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megabaker, hughes hughes. >>> a notice of violation was issued. >>> supervised heroin, the unconventional approach to fight a problem plaguing the >>> and the dash cam video. the same technology could help you get out of a ticket. >>> temperatures with blue skies and this system is heading our way. i'll tell you what that means for you tuesday coming up in the full forecast. >>> and coming up on the cbs evening news. new information about the man accused in the murder spree in michigan. >> scott pelley joining us now. >> great to be with you. we saw him in court today. and he said that he understood that he has been charged with six counts of murder from a shooting spree on saturday night. the prosecutors say he has confessed and we'll have all the latest on that story and cbs evening news at 6:30. >>> a controversial plan in the war on heroin. the mayor of ithaca, wants to be the first in the country to offer a supervised injection facility. users would be under the care of a nurse. and they would be connected to recovery services. he's a support of law enforcement strategies that put tr
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sutton finds sam hughes. hughes with 11. then it's will weeks, he's underneath the basket but he'll find trey bryant. nail this three. good. dogs trail. 17-5 run puts it away. asheville wins. they're a game behind the bulldogs. asheville at campbell saturday. >>> the greatest day of prep football players life, probably the day they sign collegiately. luke notestine has a story of a few of the lucky ones. the best athletes that western carolina has ever produced. he'll take his incredible talent to play football at south carolina. >> very emotional. just a great feeling. i feel relieved knowing that i'll be going there this summer to play the next three on four years as a gamecock. >> luke: asheville all-state lineman pete liotta. he committed to the gamecocks in september. stuck with it even when coach spurier stepped down. >> i'm looking forward to it. just playing on the field. >> luke: cameron parker from tc roberson had a big crowd to watch him sign. >> it's awesome. to see all the people behind me really shows me that t
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hugh hugh, you said you were going to be fair to everybody. you didn't ask me about taxes. i had something to say about that. any minute now, we are expecking to get our hands on new numbers showing which of the remain democratic candidates florida voters are going to get. >>> in just hours, president jacksonville, voice i iting a battery plant built with money from his 2009 stimulant package. >> there morning, allegiant airlines is working to make things right for hundreds of passengers whose flight out of tampa bay came to a stop yesterday afternoon. moments before takeoff after the pilot heard a loud boom. passengers say it was so strong it shook the plane. in fact, some told us they thought they were going off the run way. >> the left wing and heard a boom that shook the plane and it was obviously an engine malfunction. >> in this case, all of the passengers were rebooked, but our "i-team" has spent the last year investigating issues at allegiant air uncovering main nance problems that lead to a rash of emergency landings. airline of putting profits before passenger's s
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hugh jackman. lukas and scott are chatting about hugh jackman. lukas and scott are chatting about hugh jackman. lukas and scott are chatting about hugh jackman. scott:we have some light snow that will lukas and scott are chatting about hugh jackman. lukas and scott are chatting about hugh jackman. lukas and scott are chatting about hugh tomorrow night into early friday with most of the accumulating snow missing north and east. today's high is 25. the low is 9 with mostly cloudy skies. tomorrow's high is 24 with clouds and flurries. here's your extended forecast. we have some light snow that will wrap up early in the afternoon. then we've got flurries tomorrow night into early friday with most of the accumulating snow missing north and east. today's high is 25. the low is 9 with mostly cloudy skies. tomorrow's high is 24 with clouds and flurries. here's your extended forecast. jessica rae tomorrow night into early friday with most of the accumulating snow missing north and east. today's high is 25. the low is 9 with mostly cloudy skies. tomorrow's high is 24 with clouds and extended forecast. we
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joining me now is hugh hewitt. hugh, welcome back.mp is in new hampshire tonight trying to put his best foot forward but is it a much bigger challenge there that even more candidates could do well? >> i think donald's in gre
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up, i'm going to talk to hugh >>> hugh jackman is back with a brand-new movie about one of the most improbable olympic heroes ever. earlier this week, robin sat down with hugh and his co-star to talk about "eddie the eagle." >> "eddie the eagle" is the heartfelt new movie inspired by a dream come true. taron egerton portrays eddie ed wards a resilient underdog determined to get to the and there's only one person that's going to help him get there and, of course, it's hugh jackman. take a look. >> want your moment, eddie edwards, i ka get your moment but it's going to hurt like hell for both of us. >> your back leg, wrong position. get closer. the flame >> it's not better. it's crap. >> oh, you and taron. >> you can't say that in the morning. >> i know you can't. oh, so great to see you both. i laughed. i knew i was going to cry. i knew i was going to be touched by this. i remember eddie the eagle, 1988, big sports fan here. i'm sure -- >> i remember very well. i remember watching him in the ympics and never forget him being the top of the 90-meter and the camera going, hello, mom. just before almost killing himself. you know, we loved him, you know. >> taro
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hugh hewitt. hugh, welcome back. trump is in new hampshire tonight trying to put his best foot forward but is it a much bigger challenge there that even more candidates could do well? >> i think donald's in great shape. he's got corey running that state for him, he's in terrific shape. i look at marco rubio as being very strong in south carolina. terry sullivan, his campaign manager knows that state like nobody. rubio's got great staff. i look at the benches and the teams. all the three guys who won yesterday are all going on to south carolina and to march 15th. the people under pressure are kasich, christie and bush. one of them have to break through and score what matt lewis referred to as an expectation win. it's about the republican party and whether or not it can get out of its habit of doing dumb things and giving things away. you know, don, hillary clinton's got serious legal problems. you know that that release of the 22 e-mails last friday imperils her under the u.s. code. i think the republican candidate who hits her the hardest, the fastest, the most consistently for being an almost felon for the next week is going to win that extra card in. i'm looking for bush, christie and john kasich to up their games about beating hillary, not each other. although christie spent all day punching marco rubio. >> no charges against hillary clinton, we have to say. that was pretty harsh what you said about her. >> she's not charged. i think o.j. simpson killed those two people, right? he was never convicted but i believe he killed her. i think hillary clinton violated 18 usc 1924, though she has not been indicted. i know my way around the intelligence material she's been mishandling for five years. you don't have to have a conviction to believe someone's guilty of a felony, don, you know that. >> okay, let's move on. all the polls put trump ahead in iowa. were things like name celebrity a turnoff in iowa? might it be a turnoff in new hampshire? >> he did so well yesterday, 180,000 people showed up. what happened yesterday isn't that donald trump did poorly. he did very, very well. it's just that ted cruz had far more of his core supporters. i go back to the three js. he's got these three extraordinary geniuses of social media working for them. they designed a new system. i would get reports for them over the last six months about the number of touches they had made into iowa on to their web network where they really befriended and became in relationship over the internet in the way that the new media allows to us do with hundreds of thousands of iowans, many of whom showed up yesterday to vote for ted cruz. it's not that donald trump lost, it's that ted cruz won. i think donald trump will win in new hampshire and south carolina, all bets are off. we're going to see the first real competitive race will be in south carolina. that's where no one has an advantage. i've got a 100,000 watt station there, don. 94.5 conservative talk in south carolina. 100,000 watts. they're lined up out the door to come on this week because south carolina is a coastal economy, it's a military state, it's a religious state, it's a retiree state with a bunch of people in or from new jersey. it's actually the first general election electorate of the election. i'm looking past new hampshire because i expect donald to win there and say in south carolina the field will get down to four and then it's going to stay that way until march 15th. >> i think it's interesting because as you said, south carolina is more reflective of the country -- of what the democrats in the country are. donald trump seems much more reflective since last night. this is a kind of new experience for him that we are seeing and maybe for him as well. are you impressed with how he's dealing with it? >> i thought he did very well last night. he was gracious. it's a good thing to try on a new suit every now and then. donald trump is on tomorrow with me as well as governor bush. i'll be asking him hard core, substantive questions. he will mark the 150th interview with a gop would-be nominee that i've done since the first republican debate and i still have lots of questions for donald trump. he's the best interview in america, as you know, and i'll be looking for that tone difference. he was very -- not subdued, i thought he was gracious to the point move on, he has an explanation. katrina echoed it very well. they got good message discipline at trump headquarters. i expect him to go back to the i am here to get things done mode. i will build the wall. i will get it done. >> is that your strategy? are you going to ask him about his strategy going forward? do you think he should stay on the attack and away from detailed policy or does he have to get more serious? >> i'd prefer not processed interviews, i like substantive interviews. but in this case there is a huge process question sitting right in front of us, which is do you go after anyone in particular? do you feel the need to stomp on cruz, on rubio? or do you feel the need to go back to -- so there's one big process question for him tomorrow, which is do you have an attack plan? up until now he's only counterpunched with one exception. he went after ted cruz on the canada thing, which probably proved not to work with a ted cruz hard core voter and mark levin effectively assuaged the worries of people on that. i teach law, too, and i don't believe there's any merit to it. john eastman is a conservative. he doesn't believe there's any merit to it. even though lawrence tribe was trying to give coverage to donald trump to dent up ted cruz, that was the misfire. i don't think we'll hear much of that going forward. >> thank you, hugh hewitt. >> always good to talk to you. >> i want to bring in our next guest. hello, friend, good to see you. >> don, great to be with you again. it's been a while. >> you had the chance to speak to donald trump tonight. tell me about that. >> i did. i spoke to him exclusively earlier this evening. you were just talking to hugh. he was really no gloves on rubio. he was very soft on rubio. i tried to have him be critical of marco rubio. he wouldn't go there. he was critical of ted cruz in my interview and later in the news conference, really attacking cruz for the way he operated in iowa. i asked him, any regrets from maybe not putting it all in, in iowa? take a listen. >> at all your events, you talk about making america a winner and you talk about the polls and last night you didn't win. how much does that hurt personally and how much does that hurt your brand? >> i think we did great. i was expected not to be in the top ten for a long period of time and i came in second and we spent
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i want to bring in hugh at the host of the hugh hewett show. hugh, donald trump called in to wolf blitzer to respond. let's listen to that and then we'll talk. >> he's a desperate person. he's a pathetic person. he doesn't even use his last name in his ads. he's a sad person who has gone absolutely crazy. i mean, this guy is a nervous wreck. he goes around saying, "i'm the only one to have courage to go after trump." what courage is it? he says nasty things. i put him down and he goes away like a little sheep. jeb is having a breakdown, i think. he's an embarrassment to his family. he has to bring his mother out and walk his mother around at 90 years old. >> so, hugh, who is going to win this feud between the two? is bush helping himself or hurting trump at all? >> well, donald trump is going to win tomorrow night, and i recall that toy that's been on the market for probably 50 years, rock 'em sock 'em robots, the red robot and the blue robot. that's donald trump and jeb bush, and the guy actually benefiting from that is john kasich. probably the be
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hugh jackman. >> hugh on the super bowl, oscar controversy, and why hugh and aj are getting a little jiggy? >> it's about two in the morning at the bar for most aussies. >> mr. and mrs. clooney's royal premiere. george coming straight to mario. >> what an entrance, man. familiar. brolin. >> she liked the part where josh is slapping me in the face. she thought that was good. >> now on "extra" from universal studios hollywood, the entertainment capital of l.a. >> hey, everyone. welcome back to "extra." i'm mario lopez. >> and i'm renee bargh. coming up your day out with my favorite guy. >> we're bffs now. but first we're all about the super bowl and who better to get the lowdown than charissa? >> he's leading the broncos. he's panthers player number one. but before the two quarterbacks battle on the field, cam newton and peyton manning, we are putting them to the test with our super bowl helmet quiz. who has more game? peyton with the warm-up. >> what competition show does j. lo judge? "american idol." name george clooney's wife and >> now it's the real matchup. >> who is taylor swift dating?
