be a distraction for anybody. giovanni: this is where the deal comes crashing. lisa: so, this is our stock room/special orders. giovanni: we just got a delivery. lisa: yeah, we just took advantage of some sales, too, so... lemonis: it's literally like a bomb went off in here, and there is crap everywhere. this is how you manage your inventory? giovanni: yeah, if we were perfect... lemonis: then i wouldn't be here. what is all this stuff? giovanni: we moved seven times in seven years, so a lot of it is our stuff, too, mixed in. lemonis: what about the mattress? -lisa: no, that's not! -giovanni: [ laughs ] look, you wouldn't want the life that we had the last seven years, but that's -- -lemonis: why wouldn't i? -giovanni: no, i mean -- lisa: we just moved a bunch of times to save money to -- giovanni: we sold our house. we did what we had to to make it. but now we have sebastian. it's not fair to him. i'm not gonna put him through it, so... lemonis: what do you mean it's not fair? -what does that mean? -giovanni: to him. i'm not gonna put him through what we did. lisa: we don't want to move him all the time. -lemonis: because it's tough. -giovanni: yeah, it's tough. [ voice breaking ] we did whatever we had to to survive and never let any of them up there know what it took or it cost me. in seven years, people got bonuses. but now we got sebastian. i can't. i can't. that's why we called. we can't keep going like this. lisa: so the reason we called is not because this is a failing business, but because we know we need help. lemonis: i have to tell you something. when i see all that crap back there, i can have a bad reaction or an understanding reaction. understanding the story behind it helps me understand it. i've seen their best store, and there are some clear-cut problems, so i want to visit another location to see the whole picture. giovanni: hey. -lemonis: hi. -lisa: this is the newest one. lemonis: this is the newest location? this store looks totally different than arlington. the merchandising is different, the layout is different, the lighting is different. the whole thing is different. the one thing that's consistent is this place is also functioning like a mini-warehouse. and there's even more inventory piled up here than there was in the other store. giovanni: i know what you're thinking. we literally just unloaded our delivery. lemonis: and i also wanted to check out the store they acquired at rogers park, but i had some trouble finding it, 'cause there was no sign of bentley's anywhere. giovanni: we only took it over in december. lemonis: yeah, and, so, when you took it over, did you think it was a good idea to change that awning so that i didn't drive by it three times? lisa: yes, we need to change that. -giovanni: yeah. -lemonis: why haven't you? -giovanni: just money -- -lemonis: don't say money to me. don't say money to me. we have money to pile inventory up to the hill, but not money to make sure that the sign is right. one of the most important parts of an acquisition is being able to integrate that new company into an existing platform, but that assumes that there is a platform. so, how often do they come to your store? dan: if i'm lucky, probably a couple times a month. lemonis: do you wish they came more? dan: i appreciate any time that i get with them. i think we've been self-governing for so long. lemonis: and it really seems like these stores operate independently, and there's not even a leader. after taking all this in, i'd like to talk to lisa alone and get her own perspective. i like the fact that you guys have a number of stores. i don't like the fact that they all look and feel and operate differently and that there's not clear management and there's not a clear process and there's not central distribution. so how is the ownership split up? you guys are 50/50? lisa: well, we got 30% shares, investor. lemonis: what investor? does he have shares of the company? -lisa: yeah, 30%. -lemonis: and so you own 70%? lisa: mm-hmm, we know we did too much too fast. we never knew it was gonna take off like it did. lemonis: yeah. gio and lisa's biggest struggle is that their exuberance to grow is outweighing the prudence to do it the right way. but i already know that their process is bad. now i need to see what their financials look like. well, let's look at the numbers. you don't have a 12-month. giovanni: i just have year to date, yeah. lemonis: and so is there a consolidated p&l? giovanni: yeah, it should be all the way here. lemonis: at the end? the total consolidated-income statement is $2.3 million of revenue through the first seven months of the year. on a year-to-date basis through seven months, you've lost $12,000. giovanni: oh, okay. lemonis: the business is losing money, so why in god's green earth would you open another store? did you not know that it was losing money? giovanni: no, i'll be honest with you -- to run our business, i don't follow this. lemonis: what do you use? giovanni: what's in the bank and how much money we have and how many bills -- lemonis: so you're running it on the checking account? giovanni: i'm running it on day-to-day cash flow. lemonis: the reason that the alarm bells should have gone off that you were losing money is that you didn't have cash to open a store. how much money did you raise from this partner that i heard about? giovanni: $300,000. he has lent us money before. when we took over rogers park, i had to take a loan. lemonis: how much did he lend you, in addition -- giovanni: $100,000. lemonis: so you've gotten $400,000 from him. -giovanni: yes. -lemonis: that's how you were able to afford the other stores, but you're not generating -a profit today. -giovanni: yeah, you're right. how much do you guys get paid? giovanni: probably 30 grand this year -- 34 grand. we sold our motorcycle one month to pay rent. we're borrowing on our life-insurance policy to pay for sebastian's surgery. but guess what? we chose this. lemonis: is that where that money is coming from? it's coming out of your life-insurance policy? giovanni: yeah, we took a loan out. lemonis: the fact that you did whatever you had to to take care of your child's surgery -- that's the kind of people i want to do business with. giovanni: but it's embarrassing. it's seven years. and i'm taking a loan. i'm right back to where we started. lemonis: here's the thing, okay? most people don't have the courage to do what you do, although i wish you had a little less -- to keep pushing and opening stores, okay? most people don't have the courage to adopt a baby like you guys did. and i was adopted, and so i have kind of a cool connection with anybody that adopts. you should be very proud of yourself. listen to me. we just met. what i have to get my head around is can i help you? let me look at these financials, and i'll get back in touch with you, okay? giovanni: yeah. ♪ lemonis: hi, guys. nice to see you again. you look wonderful, by the way. when i learned that bentley's had a 30% investor in the business, i wanted him to be at the negotiation. that's a serious amount of equity. david, part of the reason that i wanted to meet you is because i always feel it's important to meet the person that wrote the last check. david, are you aware that the business loses money today? david: loses money today, but it's also -- a lot of new stores have opened. lemonis: one thing that you said to me was you want to continue to grow, and you want to open stores. are you looking to acquire stores right now? david: we are. lemonis: i expected, david, that you were gonna be the disciplinarian, but you're as drunk as they are. david: yeah, but in the next 18 months, we'll have positive cash flow, and i know both of them work hard. lemonis: and are there deals on the table right now? giovanni: i mean, we got callbacks. that's what we're trying to mention was this all happened very quick. i thought there was an opportunity to acquire seven stores. lemonis: how much revenue do they do? -giovanni: $3 million. -lemonis: how much money do you need to make all the acquisitions? giovanni: $1.1 million would be a purchase price. lemonis: not only do they open stores too fast, but they're now telling me that they want to double the size of their company. are you kidding me? it does frighten me that you guys think you're ready for acquisitions. should i expect that in the new acquisitions you make, you'll also forget to change the sign for nine months? acquisitions are not a good strategy for a company that doesn't have its foundation right. in order for this acquisition to happen, they're gonna have to prove that they can run a consistent business, they can provide leadership and provide direction, and understand the importance of making that acquisition. you guys have clearly created a culture that i think is amazing. honestly, you should be very proud of yourself. so i want to make an offer. my offer is $1.7 million, okay? and it is broken up into two distinct checks -- a $400,000 equity check that will go to put sufficient working capital on the company's books to make the renovations of the stores and for the i.t. infrastructure. the second check i write will be for $1.3 million. that will go to fund the acquisition and the conversion of those locations so that they're compliant with what our new look is gonna be. but i'm gonna have to be convinced that the acquisition is the right thing. for that, i'm gonna want 40% of the equity. and if you pay off the $1.3 million, it drops to 25%, and the 15% will go back to you guys. lisa: my biggest concern is with products. i want to make sure that i still have the say in what products come in through the door -- that they fit in our niche. lemonis: i can't do that for you. let's say that the chairman of the company said, "i want you to create a product that meets her standards, -what are you saying to them? -lisa: no. we can't run a business that way. unstopand it's strengthenedting place, the by xfi pods,gateway. which plug in to extend the wifi even farther, past anything that stands in its way. ...well almost anything. leave no room behind with xfi pods. simple. easy. awesome. click or visit a retail store today. lin what products come in through the door --he say that they fit in our niche. lemonis: i can't do that for you. but what i can tell you is that i subscribe to your same philosophy, and i would never put my own dog in jeopardy or anybody else's dog in jeopardy to make a buck. lisa: okay. giovanni: good enough for us, yeah. lemonis: so, my offer is $1.7 million for 40% of the business. when you pay back the $1.3 million, it reverts back to 25%. do we have a deal? giovanni: oh, my god. -is it fair? -david: i think it's fair. giovanni: i think it's very fair. -lisa: okay. -giovanni: are you -- -lisa: i'm happy. -giovanni: yeah. -lisa: we have a deal. thank you. lemonis: all right? when i write this check, i really am 100% in charge, for real. giovanni: we're looking forward to it. lemonis: this is an unusual transaction for me because it involves two separate offers. offer 1 is $400,000 for 25% of the equity. offer 2 is $1.3 million to give them the ability to finance the acquisitions they want to make. i will get a nominal interest rate on that loan, but as a kicker for lending them that $1.3 million, my equity, instead of being 25%, will ratchet up to 40%. when they pay that $1.3 million back, including the interest, my equity will go back down to 25%. i want them to understand that if they really want to make this acquisition, it's gonna cost them a lot. lisa: thank you. lemonis: thank you. thank you. congratulations. ♪ now that i'm in business with lisa and giovanni, i've asked them to gather the entire staff at the glenview location so we can talk about the road ahead. i thought we could get everybody together. we made a deal -- david, giovanni, lisa, and myself made a deal for me to put up to $1.7 million in the business. my deal is for 40% of the equity, and it can change after that, but i'm also 100% in charge. this business does not have a clear leader, and we're gonna have one. giovanni, going forward, i'm looking to you to be responsible to run the operations. the store managers have to report to somebody. we're gonna get a central warehouse, so inventory isn't gonna sit here. -you're happy about that? -vic: i'm ecstatic. lemonis: so, the key to this whole thing is about creating consistency. the biggest one that's a problem is arlington, and so that store is gonna go through a major transformation, and we're gonna build up what we think the stores are supposed to look like. the biggest problem i'm having right now is that it doesn't feel like we have affordable foods. today, our prices are averaging like $70 for a 30-pound bag, and the market is from $30 to $80. we need to drive that number down so that more people can come in and shop here, because i think you're missing out on a lot of the market. vic: this whole thing's based on just the quality of the product. lemonis: i'm not as self-righteous as you guys are about product. lisa, from my perspective, you're the person that determines what the brand promise is, what the products are that come in and out. so what i want you to do is actually write it down on paper. i want to see, bullet point by bullet point, exactly what it stands for. anything else before we get to work? okay. ♪ -lisa: hey, how are you? -lemonis: i'm marcus. -lisa: marcus, this is kacey. -kacey: nice to meet you. lemonis: nice to meet you? how are you? pet food experts is one of the largest distributors of pet food in the united states. not only do they carry a ton of brands, but they carry a wide variety of price points. that's why we're here. do you have your mission statement? lisa: this is our food promise that we go off of. lemonis: "no byproducts, corn, wheat, or soy." -"no chemical preservatives." -kacey: mm-hmm. lemonis: why don't we walk and just kind of get a feel for it? i need lisa's expertise and her brand promise to determine what foods are gonna work and not work, but i also need her to be open-minded. -do we carry this nutro? -lisa: no. lemonis: does it have byproducts, corn, wheat, or soy? lisa: this one i don't know. no, this one doesn't. lemonis: chemical preservatives? lisa: doesn't look like it. lemonis: so, this has the food promise, but you won't carry it. -lisa: no. -lemonis: why? lisa: when we actually first opened, they were the biggest ones that had all the recalls and stuff, too. lemonis: what kind of car do you drive? lisa: a suburban. lemonis: have chevy ever had a recall? i like the fact that she believes in something, but once she actually takes that and applies it against products that are available in the market, she's now coming up with other excuses of why she doesn't want to carry products. -lemonis: this brand here. -kacey: yes. -lemonis: any good? -kacey: yes. -lemonis: does it sell well? -kacey: it does. lemonis: what's the price like on a bag like this? -kacey: 20 bucks. -lemonis: is that a good price? lisa: yes, we have some brands that -- lemonis: "features premium formulation, multi-protein sources, made in the usa." lisa: "made in the usa." i'm telling you, the packaging won't do well. lemonis: now you're a packaging expert? lisa: no, but i'm telling you. [ horn honks ] lemonis: "quality loyal, not brand loyal." "focusing on brands that get it right from the start." lisa: there's a lot of brands that have made garbage food for a long time and now realize there's a natural market. and they're making one or two skus to jump on the bandwagon, but their integrity -- you know what i mean? lemonis: but you just said you were product loyal, not brand loyal. so doesn't that go both ways? you want to kick somebody out because they do something that you don't like, but you don't want to let somebody in if they start to adjust to your way of thinking. lisa: because they still are selling the bad products out there. if they truly believed that this one sku should have byproducts, corn, wheat, or soy, then why wouldn't they implement it throughout? lemonis: let's say that, like, the chairman of the company went into a meeting, and he said, "i want you to create a product that meets her standards, 'cause i want to do business with her." -what are you saying to them? -lisa: no. lemonis: it's kind of a double standard. we can't run a business that way. she keeps telling me that she's product loyal and not brand loyal. that's a bunch of [bleep] is what it is. build a business, set a standard, write it down, follow the standard. the thing that worries me about doing business with you is that i feel like if i make a mistake, you're not gonna forgive me. lisa: no, that's not true. lemonis: well, then, why can't you forgive them? ♪ i've asked giovanni to bring his store managers to my office for a meeting. up to this point, these store managers have been left to their own devices -- different looks, different merchandising, different inventory plan. and that's not okay with me. if giovanni wants to make this acquisition, he's gonna have to prove that he can be a leader and set the plan and enforce it. giovanni: all right, guys, one, you know, part of -- lemonis: i'd like you to explain to everybody what's the purpose of today. giovanni: so, the purpose is, i wanted to give you an update of what's going on with us and then share ideas. but on our end, we have been working on an acquisition. lemonis: it still hasn't been determined yet. giovanni: correct, yeah. just saying we're working on it. lemonis: do you have an agenda for the meeting, by chance? giovanni: i didn't know what the agenda was. lemonis: when you normally get together, do you guys have, like, a list of topics that you want to cover? krystle: we don't get together. lemonis: you want to take a crack at writing an agenda on the board so we can have a process to it? giovanni: sure. shay: i would really, at this point, like to know when we're doing good and when we're doing bad. giovanni: so, i would say first off is just feedback from managers. dan: i would like to get more information or more timely information when special orders are coming into the store. giovanni: a lot of that will get solved with the ware-- lemonis: keep going. i'll do mine. giovanni: okay. lemonis: what i'm seeing from giovanni today is worrisome. he's not communicating with his people, he's not guiding them, and he's asking them for the agenda instead of setting it himself. do you guys feel today that this company is in good enough shape leadership wise to make an acquisition of a whole nother business? -dan: no. -lemonis: no. krystle: i don't know how we can take on more when we haven't perfected what we're doing right now. giovanni: what's ironic is the acquisition is probably run way better than ours. lemonis: do you see why i'm scared to make that acquisition? as a retailer, you have an obligation to deliver the consumer the choice to make that decision on their own and not for them. giovanni: oh, my gosh. hold on a second. you love your employees so much, which i think is amazing.sition? but you love them so much that you don't give them any tools or resources or information. becky: well, we want to make it easy. giovanni: yeah, no, and i know that. lemonis: the point that i want to make to you is if you're gonna lead an organization of 5, 10, 15, 25, 30 stores, the only way you can do it is in a structure. the problem is is that for this business to run and make a profit, somebody has to be tactical. i just need you to be a leader. and the only way this company is gonna really grow is if you guys feel like you're part of something. and so i'm gonna put in a system that's gonna allow you guys to videoconference from somewhere in the store so you guys can see each other. see, that's why being in person helps, 'cause i can read your face. all right? thank you, guys. dan: thank you, marcus. giovanni: you won't like the new giovanni, 'cause i've been way too easy. shay: tactical giovanni. giovanni: yes, tactical giovanni. ♪ lemonis: here's what i want to do. this location has to be totally different. -lisa: the whole look? -giovanni: how so? lemonis: now that you're talking about making acquisitions. honestly, this doesn't look good. from a design and process standpoint, the bentley stores have nothing in common it's bad enough when we're talking about seven locations, but if this business is gonna expand further, we need a consistent inventory plan, consistent merchandising, a consistent look and feel, and a consistent process. arlington heights is gonna be the model. i told you yesterday that i wasn't willing to make the acquisition unless you can prove that you are a leader. -giovanni: okay. -lemonis: and that running a manager's meeting is part of that, being open-minded is part of it, and change is part of it. and so i want to see what sort of leader you are. -giovanni: okay. -lemonis: today, we're closing the store entirely. giovanni: i don't understand lemonis: we're locking the door. giovanni: now? right now? -lisa: okay. -giovanni: for how long? lemonis: as long as it takes to get the store redone. giovanni: okay. lemonis: well, there's a truck and boxes and people here to start loading. giovanni: come on! is that really -- are you being serious? ♪ lemonis: i knew the idea of closing this store quickly would catch gio off-guard, but i need to know that he can adapt to change and lead people through tough situations. it's a small test of his leadership, but it's an important one for me. giovanni: we'll load -- that's the biggest thing. displays will move out tomorrow. so let's just empty out all the cabinets, all the treats. all hands on deck. what we need to do now is just start boxing everything up. keep it in one category. don't throw brushes with treats -- just toys, treats, accessories. lemonis: i set up the central warehouse so everything we pack up today is going there. the goal is to have one hub of inventory so that as it sells it, it can replace it and when that inventory comes in from the manufacturer or the distributor, it's sitting in one place and you know what's there. man: gio! [ dog growls ] lemonis: i like how you're taking direction and giving everybody direction and solving problems. it's the most i've seen you lead since i've known you. -i mean that in a nice way. -giovanni: no, thank you. lemonis: like, i feel like i'm watching you like a field general. giovanni: and i am that, and i know i can be. lemonis: okay, let's keep going. ♪ lemonis: so, i wanted to kind of get out and talk to people and find out, "okay, how many people have ever heard of bentley's? do you know where it's at? do you know what we stand for?" it's kind of getting an understanding of market research, right? ♪ this is a nice park. lisa: this is a very nice park. giovanni: okay, go get your owners. giovanni: this is shay, the manager. anything you ever need... lemonis: uh-oh, okay. this is lisa and giovanni. lisa: hi, nice to meet you. lemonis: they're the owners. -where do you buy your food at? -woman: petsmart. lemonis: is it because of price that you go there? woman: we get a purina special blend. he's allergic to corn, i think. giovanni: our whole store is corn-free. that's where we're different. lemonis: where do you get your food? woman: usually at petco. don't, like, you guys have the grain merrick? she's not a grain-free girl for some reason. lemonis: so she needs grain. woman: she needs the grain, yeah. lemonis: do we have merrick brand dog food with grain? lisa: we don't. lemonis: this is an example of lisa's self-righteousness getting in the way of them being a profitable business. they need to carry products that meet everybody's needs. if it falls within the brand promise, they need to carry what the customers want, not what they want, and i'm gonna push this thing all the way to the wall. going forward, any product that meets the bentley's food promise should be available. so, like, when somebody says, "i want grain-filled," as opposed to grain-free, you're gonna be a powerhouse. you got to carry everything. giovanni: i think we'll lose a lot of credibility with a lot of the customers on why they trust us. lemonis: let the customer decide what they want. giovanni: and then we have no niche. i'm sorry. lemonis: the niche is products that meet this food promise. giovanni: i'm not gonna agree with it. lemonis: so, then don't have a brand promise, 'cause it doesn't mean anything. -giovanni: i think it does. -lemonis: then, if it does, then if somebody complies with it, why can't they get in? what i never knew i was signing up for was people that weren't willing to give other people a chance who were trying to make it right. and so maybe you shouldn't have done a deal with anybody. you don't give people a chance. giovanni: hold on, we give more chances than anybody. lemonis: i'm only asking you to carry the ones that reach your standard. giovanni: but if the brand's majority -- lemonis: you told me that that was the most important thing to you. i asked you to write it down. i'm willing to live to it like the bible. as a retailer, you have an obligation to deliver the consumer the choice to make that decision on their own and not for them. giovanni: oh, my gosh, that -- i'm -- -lemonis: oh, b-but what? -giovanni: hold on a second. lemonis: have you taken the time to come here before? -giovanni: no. -lemonis: and so you draw these conclusions about people like that. i mean, 'cause if we're just gonna be negative, this was just a giant waste of time. this was just a giant waste of time. it's no longer enough to be fast. so it's no surprise that the company that led the charge to fast, who built the nation's largest gig-speed network, is already moving-beyond. beyond wifi that just connects. to wifi that thinks about what your customers want. helping you to compete. beyond the reliability you expect. to knowing that if the power goes out, business goes on. ♪ ♪ beyond chasing down network problems. ♪ ♪ to a network that shows you when and where there's an issue. beyond clumsy dial-ins and pins. to one-touch conference calls. ♪ ♪ beyond low-res surveillance video. to images so sharp, they can help protect your business. ♪ ♪ comcast business. the company that delivers unrelenting speed in more places. is also the company that's redefining what a provider provides. comcast business. beyond fast. lemonis: as a retailer, you have an obligation to deliver the consumer the choice to make that decision on their own and not for them. giovanni: oh, my gosh. that -- i'm -- -lemonis: oh, b-but what? -giovanni: hold on a second. lemonis: my attitude is that if it meets the brand promise, we're going to carry it somewhere in the system, even if it's just online. if they're unwilling to budge or be open-minded, then i'm unwilling to move forward. the challenge with being a retailer in america today is that the consumer wants to make the decision for themselves. i want to put it online and let the customer decide. you know what the biggest, baddest store in the world is? your website, because you don't have anything invested in it. and you could be everything to all people inside of lisa's requirements. i'm not asking you to make a decision today. i'm asking you just to think differently. ♪ you've seen the drawings. it's gonna look like a totally different store. fundamentally, we still have some unresolved issues, but construction is under way at the arlington heights location. we're gonna have proper displays and signage so that our customers can easily find what they're looking for. we're also gonna change the layout of the store so that we send them in the direction that is most profitable for us. we want them to see the kind of merchandise, like clothes, toys, and the chew bar, that comes with much higher margins than the commodities, like dog and cat food. giovanni: the graphics are awesome. -lemonis: even stuff like this. -lisa: yes, that's fantastic. giovanni: and it actually advertises animals. lemonis: i spent about $100,000 between changing out the floors, changing out the ceilings, adding new lighting, building all new fixtures, putting in a new i.t. infrastructure. with one week till the grand opening, we got to push it. giovanni: i'm looking at it now what our customers are gonna see. -lisa: i know. it's amazing. -giovanni: it's awesome. ♪ lemonis: what's up, guys? i'm flying lisa and gio to pennsylvania for a special trip. i haven't told them where we're going because, quite frankly, i want them to go there with an open mind. ♪ freshpet is one of the country's largest manufacturers of fresh, natural foods for cats and dogs. its products are top-notch, but it's mainly sold into big-box retailers, like petco and walmart, making it the kind of brand that gio and lisa love to hate. -giovanni: this is a surprise. -lisa: yeah. giovanni: i don't know what your intention is, but out of every brand, it's hard to put the energy behind this one. lemonis: so their food's not good? lisa: not that it's not good, but they're doing more for the grocery-store chains than the independents. lemonis: before, it was no soy, no wheat, no corn. now it's like, oh, now there's like another reason to not do business with you. giovanni: it's just difficult for us to put the energy behind a conglomerate that don't fit our stable or our beliefs. lemonis: right, but have you taken the time to come here before? -giovanni: no. no. -lemonis: have you ever seen what their production process is? -giovanni: no. -lemonis: have you sat down and listened to what they have to say? -giovanni: no. -lemonis: and so you draw these conclusions about people like that. i mean, 'cause if we're just gonna be negative, this was just a giant waste of time. if your business is in trouble and you need my help, log on to... even when nothing else is. gopi's found a way to keep her receipts tidy, (brand vo) snap and sort your expenses with quickbooks and find, on average, $4,628 in tax savings. quickbooks. backing you. my mom washes the dishes... ...before she puts them in the dishwasher. so what does the dishwasher do? cascade platinum does the work for you, prewashing and removing stuck-on foods, the first time. wow, that's clean! cascade platinum. lemonis: if we're just gonna be negative, this was just a giant waste of time. there's no point in wasting our time. giovanni: we're not being negative on the product, no. lemonis: before we even walked in the building, they're being not open-minded, not willing to change, telling me, "no, no, no. this is not how we do it." if i don't start to see a flip in the way they look at things, then we got a problem. do you agree that your brand promise and this company, freshpet, line up from a brand-promise standpoint? -giovanni: yes, yes. -lisa: yes. lemonis: so if it meets the brand promise, why are we having this discussion? i think what we should do is we should go in there. if we like the product, then we can build a relationship. giovanni: sure. okay. -lemonis: and be open-minded. -giovanni: you've got it. lemonis: richard, i'm marcus lemonis. -how are you, sir? -scott: hey, scott. lemonis: scott, nice to meet you. -scott: hi. -lemonis: this is lisa. -we'd love to get a tour. -giovanni: yeah. scott: we need to get you guys suited up. giovanni: holy [bleep] ♪ lemonis: what we saw when we walked into that place is the most professional, state-of-the-art food-manufacturing facility that i had ever seen in my life. giovanni: wow. scott: this is our q.a. lab. lemonis: so, this is chicken, beef, salmon, and egg. scott: all basically no byproducts, no corn, wheat, soy. lemonis: we saw their attention to detail, and we saw the great pride they have in making sure that pets stay healthy. i could tell this is having a real impact on lisa. man: check it out. lisa: it's awesome to see it in action and how it goes from this to the actual product. it's very impressive. lemonis: what i hope lisa learned from this trip is in order to grow your business, you have to be open-minded and learn and do research. freshpet is an opportunity for them to grow their business. if they hadn't gone, they'd have never found that opportunity. do you feel more open-minded now? -lisa: yes. -giovanni: we have to be. lemonis: do you feel more open-minded? -lisa: i do. -lemonis: all right. -let's head out. -giovanni: awesome. ♪ lemonis: so, in order to make bentley's more consistent, from the accounting numbers to inventory management to just sharing data, i have installed salespad at all the locations. matthew: when you take an order on the register here, within minutes, it makes it