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animation what caught our eye animation what caught frank's eye william thacker hugh grant william thacker hugh grant is a london bookstore owner whose humdrum existence is thrown into romantic turmoil when famous american actress anna scott julia roberts appears in his shop. a chance encounter over spilled orange juice leads to a kiss that blossoms into a full-blown affair. as the average bloke and glamorous movie star draw closer and closer together, they struggle to reconcile their radically different lifestyles in the name of love. what caught kara's eye in 1940s south calhoun ryan gosling and rich girl allie rachel mcadams are desperately in love. but her parents don't approve. when noah goes off to serve in world war ii, it seems to mark the end of their love affair. in the interim, allie becomes involved with another man james marsden . but when noah returns to their small town years later, on the cusp of allie's marriage, it soon becomes clear that their romance is anything but over. a fairy tale beautiful young woman and her one true love. he must find her after a long separation and s
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charlie: joining me now from boston, hugh hewitt, the most popular conservative radio program the hugh hewitt show. i am pleased to have him back on this program. hugh: hello charlie. good evening. charlie: what made you so convinced that cruz would win when the poll showed donald trump winning? hugh: there are two answers to that. one is radio hosts are frequently wrong but never in doubt. we always assert what we believe to be true. the data point was social media touches. inial media run by people pac operation that is the most sophisticated of any of the republicans. it has a massive databank. i don't know if it scales in new hampshire but it worked in iowa. they know whom everyone of their voters wise. charlie: tell me how you see it? one by notd trump losing on saturday night. i think john kasich is going to come in second. marco rubio will be third. theory, john kasich is everybody's favorite uncle. they are going to vote for him in new hampshire because they are independent minded, fair-minded. everyone has a lawyer uncle. nephews.for some we have christie increase. we have a doctor uncle, we have the distant scary uncle, and the cool uncle.
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sutton finds sam hughes glass to increase the lead. hughes with 11.------------- then, will weeks underneath the basket, finds trey bryant who buries the three from outside! dogs trailed late, but a 17-5 run puts it away. unc asheville wins 63-56 and are back in sole possession of first in the big south as winthrop lost tuesday and high point on wednesday. . asheville at campbell saturday. prep signing day--western carolina signs 14 players today.--7 players on offense and 7 on defense.app state coming off their first bowl game in school history, signs 23 today. they are rated the third best class in the sunbelt.nationally,in espn rankings. its fsu, bama, lsu, ole miss, ohio state, michigan --georgia 7th and clemson 8th. of course there are a lot of other ones--but if you are in the top ten mix. you did allright.its playoff time in prep wrestling., and five area teams made it out of the first two rounds of the dual team playoffs..they advance to the third round on thursday and keep state title hopes alive. in 3a, enka is at foard--jets lookin
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.- but anita burke has a nice squad at hughes..here's coulter from the side...hughes advances 52 to 44. in kentucky, a big finish in independence. simon kenton against highlands and during the game, the pioneers ally niece went over the 2-thousand point mark for her career...she's only a sophomore. sophomore.but check this out..here's how the game ended...highlands ties the game on a free throw...simon kenton gets the ball out...and ally niece flings it from the other side of the floor and it goes in......the gym explodes.. -one more time as the regular season comes to an end...ally niece, pretty well covered just lets this one fly...and the simon kenton pioneeers get it was the start of reds spring training camp....just pitchers and catchers...nobody with a bat until next week. it gives the pitchers a lot of time to work the arms....five full days of work before the everyday players come into camp....-it also makes the pitchers think and react and run.....how to respond to a bunt...how to field your position...-of note...devin mesoraco in a squat, doing the things catchers do...no pro
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hugh from the hugh hewitt show. i'm pleased to have him back. >> good evening. >> rose: what made you convinced cruz would win when the polls show donald trump win. >> there are two answers to that charlie. one is radio hosts are frequently wrong but never in doubt so we always assert what we believe to be true. but the data point what social media touches and the social media organization run by a couple people, john and josh is a super pack operation. it's probably the most sophisticated of any of the republicans that's been up and running for two years with a massive data bank. i don't know if it scales in new hampshire, but it certainly worked in iowa. they knew who every one of their voters was and where they could be found that day. >> rose: so tell me how you see it in new hampshire. >> i think donald trump won tomorrow by not losing on saturday night. i think he's going to win. i think john kasich is going to come in second. i think marco rubio will be third. my kasich theory is this. it's my uncle's theory of politics. john kasich is everybody's uncle and they'll vote for him in new hampshire because they're independent minded, fair minded yankee kind of thing. everyone's got a lawyer uncle. i an that for some of my nephews who you call when you're in trouble. you got christie and cruz and got a doctor uncle, got the distant scary uncle that can get you a job and that's donald trump. we've got the cool uncle that takes you to ball games and that's marco rubio and then we've got bad ask that's jeb bush. nobody votes for dad, yes. but he did release the cracken over the weekend and bring barbara bush into new hampshire so he's surging up a little bit but i think it's going to be trump, kasich rubio. and this overkill on the rubio repetition has actually rallied some conservatives to his side as has the ted cruz overkill on the ben carson story. because there's nothing like the sound of liberal media and democrats beating up on conservatives to rally people to them. i think rubio's actually getting a little rebound after the pile on of the weekend. >> rose: yes but the pile on wasn't from liberal writers. ly three minutes as you havedy. suggested. but it seemed to be the topic of conversation because he seemed to have momentum. >> i'll give you an example. a very smart former governor of michigan was on cnn this afternoon and she brought it up and joyful with rubio's decline. she also brought up ted cruz's canada thing, birtherrism from harvard law grad who knows better. they are trying to i think systematically sew discord but really take rubio out and take ted cruz out of the picture. i think they would like to run against a very weakened nominee who cannot energize young people against hillary clinton. >> rose: so in your judgment, this was a temporary hit that now is rebounding to marco rubio's favor. >> yes. andfrckñ what he did was, famoue in chris matthew's book hard ball, probably the most important line in politics, hang a lantern on your problem. he leaned into his problem all day yesterday and today and explained what he had attempted to explain three or four times. but i think the reason he keep going back to it was he never completed, he got the 90 seconds and he wanted to say president obama has not failed because he's young so don't hold it against me because i'm young. president obama has destroyed what conservatives believe is the core of the country's ethos because he's been successful. and he didn't get that out in 90 seconds or he kept trying to restart it to explain it. christie being the able prosecutor and i've had him on so many times kept interrupting the witness. it was terrific theatre. >> rose: yes. but i mean you know what his argument is that obama wants to change america. he wants to change america with healthcare, oh my god. he wants to change america with an iran nuclear negotiation and deal, oh my god. i mean that's not exactly somehow changing the ethos of america. >> well, the iran deal i'll disagree with you on charlie. i noted on the republican debate we spent a lot of time talking about north korea and the clinton kerry policy with islamists end timers. it doesn't work. it's not like the soviet union which nixon arranged. on the other hand i do think that bernie sanders/hillary clinton campaigns back and north over who is going to burn in hell for not supporting the first woman president is not the exactly the height of a policy debate. this is the inversion, you might agree with me. republicans usually argue over personality and democrats over policy. this is inverted this year with the except of the rock em sock em robots donald trump. >> rose: talking about the rockbz em sock em robots why do you think trump is winning. >> they're a very independent minded state. they value that and he is thoughts anybody's creature. >> rose: let's go back to kasich for a second. does anybody have the possibility now without thinking of any particular scenario of touching fire. >> yes. john kasich does because again the "wall street journal" moll, the break down of the 400,000 new hampshire people who are independent and can vote either republican or democrat tomorrow they haven't made up their mind. the one overwhelmingly is john kasich. he appeals to the likability, let's work together, that's grow the country, ronald reagan instance sunny optimism sore he can get the lion's share of the republican independentents and pull an felt. i don't know if he has enough time. the prediction along with rick wilson a suburb political consultant trump people hate him. we're going to have an open convention in cleveland. no will of one will have 1,027 delegates. the majority doesn't rule. we'll have the greatest political convention in my lifetime. >> rose: is this somehow a wish over experience. >> i'm not, because you know, they can't have a winner take all primary until march 15th. that means all sorts of delegates have to be divided up proportionately. they had one in iowa. she had a chip in cleveland. the more proportional results come in the harder it is and the more scattered the field. it will be a bunched up third, fourth and fifth place tomorrow night. the more empowered diversity of candidates on to carry on. some people talking about chris christie getting out if he gets under 5%. no he won't. he's got a couple of hedge fund guys. he's got some play in new jersey and beyond. he'll pick up some votes in michigan on march 8th where he will duel. >> rose: how can they vote as aprimary. >> since hillary is getting killed by bernie your vote has more value in pure economic theory terms if you cast it on the republican side. i think more independents will vote for republicans because they believe that bernie sanders is blowing hillary clinton out of the water. there's a politico story tonight that hillary is about to fire all of her staff. so that's a fine of chaos. david act axelrod and he's awe pliedz to the witness protection program now. i think if you're an independent voter and you wantm,satisfaction tomorrow. >> rose: because you know you're contributing to what? >> to a decisive moment. whereas, the decision is already in in the minds of most observers on the democratic side. bernie's going to win, he's going to win by a lot. the republican vote matters a lot because second third fourth fifth. ted cruz in the wmur poll, cnn poll was in third place. i was stunned by that because he got the lowest iowa bump than anyone i've seen because of the carson controversy. maybe i'm wrong but i still think trump, kasich79 rubio tomorrow in that order with some decent separation. >> rose: what about ben carson's support especially among evangelicals. >> i think that is fading. i like dr. carson a lot. he's a guest on my show often and one of the nicest men in america. i was surprised he got 10% in iowa. i don't think he lost many votes if any because of ted cruz announcement although people can disbout that forever. i think people come to the conclusion that he will make a wonderful secretary of hhs or surgeon general of the united states that he is not a participant in the first or second tier although he's going to soldier on as well because he's going to have some chips at the table in cleveland. >> rose: could he possibly endorse marco rubio. >> i don't have any idea which way he will go. >> rose: i was surprised that santorum endorsed but i don't understand the nature. >> santorum because it makes m the most serious person a iran. >> rose: there's great great fault with marco saying the first day he's going to avoid the treaty with the nuclear deal. >> well not me i would avoid it too. george pa taught key came out today and reiterated their support for marco rubio. i think there's a great divide in the country on the iran deal and i think it's playing out in front of us on the north korea deal signed in 94 by the first clinton administration. it didn't work. they're just a crazy regime. the iranians are fanatical. those of us who think the north korea deal in 94 was the disaster take the iran deal of 2015 and five forward five years and it's a disaster. >> rose: bob gates had real qualms about the deal but he said for marco rubio to say on the first day to avoid the deal was a serious mistake. >> i recognize your right. he's one of the people i disagree from. only in the clarity of the mind in the people who is the republican nominee i want them to say that deal is dead. and mrs. clinton who says she will embarrass it and work with it. the former secretary of state will have it both ways arguing she was in fact a proponent of sanctions but now is in proponent of the deal. >> rose: what's the basic divide in this election do you think between democrats and republicans. >> foreign policy. it is i think going to be a foreign policy election. and there were news stories out tonight on isis planning attacks in five cities. the catastrophe that is under way with islamist radicalism is of great concern to the foreign policy wing of the republican party which actually brings together everybody. and does not seem to concern the full sweden, i think i used that term last election. >> rose: yes, you did. >> bernie sanders, you know bernie sanders with chuck todd yesterday said he will be consulting with j street and lawrence quorum. and my job dropped. i said wow he's going to kill hillary clinton tomorrow. >> rose: yes but then they go to south carolina. things will probably even up. >> you know, that youth gap, the "wall street journal." >> rose: i think that's the most fascinating thing in democratic politics is the youth gap. and young women. all bright is in new hampshire saying for you not to vote for her is, you know, something next to terrible. >> i saw a grandmother and her granddaughter today. because i'm stuck in a hotel in boston because of the snow term i can't do my radio show. so i od's, i got new hampshire jitters. it's like drinking too much coffee but a grandmother and granddaughter both saying they're voting for bernie even though the grandma had supported the former secretary of state eight years ago. the granddaughter because he doesn't want $80,000 in college debt. in other words she likes the sanders appeal and the grandmother because she said in so many words the server scandal will bring her down, the 22 e-mails will bring her down. for very different reasons grandma and granddaughter are voting for bernie. and if bernie sanders comes out and says one thing, he will make elizabeth warren his vice president, he might turn south carolina around. >> rose: wow. i hadn't thought about that. i wondered where sh($u(j and what she was doing and how much she's sitting somewhere in massachusetts saying why didn't i do it. >> good reporters would go find her because she would be the nominee right now. if bernie sanders comes out and says, let me introduce my running mate, it's game set match. it's a replay what yogi berra said dejavu. >> rose: he says i find the discourse extremely bainal and an outrage and insaturday to the voters. you are a very smart harvard educated lawyers. do you agree with him. >> yes. it's not been, i don le the 90 second rule in a debate. i've done two and i have two more to do on february 25th. and i don't have makes the rules. i think it's very hard. yours is the only show on televisione[ where a segment gos this long. >> rose: but they're scared of it aren't they. most of them are scared of long form conversation or not. >> i don't think so. i will do my website thing but i have listed off 153 interviews and i transcribed them all. they are hours, hundreds of hours of republican candidates asking questions they have no idea what i'm going to ask them about and they will talk at length and those, they try and steer it to their strength obviously. chris christie is a very good courtroom lawyer so he knows how to bring it back to surveillance of terrorism suspects and post 911. marco rubio brings it to the intelligence committee. ted rust will talk to you all day long about his supreme court arguments and he will give you every minute of every one of those arguments because he has them memorized. jeb bush will talk about reforming education in florida. it's fascinating, interesting. ben carson will tell you about running the neurological department at johns hopkins. it's interesting. >> rose: let me ask you this about marco and the debate. however it's playing out in new hampshire. donald trump is with us on cbs this morning program. he said look one time is interesting and understandable. the second time to evoke the same statement about obama changing the country is okay. the third time is becoming questionable. fourth and fifth says something about the person saying it. >> well okay. donald trump is right but he's also a little bit wrong. message discipline isdh the most important factor in a presidential campaign. >> rose: until you look stupid. >> until you cross the line. what christie did was make him reset. because you can't give the second part of that punch line. president obama did not fail because he's young, he's failed because he's a leftist that's the second part. if you keep getting interrupted in the 90 second bell and chris christie worked it expertly. rubio got off the matt. he dominated the second half of the debate and in fact google searches on his pro-life stance again for republican primary voters it matters a lot. his talk about what the three poles of conservatism were scored off the chart. i think we in the media have done tonal vision on those three minutes. i know 9 left loves those three minutes and hillary people are trying to knock rubio out of this and he's the one that scars them the most. maybe he had a glass jar we'll see but it didn't look like to me today and wred. >> rose: thank you my friend. >> thank you charlie. >> rose: back in a moment. stay with us. >> rose: we continue this evening with politics on the eve of the new hampshire primary. joining me now from manchester, a great group of political observers. robert costa national political reporter at the washington poster. tutor stevens is political consultant for the daily beast. top advisor to mitt romney presidential campaign in 2012. pad trick healy is a national political correspondent for the "new york times" and jonathan alter msnbc analyst and dealy base column ice i'm pleased to have them all here this ink. i'll begin with robert costa. tell me how you see this and how donald trump sees this and who do you think is dictating the trends that are happening in new hampshire the night before they vote. >> charlie, great to be with you. i think back to pat buchanan's campaign in the 1990, he ran as a populist, conservative, someone against illegalqd immigration. we're seeing echos of that with donald trump here in the granite state on the eve of the primary. a sense that this is a white working class state. the buchanan coalition seems to be coming back together behind donald trump. he has a large lead in the state. if there's any place where he has a ground game, a strong operation it's here in new hampshire where his campaign manager hails from. >> rose: stuart stevens someone said earlier donald trump didn't lose and marco rubio had a good debate except for three minutes. how did you see it. >> i think that they were playing to different crowds. i think kasich more than anybody we've seen is playing to independents. he's actively out there trying to get people who might vote as independents. you can vote in either primary. i think that's his real play. this can be very very interesting to watch election night and watch the different areas. i think the kasich is going to do very well in areas that bernie sanders also does well in. the more liberal parts of the state. new hampshire has always had this compact with candidates that if you work hard and really put the time in and really value us, we will reward you. and i think kasich and chris christie are going to have surprisingly good nights tomorrow. because they've done it the old-fashioned way. i meany each done close to or over a hundred town halls. and i think that's really going to pay off. >> rose: patrick healy from the "new york times." how do you see. >>> rose: i'm good. it's great to have you here. >> good to be here. >> rose: what do you think of what's going on with the republican party and the debate they had on saturday night and sort of the conventional wisdom of the night of the debate that marco rubio had been dealt not a fatal blow but a blow that will slow him down. >> the problem with rubio is similar with the problem donald trump had in the last debate in iowa. donald trump and now marco rubio sort of came into those debates with some momentum. trump skipped that debate in iowa. for rubio, and that momentum really kind of halted. fell back into second place finish. for rubio, he was coming out of iowa with this strong third place finish. he was getting a lot of looks from voters in new hampshire who hadn't totally made up their mind. they were starting to feel like okay maybe this is the guy that we're supposed to be with or this is the guy we're supposed to get a second look at. and then in the debate just christie just pummeled him over and over and over again. it's as if christie was paying marco your super pac may have done a lot of damage to me but i'm going to go down swinging. so it's sort of a feeling that the momentum that rubio had is really kind of come to a halt. the big company is what stuart touched on. i think in most independent voters if they cut for donald trump, if they cut for bernie sanders on the left. they could go either way. john kasich certainly. rubio's able to come up the middle, we'll see. >> rose: jonathan, talk about the cracks -- the democrats ad the primary. >> well, she struggled with message. i think in some cases she's probably not taking a lot of thk advice that she's getting to make a crystal presentation that is more folked on the voters and the public rather than herself. the night of the iowa caucus and her speech where she was breathing a sigh of relief, she went into kind of a partial stump speech. she said i know, i know this. i know this. i know this. she said i know about five times. the election as her husband knows better than anybody else is not about her, it's about the voters. that's what bill clinton did so well up here in 1992 when he was being attacked of these sex scandals, dodging the draft. look you can say anything you want about me, it's about you the voters and your problems. and that's what she's been unable to do is to convince people that she's a warrior for the middle class. defending her approach or kind of a process question about who is better able to make change which is kind of boring for voters. they want to hear about their problems and what you're going to do about them and that's the connection she hasn't made. bernie sanders makes it very well, very clearly. i just went and saw an appearance by him today. he makes a great stump speech and he will do extremely well here. >> rose: does he have the capacity -- >> charlie if i could jump in. it was very telling to jonathan's point that hillary clinton went to flint, michigan on sunday. she left new hampshire and went to flint because i feel like when she talks about flint, michigandq and the dirty water there and the fact that she feels like government did not, left this