back up to the cloud. lemonis: every store will have access to their sales numbers and will be able to properly track their inventory in real time. all the inventory here would be bar-coded, and so as you sell on a tuesday, it would replenish on a wednesday. it allows the stores to grab inventory from the central warehouse, already up and running. and i've also had at&t connect put in that allows giovanni to have regularly scheduled meetings with his managers without them having to leave their store or interrupt their business. you can see if there's a manager that's not engaged or they're not paying attention. it doesn't get any easier than just pushing a button. -here, let's get started. -giovanni: okay. hey, guys, so, this is just gonna give us the ability to not only see each other, but to relay information right as it's happening. lemonis: this is really gonna be the way i want you guys to communicate when you can't physically get to the store. giovanni: i'm excited, guys. woman: [ laug]s ♪ -giovanni: what is all this? -lisa: cat litter. giovanni: i can't have this much money sitting back here. it's hundreds of dollars, and we're slow. i want over-communication now. we got to stop guessing at what works. you know, i just want to get in the habit of being proactive on stuff. lemonis: to see gio communicate with his staff succinctly and give them clear direction is really giving me a lot more confidence that i had before. he's come a long way. giovanni: we took to heart a lot of what you said. we brought on a lower-priced brand and have a second one on the way to really go after the grocery-store customer. lemonis: so you made that decision? -lisa: i did. -giovanni: lisa did. lemonis: good job. ♪ so, you guys ready? -lisa: yeah. -giovanni: yeah. lemonis: are you dying to turn around? [ both laugh ] what you're gonna see today is kind of the future look of what could be a regional or a national brand. -are you ready? -lisa: yeah. giovanni: i'll let you go first. lisa: i'm closing my eyes. lemonis: close your eyes, close your eyes. -close your eyes. -lisa: oh, my god. giovanni: i'm looking at the floor. oh, my god. i'm ready to crush ap english. i'm ready to do what no one on my block has done before. forget that. what no one in the world has done before. all i need access, tools, connections. high-speed connections. is the world ready for me? through internet essentials, comcast has connected more than six-million low-income people to low-cost, high-speed internet at home. i'm trying to do some homework here. so they're ready for anything. -lemonis: are you ready? -lisa: yeah. giovanni: i'll let you go first. lisa: i'm closing my eyes. lemonis: close your eyes, close your eyes. -close your eyes. -lisa: oh, my god. giovanni: i'm looking at the floor. lisa: oh, my god. giovanni: oh, my god. lisa: it looks fantastic. giovanni: i'm trying to remember what it used to look like. lemonis: bentley's corner barkery is now much more inviting and a lot brighter. lisa: it looks fantastic. oh, my god. giovanni: wow. lisa: [ laughing ] oh, my god. giovanni: i mean, look at the graphics. lis, look at the dog house. we didn't have one picture of a dog before. lemonis: uh, i know. we've brought in a lot of graphics so that people could feel like they're in a pet store. giovanni: "the snack wagon"? i'm not kidding you -- i am totally blown away. giovanni: we've created a new display for the chew bars. it's our highest-margin product, and we want to make sure that customers are attracted to it. we put two of them in so that we constantly are reminding people. highest-margin items, right? the commodity margins are on that wall, kind of impulse section. -giovanni: sure, yeah. lisa: i just can't stop looking around. it's crazy good. giovanni: it feels like it's three times the size. -lisa: yeah. -lemonis: there's less than half of the inventory. and, so, part of merchandising it this way is taking the categories that matter, stocking them properly, getting the margin, getting the turn, and letting it just pump out cash. giovanni: yeah, rather than piles sitting there. yeah. this is beyond what i ever imagined. -lisa: thank you so much. -giovanni: yeah. lisa: [ voice breaking ] seriously, thank you. i can't tell how much this has helped our family and our -- thank you. oh, my god, i love it. lemonis: before we open the store, i wanted to talk to lisa and giovanni about this potential acquisition. i feel like you guys have made a lot of progress. but i worry that progress can be easily derailed with overload. how strongly do you feel about the acquisition? on a scale of 1 to 10, in terms of being -- -giovanni: 10. -lemonis: you're a 10? giovanni: you created the 10. if this was not so good, it would be 8. lemonis: i'm willing to take the leap with you, okay? i'm willing to take the leap with you. lisa: [ laughs ] lemonis: all right? i'm willing to take the leap. ♪ how are you? they can't wait. it's the grand opening of bentley's corner barkery. what do you think of the store? -and who is this? -woman: luke. lemonis: luke! i'm excited that people are actually able to move around this store. it's not cramped, it's not overloaded, and there's got to be 125 people in here. [ dog barks ] -oh, this is bentley? -giovanni: yeah. -lemonis: hey, buddy is that good? oh, yummy. lemonis: people are picking up new products. they're seeing some of the new things that were added. i feel like we got it right. i think your dog is shoplifting. [ laughter ] with its limited selection of products, the old arlington heights store maybe covered 20% of the market. by adding more varieties and more brands at wider price points, we can now cover 60% of the market, and that's gonna have a huge impact on sales. before, the arlington heights store averaged between $2,800 and $3,200 a day. and now, since the grand opening and re-merchandising and the addition of more affordable products, it's averaging closer to $5,000 a day. -what do you think? -woman: it's awesome. -lemonis: you like it? -woman: it's really neat. lisa: can we get everyone's attention for a moment, please? we want to sincerely thank marcus and his team... giovanni: you want to thank marcus. lisa: ...and all of our employees. giovanni: 50 stores in 12 months. we'll be right there, so
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kushner is supposed to be the type of guy that can pick up the phone and say, hey, buddy, fix this, and fix it now, or, hey, buddy, what happened? did you order a murder? that doesn't seem to be happening. he seems to be sinking into the background on this. >> it's remarkable that jared kushner with no foreign policy experience and was bailed out of a terrible deal in new york and was bailed out by the saudis -- we just watched this movie a few weeks ago which was the president and his team deciding let's decide what the result is and then do an investigation that gives us that result with brett kavanaugh. they had a set of facts that they wanted to prove, and then they did an investigation to do that. they are doing the same thing here. the other point i would make, stage craft is always important in foreign policy. i get that maybe pompeo did not want to embarrass them there, but he has been back in the united states for 24 hours. i don't believe sources. i don't believe he went in there and was tough. somebody has to come out and say these things, and we are not hearing it from the trump administration. >> you
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buddy. thanks. bye-bye. how are you doing, buddy? fabio: how are you doing, man? lemonis: appreciate you coming. fabio: is everything good? lemonis: good. i'm just waiting for my guy. he'll be here any second. fabio is a celebrity-chef friend of mine who's based in chicago, and he's been on a ton of cooking shows, and he specializes in the italian-food space. and so if you're going to learn about how to improve your sauce and make it scalable, i think this guy could teach you something. hey, dino. i'm getting a little worried about you, bud. it's 10:45. i have the chef here. you're running late. i don't know where he is, so let's you and i get started. fabio: as long as you're going to make the sauce for him, then we're good. lemonis: okay. well, it's too bad that the guy that was supposed to be here learning how to improve his business decided not to show up. fabio: so, for franchise, you got to source good tomato can. what are you gonna buy? you're gonna buy the best-quality tomato, or you're going to buy a lower-quality tomato puree? lemonis: what's the difference in price between these two? fabio: almost double. lemonis: cheaper isn't always better, and business owners sometimes think that they can cut their way to a profit. fabio: garlic, crushed pepper. lemonis: sometimes having a better product and getting better repeat visits will actually make you more profitable. ♪ man, that's fantastic. thank you, buddyus. lemonis: i wanted to drop off some sauce that i made this morning. debbie #2: oh, cool. lemonis: is your dad around? debbie #2: he asked me to call him when you got here. lemonis: yeah, do you mind? debbie #2: mm-hmm. lemonis: i understand that dino likes to control everything, but when people put their reputation on the line or they bring somebody in to help and you just flat-out embarrass me, well, now it's just rude. and while i'm furious that he's disrespectful, my job is to continue to move the business forward. ♪ where were you before? dino: being involved in this process is like riding a tilt-a-whirl. yesterday, i'm trying to give my kids a day where there's no drama. and i'm like, "i'm just gonna work," 'cause i do much better when i'm working. lemonis: yeah. dino: and i got a call to come up to... lemonis: my restaurant. yeah. dino: and it was, "we want you by yourself." "all right. my wife's not gonna like that. we don't do anything separate." and i said, "no. no, no, no.
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buddy, we'll be your buddy. you'll get paid big dividends for that. that's an important lesson to remember whether you're turkey or any country in the world seeking to be our friend or enemy. >> jon: adam kinzinger is a member of the house foreign affairs committee and republican congressman from illinois. thanks. >> sandra: as we continue to follow the breaking news this morning, there is a lot of it, washington is still abuzz about a kanye west meting with the president at the white house. >> you know, they tried to scare me to not wear this hat. my own friends. this hat, it gives me -- it gives me power in a way. >> sandra: so a lot of folks have a lot to say about that meeting. could kanye west, though, help president trump and his party with the african-american vote? we'll discuss that. >> jon: dramatic video showing a rescue from a burning house. how fire crews saved a man in the nick of time. incomparable design makes it beautiful. state of the art technology makes it brilliant. the lexus nx, experience the crossover in its most visionary form. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. when you're looking for answers, it's good to have help. because the right information, at the right time, may make all the difference. at humana, we know that's especially true when you're looking for a medicare supplement insurance plan. that's why we're offering seven things every medicare supplement should have. it's yours free just for calling the number on your screen. and when you call, a knowledgeable licensed agent-producer can answer any questions you have and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free and there's no obligation. you see, medicare covers only about 80 percent of your part b medical expenses, the rest is up to you. that's why so many people purchase medicare supplement insurance plans, like those offered by humana. they're designed to help you save money and pay some of the costs medicare doesn't. depending on the medicare supplement plan you select, you could have no deductibles or co-payments for doctor visits, hospital stays, emergency care and more. you can keep the doctors you have now, ones you know and trust, with no referrals needed. plus you can get medical care anywhere in the country, even when you're travelling. with humana, you get a competitive monthly premium and personalized service from a healthcare partner working to make healthcare simpler and easier for you. you can choose from a wide range of standardized plans. each one is designed to work seamlessly with medicare and help save you money. so how do you find the plan that's right for you, one that fits your needs and your budget? call humana now at the number on your screen for this free guide. it's just one of the ways that humana is making healthcare simpler. and when you call, a knowledgeable licensed agent-producer can answer any questions you have and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free and there's no obligation. you know medicare won't cover all your medical costs, so call now and see why a medicare supplement plan from a company like humana, just might be the answer. >> sandra: fox news alert. a live look at fema headquarters where brock long is giving an update on the catastrophic damage of former hurricane michael. now a post tropical cyclone. as we know, a lot of folks still without power and seeking shelter. as we've been mentioning, some of the worst damage from hurricane michael is in mexico beach, florida, where the city is now in ruins. the cajun navy helping with rescues there. joining me on the phone is scott, a board member of the relief group united cajun navy. as we all know it's an all-volunteer group. scott, thank you to you and everyone involved in the search and rescue efforts and on the ground there. what are you seeing specifically when it comes to mexico city, which has really been ground zero for this storm? >> thank you for having me first off. if you look at this hurricane, it is much different than that we've heard on the news. this is like a large tornado that went through, complete devastation. there is hardly any structure left there that might be salvageable. we're working with the local fire department with a team of 20 individuals that have been assisting in search and rescues, unfortunately we have a feeling it will turn into recovery in the near future. >> sandra: it was a while before you and the rest of the cajun navy could get in there. when you finally got in were you able to see anybody looking for help? what was the actual human presence when you were able to enter >> we started this operation two days prior to the hurricane making landfall located in avalon where we did a pre-staging and we sent crews east of mexico city and we actually were in that area hunkered down when the storm came through and immediately started search and rescues that night with the local fire department and rescue services that were already there. >> sandra: what are you hearing from people on the ground there what is the -- what is the outlook and -- it's tough for people to stay positive when your home is ruined, the trees are across the road and hard to get anywhere. what do people say when you talk to them on the ground there? >> the number one thing that comes out is they feel they're in the middle of a war zone in a third world country. >> sandra: what's being done to get them food and water and that area still without electricity? >> correct. so we have set up a central hub on the east side of panama city and calloway. one of the only places we can get cell signal. we have crews that are constantly out day and night working with local officials and then they check in with us to make sure we can update them with information. i currently right now have over 1,000 gallons of diesel being delivered and 5,000 pounds of ice this morning and 10 pallets of watered delivered to the eoc in panama city. we have volunteers that go through the gulf coast, east coast and have supplies coming in from all states. it is an all-volunteer organization. we're a registered 501c3 and people put their lives in jeopardy to help out others. we knew it was like in new orleans during katrina and that is how this organization started. >> sandra: based on your experience with hurricanes, what do the recovery