predominantly african american behind. she is at her strongest. she's where you hear the message sort of 2350eu9ing people who are genuine, she feels she's sort of found her voice. in terms of the messaging, it's when she talks about flint, it's every time you feel she's sort of raising her game level but more generally it goes to sort of jonathan's point. she really sort of struggles in terms of figuring out a menial that's going to resonate especially with young people those numbers in terms of her unpopularity with young people is a real problem. >> rose: what do you make of bill coming out so strongly against bernie sanders yesterday? >> he's been dying to. he's really been itching. today, monday at an event he referred to bernie going after this mystical establishment. mythical brought back for a lot of us an echo eight years ago of bill raging against the fairy tale that was barack obama's position on the iraq war which he did on the eve of the presidential primary. bill clinton has been wanting to do this for some time. the concern is bernie sanders favorable ratings have been so high and hillary's are not great. so going tooagainst bernie is r. and bill clinton pulled back a little bit today in terms of focusing the attack just on bernie sort of hitting everybody who doesn't agree with him as part of the establishment. >> rose: letrÑi me turn back to marco rubio. stuart if you were advising him what would you tell him. >> it's impossible to be nominated by a party and not be humiliated and not have terrible moments. it's how you come back. this is just part of the progression. and i think today he's responded well. he seems to understand that. it also stresses the staff. you have to just take it and say look this happened and move on. it's like top notch quarterback. you're going to throw interceptions you have to say okay. >> rose: do you think trump is getting away light. >> i think trump is running in his own political lane and he's not been accurately fact checked by a lot of republican voters. i think the point you brought up charlie about kasich the compelling one. i was on the campaign bus with kasich. he's been a fidgety politician experienced in the house but somebody who didn't have a profile for many months. now he's finding his groove here in new hampshire, positive surrounding by a sea of negativity. very human on the campaign trail, emotional. and he has the backing of many of the republican establishments. he's someone to watch. if he catapults out of new hampshire the establishment says look this is a two-term governor he could be a contender. >> charlie, i think that the moment that we're waiting for in this republican nomination, someone in a debhait has to turn to -- debate has to turn to donald trump it's a great privilege to run for president of the united states and the greatest privilege is to be and you haven't taken this seriously and you are a presidential candidate. you have absolutely no policy. you haven't taken it seriously enough to even study. and being up here is denigrating this process. >> rose: if itches donald trump and you said that to me, i would say then do you know what stuart, you're talking about people in iowa and you're talking about people new new hampshire. you're not talking about me. you're talking about the people who support me and i would turn it to them. >> i think you have to go right. wheneverñrÑÑri you're attacked,u have to go with the essence of it and the eastance of donald trump isn't that he isn't conservative enough or that he used to be a democrat. it's that basically he's a jessie venturey candidate running for president of the united states. you have to call him out on that and that's ultimately he will exit this stage. but people will at a certain point laugh at someone who is saying that their healthcare policy is not having people dying in the street. >> real quick charlie the problem for any republican who wants to make that argument is who has the political capital with an the gop to make that case against trump and have the answer. >> you gain capital by picking fights and winning fights. and i think that there has been this version of attacking trump for fear of alienating trump voters. i don't think that works. >> it didn't work for bush. >> rose: well bush was working saturday night. >> here's the thing. you have to do it in a sustained fashion. you can't do a little bit. you have to make the sustained decisionment one of us is going to walk off this stage alive and go at it. that really is the only way to prosecute somebody and you have to do it in paid media. because donald trump is getting such a percentage of the coverage that if you only do it in free media in the press, he's going to out shout you. you need a combination of the two. >> rose: let me turn back to the democrats. jonathan is it possible that we're looking at something that willclinton damaging to her evef she gets the nomination, her appeal to young people especially to women who you idea of making history with the first woman president. >> i think it's better that she goes through this now and that she's really challenged now. i think if she stabilizes in south carolina and starts to really win a lot of primaries a month from now, that we'll look back on this as having been a good thing for her. it's forced her to sharpen her message. it's forced her to reach out more not take things for granted, not come across as entitled which was a problem for her before. i think a lot of the young people will, they are smart. they're a lot smarter than the babyboomers were when they were young. and they will come back to the democratic party nominee in the fall. they know the stakes in the fall. and so she kind of needs this, a lot of sanders message she will incorporate. it will take a democratic party to the left some but i don't think to the dangerous left. i think it will take her a little further center left in a ways that will hen her get more votes in november if she's the nominee. >> rose: what about if bernie sanders, hughtt gave me this idea. if bernie sanders announced that elizabeth warren is going to be his running mate. >> yes. i think that's not so likely but i think it's quite possible charlie if hillary is nominated you're going to see a clinton warren ticket and will double down the way bill clinton did with al gore whenned they had she southerners on the ticket in 1992. >> rose: patrick, what are you looking in terms of the narrative that's likely to come out of new hampshire. >> well. >> rose: is it one from marco to maybe john kasich or maybe hillary clinton for a layout of reasons exceeded expectations in new hampshire but still lost by a lot. >> i think the dominant republican side because there is just so much up for grabs. if john kasich or chris christie can turn himself into something really. it can come out of new hampshire with sort of a strong showing. that will be huge. if donald trump sort of ultimately kind ofmplodes on his own which i think is the bet of a lot of these republica
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hugh. thank you, george. hugh laurie and george clooney. it opens friday. we'll be right back with dave salmoni and animals. what backache? what sore wrist? what headache?der? advil makes pain a distant memory. nothing works faster stronger than advil it' s the world' s #1 choice. what pain? advil. wanted to re-do that bathroom. you've just been busy. work. kids. binge-watching season 3 of, yeah. le you were not remodeling your bathroom, the internet got rocket mortgage. a fast, easy way to refinance.the money you need for the bathroom you want. u read headlines property being stolen. that is cyber-crime and it affects each and every one of us. microsoft created the digital crimes unityber-crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information so we can track down the criminals.to the cloud, trust and security are paramount. we're building what we learn back into the cloudnd organizations safer. but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended release technology, helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. to be my last time. lease a 2016 lincoln mkx for $399 a month only at your lincoln dealer. a ba esurance was born online. which means fewer costs, which saves money. which saves paper, which saves money. they have smart online tools, what's rmoney. they settle claims quickly, which saves time, they drive an all-hybrid claims fleet, which saves gas, to save money, which means when they save, you save. that's auto and home insurance for the modern world. esurance. backed by allstate. [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: we are back. it is february 2nd, and our next guest happened to have a compartment.beasts and host for animal planet where sunday you can watch "puppy bowl 12."an tarzan, dave salmoni. [ cheers and applause ]hese guys. >> jimmy: all right. >> grab them by their wings. >> jimmy: by the wings. how can you even find his wings? >> over the wings. [ laughter ]my: who knew i would be terrorized by a chicken? i'm going to eat those on sunday. [ laughter ]tart out with something nice and light for you to hold. >> jimmy: wow. this is the animal that i wasn't fearful of, and now it's turned into a nightmare. no. no.when we grab the wings? >> they do. because they feel comfortable. see how comfortable? >> jimmy: yours is comfortable. mine's freaking out. [ laughter ]ut? >> duck him in here. you got him? just grab his feet up a little >> jimmy: what about the wings?s. there you go. you got him. yes. you're a chicken wrangler. >> jimmy: look at how natural i am. [ laughter ] doing wonderful. do you want me to grab him? >> jimmy: no, look at me comfortable, are you kidding? [ laughter ] >> these are called silky chickens. are silky. >> the texture of their feathers. the other thing, these are neat, they have black meat. so if i were to eat a chicken breast or a wing like you suggested, it's black.t these? >> they don't usually. >> jimmy: because it's >> exactly. >> jimmy: isn't it an interesting thing that people won't eat these chickens because they're beautiful. >> and the meat is not so beautiful. >> jimmy: and the meat's not so beautifu beautiful on the outside and black as night on the inside. [ laughter ] >> a big reason we bring these he cheerleaders for our puppy bowl during -- >> jimmy: oh, you have the chickens be the cheerleaders. >> yeah. >> jimmy: and do the puppies eat >> i jimmy: is this chicken doing -- pooping or something? i feel things dropping. >> i hope not. >> no. you're good.re like muppets than chickens, aren't they? [ laughter ] >> i thought they're odd enough looking that i could bring them out for you. >> jimmy: they are pretty odd-looking. they lay eggs. >> they do. they lay a lot of eggs. 100 a year. amount. and then they come out little -- they must look really cute when they're babies. >> very cute. the other thing that makes them is little rough tough thing that most chickens don't have, this little extra rough at the bottom under their neck. >> i think it also goes to them looking good. a bit of scruff.it's like somebody turned an ugg inside out. [ laughter ] hey, do you guys want a chicken? yes., enjoy. you know how to hold them. that's the humiliating part for me is when the young women -- >> just slide in. >> stay right there. >> jimmy: that is a cute -- >> this is a bobcat. you can come in now nice and slow.say that is this guy in particular doesn't love it if somebody's hovering over them. >> jimmy: you'll never see y than i will toward that bobcat. [ laughter ] >> can you hear him give a little bit of a growl there? >> jimmy: yeah. [ laughter ]in a good position, then. >> jimmy: should you not make eye contact? or what -- >> it's interesting. with him, it's an aggressive move. if he stares at you and you locks you're trying to pick a fight with him. so it's a great one not to -- [ laughter ]they eat, dave? >> they eat almost anything. good boy. >> jimmy: where do these come from? >> all over north america. you can come in.t want to make eye contact. >> it's not glancing eye contact. it's if you stare at him. these guys are perfect predators. america. adapt to almost anything.- hunters. they can live off rats or birds or rabbits or whatever. >> jimmy: chickens? >> i'm going to get him to stand up. come here, buddy. look at his tail.alled bobcats, by the way? are they all named bob? [ laughter ] >> i'm going to walk around here and get him to stand up a little bit. hi, buddy. you're a good boy.g eye contact. [ laughter ] >> i know. i thought i could get him to move. obviously he's not -- i promise there -- >> jimmy: how much like regular cats are these bobcats? if i had a laser pointer or a ball of yarn or something. would -- [ laughter ] >> the difference with these guys.s would chase. and they're honed predators. this guy even more of a predator than your house cat. >> jimmy: well, yeah.he likes to hunt things it would be just like you see there. >> jimmy: seems like you've got a real loose grip on that leash. [ laughter ]aking this is just so he doesn't run off somewhere. >> jimmy: yeah. [ laughter ]'t want to pull on him too much. this guy, being such a good hunter, he's going to lay in wait like, this wait for something to get nice and close that's why you see a lot of the big weight is in his bum. >> jimmy: and what's the biggest animal he'll capture? oh, my god, there's a woman. >> yeah. she's going to make both of us >> jimmy: yeah. you did. yes, you also humiliated me. congrats. oh, no. it seems so cute. now that it's far away. >> yes. >> jimmy: guillermo, are you all right over there? >> yeah. >> you're going to keep it in your hands. and keep hiding it. okay?immy: keep the dish -- oh, boy. now, that's a -- that's an actual monster, right? >> this is a eurasian boar.come around and take one of those treats. give me another handful. -- >> jimmy: he could kill this desk if he wanted to, right? [ laughter ] >> put one of those in your hand. you're a good boy. >> jimmy: and throw it at him >> no. no. you're going to do it like this. i'll show you. you're going to hold your hand nice and flat and you're going to shove it under his nose. >> jimmy: no, i'm not. [ laughter ]t to try? >> jimmy: look at how gross his mouth is. >> look how smart he is. okay. sit. sit. >> jimmy: he's foaming at the mouth.ause ] >> jimmy: it's possible -- >> thank you. you can applaud that. [ applause ] come on, in jimmy. he's sitting down for you. why can't i just toss it? it would be funny -- how awesome would to be if he caught this indoesn't catch. you're the only person with a treat right now and he's going to smell it. >> jimmy: oh, geez. >> flat hand. yeah. [ applause ] >> jimmy: that wasn't so bad. look at my hand. look at this. it's got like rabies froth all over it. [ laughter ] >> all right, buddy. i know.supposed to be managing the -- >> jimmy: i know. oh, no. oh, my god. >> come on, buddy.is attack >> you see its tusks while it's up there like that? >> jimmy: yeah. >> the bottom tusk -- i'm worrying a- >> jimmy: he's kind of friendly in a way? >> come on, come down nice and gentle. good boy. those tusks on the bottom are scissor sharp.his head really, really fast and basically gouge you. it's actually funny you ask because they are typically quite aggressive. can really, really do serious damage. a lot of guys that hunt these -- [ laughter ] you can imagine -- laptops? oh, yeah, these are the ones that people hunt, right? >> they hunt these things. and if you just wound it these guys can be so dangerous.s. >> jimmy: you should not mess with an animal like this. >> want to ask him to sit? >> jimmy: sit. >> put your hand up. no -- yeah, that's fine.you have to abort it. i'll show you how to do it once. come here, buddy. boris. >> jimmy: boris is his name? >> sit. you're sliding.ined. >> jimmy: he's trained to sit? >> yeah. sit. sit. come here. sit. sit. [ applause ] >> jimmy: oh, boris. wow. that's pretty good. >> pigs and boris is one of the smartest. >> jimmy: we're going to take a commercial break, boris. you'll enjoy another one of these disgusting little rocks. afternoon 3:00 eastern on animal planet. (nature sounds) and roar, and crack, and storm. nature can't stop us. the 2016 ford explorer. this is my fight song& >> jimmy: i want to thank george clooney. i want to thank hugh laurie. apologies to matt damon. we ran out of time.u so much. puppy bowl 12 is on animal planet on sunday. and thanks to you, boris. you've been a good dude.ightline" is next. thanks for watching. >>> this is a special edition of "nightline." a mother's reckoning. >> tonight, the massacre at columbine high school. a tragedy that shocked a left the nation asking what drove two teenagers to take the lives of 13? what kind of people were their parents? >> could you haveed at columbine? >> after 17 years, sue klebold, mother of one of the shooters, break her silence. and the families that lost so hat is it you want to say to them? >> one mother's quest, looking for the path of her son's descent and the clues she says she missed. >> the one thing of course is, i am so sorry for what my son did. >> tonight, an important
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hughes how to adjust. better, because i know more on how to place my feet." first, hughes zips up in an airtight bag. the cockpit -- as they call it-- fills with air, calibrates her weight and then determines how much air is needed to make hughes feel lighter. 1:05-1:13 "it eliminates body weight. so, we can take up to 65 to 70 percent of their body weight off of them while walking on the treadmill. so, they don't have pain, they don't have all their body weight coming down on their legs as they are walking." with a camera below pointed towards hughes's feet, a monitor above displays her exact physical therapists to then focus on the mechanics of walking. i'm just come and that i'm going to be able to run...maybe pretty soon." 70 -year-old hughes says technology, nothing will keep her down. in roanoke, christina craig, wsls10. helping hundreds of high school students better prepare for future technical careers. today ... the college held the district three virginia skills usa more than 200 high schoolers from fifteen different schools competed in everything from traffic stops to competing in welding says the competition is really helping him. spencer morris/welding competitor - "i've really been opened up to a new world. it sh
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scotty hugh scottie hughes, we'll have her back. we're waiting to hear directly from donald trump addressing a rally. there's a lot more coming up as well. stay with us. my constipation and belly pain... ...feel like a raging storm. i've tried laxatives... ... but my symptoms keep returning. my constipation... ...feels like a heavy weight... ...that keeps coming back. linzess can help. once-daily linzess treats adults with ibs with constipation or chronic constipation. linzess helps you proactively manage your symptoms. it may help you have more frequent and complete bowel movements that are... ... easier to pass and may relieve your belly pain. do not give linzess to children under 6, and it should not be given to children 6 to 17. it may harm them. don't take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you... ... develop unusual or... severe stomach pain... ...especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect... ... is diarrhea, sometimes severe. if it's severe, stop taking linzess and ... ...call
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hugh. thank you, george. hugh laurie and george clooney. go see "hail caesar." it opens friday. we'll be right back with dave salmoni and animals. [ cheers and applause ] ll ask what backache? what headache? what bad shoulder? advil makes pain a distant memory. nothing works faster stronger or longer than advil it's the world's #1 choice. what pain? advil. you've wanted to re-do that bathroom. you've just been busy. work. kids. binge-watching season 3 of, yeah. luckily, while you were not remodeling your bathroom, the internet got rocket mortgage. a fast, easy way to refinance. getting you the money you need for the bathroom you want. every day you read headlines about businesses being hacked and intellectual property being stolen. that is cyber-crime microsoft created the digital crimes unit to fight cyber-crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information so we can track down the criminals. when it comes to the cloud, trust and security are paramount. we're building what we learn back into the cloud to make people and organizations safer. i've smoked a lot and quit a lot, but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose lease a 2016 lincoln mkx for $399 a month only at your lincoln dealer. ba da ba ba ba esurance was born online. which means fewer costs, which saves money. their customer experience is virtually paperless, which saves paper, which saves money. they have smart online tools, so you only pay for what's right for you, which saves money. they settle claims quickly, which saves time, which saves money. they drive an all-hybrid claims fleet, which saves gas, which saves money. they were born online, and built to save money, which means when they save, you save. that's auto and home insurance for the modern world. esurance. backed by allstate. what's with them? oh, those two? they're always fighting for attention. there's more to a legendary city than its legends. plan your legendary stay at visitphilly.com [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: we are back. it is february 2nd, and our next guest happened to have a groundhog in his glove compartment. he's a master of wild beasts and host for animal planet where 12." here he is, the canadian tarzan, dave salmoni. [ cheers and applause ] >> take one of these guys. >> jimmy: all right. >> grab them by their wings. >> jimmy: by the wings. how can you even find his wings? >> over the wings. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: who knew i would be terrorized by a chicken? i'm going to eat those on sunday. [ laughter ] >> i figured i'd start out with something nice and light for you to hold. >> jimmy: wow. this is the animal that i wasn't fearful of, and now it's turned into a nightmare. no. no. bit in your hands. there you go. >> jimmy: what about the wings? >> you've got big hands. there you go. you got him. yes. >> jimmy: look at how natural i am. [ laughter ] >> you're doing wonderful. do you want me to grab him? >> jimmy: no, look at me comfortable, are you kidding? [ laughter ] >> these are called silky >> jimmy: because they are silky. >> the texture of their the other thing, these are neat, they have black meat. so if i were to eat a chicken breast or a wing like you suggested, it's black. >> jimmy: do people eat these? >> they don't usually. >> jimmy: because it's not so good looking? >> exactly. >> jimmy: isn't it an interesting thing that people won't eat these chickens because they're beautiful. >> and the meat is not so beautiful. >> jimmy: and the meat's not so beautiful. that's the key, is to be beautiful on the outside and black as night on the inside. [ laughter ] >> a big reason we bring these out, these are the cheerleaders for our puppy bowl during -- >> jimmy: oh, you have the chickens be the cheerleaders. >> yeah. >> jimmy: and do the puppies eat the chickens? >> i hope not. >> jimmy: is this chicken doing -- pooping or something? i feel things dropping. >> jimmy: i hope not too. >> no. you're good. >> jimmy: these are more like muppets than chickens, aren't they? [ laughter ] >> i thought they're odd enough looking that i could bring them out for you. >> jimmy: they are pretty odd-looking. do these lay -- i assume they lay eggs. >> they do. they lay a lot of eggs. 100 a year. which is more than normal. >> jimmy: that's a pretty good amount. and then they come out little -- they must look really cute when they're babies. >> very cute. the other thing that makes them a little special, they have this little rough tough thing that most chickens don't have, this little extra rough at the bottom under their neck. >> jimmy: why do they have that? >> i think it also goes to them looking good. a bit of scruff. >> jimmy: it's like somebody turned an ugg inside out. [ laughter ] hey, do you guys want a chicken? yes. here you go, yes, enjoy. you know how to hold them. that's the humiliating part for me is when the young women -- >> just slide in. >> jimmy: oh, boy. i'll just go over by the band. >> stay right there. >> jimmy: that is a cute -- slow. the only reason i say that is this guy in particular doesn't love it if somebody's hovering over them. >> jimmy: you'll never see anyone move more slowly than i will toward that bobcat. [ laughter ] >> can you hear him give a little bit of a growl there? >> jimmy: yeah. [ laughter ] >> i would say you're in a good positi so it's a great one not to -- [ laughter ] you can come in. >> jimmy: i