and rebuild efforts look like from this storm compared to others? >> this is definitely long-term. harvey doesn't compare to this one. people have lost everything, not just water damage. but going back to their property and their house that once was there is no longer there. it is a complete rebuild. >> sandra: scott, with the united cajun navy, thank you for everything that you and your volunteer organization are doing on the ground there and thanks for calling in. >> no problem. you have a great day. >> jon: overheated political rhetoric nearly took the life of a sitting congressman last year but what about this year? are tensions reaching an all-time high. >> you see leaders on the left inciting more violence and they don't like the direction we're headed. they're trying to threaten and intimidate people and it is not what america is about. >> jon: has political incivility become down right dangerous? plus is it another low blow to ask the first lady about rumors of infidelity? our a-team takes all that up in our next hour. >> you aren't the first first lady to have to deal with her husband's alleged infiled elts. has this put a strain of your marriage? >> it is not a concern and focus of mine. i am a mother and first lady and i have much more important things to think about and to do. >> sandra: a dramatic seen in fresno, california as firefighters rush into a burning home to save a man's life. the house was abandoned but officials say one homeless person was inside. firefighters had to use a chain saw to cut through the siding, pulling him to safety and immediately giving the injured man first-aid. the good news is he did survive. unbelievable scene there. firefighters doing what they do, heroes. >> jon: they call them america's bravest for a good reason. that's terrific. >> sandra: thank you to them. >> jon: in just a few hours president trump will be on his way to ohio campaigning at another rally ahead of the mid-term elections while washington is still buzzing about kanye west's visit to the white house. as many wonder whether the rapper's admiration for the president could attract more african-american voters to the republican party. gillian turner live at the white house with more on that. kanye was officially invited to the oval office to advocate for prison reform but that issue didn't get a lot of play, did it? >> no, jon. he did definitely steal the show here at the white house yesterday while the jury is still out on whether his appearance ultimately hurts or helps the president moving forward. all signs point to this is going to be a boon for the president when it comes to support amongst the maga crowd. kanye mentioned larry hoover he is hoping to get pardon but his focus in the oval office was elsewhere. >> you know, my dad and my mom separated. so i didn't have a lot of male energy in my home. there is a lot of things affecting our mental health that makes us do crazy thing that puts us back into the trap door called the 13th amendment. would you build a trap door that if you messed up and you accidentally something happened you fall and you end up next to the unibomber? >> there is the matter of the hat, jon. kanye saying he prefers make america great again. he added this. >> they tried to scare me to not wear this hat. my own friends. but this hat, it gives me power in a way. >> president trump's focus is on the campaign trail. in a few hours he heads to lebanon, ohio where he will host a rally this evening. >> it was one of the more unusual news conferences you might say in the oval office, that's for sure. there is also a new development in the mueller probe, gillian, what can you tell us about that? >> sources have confirmed to fox news the president's team of lawyers is working with mueller's team to narrow down the scope of questions they believe the president may answer. and all signs point to their making significant progress today. not a final agreement, the two sides seem to be coming together around the idea of president trump submitting written answers to questions about russia and the campaign specifically. the president's attorneys are now focused on paring down those questions and putting together background materials to support any written answers the president ultimately does provide to mueller. >> jon: gillian turner at the white house. thank you. >> sandra: just a few moments from now the markets will open after two heart stopping days. so will wall street recover today? we'll be watching it. >> jon: plus take a look at this scene in orlando. what did you do on the way to school today, jimmy? well, my school bus went into a swimming pool. nine children and a driver on board. we're happy to report no one injured. >> sandra: fox news alert. trading has resumed on wall street moments ago. 1 1/2 minutes into trading and a rally for a friday morning. 373 points the dow is moving to the up side after a second big sell-off yesterday. the dow dropped another 545 points. remember, wednesday it fell more than 800 points. so the big board reflecting some optimism as we end the week, but that doesn't necessarily mean it will recover all the losses from the week. this is coming in from senior editor at the fox business network. barring a massive rally today much larger than we're seeing on the open it is likely the dow, s&p and nasdaq will suffer their biggest weekly drops in seven months. something we're watching. all of this has been higher interest rates has been a concern for the market. inflation, trade, all of that sort of has been playing into fears, a rally to start off this friday morning. the dow up 380. all right. talked right through the script. i get excited when looking at these markets. one of those things folks have gotten nervous at the sell-off. why? it was record after record after record and can't go up forever. everybody is wondering when it would take a breather. the president weighed in and said we're looking for a correction. it can make a market healthier. maybe we got a little bit of a sell-off this week. we'll see where it ends. >> jon: the numbers today recoup a lot of what happened yesterday. >> sandra: we'll see. >> when they go low, we go high. no, no. when they go low, we kick 'em. >> sandra: we all remember that moment now. former attorney general eric holder rejecting the notion that democrats should hold themselves to a standard of civility. mitch mcconnell hitting back calling out politicians who engage in divisive rhetoric. >> these comments come less than a year and a half after republican members of the house and senate were literally shot at by a politically crazed gunman. graphic death threats. senators and staff have needed extraordinary police protection. and the democrats calling for more incivility and more rage? >> sandra: joining us now is charlie hurt opinion editor at the washington times and fox news contributor. great to have you on friday morning. if you could look back at this big conversation that has taken place over civility this week and tell us your thoughts. >> you know, it really is sort of amazing especially when you look back at the last couple of weeks with the sordid really disgusting scenes that we saw in the brett kavanaugh confirmation fight on capitol hill. i have never seen things get so ugly and the politics of personal destruction become so acute where the allegations that got thrown out didn't need to be substantiated or anything like that. it really -- we really have hit a new level. i was glad to see that michelle obama came back out to preach the importance of being hopeful and using different rhetoric. but i have to say that it kind of reminded me of her husband's 2008 campaign, also of hope but what was the first thing that he did when he became president? he put eric holder as attorney general. and from there on out it was a very, very different type of politics we got from the obamas. >> sandra: here is michelle obama now that you brought it up responding to eric holder's comment. listen. >> fear is not a proper motivator. hope wins out. if you think how you want your kids to be raised, how you want them to think about life and their opportunities. do you want them afraid of their neighbors, angry and vengeful? we look at the values we try to promote to our children. >> sandra: since then eric holder has responded to all the outrage over his comments, charlie. he tweeted out, okay, stop the fake outrage. i'm obviously not advocating violence. when i was a.g. violent crime in the u.s. was low. republicans are undermining our democracy and democrats need to be tough, proud, and stand up for the values we believe in, the end. >> yeah, you know, obviously because who would imagine that kicking someone is a violent act. you know, it's insane. like i said, you know, i always go back to that 2008 campaign that was the most hopeful, positive campaign i think i've ever seen and look at the eight years, the way the obamas governed and in particular the way that eric holder weaponized the department of justice to divide people. it was an incredibly divisive campaign. they did use fear. that's kind of how they kept voters, you know, in check. it was a really -- it was such a missed opportunity that initial -- that first obama campaign. >> sandra: i go back to leader mcconnell's comments and he is saying that the fight over kavanaugh's confirmation came at a perfect time for republicans as far as generating enthusiasm to get out and vote in the mid-term elections. he says -- here is his warning, lose the senate and the project of confirming judges is over for the last two years of president trump. that i think is a scary prospect to the people who like what we've been doing on the judge project and i hope will help us hold onto our majority. i wanted to get your final thoughts on that. >> there is no motivator among republican voters like the courts. mitch mcconnell and the republicans everywhere need to hit that message every day. it was the primary reason why president trump won the white house in 2016. and as we have seen with the enthusiasm over the last couple weeks from republican voters, it is probably the biggest thing that can get republicans to turn out between now and the election day. >> sandra: charlie hurt. great to have you on on the friday morning. have a great weekend. >> jon: fox news alert and it appears to be good news for pastor brunson in turkey. the turkish court has convicted him of a terror charge but it releases him from house arrest. it appears that means he will be free to return to the united states and perhaps north carolina, his home. let's check in with benjamin hall live with the latest on that. >> it does appear, as you say, the ordeal for pastor brunson is over after two years under arrest year. a year and a half in jail and a half year in house arrest we learned although being convicted of terror charges has had the travel ban lifted, house arrest lifted and control order lifted and he was sentenced to time served. the path is clear for him to return to the u.s. the trial went quickly. they had a few witnesses, brunson was asked to say a few words. he said i am innocent, please let me go. and then a few hours later the judge made this ruling. this would never be decided in the courthouse behind me. it was more political trial. we've heard him called a pawn of the turkish government. he was sentenced -- facing 35 years for terror and espionage charges connected to the failed coup who took place here. people said that was ridiculous. a pillar of the christian community, gentle man and used as a pawn. now he is released. we're getting evidence yesterday it came down to an agreement made yesterday. turkey has been suffering financially and this may now be pastor brunson coming behind us and i'll let you see him. this may be them leaving the courthouse. the military convoy, this is the way he came in. we'll see if we can get a glimpse of him through the window here. we don't know if that perhaps was pastor brunson on his way to free development as i said, this has been political and president trump made it a campaign promise to get unlawfully held americans free. here today it appears we have one more coming home and great news out of turkey. to be honest it could have gone either way as of yesterday. he had a court case four months ago a jet waiting to take him home and the two countries could not agree. today it appears that has gone through. we don't know the specifics of that deal. we do know that turkey wanted relief from some tariffs and sanctions. we'll wait to find out about that. certainly today a great day. although sentenced to terror charges he is only having to do time served. the house arrest lifted, travel ban lifted. control order lifted. paving the way for a return to the u.s. back to you. >> jon: what do we know about his health? he was in a turkish prison but was released supposedly for health reasons and released into house arrest. do we know how he is doing? >> well, he is not in ill health. people said he was hopeful he would be released today. he was angry at some of the charges and witnesses appearing from nowhere to accuse him but no indication he is in bad health. he had been with his wife under house arrest and free to come and go. she had been held under arrest at the beginning. he is in good health. a number of supporters allowed into the court today. certainly for all involved a good day. >> jon: benjamin hall reporting from turkey where pastor andrew brunson, it appears, will be released even though he was convicted on this so-called terror charge. turkish authorities have decided to set him free. thank you very much, benjamin hall. >> sandra: up next we'll have senator thom tillis of north carolina joining us live. he has been fighting for the release of pastor brunson. he will join us with his reaction next. >> sandra: we are just getting the latest now on pastor brunson. the verdict has been reached and he will be freed. in the courtroom a short time ago the turkish court freed pastor brunson sentencing him to three years and gets time served. the actual sentencing he has already served. we await news as to when pastor brunson will come home. that verdict was just reached moments ago. senator thom tillis has been fighting for his release and joins us now by phone. senator, first of all, your reaction to what we've just learned came out of that courtroom. >> it's the best possible outcome. we're very excited for pastor brunson and his wife and working through the logistics and getting him back home. >> sandra: they convicted him of terror charges that he denies. but, of course, is news that they're releasing him from the house arrest he has been under. is this a best-case scenario based on what you've been asking for? >> without any question. we expected there would be some conviction. i think some of the witness statements were withdrawn. i spoke with pastor brunson on sunday. the second anniversary since he has been incarcerated and he was in good spirits. we were talking about possible scenarios and this is the best case. >> sandra: do you know anything about andrew brunson's ability to leave the country and when that might happen? >> no. we'll be working with the state department and the turkish officials to work that out. but we're hoping we're talking just a couple of days, if not hours. >> sandra: president trump just moments ago it seems to be that he tweeted this out after the news of the verdict coming down in the courtroom there. the president tweeting working very hard on pastor brunson. do you know that there would be plans in place if andrew brunson was to be released from the country in the next day or two if he would come home and go directly home, perhaps go to the white house? >> well, i think we will. first i have to thank president trump. he was, i think the mvp in helping us get pastor brunson released, secretary pompeo and lindsey graham. it was really a team effort. the team came together and gotten them freed. now we have to work through the logistics. i don't know if we can have a u.s. asset bring him home or if he will have to come through commercial airlines. those are all logistics i'm thrilled to know we can work through over the next day. days or hours. in my opinion i would like to get him out of