don't want to make eye contact. >> it's not glancing eye contact. it's if you stare at him. uddy. look at his tail. >> jimmy: why are they called bobcats, by the way? are they all named bob? [ laughter ] >> i'm going to walk around here and get him to stand up a little bit. hi, buddy. you're a goo would -- [ laughter ] >> the difference with these guys. ball of yarn these guys would chase. to hunt things it would be just like you see there. >> jimmy: seems like you've got a real loose grip on that leash. [ laughter ] >> typically speaking this is just so he doesn't run off somewhere. >> jimmy: yeah. like in to kill our audience. [ laughter ] >> you don't want to pull on him too much. hunter, he's going to lay in wait like, this wait for something to get nice and close and he jumps on it. that's why you see a lot of the big weight is in his bum. >> jimmy: and what's the biggest animal he'll capture? oh, my god, there's a woman. >> yeah. she's going to make both of us look not as tough. >> jimmy: yeah. you did. yes, you also humiliated me. congrats. oh, no. it seems so cute. now that it's far away. [ laughter ] >> yes. >> jimmy: guillermo, are you all right over there? >> yeah. >> you're going to keep it in your hands. and keep hiding it. okay? >> jimmy: keep the dish -- oh, boy. now, that's a -- that's an actual monster, right? >> this is a eurasian boar. i'd invite you to come around and take one of those treats. give me another handful. he's going to see that -- >> jimmy: he could kill this desk if he wanted to, right? [ laughter ] >> put one of those in your hand. you're a good boy. >> jimmy: and throw it at him from here? >> no. no. [ laughter ] you're going to do it like this. i'll show you. you're going to hold your hand to shove it under his nose. >> jimmy: no, i'm not. [ laughter ] >> you don't want to try? >> jimmy: look at how gross his mouth is. >> look how smart he is. okay. sit. sit. >> jimmy: he's foaming at the mouth. >> good boy. [ applause ] >> jimmy: it's possible -- >> thank you. you can applaud that. [ applause ] come on, in jimmy. he's sitting down for you. >> jimmy: why, oh why. why can't i just toss it? it would be funny -- how awesome would to be if he caught this in the air? >> he doesn't catch. you're the only person with a treat right now and he's going to smell it. >> jimmy: oh, geez. >> flat hand. down. and push. yeah. [ applause ] >> jimmy: that wasn't so bad. look at my hand. look at this. it's got like rabies froth all over it. [ laughter ] >> all right, buddy. i know. jimmy, you were supposed to be managing the -- >> jimmy: i know. oh, no. oh, my god. >> come on, buddy. >> jimmy: how would this attack if it were to attack? >> you see its tusks while it's up there like that? >> jimmy: yeah. >> the bottom tusk -- i'm down -- >> jimmy: he's kind of friendly in a way? >> come on, come down nice and gentle. good boy. those tusks on the bottom are scissor sharp. what he'll do is turn his head really, really fast and basically gouge you. it's actually funny you ask because they are typically quite aggressive. if they get angry they can really, really do serious damage. a lot of guys that hunt these -- [ laughter ] you can imagine -- >> jimmy: do they eat laptops? oh, yeah, these are the ones that people hunt, right? >> they hunt these things. and if you just wound it these guys can be so dangerous. they kill hunters. >> jimmy: you should not mess with an animal like this. >> want to ask him to sit? >> jimmy: sit. >> put your hand up. no -- yeah, that's fine. sometimes you have to abort it. i'll show you how to do it once. come here, buddy. boris. >> jimmy: boris is his name? >> sit. you're sliding. >> jimmy: he's trained. >> come on, good boy. >> jimmy: he's trained to sit? >> yeah. sit. sit. sit. sit. good boy. [ applause ] >> jimmy: oh, boris. wow. that's pretty good. >> pigs are very smart and boris is one of the smartest. >> jimmy: we're going to take a commercial break, boris. you'll enjoy another one of these disgusting little rocks. puppy bowl 12 is sunday afternoon 3:00 eastern on animal planet. we'll be right back. [ cheers and applause ] flonase allergy relief nasal spray. this changes everything. outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. when we breathe in allergens, our bodies react by over-producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. most allergy pills only control one substance, flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. so go ahead, inhale life, excite your senses, seize the day and the night. flonase. six is greater than one. this changes everything. i'm neil patrick harris and new york is my home. no place has more world class culture. come winter, i can't wait to visit our must-see collections of art and superb photography and film. new york has beautifully restored theaters, that are now important centers for the performing arts. and museums that preserve the glories of the past. winter in new york state means more great things to do than ever. plan your trip at iloveny.com >> jimmy: i want to thank george clooney. i want to thank hugh laurie. apologies to matt damon. we ran out of time. dave salmoni, thank you so much. puppy bowl 12 is on animal planet on sunday. and thanks to you, boris. you've been a good dude. you really have. "nightline" is next. thanks for watching. >>> thi of "nightline." a mother's reckoning. >> tonight, the massacre at columbine high school. y that shocked a community and left the nation asking what drove two teenagers to take the lives of 13? parents? >> could you have prevented what happened at columbine?
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hugh. thank you, george. hugh laurie and george clooney. go see "hail caesar." it opens friday. we'll be right back with dave salmoni and animals. [ cheers and applause ] ll ask what backache? what sore wrist? what headache? what bad shoulder? advil makes pain a distant memory. stronger or longer than advil it's the world's #1 choice. what pain? advil. you've wanted to re-do that bathroom. you've just been busy. work. kids. binge-watching season 3 of, yeah. luckily, while you were not remodeling your bathroom, the internet got rocket mortgage. a fast, easy way to refinance. getting you the money you need for the bathroom you want. every day you read headlines about businesses being hacked and intellectual property being stolen. that is cyber-crime and it affects each and every one of us. microsoft created the digital crimes unit to fight cyber-crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information when it comes to the cloud, trust and security are paramount. we're building what we learn back into the cloud to make people and organizations safer. i've smoked a lot and quit a
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hugh hewitt. today is hugh's birthday. he is 25 years old. so naturally you close to spend it here with our viewers, right? >> yeah. i woke up this morning and mike allen's play book sang happy 60th birthday. so i've gotten more birthday wishes than i have in the previous 59 years so thank you. >> i always say i'm celebrating the anniversary. so the 30th anniversary of your 30th birthday. >> what donald trump has proven, we get on work as long as we want. they're bunls of energy. if they can keep running for president, we can keep commenting. >> what a birthday present. your radio show, you spoke to them. did they give you any headlines? >> i think the headline for ted cruz is that he grew up speaking spanish and that he fired rick tyler. he thought it was unfortunate. he needed to. he is not worried about the narrative. he is leaning into the narrative, liar, liar, liar, and taking it on. there is an old proverb, hang a lantern on your problem. lee atwater. when your possibly is on the ground with a broken arm, step on it. so they stepped on it. also had ben carson on today. he has forgiven ted cruz for the iowa brouhaha. he brought up the ben carson thing and he went after ted cruz really hard. even though it is kind of counter intuitive to me. he wants to keep cruz alive and dividing the ant-trump vote. >> let's listen to trump from your interview. >> we've had a lot of problems with him. he is a person who doesn't like telling the truth. and i just find it hard to believe that some of the things he said. so he plays hard ball. and i like hard ball. and i've met a lot tougher people than him, many, many many times tougher. >> he's worried as i said, that this may be sticking. >> very. you've got to, a narrative like this takes hold. and it got ahold of nixon in his career and he had to fight at this time rest of his career. it doesn't mean you can't beat it but you would rather be talking about the constitutional issues by the scalia opening. donald trump said he wants a scalia reincarnation. so ted cruz would rather talk about that than talking about his spokesperson and giving marco rubio an opportunity. rubio had this day where he collected more endorsements, all the jeb people seem to have gone to marco rubio. a lot of people will not get out until ohio. i've known kasich a long time. i think the big story of the day is that donald trump will win tomorrow in nevada. he'll win big. your poll confirms that. then can ted cruz keep his fire wall in texas? and our debate thursday will have a lot to do with that. it will be sparky. oh, will it be sparky. >> you mentioned john kasich. he spoke to wolf blitzer. >> are they urging you to drop out? >> no. i haven't heard from any of the special interests to get no drop out. we're signing people up. we're signing up some significant republican fund-raisers. and our political organization is and panelling as well. we're going to keep going. when i travel places, people beg me. they say you stay in. you represent hope for me and my family. this is all political mumbo jumbo from people who, you know, i don't even know who they are. the fact is, we're just going to keep going. and at some point when we get the consolidation, i'm very hopeful it will be toward me. >> so you said you think he is stay on to ohio at least. you think there's pressure. you don't think it is time for him to make room for someone else? >> there are people in the party who want behind out. did he pick up a couple of hedge fund guys and made some money. here's what john kasich is. he got there through hard work and beating odds. he won in congress. i think he was the only republican to win the year that he won. it might have been 1982. john kasich is tough as nails and he's happy. he's a happy warrior. he is not going anywhere. an open convention is a real possibility, unless donald trump takes out ted cruz in texas and marco rubio in florida. if he does that, i think he's pretty much unstoppable. but i don't see that happening. i'm a fairly traditional guy. i think home state favorite sons win their state an sent extraordinary circumstances. so this debate could be very, very big and there are some issues that are troubling for donald trump. i asked about his tax returns and they still haven't been produced. he said they'll get there eventually. >> so at this point no clear runaway. trump is stoppable to you at this point and you still believe -- >> oh, yeah. i don't think there's any -- no way in heck to predict what's going to happen. but the odds makers and the bet takers show donald trump with a 50% probability and marco rubio with a 40% probability. they have kasich in low, high single digits and ted cruz a little higher than that. that reflects a divided field in which the possibilities are enless. only ben carson doesn't have a path. he said his path is to hope they all break to him. that's a long ball. four people could be the nominee. we'll find out more thursday night. >> do you want to predict nevada? you know i have to ask. >> you got me to predict south carolina. i got it right but i put the crystal ball away. i got it exactly right. on your show. >> did you. you know why we're similar? a week from tomorrow, i'll be celebrating with you. i'll be 27. that's a joke. a lot older than 27. >> thank you, hugh. happy birthday. >>> stay with cnn for all of this week's big political events. hillary clinton and bernie sanders take questions from voters. it starts at 8:00 eastern on. thursday night it is the last debate before super tuesday. the cnn presidential debate in houston moderated by wolf blitzer beginning at 8:30 eastern. when we come back, the big shake-up at the cruz campaign. will it change voters' minds about the candidates? plus, hillary clinton's message for black americans. are black votes the key for the campaign? if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis... isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla, apremilast. otezla is not an injection, or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months. and otezla's prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase the risk of