turkey before the sun sets. we'll have to see what the processing on the turkish side is. >> sandra: senator tillis, we were told as pastor brunson sat in the courtroom there wearing a black suit and white shirt, red tie. his wife was there looking on. and as they brought forward prosecution witnesses, pastor brunson said i do not understand how this is related to me after the judge questioned one of a series of witnesses. he said the judge was asking the witness about incidents brunson was not involved in. how did this all -- how did this all come about? >> i sat in a courtroom for 12 hours in turkey just outside of the city the first extensive hearing, and the charges that were levied there were absurd and quite honestly why some of the statements have been withdrawn. the turkish court is very different than a u.s. court. you have a three-judge panel, a prosecutor that sits up, a fourth judge. the accused is presumed guilty. you have to prove your innocence. i was proud how pastor brunson stood in the courtroom for hours taking questions and defending himself and asking how could this be? how could you have witnessed the light on in the middle of the night in a room in my church that has no windows? and the absurdity of the charges gave way to what happened today, i think. >> sandra: the turkish courts found pastor brunson guilty of the terror charges as we detailed him but sentenced him to three years, the time he has already served. he will be released shortly. this is what we're getting from there. senator tillis, your expectation he could be home when? >> we're hoping, as i said, if not hours, en route back to the united states over the next couple of days. our office will be working with the state department, some of my colleagues in the senate that have worked hard with us to compel his release and we'll be pressing to get him here as quickly as possible and hopefully back in north carolina. there are a number of people in the courtroom today who are back from his hometown in western north carolina and looks like he will have a great welcoming party once he is released in turkey and once he gets home. >> sandra: a long-awaited moment. you have been fighting for his release. senator tillis, thank you. >> thank you, it's a great day. >> jon: another major shake-up in the roman catholic church. pope francis accepting the resignation of washington cardinal wuerl as sexual abuse allegations continue to engulf the church. stay just twice this fall.n you or, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com ito address my fellow veterans, because i know so many of you have served our country honorably. one of the benefits that we as a country give you as a veteran is the eligibility for a va loan for up to 100% of your home's value. if you need cash for your family, call newday usa. with automatic authority from the va, we can say yes when banks say no. give us a call. call now: 1-855-376-1361. >> jon: fox news alert. as we've told you, hurricane michael nearly flattening the town of mexico beach, florida. now it's heading out to sea as a post tropical storm. mexico beach is now very much in ruins. one woman riding out the storm with her daughter recorded some terrifying images as the eye of the hurricane passed right over their condo. patricia mulligan joins us now on the phone. patricia, it must have been terrifying. >> yes, it was. it was extremely scary. especially when the building started to sway. >> jon: how big a condo are we talking about here? a couple stories, five? >> four stories. we were on the fourth floor. >> jon: top floor. concrete construction? >> yes, that's why we felt safe. concrete construction and even the roof was concrete. >> you rode out the storm. would you do it again? >> well, no, but this would be my second one because i was in hurricane andrew also. but we didn't think it would be that strong. it just -- it kind of got that way quickly. >> jon: it did blow up overnight. you said the whole building was shaking. what was the most terrifying moment for you? >> that, when it started to -- when it started to sway and then you could feel the vibration, a lot of vibration and there were about i think six or seven -- eight of us in there and we were all very nervous. >> jon: then the eye of the storm comes over and you get the weird quiet. >> no, we got the wall of the eye the whole time. that's why we had the wind so strong for so long because we didn't get that quiet part. >> jon: we are glad you're here to tell us your story and thanks very much for sharing those images with us. what a story. thank you very much. >> sandra: victory for the trump administration after turkey releases an american pastor detained there now for two years. senator lindsey graham joins us with his reaction to this breaking news next hour. this is not a bed. it's a revolution in sleep. the new sleep number 360 smart bed is on sale now, from $899, during sleep number's fall sale. it senses your movement, and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. it even helps with this. so you wake up ready to put your pedal to the metal. don't miss the final days of sleep number's fall sale. the queen sleep number 360 c2 smart bed is now only $899. plus, 24-month financing on all beds. ends sunday. sleep number. proven, quality sleep. when it comes to managing your type 2 diabetes, what matters to you? step up to the stage here. feeling good about that? let's see- most of you say lower a1c. but only a few of you are thinking about your heart. fact is, even though it helps to manage a1c, type 2 diabetes still increases your risk of a fatal heart attack or stroke. jardiance is the only type 2 diabetes pill with a lifesaving cardiovascular benefit for adults who have type 2 diabetes and heart disease. jardiance significantly reduces the risk of dying from a cardiovascular event... ...and lowers a1c, with diet and exercise. let's give it another try. jardiance can cause serious side effects including dehydration. this may cause you to feel dizzy, faint, or lightheaded, or weak upon standing. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may be fatal. symptoms include nausea, vomiting, stomach pain, tiredness, and trouble breathing. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of ketoacidosis or an allergic reaction. symptoms of an allergic reaction include rash, swelling, and difficulty breathing or swallowing. do not take jardiance if you are on dialysis or have severe kidney problems. other side effects are sudden kidney problems, genital yeast infections, increased bad cholesterol, and urinary tract infections, which may be serious. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. so-what do you think? well i'm definitely thinking differently than i was yesterday. ask your doctor about jardiance- and get to the heart of what matters. give us the work no one else wants to do. we don't just go against the grain. we grow it. give us the frontiers. the places where success is measured in pushed limits. give us the middle of nowhere. where the only map is your buddies' tread marks. this life? no one's born ready for it. ( ♪ ) ( ♪ ) >> sandra: a fox news alert. breaking news out of turkey moments ago. a court there freeing an american pastor held prisoner for two years. welcome to a brand-new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm sandra smith. >> jon: i'm jon scott in for bill hemmer. news of the verdict coming in moments ago. pastor andrew brunson found guilty of the charges that the u.s. calls baseless but he was sentenced to time served and travel restrictions on him are lifted. that means he can leave the country. it is a victory for the administration that pressed the turkish government on this issue. benjamin hall live in turkey with the latest developments. >> that ordeal, two year ordeal for andrew brunson is now over. bittersweet. he was sentenced to terror-related charges but released. we heard from his lawyer who said he will be heading back to the u.s. he was facing a number of charges, terror related and espionage related to the coup in 201
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buddies with mbs, the leader of saudi arabia. he made buddies with the leader of saudi arabia. is this just as crass as that, that the trump family are in hoc, moneyed interests with the saudis and therefore this is just going to be let go? >> it's quite possible that that's true, that it is just going to be let go. now to the chagrin of the trump family it's probably not going to be robert mueller that puts that information out. if anything it's going to be the alliance of the government of turkey and the government of qatar who have a grudge against the saudi government. for imposing a block aids against them. they've created this ad hoc alliance. the turks themselves have their own interest that they need from donald trump, one of them the release -- i'm sorry, not the release, but the rendition of one of erdogan's biggest enemies. he's a resident of pennsylvania. so i think there's going to be some middle east blackmail, something which they're very good at. , between the trump family and mohammed bin salman of saudi arabia and erdogan in turkey. because if the real story gets out that it's true that the saudis did this murder and that the united states may have known about it, then you have something that's a crisis that could take down both governments. >> and it was the news organization that you work for that did do this story, that hints at the fact that jared kushner was very open, that he, like his father-in-law, had very loose lips when in the presence of foreign leaders who he probably should not have been chatting too, right, and that he may have given information to the saudis that was helpful to them in terms of speaking to them out of turn. what do we have to back that up? >> the reporting from my colleagues also mentioned, you remember, the intercept the mbs bragged to others that he had jared kushner in his pocket. the close relationship between these two princes, if you could call them that, has been known for all. what's interesting, what i find so fascinating when we talk about jared kushner and mbs, they're both spoiled brats and not very good at their jobs. everything mbs touches turns to dust, the war in yemen, disaster, blockade of qatar, disaster. if he ordered this assassination, it's backfired in a way he never imagined. he never thought things would fall apart over the death of jamal khashoggi. where all these u.s. media companies are pulling out of the conference. ariana huffington say she will speak there. one thing i would say, it's easy to line up and bash trump, we should, he's the president, but all these u.s. media companies and business leaders, the head of uber, why did it take the killing of khashoggi to think about how much they've buddied up against the saudis. they've been starving and blockading the people of yemen for several years now. >> it's a fair point. just the people quitting that conference tells you who was going to the conference, right, and just somehow cuddled up american businesses, international businesses were with the saudis. how is it that we're just now having people have a come to jesus, to mix all sorts of metaphors about who this government is? >> well, you know, i lived over there for seven years in the gulf states. and just recently returned to the united states. and the one thing that we can say, unequivocally, is they have ridiculous amounts of money. i mean, they're not billionaires. they're technically trillionaires allowing the states to hold onto their money. they are developing lots of work in the region. they have many, many lobbyists in the united states. that's what everyone really wants. that's why donald trump scheduled his first visit to saudi arabia as a first state visit as pres
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buddy holly song, passed away. the story buddy holly was in high school? liz: was in high school ran into the real peggy sue and knocked book out of her hands. her friend says, do you know who that was? buddyy met later on double dating. he said you're great. hard to sit still, hard to sit still to that song, "peggy sue." stuart: she passed. ashley: i did a double-take, the stocks are up eight million barrels. we were expecting a growth of if you look, two million barrels. we're up eight million barrels. which means we're not using at much you would think that would put downward pressure on oil. stopped at 75. the price is coming down. stuart: it is down over 1%. ashley: a lot more in storage than expected. that is the story. stuart: got it. get more on the market. we're up at a record high. we're up 150 points. facebook, amazon, apple, microsoft, all of them up, one loser. that would be google, as in alphabet. show me tesla. hudson bay capital management said they will keep betting against the stock. >>> trade, president trump makes a deal with canada. joining us, casey guernsey a seventh generation farmer. casey, welcome back. good to see you. >> thanks for having me again. stuart: you'r
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buddy holly playing] >> dana: everyone knows that song, she was a real person. she inspired one of buddy holly's biggest hits, she just passed away. the song was originally going to be called cindy lou but his drummer convinced him to change his name so he could impress peggy. >> jeanine: did he ever end up with peggy? >> greg: he died in a plane crash. >> jeanine: what? >> juan: buddydied. >> juan: she did get married to the drummer. >> jeanine: how do you know this? >> juan: i read it. you know they say it's your birthday but what if you're a homeless child? a pittsburgh woman doing volunteer work with the homeless began to cry when an 11-year-old told her she never had a birthday party or a slice of birthday cake. a33-year-old mom of four came up with this idea, she called her to beverly's birthday's and since 2012 she's put on parties for more than 30,000 children in pittsburgh allowing them to feel like they matter for a few hours and forget the stress of living in poverty. an estimated 2.5 million homeless kids live in the united states and for them, the idea is just terrific it's the gift that keeps on giving. it's a great example for us all. >> jessie: a trainer of mine, his son dominic was diagnosed with juvenile diabetes. he's got this crew, dominic's dominators, there is going to be a big annual walk in the long island area, saturday october 21st if you w
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buddy. thank you so much. i'll talk to you later. >> all right, man. >> jimmy: bye, buddy. bye-bye. [ cheers and applause ] [ light laughter ] he wasn't there. it went straight to voicemail. >> kevin: i heard the whole conversation. >> jimmy: give it up for dwayne johnson, everybody. [ cheers and applause ] we'll be right back with more of "the tonight show" with me and kevin hart. >> kevin: come on. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ 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 pro everywhere. part of an entrepreneur's job is to get stuff done. i like to do, like, four things at once. the new surface pro can handle all of my programs. i can paint, i can mold, i can code. i have it on all the time, it's fantastic. we get to build toys for kids and change the world. it's a big deal. yaaaayyy!!! aww. yaaaayyy!!! aww. yaaaayyy!!! aww. we hide hotel names, so you can find four star hotels at two star prices. h-o-t-w-i-r-e hotwire.com but allstate actually helps you drive safely... with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... ...and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that. now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? it's simple, honest ingredients. it's pre chopped, and pre seasoned. it's just the right amount of help to make a wholesome meal. that's what it is. take us downtown, waze. waze integration- seamlessly connecting the world inside with the world outside. making life a little easier. ♪ the new well-connected 2019 lincoln mkc. police are investigating a shooting. we have a crew at the scene gathering more information. no jackpot winner tuesday night, so that means this friday )s mega millions jackpot is a whopping 868 million dollars. someone in san francisco did win big though... matching 5 out of 6 numbers ... worth nearly 2 million bucks. our next digital update is in an [ cheering and applause ] m♪ >> jimmy: welcome back, guys. we're so excited to have kevin hart here tonight. >> kevin: yeah! >> jimmy: co-hosting. [ cheering and applause ] >> kevin: yes. >> jimmy: now every time he is here, kevin and i try to do something fun. and in honor of his new movie "night school", we thought that this time we would see what happens when we go back to school. take a look. [ applause ] >> jimmy: hey guys, we're here at a local high school out in queens, new york city. now, kevin, you're in a new movie called "night school" and because of that, i thought it would be fun if the two of us went back to high school for a a day. and competed against each other to see who is the better student. now, none of the students know we're here. so we're about to surprise them and crash their classes all day. you ready? >> kevin: yes. [ laughter ] ♪ [ bell ] >> good morning, everybody. so we have two new students today. let's make them feel welcome. >> good morning. [ laughter ] >> thank you. >> jimmy: it's for you. apple -- please. eat it whenever. hi. >> kevin: how you doing? >> good. >> kevin: an apple. what do you give him an apple for? i don't know you're into apple products, but i got you all of them. [ laughter and applause ] yeah. yeah. >> jimmy: you can eat mine, make it into an applesauce. >> kevin: you know where you can learn more about applesauce? on apple tv. i'm ready to learn. i'm not here to waste your time. >> all right, so today we're going to be doing some solving algebraic equations. all right, so, jimmy, do you want to give it a try? >> jimmy: um, sure. of course. and, let's see -- x plus 22 -- >> kevin: uh-uh. uh-uh. >> jimmy: to the 29. that thing, i always very good -- >> kevin: mm-mm. >> jimmy: 32, x -- >> kevin: what? x equals 7. >> kevin: what? what? >> no. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: oh, like you -- like, you know what it is? >> kevin: everybody knows that. if you had called me up there, it's easy. you just -- i don't even know -- [ bell ] oh, i guess i can't show you. i gotta go. >> jimmy: that's unbelievable. >> kevin: i got to go. [ applause ] [ bell ] >> here's the day we've all been waiting for. frog dissection. >> jimmy: oh! >> kevin: oh! [ gagging ] kinda see his ass. i can see the frog -- [ gagging ] >> jimmy: oh, got me. [ bell ] >> kevin: and i had a bag, like, a bag, you know. and that's when i said, "put the money in the bag." [ laughter ] what's that noise? >> jimmy: finally, you get -- [ chair dragging ] >> kevin: it's so loud. so loud. so loud. it's so loud. just pick the chair up. >> jimmy: hi, guys. >> kevin: so loud. >> jimmy: how you doing? oh, this is so fun. are you guys laughing over here? i got a joke. do you want to hear a school joke? a neutron walks into a bar. a neutron. he goes to the bartender, "how much for a drink?" the bartender says, "well, for you, no charge." [ laughter ] it's a neutron. [ chair dragging ] >> kevin: guys. guys. sorry, megan. >> jimmy: what's your problem? you don't know what a neutron is? no charge. nerds. [ bell ] ♪ [ cheering and applause ] >> kevin: watch out, guys. watch out, watch out, watch out, watch out, watch out, watch out. >> jimmy: watch out. >> hit the ropes, now. >> kevin: he was the one that held me up. >> everybody else, go. ropes, now. >> kevin: oh, my god. >> jimmy: i think i'm wearing your shorts. [ laughter ] >> unbelievable. [ floor scuffing ] [ laughter ] >> kevin: let's go. [ whistle ] you got it. yeah. and now we start. that's right. yeah! keep going! >> jimmy: i got it. i got it. >> kevin: where's your underwear at, man? your jimmy's out. [ laughter ] [ whistle ] >> dodgeball. >> jimmy: let's play dodgeball. >> kevin: but that's a a basketball. >> jimmy: i know it's a a basketball. [ laughter ] >> kevin: that was great, right? i brought you a water, man. >> jimmy: thank you, dude. >> kevin: god, class is crazy. [ laughter and applause ] [ bell ] >> jimmy, we know you tried very, very hard and we're very proud of you. but, kevin, you are the better student. >> kevin: yes! >> jimmy: oh, my gosh. [ cheers and applause ] this is unbelievable. >> kevin: oh, my gosh. the entire school is going to go and see my movie "night school." you guys get to see it before anybody else. [ cheering and applause ] ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> kevin: oh, thanks a lot. >> jimmy: my thanks to kevin hart and to all of the students and teachers at st. john's prep in queens for having us. we hope you had fun at the screening. we'll be right back with more kevin hart, ladies and gentlemen. >> kevin: oh, so good. >> jimmy: it was great. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ (nationwide jingle) you see brad, songs are really about big life moments. baby shower here. big. life. moment. what is in here? ohh! oh, i hope it's a life insurance policy. what? it's a sensible gift. protection for you and your family, nationwide has all the tools to help you find the right coverage. tiny baby shoes. so close. (peyton) makes no sense. babies can't even walk. should have been a life insurance policy. plus it would have been a great song. think about it, the lyrics, the beneficiaries... brad, where are you going? 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. this is our fist glimpse ofthat's so cool.er. this is one of my favorite things right here... ...tangerines. look at these guys. a beautiful, sweet giraffe. there's the man, thomas jefferson, right there. hang on, i'm looking it up. don't do the accent again. [french accent] the arènes de lutce... ...and, you did it. oh, it's a gerenuk, gar-enuk? i guess a tangerine's different. huh, can't remember everything. ♪ you are many different things, in one amazing package. and t.j.maxx lets you express every one. with our unique mix of must-have brands at must-buy prices, you'll always save on something for every you. maxx you. maxx life. t.j.maxx maxx you. maxx life. ♪ do you ♪ the 3 for $10 deal it's hot got a cheesy up-grade ♪ ♪ we added a burger, now topped with our queso ♪ ♪ it's que-so-amazing, que-so see you soon ♪ ♪ 3 for $10 bucks, baby, bucks, baby, bucks ♪ mmm-hmm... ♪ oh, baby, 3 for $10 bucks ♪ ♪ baby, bucks, baby, bucks ♪ ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: welcome back, everybody. i am hanging out with my co-host kevin hart. >> kevin: yes, yes. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: we love you. kevin and tiffany haddish star in the huge new comedy "night school", which is in theaters next friday. i'm so happy that you're here and you're co-hosting on my birthday. so this is double -- [ cheers and applause ] it's double the fun. >> kevin: this is big. this is big, man. >> jimmy: it's double, yeah. >> kevin: no, you only get one 50th. you get one 50th birthday. [ light laughter ] >> jimmy: i'm 44. >> kevin: and you gotta -- ah, to-may-to, to-mah-to. we don't have to get into it. >> jimmy: my gosh -- >> kevin: but if you think that i came here empty handed, you've got another thing coming, man. >> jimmy: really? >> kevin: i got you a gift. it's -- >> jimmy: you don't have to get me something. >> kevin: where is it? i put it back there. >> jimmy: this? >> kevin: yeah, there it is. look at that. look at what i got you. ha? ha? [ cheers and applause ] ha? yeah. yeah. >> jimmy: wow. >> kevin: that's for you. that's for you. i got you that. that's me -- that's me right there. >> jimmy: wow. >> kevin: that's my new tommy john x kevin hart campaign. it's not launching until, like, october -- >> jimmy: it's not -- it's not launching? >> kevin: not 'til october. i wanted to give you -- [ laughter ] >> jimmy: something -- something's launch -- something's launching. >> kevin: what are you talking about? [ laughter ] what are you talking about? >> jimmy: wow. >> kevin: i wanted to give you the first poster. that's for you, man. >> jimmy: yeah. >> kevin: happy birthday, man. [ cheers and applause ] yeah, yeah. >> jimmy: well -- and, wow. >> kevin: yeah. >> jimmy: yeah. well this is -- you teamed up with tommy john underwear. >> kevin: yes! you can talk to me about it. ask my whatever you want about that. i'm so in love with the campaign, how it came out, the relationship. talk to me. what's up? [ light laughter ] >> jimmy: i have a lot of questions. >> kevin: shoot. >> jimmy: just look at it again? i mean, this -- >> kevin: yeah, yeah. >> jimmy: bubble bath. looks like a -- looks like an easy photoshoot. i mean, was it hard? >> kevin: what? [ laughter ] what? [ applause ] >> jimmy: was the photoshoot -- [ laughter ] was the photoshoot -- >> kevin: no! >> jimmy: it looked easy. >> kevin: no, it was a piece of cake. i'm very relaxed. >> jimmy: yeah. >> kevin: you see the bubble bath. >> jimmy: yeah, you're very relaxed. look, i -- here is my question. my question is -- >> kevin: what is it? what is it? >> jimmy: when you buy tommy john underwear -- >> kevin: yeah. >> jimmy: you buy them by the -- the per underwear or does it come in, like, a a package of three? my question is how big is the package? [ laughter ] when i get -- >> kevin: what? >> jimmy: when i get -- when i get my underwear, how big is the package? >> kevin: i mean, well, it depends. for you, it'd be a small package. [ laughter ] because they don't need -- >> jimmy: why, because you're only going to give me one? is that why? >> kevin: well, it's like if we were to -- like, picture a thimble. like if we wrapped you up -- [ laughter ] >> jimmy: what? >> kevin: like a walnut. like if a walnut came in a a package. >> jimmy: like a walnut shell. >> kevin: yeah. like a walnut shell. we can send it to you in that. my packages are big. these are big packages, with mine. [ light laughter ] because this is my line, so -- >> jimmy: this is a great present. thank you. >> kevin: i didn't sign -- give me a pen. can i sign it for you? i gotta sign this thing, man. >> jimmy: this is amazing. i really appreciate it. >> kevin: happy birthday, man. you're my guy. >> jimmy: i appreciate it. >> kevin: you're my guy, you know? [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: thank you so much. >> kevin: no problem. yeah, yeah. >> jimmy: oh, my goodness. >> kevin: happy birthday, man. >> jimmy: i've very lucky. thank you so much, man. >> kevin: yeah. i'm your friend, buddyry, if you know what i'm talking about. >> kevin: oh, my god. with jerry seinfeld. >> jimmy: yes. jerry seinfeld, and somehow -- well, explain this. >> kevin: i'll tell you the story. so jerry seinfeld, a good friend of mine, man. >> jimmy: love him. >> kevin: jerry seinfeld, i go to his house and jerry seinfeld has a pizza oven. and i see the pizza oven and i'm like, "what's that?" he's like, "oh, my god, it's a a brick pizza oven." he's like, "you've never had brick oven pizza?" and i'm like, "no, i didn't even know that was a thing." he's like, "oh, my god. you got to get brick oven pizza." [ laughter ] he's like -- >> jimmy: that's your jerry impression? >> kevin: yeah, it's my jerry impression. he's like, "you haven't lived until you've had brick oven pizza." [ laughter ] >> jimmy: that doesn't sound like jerry seinfeld. >> kevin: that's spot on jerry seinfeld. [ light laughter ] >> jimmy: sounds like nipsey russell. >> kevin: no, no, no. [ laughter ] if you were to close your eye
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buddy mark judge. judge has written about a fella named bart o'kavanaugh. was that a reference to his real life buddy i only the one who remembers the maverick brothers on television. brett and bart. could this be the way author mark judge meant to disguise brett and his accounts of wild drinking and associated horrors. i want to know everything mr. judge can tell us and more. if he says he can't remember, the fbi agents should get judge to admit that. it can't be served up as mr. judge's alibi for himself and perhaps future justice kavanaugh. we need of get a full reading of what happened that night with deborah ram nez and michael avenatti's client julia swetnick. we need a solid probe of kavanaugh's drinking habits. h did he alternate between bad guy and good guy depending on his consumption. that could tell us that once on the supreme court he could find himself pulled to the hard right by the people who pushed this nomination in the first place and got him this far, you know who they are. that's "hardball" for now. thanks for being with us. "all in" with chris hayes starts right now. >>> tonight
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buddy, financial expert author of everyday plirn chris hogan thanks for joining us. >> good to be. >> tell us what a money buddy is why people need to get themselves one. >> well, a monday bunny helps you be accountable we know accountability is so important helps to stay focused avoid distraction as you start to look for this money there is few qualities to encourage you number one choose wisely someone that you trust and respect, someone that understands you, and can tell you no. but, at the same time, you want to find someone that is also very clear and can be honest with you. that can tell you to stay on track, so now you don't get distracted because the mall is having a sale something else going on it helps to remain focused. >> joining at the conversation susan lee. >> good morning i love talking about saving for retirement for the future but given that we are at record levels right now for the stock market people think going to be hard to make gains forward do you have advice for people looking to save long term? >> i think the most important thing is that if you are trying to save for the long term you've got to be connected to your now means budgeting aware how much is coming in what does it take to run household stay focused i think economically, we got to focus on our own homes, we need a debt reduction plan a spending plan we immediate emergency fund for our homes if we did that we will be okay. >> chris mike murphy. i agree with what you are saying kind of go to the gym work out buddyto working out than you i give same advice as far as financial buddy you want someone who is better that the saving and better at planning longer term if you can then reach their standards i think you really improve yourself. >> you are absolutely right i think when you find someone that has more proficiency than you, you've got an opportunity to improve, but, again, you've got to be honorings you got to be willing to be open, about your money weaknesses we all have those being honest about it allows us to control it. you can't manage anything you are not aware of so be open honest, studies have shown increase your chances of success when you involve someone with you as you chase that goal. maria: always. >> i am asking you chris should i be nobody's monday -- money buddy. >> thank you so much. >> coming up jobs claims out numbers ahead of tomorrow's big, important jobs' report we have heard airline cutting back on frills a major perk coming to delta passengers we've got to tell you ab