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hughes park drive. summerlin/howard hughes will construct the improvements in cooperation with the county, city and ndot. the project will add intersection capacity by adding an extra right- turn lane and another left-turn lane. this should reduce the number of lane changes for drivers. here's the problem. the project has no start date. nothing has been set in stone. timing will coincide with the second phase of development at downtown summerlin - no date for that either. hey! what's driving you crazy? send your traffic question to traffic eight at las vegas now dot com. /// > ((denise valdez)) > an 106 year old is proving she can still boogie! ((paul joncich)) how social media helped her snag a dance with the president of the united old has proven you're never too old to cut a little rug...especially when you're showing off your moves for a very special new friend. ((denise valdez)) plus you're sure to put a smile on your face after you see a panda's reaction to snow. jeremy roth has that and more in take a look at this! >"virginia mclaurin -- hi!!!!" mclaurin was excited to meet president obama and th
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. >> reporter: as to what longston hughes would think of three grammy nominations? >> hugheswould be absolutely thrilled. kpix 5. >> our own betty yu will be in los angeles to bring us exclusive reports from the grammys starting at 3:30 monday afternoon. and you can see the grammy's live monday here on kpix 5. the red carpet preview at 4:00, and then ll cool j hosts it big show starting at 0. if you're not home yet from work, you have another chance to see it during the on core presentation at 8:30. >>> speaking of on core presentation, it looks as if we're going to have such thing in the weather department with another warm day on tap for sunday, then for monday. then things are going to change later in the week. first highs today, it was warm, 74 degrees in santa rosa. it was up 72 in fairfield. boy, this looks like -- here we are in what's supposed to be the middle of the rainy season. it didn't work out the way we wanted. 61 in concord, 58 in san francisco, and 60s in santa rosa. high surf advisory expired. the surf is on for coastal locations with surfs up to 12 to 9 fee
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hughes park drive. summerlin/howa rd hughes will construct the improvements in city and ndot. the project will add intersection capacity by adding an extra right-turn lane and another left-turn lane. this should reduce the number of lane changes for drivers. here's the problem. the project has no start date. nothing has been set in stone. all summerlin knows is that the timing will coincide with the second phase of development at downtown summerlin - no date for that either. what's driving you crazy? remember, you can write me at. traffic 8 at las vegas now dot com. back to you. /// ((kirsten joyce)) > a strong cyclone rips through fiji. ((brian loftus)) how many people were killed in the storm this weekend... and the other damage it caused./// > ((michael stevens has the latest on the upcoming gop caucus)) ((brian loftus)) apple to help out the government... to help unlock a terrorists phone. the strong message to the tech director. ((kirsten joyce)) > a panda...checkin g out his winter surroundings. how this little guy makes the most out of the snow fall... no sled or mitten
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hugh. thank you, george. hugh laurie and george clooney. go see "hail caesar." it opens friday. we'll be right back with dave salmoni and animals. ll ask what backache? what sore wrist? what headache? what bad shoulder? advil makes pain a distant memory. nothing works faster stronger or longer than advil it' s the world' s #1 choice. what pain? advil. you've wanted to re-do that bathroom. you've just been busy. work. kids. binge-watching season 3 of, yeah. luckily, while you were not remodeling your bathroom, the internet got rocket mortgage. a fast, easy way to refinance. getting you the money you need every day you read headlines about businesses being hacked and intellectual property being stolen. that is cyber-crime and it affects each and every one of us. microsoft created the digital crimes unit to fight cyber-crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information so we can track down the criminals. when it comes to the cloud, trust and security are paramount. we're building what we learn back into the cloud to make people and i've smoked a lot and quit a lot, but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended release technology, helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose lease a 2016 lincoln mkx for $399 a month only at your lincoln dealer. ba da ba ba ba esurance was born online. which means fewer costs, which saves money. their customer experience is virtually paperless, which saves paper, which saves money. they have smart online tools, so you only pay for what's right for you, which saves money. they settle claims quickly, which saves time, which saves money. they drive an all-hybrid claims fleet, which saves gas, which saves money. they were born online, and built to save money, which means when they save, you save. that's auto and home insurance esurance. backed by allstate. [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: we are back. it is february 2nd, and our next guest happened to have a groundhog in his glove compartment. he's a master of wild beasts and host for animal planet where sunday you can watch "puppy bowl 12." here he is, the canadian tarzan, dave salmoni. [ cheers and applause ] >> take one of these guys. >> jimmy: all right. >> grab them by their wings. >> jimmy: by the wings. how can you even find his wings? >> over the wings. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: who knew i would be terrorized by a chicken? i'm going to eat those on sunday. [ laughter ] >> i figured i'd start out with something nice and light for you to hold. >> jimmy: wow. this is the animal that i wasn't fearful of, and now it's turned into a nightmare. no. no. do they like it when we grab the wings? >> they do. because they feel comfortable. see how comfortable? >> jimmy: yours is comfortable. [ laughter ] why is mine freaking out? >> duck him in here. you got him? just grab his feet up a little bit in your hands. there you go. >> jimmy: what about the wings? >> you've got big hands. there you go. you got him. yes. you're a chicken wrangler. >> jimmy: look at how natural i am. [ laughter ] >> you're doing wonderful. do you want me to grab him? >> jimmy: no, look at me comfortable, are you kidding? [ laughter ] >> these are called silky chickens. >> jimmy: because they are silky. >> the texture of their feathers. the other thing, these are neat, they have black meat. so if i were to eat a chicken breast or a wing like you suggested, it's black. >> jimmy: do people eat these? >> they don't usually. >> jimmy: because it's not so good looking? >> exactly. >> jimmy: isn't it an interesting thing that people won't eat these chickens because they're beautiful. >> and the meat is not so beautiful. >> jimmy: and the meat's not so beautiful. that's the key, is to be beautiful on the outside and black as night on the inside. [ laughter ] >> a big reason we bring these out, these are the cheerleaders chickens be the cheerleaders. >> yeah. >> jimmy: and do the puppies eat the chickens? >> i hope not. >> jimmy: is this chicken doing -- pooping or something? >> i hope not. >> jimmy: i hope not too. >> no. you're good. muppets than chickens, aren't they? [ laughter ] looking that i could bring them out for you. >> jimmy: they are pretty odd-looking. do these lay -- i assume they lay eggs. >> they do. they lay a lot of eggs. 100 a year. which is more than normal. >> jimmy: that's a pretty good amount. they must look really cute when they're babies. >> very cute. a little special, they have this little rough tough thing that little extra rough at the bottom under their neck. >> jimmy: why do they have that? >> i think it also goes to them looking good. >> jimmy: it's like somebody turned an ugg inside out. [ laughter ] hey, do you guys want a chicken? yes. here you go, yes, enjoy. that's the humiliating part for me is when the young women -- >> just slide in. >> jimmy: oh, boy. i'll just go over by the band. >> stay right there. >> jimmy: that is a cute -- >> this is a bobcat. you can come in now nice and slow. the only reason i say that is this guy in particular doesn't love it if somebody's hovering over them. >> jimmy: you'll never see anyone move more slowly than i will toward that bobcat. [ laughter ] >> can you hear him give a little bit of a growl there? >> jimmy: yeah. [ laughter ] >> i would say you're in a good position, then. >> jimmy: should you not make eye contact? or what -- >> it's interesting. with him, it's an aggressive move. if he stares at you and you lock eyes with him he thinks you're trying to pick a fight with him. so it's a great one not to -- [ laughter ] >> jimmy: and what do they eat, dave? >> they eat almost anything. good boy. >> jimmy: where do these come from? >> all over north america. you can come in. >> jimmy: i don't want to make eye contact. >> it's not glancing eye contact. predators. they're all over north america. and it's been said they can adapt to almost anything. because they sort of -- hunters. or rabbits or whatever. >> jimmy: chickens? up. come here, buddy. look at his tail. >> jimmy: why are they called bobcats, by the way? are they all named bob? [ laughter ] >> i'm going to walk around here and get him to stand up a little bit. hi, buddy. you're a good boy. >> jimmy: you're making eye contact. [ laughter ] >> i know. i thought i could get him to move. obviously he's not -- i promise he's got a tailback there -- >> jimmy: how much like regular cats are these bobcats? if i had a laser pointer or a ball of yarn or something. would -- [ laughter ] >> the difference with these guys. ball of yarn these guys would chase. and they're honed predators. this guy even more of a predator than your house cat. >> jimmy: well, yeah. >> but this guy the way he likes to hunt things it would be just like you see there. >> jimmy: seems like you've got a real loose grip on that leash. [ laughter ] >> typically speaking this is >> jimmy: yeah. like in to kill our audience. [ laughter ] >> you don't want to pull on him too much. this guy, being such a good hunter, he's going to lay in wait like, this wait for something to get nice and close and he jumps on it. that's why you see a lot of the big weight is in his bum. >> jimmy: and what's the biggest animal he'll capture? oh, my god, there's a woman. >> yeah. she's going to make both of us look not as tough. >> jimmy: yeah. you did. yes, you also humiliated me. congrats. oh, no. it seems so cute. now that it's far away. [ laughter ] >> yes. >> jimmy: guillermo, are you all right over there? >> yeah. >> you're going to keep it in your hands. and keep hiding it. okay? >> jimmy: keep the dish -- oh, boy. now, that's a -- that's an actual monster, right? >> this is a eurasian boar. i'd invite you to come around and take one of those treats. he's going to see that -- >> jimmy: he could kill this desk if he wanted to, right? [ laughter ] >> put one of those in your hand. you're a good boy. >> jimmy: and throw it at him from here? >> no. no. [ laughter ] you're going to do it like this. i'll show you. you're going to hold your hand nice and flat and you're going to shove it under his nose. >> jimmy: no, i'm not. [ laughter ] >> you don't want to try? >> jimmy: look at how gross his mouth is. >> look how smart he is. okay. sit. sit. >> jimmy: he's foaming at the mouth. >> good boy. [ applause ] >> jimmy: it's possible -- >> thank you. you can applaud that. [ applause ] come on, in jimmy. he's sitting down for you. >> jimmy: why, oh why. why can't i just toss it? it would be funny -- how awesome would to be if he caught this in the air? >> he doesn't catch. you're the only person with a treat right now and he's going