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buddy, stop. and he's just looking at the bush. he won't leave it or anything. so we go up there and we're looking and it's like, wow that looks pretty strange. >> reporter: buddy made a discovery a human skull. >> i was totally amazed. i was without words, you know, i didn't know what to think. >> reporter: when police arrived, they found a shallow grave nearby. >> that's when we found him. >> reporter: him. the coroner soon confirmed it, after two.5 years, here was the body of gavin smith. >> the clothing was still intact and he had been wrapped in his own blanket he had in the truck of his car. >> reporter: the coroner also found the cause of death and it was grim. blunt craneio facial trauma, that is, multiple blows to his face. he was beaten to death. >> it was repeated hitting in order to do that much damage, very violent. >> reporter: there were also fractures to the right forearm, possibly defensive wounds. gavin had tried to fight, but clearly, he was no match for his killer. whoever did this was strong, very strong. >> powerhouse gym was very gossipy so if you told the wrong person something your secret would be all over the gym r. lauren just 18 years old back then asked us not to use her last name. not after she found herself in the middle of a homicide investigation. when police came across her doing under surveillance on john creech. lauren used to work at the pro shop of the power house gym in schatzworth, california. that's where she first met creech. >> he was beautiful. he was tall and he was muscular and a lot of women especially wanted to date him. a lot of men wanted to be him. >> reporter: lauren fell for him. he told her he was separated from his wife chandy, but that didn't stop chandy from calling lauren. >> she texted and called me and was very belligerent and rude. >> reporter: angry, programs, that her husband, then 39 was dating a high school girl. in fact, sheer coincidence, lauren went to high school with gavin smith's son. though she knew when he disappeared in may, 2012, but made no connection between that and something she noticed about her boyfriend, john creech. >> i discovered he had scrapes on his hands and on his arms. >> she didn't think he had a eng to do with the disappearance. >> reporter: but when detective o'brian heard about creech's skrarngs she thought about gavin smith's wuvenltdz he needed to talk to him again. he found him in jamie serving eight years on a cocaine charge, his second conviction for dealing drugs. not exactly an upstanding citizen. could they prove he murdered gavin smith. >> he went to him. didn't ask him questions, put a picture down in front of him with the shol shallow grave. >> reporter: how'd he react to that in. >> very wide eyed 57d the first call to his attorney. >> reporter: the record of calls detectives found in creech's cell phone from the night gavin vanished. john creech was on the phone a lot. >> he was calling multiple people, very intensely. >> reporter: so like three or four or five calls to the same person over and of? >> exactly. >> reporter: some of the calls were to creech's buddies power house gym. >> we did a multi-location search warrant. we hit everybody we believed might have helped on that evening. we hit all those houses all at once. >> reporter: one by one those buddys turned. they toomd detectives how a frantic creech showed up and persuaded one friend to get rid of gavin's cell phone. another friend to hide gavin's car and body in his kranl and yet another told detectives she saw chandy and john creech burning their own clothes in the fireplace after havegavin was killed. >> this was a straight case. >> reporter: prosecutor bobby graves. >> you don't normally find a body two years later afte aftersomebody is killed. you don't have key witnesses until years later. >> reporter: in january, 2015, nearly three years of gavin smith disappeared, creech was charged with first degree murder. he had pleaded not guilty. and chandy, well -- >> we didn't know if she set it o up or she had something to do with it. >> coming up, an under cover sting and chapdy is the
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buddy. how are you? ♪ i just want some i just want some mac and cheese ♪ greg kinnear in the house! greg kinnear! [ cheers and applause ] >> thanks. >> jimmy: you look great, buddy. >> thanks. >> jimmy: how have you been? i want to talk to you about everything. "house of cards." >> there's gonna be some drama. >> jimmy: last season, man. >> it's the last season. it's all over. >> jimmy: how's -- how's your golf game? i always bring it up every time you come on. >> i know you're a fan. >> jimmy: i am a fan of golf. >> you're going to be mad at me. you're going to be a little jealous of me because i played in the ryder cup. >> jimmy: i can't believe that. >> yeah. >> jimmy: how is that possible? >> it's kind of the world series of golf. and they basically have all the best golfers from the united states signing off against all the best golfers from europe. tiger woods and i played 36 straight holes together. >> jimmy: did you really? >> no, that's not true. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: he didn't even wave at you? >> but the day before the big tournament actually starts -- >> jimmy: i fell for it. >> you really did, man. my god. >> jimmy: i was like, "wow." >> you're changing. but the day before they start the big tournament they had the sort of amateur, you know, u.s. team of athletes and some actors against the european group. and so we had a cool group. we had sam jackson there. we had kurt russell. we had john mcenroe. >> jimmy: yeah. >> who literally says after he hits a bad shot, "you can't be serious." [ laughter ] >> jimmy: yes, he does say it. >> michael phelps. condoleezza rice was a golfer. >> jimmy: really? >> yeah. >> jimmy: how is she as a a golfer? >> she plays fast. she's very quick. she's used to solving world crisis. she hits and she goes. i just like to talk more. >> jimmy: yeah, exactly. >> but it's a nerve-wracking thing because you're actually at le course national, which is in france. >> jimmy: i couldn't tell. i thought it was in -- >> it's called le course national. >> jimmy: in france. >> oui. >> jimmy: oui oui? >> no. just oui. >> jimmy: oh, just oui. [ laughter ] >> so it was really -- but you're nervous because in the ryder cup unlike, you know, you go to a normal golf tournament and people just kind of like if you hit a good shot, people just kind of do that. it's quiet. at the ryder cup, long-standing tradition. they're kind of -- people are in it and they're ready to defend their turf. as an american, if you hit a a good shot, they boo. and it's in france. so it's a french boo. it's like a "beu." [ laughter ] beu. >> jimmy: beu. >> try it. try it. beu. >> jimmy: beu. >> it's in the -- >> jimmy: it's just real -- beu. >> beu. >> jimmy: if it's real bad it's baguette. baguette. >> baguette. >> together: beu. >> jimmy: so, you're getting booed? >> yeah. so they'll boo you. but they will cheer you if you hit a bad shot. i guess so, yeah. >> so i delivered on that. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: how did you end up doing? >> well, you know, my partner was luke wilson. >> jimmy: i love that guy. he's great. >> oh, yeah. >> jimmy: absolutely. >> that's what i thought. >> jimmy: yeah. sure. >> we used to be friends. no, it was like -- we got -- you know, we got down heavily in the match early on. and so rather than supporting each other and doing that whole thing we basically started humiliating each other. and just random horrible attacks. >> jimmy: really? >> and just infighting. because we were nervous. you know? we weren't doing well. so as it turns out, when your partner, after you hit a bad shot, tells you, "you really suck at golf --" >> jimmy: yeah. >> it doesn't make you hit the next shot better. >> jimmy: no, no. it doesn't. [ laughter ] >> it's not helpful. >> jimmy: no, not at all. but how did you end up -- >> we kicked a little ass. yeah. we won. >> jimmy: oh, really? [ cheers and applause ] for america. >> yeah, that's right. for the united states of america. >> jimmy: for the united states of america. here is the victory shot right here. the whole team. >> yeah there it is. >> jimmy: there you go. [ cheers and applause ] not bad. where are you? where's greg kinnear? >> yeah. i'm back in the -- no, no. that's nick jonas. >> jimmy: that's nick jonas. >> that's nick jonas. i don't know. that's phelps, i think over there. there's condi. you got um -- i think i'm -- >> jimmy: kurt russell. are you here? [ laughter ] >> yeah keep going. >> jimmy: is that your hand? >> no, that's luke. sam really -- i think -- >> jimmy: there he is. greg kinnear. there he is. world champion. world champion right there! [ laughter ] you're barely in this photo. that's a terrible photo. >> i'm thinking, "was i there?" >> jimmy: no, i don't even think you were there. >> it really -- i celebrate with my nostrils, though. you can still see. how about sam? look at sam jackson, for crying out loud. he's like owning the entire photograph. >> jimmy: he's a good golfer, isn't he? >> he's pretty good, yeah. >> jimmy: how's the family doing? >> everybody's good, you know. growing up. you know what it's like. you've got two. i've got three daughters. and you know, they're half -- my wife's from england. so uh, they're different, you know. [ laughter ] well, i mean i'm saying the british -- no, no, no. the british are different. so i see in my kids as they get older, i see the american kind of boisterous side and then i also see the quiet demure sort of more reserved, proper british. we were in england recently. this is a true story. we were in like a bed and breakfast. kids are crashed out. my wife and i -- this is just a great example of how the british behave. we're in a little café downstairs having a bite to eat. and there's an older couple sitting over here just eating their eggs. and i start hearing -- [ choking noise ] you know, just very soft -- that's choking. that's me choking. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: of course. >> and i look over here, and the husband, he's not looking up from his eggs to even acknowledge that his wife is, like, kind of choking. i look over at the waiter and the waiter's got the newspaper. and he's like -- he's not going to do anything. [ laughter ] i said to my wife, "should i go do anything?" and she's just like -- we just don't deal with it like that. but the woman is getting a a little louder. she goes out into the hallway. and she's having an episode. it's like an f-150 backfiring at this point. and i'm like i've got to do something. so i go in the hallway, and i tap her on the shoulder. i say can i -- you know, and i played a soap opera doctor in a movie once. i know nothing. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: you were great, by the way. you were fantastic. >> i have no idea how to deal with a choking situation. but i just said, "can i give you, you know --" you know, the international symbol, i guess, for a heimlich. and her eyes are tearing up. and she said, "yes, please." turns around. and i give her a couple of pops. and finally the husband, who's been gulping eggs, peeks around the corner. and is kind of checking out. she coughs a little something up. she was fine. everything was okay. and then seconds later we're all back in the cafe and nothing's happened. everybody's -- nothing happened. nothing at all. >> jimmy: you saved someone's life. [ cheers and applause ] you're a hero. >> no. >> jimmy: you're an american treasure. >> it kind of was my tom cruise moment. >> jimmy: it certainly was. >> i think she would have been fine anyway. but honestly, it was just like the way the british are. it's just very quiet and reserved. >> jimmy: i want to talk about "house of cards." >> yeah. >> jimmy: i love it. big fan of the show. you coming in on this -- it's a a big deal. this is the end of the whole series. >> yeah. >> jimmy: they almost didn't make this last season. >> yeah. it started a little rough. you know, obviously. diane lane and i play brother and sister. we play bill and annette sheppard. we started the show and obviously hit a pretty serious speed bump. netflix was very good. they took care of the crew during a time where the writers had to go rewrite and reconfigure the show for that final episode. >> jimmy: sure. >> but we all came back with a a mandate. listen, i'm just a big fan of the show. i felt like the people on that show, particularly robin, who i really felt like stuck with it -- [ cheers and applause ] it would be very easy for an actor to lose, you know, her co-star and say "you know, maybe that's a sign. maybe that's enough." and she stuck right in there. brought that ball into the end zone. >> jimmy: good for her. >> and i felt like -- for good reason, too. not only for the crew but the fans. i mean people really, really like that show. >> jimmy: of course, yeah. >> we have an ending coming. and it's good. >> jimmy: really? now, it's eight episodes, right? >> that's right. >> jimmy: what can you tell us? can you tell us anything? can you give us a hint, a a spoiler? can you allude? >> i can't tell you much. i can tell you that at the end of the season i've killed everyone and i'm the president. but i can't -- [ laughter ] >> jimmy: that's way too much. >> i can't tell you anything more than that. >> jimmy: all right. that's a good hint. i want to show you a clip. here's greg kinnear and robin wright in the new season of "house of cards." take a look at this. >> he's out, claire, and he's not going back in. now, you need my help. later tonight i'm going to watch you sign that bill that's sitting on your desk. to the dead a kingdom means nothing. they have their requiem and eternity. that's "macbeth," the opera, not the play. all you have to do now is just go on out there to your oldest, dearest friend, and hold her hand up high. ♪ >> jimmy: that's how you do it right there. [ cheers and applause ] greg kinnear, everybody! watch the final season of "house of cards" streaming november 2nd on netflix. we'll be right back with paul dano, everybody. stick around. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ alright, come on girls get together. three... two...one! oh! i wasn't ready! ♪ let me try again... ♪ ready? ♪ let me try again... happy birthday to you... arrgh!!! ♪ ooh, let's get a group photo. ready? aah! (chuckling) ♪ aaw! i did not catch that. ♪ you and me can't have it all ♪ you and i again one two three...cheeese! waah! (dog barks) ♪ let me try again ♪ ♪ let me try again cheezcombination of thecrunch with-ying cheese. with their delicious perfection- cheese. it's not all about you cheese. you think i have a mouth. i'm a wheel of cheese. got a point. [yeah] cheez-it. cheesy, crunchy satisfaction. ♪ is that good? yeah, it's perfect. bees! bees, bees! [ yelling ] [ indistinct chattering ] close the door! [ heavy breathing ] aww, there's bees in the car. bees! bees! the volkswagen atlas. with easy-access 3rd row. life's as big as you make it. ♪ look around. with artificial intelligence, we are not crawling or walking. we are flying. microsoft ai helps an architect bring history back to life. this is now. ai helps farmers grow more food with less resources. an engineer explores how ai can help the deaf see sound. innovation creates tomorrow, and tomorrow is here today. "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 california news papers endorse dianne feinstein for us senate. narrator: he claims to be an education reformer, but marshall tuck's failed record managing actual schools won't work as superintendent of public instruction. as ceo of l.a.'s partnership schools, the teachers gave tuck a vote of "no confidence." and tuck's total mismanagement of l.a. charter schools caused financial problems that cost taxpayers thousands. tony thurmond. the only candidate endorsed by classroom teachers. holding all our schools accountable and always protecting neighborhood public schools. tony thurmond. for our schools. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: our next guest is a a fantastic actor who just directed and co- wrote his first feature film, called "wildlife." it's in theaters now. everyone, please welcome paul dano. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: welcome back. looking great, buddy ] ♪ >> thank you. thank you. yeah. >> jimmy: she's gorgeous, by the way. what a beautiful, beautiful baby. how does it feel to be a dad? >> i'm so tired. [ laughter ] and i'm so in love. you know. i mean, it's like -- >> jimmy: it's amazing, right? >> it's so extreme. your heart has gone like, supernova in one sense. and then we landed from london last week and she cried for like 24 straight hours. and you just kind of want to walk through a wall. [ laughter ] it's crazy. >> jimmy: it's the most bizarre thing in the whole wide world. congrats on that. that's fantastic. a "little miss sunshine" reunion here. greg kinnear was just on the show. and that was -- [ cheers and applause ] we have a photo here. there's paul in the back there. there's paul. >> young man. >> jimmy: a young man back then. >> yeah. yeah. yeah. >> jimmy: what do you remember from this? >> so i remember in rehearsal, our directors jonathan dayton and valerie faris trying to establish a sort of family dynamic, right.