to smell it. >> jimmy: oh, geez. >> flat hand. down. and push. yeah. [ applause ] >> jimmy: that wasn't so bad. look at my hand. look at this. it's got like rabies froth all over it. [ laughter ] >> all right, buddy. i know. jimmy, you were supposed to be oh, no. oh, my god. >> come on, buddy. >> jimmy: how would this attack if it were to attack? >> you see its tusks while it's up there like that? >> jimmy: yeah. >> the bottom tusk -- i'm worrying about him coming down -- >> jimmy: he's kind of friendly in a way? >> come on, come down nice and gentle. good boy. those tusks on the bottom are scissor sharp. what he'll do is turn his head really, really fast and basically gouge you. it's actually funny you ask because they are typically quite aggressive. if they get angry they can really, really do serious damage. a lot of guys that hunt these -- [ laughter ] you can imagine -- >> jimmy: do they eat laptops? oh, yeah, these are the ones that people hunt, right? >> they hunt these things. and if you just wound it these guys can be so dangerous. they kill hunters. >> jimmy: you should not mess with an animal like this. >> want to ask him to sit? >> jimmy: sit. >> put your hand up. no -- yeah, that's fine. sometimes you have to abort it. i'll show you how to do it once. come here, buddy. >> jimmy: boris is his name? >> sit. you're sliding. >> jimmy: he's trained. >> come on, good boy. >> jimmy: he's trained to sit? >> yeah. sit. sit. come here. sit. sit. good boy. [ applause ] >> jimmy: oh, boris. wow. that's pretty good. >> pigs are very smart and boris is one of the smartest. >> jimmy: we're going to take a commercial break, boris. you'll enjoy another one of these disgusting little rocks. puppy bowl 12 is sunday afternoon 3:00 eastern on animal planet. we'll be right back. [ cheers and applause ] switch to centurylink prism tv, and get the same great channels cable gives you, without having to deal with cable. yes and? plus tons of on demand options so you can watch whatever, whenever. yes and? why do you guys keep saying that? it's the first rule of improv. by saying "yes and," we accept the reality created by our comedy partners, paul. yes, right, i know. do you? feel like a hollywood insider with prism tv from centurylink. the son of a polish immigrant who grew up in a brooklyn tenement. he went to public schools, then college, where the work of his life began -- fighting injustice and inequality, speaking truth to power. he moved to vermont, won election and praise as one of america's best mayors. in congress, he stood up for working families and for principle, opposing the iraq war, supporting veterans. now he's taking on wall street and a corrupt political system funded by millions of contributions, tackling climate change to create clean-energy jobs, fighting for living wages, equal pay, and tuition-free public colleges. people are sick and tired and they want real change! [ cheers and applause ] bernie sanders -- husband, father, grandfather, an honest leader building a movement with you to give us a future to believe in. i'm bernie sanders, and i approve this message. >> jimmy: i want to thank george clooney. i want to thank hugh laurie. apologies to matt damon. we ran out of time. dave salmoni, thank you so much. puppy bowl 12 is on animal planet on sunday. and thanks to you, boris. you've been a good dude. you really have. "nightline" is next. thanks for watching. >>> this is a special edition of "nightline." a mother's reckoning. >> tonight, the massacre at columbine high school. a tragedy that shocked a community and left the nation asking what drove two teenagers to take the lives of 13? what kind of people were their parents? >> could you have prevented what happened at columbine? >> after 17 years, sue klebold, mother of one of the shooters, break her silence. and the families that lost so much. >> what is it you want to say to them? >> one mother's quest, looking for the path of her son's descent and the clues she says she missed.
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hugh hewitt, host "the hugh hewitt show." happy monday, sir. let's play your last prediction monday night before the new hampshire primary. >> so your prediction, you said, is donald trum s&p. >> trump, kasich, rubio. >> all right. you were pretty close. what do you say about south carolina? >> well, you know, you can actually say i called iowa completely right. on this one rubio got the same number of delegates as cruz and bush. so he actually tied for third in delegates. but i was off. he was hurt more badly than i thought. >> but you picked kasich, which i thought was very smart. >> yeah. the independents broke for him. about rubio i'll say this. there's an old ballad, an old english song, don, called "the ballad of sir andrew barton" in which it is said that the wounded scots admiral says i am wounded, i am not slain, i shall lay me down and bleed a while and rise to fight again. i think that was rubio with wolf earlier today. i think ted cruz has got momentum. jeb is fighting on. i looked, though, at donald tru trump's crowd in south carolina tonight and i say to myself, this is far beyond anything i think he imagined when he began. >> i think we're going to probably play it. what do you say for south carolina before we go on to continue to talk about this? >> it depends on this debate saturday night completely. i was asked tonight on my radio show to make a prediction because i've been pretty close to 100%, and it really depends on saturday night because the compression of this calendar and the focus on these debates, it was announced wolf is going to moderate the cnn debate in which i'm participating on february 25th. and that one might be down to three or four but this one was six with dr. carson and the other kands is going to allow the candidates a lot more time to talk. so it will shift the race on its axis again. >> okay. so -- >> no predictions till next week. >> let's talk about this. as i've been saying, if you tell me you're going to run for president i'm going to take you seriously. a lot of people didn't take him seriously, donald trump i'm talking about, and we did. so let's dig into this new hampshire, these results. trump wins. his win was convincing. he won across ages, new voters, republicans, democrats. who of the runners-up do you think can beat him at this point? can trump be stopped? >> oh, yes. 35%. i don't know if it's a ceiling or a floor. at this point all of the -- i don't see dr. carson with a path. i see him with a program and i see him with a role to play but i don't see him with a path to the nomination. i do see the black swan of american politics coming right at us, the open convention, and anything can happen in something that has been unprecedented and hasn't happened in my lifetime. so we don't really know who could come out of that with the nomination. but given what you just said, the big kahuna, super tuesday, it's proportional representation. the delegate count, if i can consult, trump has 17, cruz has 11, rubio 10, kasich 5, jeb 4, and ben carson 3. it takes 1,237 to win. so we have such a long way to go. any of these gentlemen can win. and they all have terrific advantages and disadvantages. in south carolina you've got terry sullivan is marco rubio's campaign manager. he knows the state back of his hand. worked for jim demint down there. jeb bush has bush family memory. both bush 41 and bush 43. faced crisis moments in their campaigns. in 1988 george herbert walker bush was 30 points behind michael dukakis. in 2000 w had to go from a blistering loss in new hampshire to go beat mccain in the pro military state of south carolina. 41 had lee atwater. 43 had rove. mike murphy is walled off from jeb. i don't know about that. ted cruz, this is really interesting. he's the constitutional expert and today the supreme court put a stay -- or yesterday late last night the supreme court put a stay on president obama's global climate change throwdown from the epa. they also a week earlier raised the issue of the president not taking care of the laws that he's charged with enforcing. so ted cruz's constitutional chops come into play. everyone's got a strength. then there's john kasich -- >> i've got to ask you this before we get too far afield here. you keep talking about a brokered convention that's going to go all the way -- why do you say that? if donald trump has enough delegates or whoever it is enough delegates, why would the convention say brokered? >> i never say brokered. i say open. there are in brokers. unlike the democratic party which found a way to give hillary five delegates out of her blowout there are no bosses in the republican party. i just do math. it takes 1,237 delegates to be nominated. i don't see how anyone with the rule set before anyone knew who was running, reince priebus and the republican national committee adopted a rule set that leads to a four or five-way race which leads to no one getting close to 1,237 delegates. so it's not brokered. it's just going to be math. and everyone with chips on the table, a committed delegate is going to be invited in the game. >> ted cruz, well organized in iowa and he says he has the organization in south carolina to win especially with evangelicals there. do you think he can win there? >> i do. i think any of these people can win -- literally. any of those five. i don't think dr. carson with can win. he can have a good showing but i don't think he can win. any of the other five can win at this point. and with the evangelicals ted cruz has enormous strength. but i'll point out i posted on my website today an interview i did with john kasich from 2010 when he put out his book "every other monday" about his 20 years in a small group of men of the christian faith, evangelicals who'd been meeting his faith and his touch with evangelicals is deep and authentic as any of them. so i wouldn't say all the evangelicals are going to go with ted cruz though he has a huge head start because of heardship nodding toward him. i find this to be the most interesting ten days in republican political history that i can remember. maybe after ford and at the north carolina primary in '76. but that's ancient history. this has really been intense stuff. >> it's been amazing to watch and will be amazing to watch. thank you, hugh. i'll see you soon. >> always a pleasure, don. >> heading into the south carolina, donald trump and ted cruz are attacking each other in new political ads. look at this. >> ted cruz, the worst kind of washington insider who just can't be trusted. >> that's a lousy house. i'm going to take your house with eminent domain and park my limos there. >> eminent domain! >> wow. joining me is matt moore, the chairman of the south carolina republican party. that is a harsh ad. south carolina politics not for the faint of heart. attack ads on the air. there have been some dirty tricks in past campaigns. what do you expect over the next ten days? >> south carolina is a fascinating place, a long history of creative campaign tactics, don, to say the least. i expect a sprint to the finish here in south carolina. as hugh was just saying, a lot of candidates have a real shot here in south carolina. it they get a bit of luck and they perform well in the debate here on saturday night. >> so outsiders, m
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hughes park drive. summerlin/howa rd hughes will fix the problem in cooperation with the county, city and ndot. the project will add intersection capacity by adding an extra right-turn lane and another left-turn lane. this should reduce the numberof lane changes for drivers. here's the problem. the project has no start date. nothing has been set in stone. all summerlin knows is that the timing will coincide with the second phase of development at downtown summerlin - no date for that either. hey! what's driving you crazy? send your traffic question to dot com. back to you. ((kirsten joyce)) > samsung just unveiled it's new galaxy s-7 and s-7 edge! they showed off the new smartphones this weekend during a tech conference in spain. samsung also debuted its first ever virtual reality device, that's capable of taking 360- degree pictures and videos. you can watch them with a gear vr headset. they're expected to go on sale sometime this year. no word on a price just yet./// ((brian loftus)) > beatle-mania never really went away.. even with the death of the band's members.. ((kirsten joyce)) the odd
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