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buddy. how are you? ♪ i just want some i just want some mac and cheese ♪ greg kinnear in the house! greg kinnear! [ cheers and applause ] >> thanks. >> jimmy: you look great, buddy. >> thanks. >> jimmy: how have you been? i wa everything. you about "house of cards." >> there's gonna be some drama. >> jimmy: last season, man. >> is the last season. it's all over. >> jimmy: how's -- how's your golf game? i always bring it up every time you come on. >> i know you're a fan.am >> jimmy: fan of golf. >> you're going to be mad at me. you're going to be a little jealous of me because i played in the ryder cup >> jimmy: i can't believe that. >> yeah. >> jimmy: how is that >> it's kind of the world series of golf. e all the asically h best golfers from the united states signing off against all the best golfers e frope. tiger woods and i played 36 straight holes together. >> jimmy: did you really? >> no, that's not true. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: he didn't even wave at you? >> but the day before the big -tournament actually star >> jimmy: i fell for it.ou >>eally did, man. my god. >> jimmy: i was like, "wow." >> you're changing. but the day before they start the big tournament they had theo soamateur, you know, u.s. uram of athletes and some actors against theean group. and so we d a cool group. we had sam jackson there. we had kurt russell. we had john mcenroe. >> jimmy: yeah. >> who literal says after he hits a bad shot, "you can't be serious." [ laughter >> jimmy: yes, he does say it. >> michael phelps. condoleezza rice was a golfer. >> jim: really? >> yeah. >> jimmy: how is she as a a golfer? >> she plays fast. she's very quick. she's used to solvind crisis. she hits and she goes. i just like to talk more. >> jimmy: yeah, exactly. >> but it's a nerve-wracking thing because you're actually at le courseational, which is in france. >> jimmy: i couldn't tell. i thought it was in -- >> it's called le course national. >> jimmy: in france. >> oui. >> jimmy: oui oui? >> no.st ui. >> jimmy: oh, just oui. [ laughter ] >> so was really -- but you're nervous because in the ryder cup unlike, you know, you go to a normal golf tourname and people just kind of like if you hit a good shot, people just kind of do that. it's quiet. at the ryder cup, long-standing tradition. they're kind of -- people are in it and they're ready to t defend thef. as an american, if you hit a a good shot, they boo.ce and it's in fr so it's a french boo. it's like a "beu." [ laughter beu. >> jimmy: beu. >> try it. try it. beu. >> jimmy: beu. >> it's in the -- >> jimmy: it's just real -- beu. >> beu. >> jimmy: if it's real bad it's baguette. baguette. >> baguette.og >>her: beu. >> jimmy: so, you're getting booed? >> yeah. so thell boo you. but they will cheer you if you hit a bad shot. i ess so, yeah. >> so i delivered on that. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: how did you end up >> well, you know, my partner was luke wilson. >> jimmy: i love that guy. he's great. >> oh, yeah. >> jimmy: absolutely. >> that's what i thought. >> jimmy: yeah. sure. >> we used to be friends. no, it was like -- we got -- you know, down heavily in the match early on. and so rather than supporting each other and doing that whole thing we basically started mi ating each other. and just random horrible attack >> jimmy: really? >> and just infighting. because we we nervous. you know? we weren't doing well. so as it turns out, when yr partner, after you hit a bad shot, tells you, "you really suck at golf --" >> jimmy: yeah. >> it doesn't make you hit the next shot better. >> jimmy: no, no. it doesn't. [ laugs er ] >> it helpful. >> jimmy: no, not at all. but how did you end up -- >> we kicked a little ass. yeah. we won. >> jimmy: oh, really? [ cheers and applause ] for america. for the united states of america. >> jimmy: for the united states of america. here is the victory shot right here.th whole team. >> yeah there it is. >> jimmy: there you go. [ cheers and applause ] not bad. where are you? where's greg kinnear? >> yeah. no, no.k in the -- that's nick jonas. >> jimmy: that's nick jonas. >> that's nick jonas. i don't know. that's phelps, i think over there. there's condi. you got um -- i think i'm -- >> jimmy: kurt russell. are you here? [ laught g ] >> yeah keng. >> jimmy: is that your hand? >> no, that's luke. sam really -- i think -- >> jimmy: there he is. greg kinnear.th e he is. world champion. world champion right there! [ laughter ] you're barely in this photo. th's a terrible photo. >> i'm thinking, "was i there?" >> jimmy: no, i don't even think you were there. >> it really -- i celebrate with my nostrils, th you can still see. how about sam? look at sam jackson, for crying out loud. he's like owning the entire photograph. >> jimmy: he's a good golfer, isn't he >> he's pretty good, yeah. >> jimmy: how's the family doing? >> everybody's good, you know. growing up. you know what it's like. you've got two. i've got three daughters. and you know, they're half -- my wife's from england. so uh, they're different, you know. [ laughter ] well, i mean i'm saying the british -- no, no, no. the british are different. so i see in my kids as ty get older, i see the american kind of boisterous side and then i also see the quiet demure sort of more reserved, proper british. we were in england recently. this is a true story. we were like a bed and eakfast. kids are crashed out. my wife and i -- this is just a great example of how the itish behave. we're in a little café downstairs having a bite to eat. and there's an older couple tt g over here just eating their eggs. and i start hearing -- [ choking noise ] you know, just very soft -- that's choking. that's me choking. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: of course. >> and i look over he, and the husband, he's not looking up from his eggs to even acknowledge that his wife is, ke kind of choking. i look over at the waiter and the waiter's got the newspaper. and he like -- he's not going to do anything. [ laughter ] i said to my wife, "should i go do anything?" and she's just like -- we just don't deal with it like that. but the woman is getting a a little louder. she goes out into the hallway. and she's having an episode. it's like an f-150 backfiring at this point. and i'm like i've got to do something. so i go in the hallway, and i tap heon the shoulder. i say can i -- you know, and i played a soap opera doctor in a movie once. i know nothing. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: you were gre the way. you were fantastic. >> i have no idea how to deal with a choking situation. but i just said, "can i give you, you know --" you ow, the ess, national symbol, i for a heimlich. and her eyes are tearing up. and she said, "yes, please." turns around. and i give her a couple of pops. and finally the husban been gulping eggs, peeks around the corner. and is kind of checkg out. she coughs a little something up. she was fine. everything was okay. and then seconds later we're l back in the cafe and nothing's happened. everybody's -- nothing happened. nothing at all. >> jimmy: you saved someone's life. [ cheers and applause ] you're a hero. >> no. >> jimmy: you're an american treasure. >> it kind of was my tom cruise moment. >> jimmy: it certainly was. >> i think she would have been fine anyway. h t honestly, it was just like the way the brite. it's just very quiet and reserved. >> jimmy: i want to talk about "house of cards." >> yeah. >> jimmy: i love it. big fan of the show. you coming in on this -- it's a a big deal. this is the end of the whole series. >> yeah. >> jimmy: they almost didn't make thilast season. >> yeah. it started a little rough. you ow, obviously. diane lane and i play brother and sister. we play bill and annette sheppard. we started the show and obviously hit a pretty serious speed bump. netflix was very good. they took care of the crew during a time where the writers had to go rewrite and reconfigure the show for that final episode. >>immy: sure. >> but we all came back with a a mandate. listen, i'm just a big fan of the show. i felt like the people on that show, particularly robin, who i rely felt like stuck with it -- [ cheers and applause ] it would be veryasy for an actor to lose, you know, her co-star and say "you know, maybe that's a sign.e maat's enough." and she stuck right in there. brought that ball into the end zone. >> jimmy: good for her. >> and i felt like -for good reason, too. not only for the crew but the fans. i mean people really, really like that show. >> jimmy: of course, yeah. >> we have an ending coming.oo and it's >> jimmy: really? now, it's eight episodes, right? y that's right. >> jimmy: what c tell us? can you tell us anything? can you give us a hint, a a spoile can you allude? >> i can't tell you much. i can tell you that at the end of the season i've killed everyone and i'm the president. but i cat -- [ laughter ] >> jimmy: that's way too much. >> i can't tell you anything more than that. >> jimmy: all right. that's a good hint. i want to show you a clip. here's greg kinnear and robin wright in the new season of "house of cards." take a look at this. >> he's out, claire, and he's not going back in. now, you need my help. later tonight i'm going to watch you sign that bill that's sitting on your desk. to the dead a kingdom means nothing. they have their requiem and eternity. that's "macbeth," the opera, not the play. all you have to do now is just go on out there to your oldest, dearest friend, and hold her hand up high. ♪ >> jimmy: that's how you do it right there. [ cheers and applause ] greg kinnear, everybody! watch the final season of "h se of cards" streaming november 2nd on netflix. 'll be right back with paul dano, everybody. stick around. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ alright, come on girls get together. three... two...one! oh! i wasn't ready! ♪ let me try again... ♪ ready? ♪ let me try again... happy birthday to you... arrgh!!! ♪ ooh, let's get a group photo. ready? aah! (chuckling) ♪ aaw! i did not catch that. ♪ you and me can't have it all ♪ you and i aga one two three...cheeese! waah! (dog barks) ♪ let me try again ♪ ♪ let me try again cheezcombination of thecrunch with-ying cheese. with their delicious perfection- cheese. it's not all about you cheese. you think i have a mouth. i'm a wheel of cheese. got a point. [yeah] cheez-it. cheesy, crunchy satisfaction. ♪ is that good? yeah, it's perfect. bees! bees, bees! [ yelling ] [ indistinct chattering ] close the door! [ heavy breathing ] aww, there's bees in the car. bees! bees! the volkswagen atlas. with easy-access 3rd row. life's as big as you make it. ♪ look around. with artificial intelligence, we are not crawling or walking. we are flying. microsoft ai helps an architect bring history back to life. this is now. ai helps farmers grow more food with less resources. an engineer explores how ai can help the deaf see sound. innovation creates tomorrow, and tomorrow is here today. is a standard issue partisan with no fresh ideas. but it's the ideas she does have that should scare us. defund planned parenthood- leaving women without access to cancer screenings. repeal the affordable care act- devastating families with pre existing conditions. and cut federal funding to combat opioids. david trone will support woman's reproductive health. hefully fundery personal fight against opioids. and strengthen the affordable care t. i'm david trone and i approve this message. as your home becomes more connected... you need fios to keep up. because fiber-optics move crazy amounts of data at even crazier speeds, and fios is the 100% fiber-optic network so you can get phenomenal capacity for your tech. and now is a great time to switch, because it's your last chance to get $200 toward a range of google and nest smart home devices, plus the fastest internet available, tv with up to 250 channels, phone, and a 2-year price guarantee all for just $79.99 per month with a 2-year agreement. so switch today. call 1.888.getfios and see why fios has been the most awarded network for internet and tv service satisfaction for the past 10 years, and why we've been ranked #1 in customer satisfaction compared to cable. and if you order online, you'll get a $100 visa prepaid card. but hurry, this is your last chance, because this offer ends october 31st. go to getfios.com today. 100% fiber-optic network. 100% phenomenal. e [ cheers and appla >> jimmy: our next guest is a a fantastic actor who just directed and co- wrote his first feature film, called "wildlife." it's in theaters now everyone, please welcome paul dano. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: welcome back. looking great, buddy.e >> good tock. >> jimmy: looking sharp. i want to talk about the movie. but even bigger congratulations, you have a a little baby. eight weeks ago. congratulations. [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you. thank you. yeah. >> jimmy: she's gorgeo, by the wa what a beautiful, beautiful baby. how does it feel to be a dad? >> i'm so tired. [ laughter ] and i'm so in love. you know. i mean, it's like -- >> jimmy: it's amazing, right? >> it's so extreme. your heart has gone like, supernova in one sense. and then we landed from london last week and ied for like 24 straight hours. and you just kind of want to walk through a wall. [ laughter ] it's crazy. >> jimmy: it's the most zarre thing in the whole wide world. congrats on that. that's fantastic. a "little miss sunshine" reunion here. greg kinnear was just on the show. and that was -- [ cheers and applause ] we have a photo here. there's pauln the back there. there's paul. >> young man. >> jimmy: a young man back then. >> yeah. yeah. yeah.: >> jimat do you remember from this? >> so i remember in rehearsal, rectors jonathan dayton and valerie faris trying to establish a sort of family dynamic, right. and they said, "why don't you guys get in the van in character. and let's go drive and we'll get some food. and we'll go bowling and just stay in character the time." and we're all like, "okay, great." and i was 20 or something. 20. looked 12. [ light lauger ] and the second we pulled out of th, lot to go on our excursi alan arkin, playing our grandpa, goes, "i have to pee." and greg kinnear, playing the father, in character was like, "we just left, dad. you have to wait." and arkin was like "no, i have to pee.' and don't have to pee.ou we're not pulling the car over." and arkin was like, "at the next redight i'm getting out to pee." and greg kinnear ran the next red light. [ laughter ] just becau he did not want to give in to grandpa. who clearly needed to pee just to piss him off. >> jimmy: wow. absolutely. t >> a family dynamic was there. and of course, all this is happening. and my charaer is mute -- >> jimmy: that's right. >> i mean not mute. he's chosen not to speak.ng so i'm sitn the back seat just going like, okay, did we really just run a red light? and greg i'mure did it safely. >> jimmy: oh yeah, of course. of course. >> as safe as you can run a red light. >> jimmy: yeah that's very important. of course. how did it feel directing this movie? and writing it? this is a big deal. >> yh. >> jimmy: did you always want to write and direct? >> yeah, i've wanted to make a a film for a long time. basically, i read this book which just sort of made my heart leap. akdecided you know, let me a stab at a first draft. >> jimmy: have yan ever written hing before? >> never written. and i didn't know if i could. so i started kind of dipping myo in that pond. and as i was writing i stared thinking, "okay, this is pretty good. pretty good. so i gave it to my partner zoe, who'a proper writer. she's written plays and screenplays. >> jimmy: i love zoe. >> and she tore it apa[ . ughter ] she came out of the bedroom. she's like, "it's -- it's good." and i was like -- >> jimmy: yeah, that means it's not good. it's interesting.>> eah, notes on every page. every page was d-eared. >> jimmy: but you ended up writing it together. >> well, yeah, we did. we got through like five pages of notes. she's like, "you're too stubborn i was like, "i'm just being thorough." and she was like, "why don't u st let me do a pass on the script?" and she did an incredible job. and so then we just started trading it back and forth. n er wrote together. that was n sustainable. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: oh, intere >> but we would do notes together and then one of us would take it and do a pass. and it was great. >> jimmy: well congratulations. i mean you've gotten incredible reviews for this movie.on 98% fresotten tomatoes. i don't know if that means anythingbut it does to me. anyways, but, tell everyone what the film's about and based on the book. >> yeah. it's based on a richard ford novel called, "wildlife." he's a great arican writer. it's -- i guess it's about a a kid seeing his parents change and their marrge break. and sort of, you know, through your parents, sort of just being forced into adulthood.or it'sof a coming of age film for a family. it's about the mystery of who our parents are. and i think it's really beautiful. >> jimmy: great performances from our buddyer is leaving us to go fight those wildfires. >> what? dad, why? >> answer him, jerry. you won't take a job at a a grocery store, but you'll go out with a bunch of dead beats and risk getting killed. >> you don't have to go there -- >> what does it pay? >> what? >> what does it pay? >> a dollar an hour. >> oh my god. jerry, you don't have to do this. >> it won't be for long. >> what if you get yourself killed? >> you don't know if the fire going to go out. and we're going to send everybody home. what do you think, it's a bad idea? >> don't ask him. >> he's almost grown. he can say what happens in this family. >> your father will burn up and you'll never see him again. >> don't say that. >> you can't keep running every time something doesn't go your way. >> please, you don't know what i'm doing. [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: paul dano, everybody!n "wildlife" iheaters now. congratulations, dad. we'll be right back with a a performance from hozier, featuring mavis staples. stick aroun
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buddies and i think about this every day as a physical manifestation but a metaphor. this young boy christian thought his family was moving to germany. they went to advice ate school there. he saw a buddyhool here in the states he said, could we have one of those? thankfully the school supported him. ♪ >>> welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm anthony mason with michelle miller and dana jacobson. and coming up this hour, for more than 80 years it not only was the world's largest fish market, it also drew tens of thousands of tourists every year, but this morning it closed and not for a lack of business. >>> then it's apple picking time and the shine is off the red delicious apple. it's no longer america's favorite. we'll tell you what is and how that came to be. >>> and eric idle of monty python fame release as new memoir as the group celebrates its 50th anniversary. we'll get the story behind the comedy legend status ahead. >>> but first the latest on our top story. the senate is expected to confirm embattled nominee brett kavanaugh to the supreme court later today. with 51 yays and 49 nays yesterday's cloture vote indicated kavanaugh is likely to receive enough support. >>
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