Donald Trump vs. Hillary Clinton Third Debate Cold Open - SNL
UPDATED: The weekend"s highlights include an expanded "Walking Dead," comedy from "Saturday Night Live" and Bill Maher, and a "60 Minutes" interview with President-elect Donald Trump and his family.
The longer-than-usual "Walking Dead" episode is called "Service" and places Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) at Alexandria. The episode starts at 9 p.m. Sunday on AMC; "Talking Dead" is set for 10:25 p.m. The guest list: executive producer David Alpert, comedian Ron Funches and actor Lou Diamond Phillips discuss the episode with host Chris Hardwick.
"Saturday Night Live" offers its first episode since Trump was elected, and fans will expect Alec Baldwin as the Republican winner. But what will Kate McKinnon be doing as Hillary Clinton? Dave Chappelle hosts at 11:30 p.m. Saturday on NBC. A Tribe Called Quest is the musical guest.
Bill Maher is likely to be in furious form after his candidate, Clinton, lost. You can catch his monologue at 10 p.m. Friday on HBO. Former Attorney General Eric Holder and comedian Trae Crowder are the interview guests. The panel will be CNN commentator and former Obama adviser David Axelrod, Ana Marie c*x of MTV and The New York Times and Times columnist Thomas Friedman. Maher is concluding his 14th season on HBO with the episode and starts season 15 in January. Programming note: Late Friday, HBO said the show will be livestreamed on the program"s YouTube channel (YouTube.com/RealTime) and will be available there after the livestream.
Trump can weigh in on the protests, the election results and the future in a Lesley Stahl interview at 7 p.m. Sunday on CBS" "60 Minutes." The interview will be conducted Friday in New York. Melania Trump, the new first lady, also talks to Stahl, and so do Trump"s four grown children: Ivanka, Tiffany, Eric and Donald Jr.
ABC"s "20/20" offers "Donald Trump: The Making of a President" at 10 p.m. Friday (today). The interviews include Kellyanne Conway, Trumps campaign manager; Lara Trump, Eric Trump"s wife; and Omarosa Manigault, former contestant on "The Apprentice."
NBC"s "Dateline" explores how its reporting helped reopen a murder case at 9 p.m. Friday. The report, by Keith Morrison, is called "The Man Who Knew Too Much." NBC News says: "A son enlists the help of his attorney father after he watches a "Dateline NBC" report on the murder of college student Michelle O"Keefe. They soon discover disturbing questions that help reopen the case in a way no one saw coming."
CBS" "48 Hours" looks at alleged serial killer Todd Kohlhepp, a South Carolina real estate broker, in "Buried Truth" at 10 p.m. Saturday. His mother tells the newsmagazine that her son was "very misunderstood."
Sunday"s most-watched telecast is likely to be "Sunday Night Football." The Seattle Seahawks visit the New England Patriots, who tend to be ratings magnets. Coverage starts at 7 p.m.
Because we are in the November ratings period, episodes of most scripted series on ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC and The CW will be new.
Fans of musical theater will want to catch the recent London production of "Gypsy" at 9 p.m. Friday on PBS" "Great Performances." Imelda Staunton plays Rose. She is supported by Lara Pulver as Louise and Peter Davison as Herbie. The score includes "Everything"s Coming Up Roses," "Some People," "Let Me Entertain You," "Together, Wherever We Go" and "Rose"s Turn," a showcase for the actress playing Rose.
Charlie Strong post game press conference - West Virginia [Nov. 12, 2016]
Ten takeaways from a college football weekend that set the table for what could be an epic closing week of the regular season:
No. 1: Charlie Strongs tenure at Texas is near an end, and it could be part of massive coaching turnover in the Lone Star State in the coming weeks.
But it would cost a lot of money.
Strong, Texas Techs Kliff Kingsbury and Texas A&Ms Kevin Sumlin are sitting on seats of varying degrees of heat. Rices David Bailiff and UTEPs Sean Kugler also could be gone. And it is highly likely that Houston will have a position to fill when Tom Herman upgrades.
Yet the amount of money it would take to make the first three go away is pretty staggering. Strongs buyout is $10 million Texas boosters will take care of that one. But it would also cost a ton to get rid of Kingsbury (a reported $9.4 million) and Sumlin would be owed even more money than either Strong or Kingsbury if A&M were to fire him.
Kansas likely applied the final blow to Strong on Saturday night, beating the Longhorns in overtime. It was the Jayhawks first Big 12 win since 2014 and snapped a 23-game losing streak to FBS opponents.
Simply put, it is a humiliating loss for Texas. It left the Longhorns 5-6, and dropped Strongs Texas record to 16-20. The remainder of his tenure could be measured in hours at this point. Stay tuned Sunday.
Then get ready for Herman Watch in Austin.
Kingsbury experienced his own humiliation Saturday, watching his horrendous Red Raiders defense surrender 66 points to 3-8 Iowa State. It was the most points the Cyclones have scored in 36 years, and their 608 yards total offense will keep Texas Tech 128th and last in the nation in total defense.
Sumlin at least got a victory Saturday, beating UT-San Antonio in unimpressive fashion, 23-10. The Aggies Friday game against LSU is likely to have a far greater impact on Sumlins approval rating with boosters and administration than this outcome. If A&M wins that game to get to 9-3, and given the colossal buyout, it seems highly likely hed be back in 2017.
Charlie Strong is 16-20 at Texas. (Getty)
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No. 2 : College Football Playoff winners from the weekend: Washington (10-1), which bounced back from its loss to USC by walloping Arizona State 44-18, and could well move up to No. 5 in the CFP rankings in place of Louisville; Colorado (9-2), which beat Washington State by two touchdowns and will clinch the Pac-12 South with a home victory over Utah next week; the Big Ten, which saw its chances of a second team in the bracket stay intact with wins by Ohio State, Michigan, Wisconsin and Penn State; and, if you insist, the Big 12, which is now headed for a Bedlam showdown between Oklahoma and Oklahoma State Dec. 3 for the league title.
The further inflation of Team Helium, Oklahoma, was proceeding full-speed Saturday night after the Sooners blew out West Virginia in Morgantown. Yet I cant think of a single reason to rank Oklahoma higher than eighth at this juncture. You certainly cannot put the Sooners ahead of Penn State, which has the same record (9-2) with a three-point victory over a team that beat Oklahoma by 21 (that would be Ohio State) and I would slot Penn State seventh this week.
Oklahoma State (9-2) has its own issue: a home loss to Central Michigan of the Mid-American Conference. No other playoff contender has anything remotely as damning on its rsum as a defeat at the hands of the fourth-place team in the MAC West. There were mitigating factors to that loss, of course the game should have been over before the Chippewas winning play, but the officials screwed it up. Yet Oklahoma States go-ahead touchdown in the fourth quarter never should have stood, either the Cowboys were flagged on a blatant hold on the scoring play, yet the officials somehow picked up the flag.
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What was true in September remains true in late November: the Big 12 isnt good enough to make the playoff. Just because the Sooners and Cowboys have beaten up on the league doesnt suddenly eliminate what happened in non-conference play.
No. 3: There is one other team that saw its playoff hopes remain alive Saturday: Florida.
Yes, Im serious.
The Gators (9-2) won the Relocation Bowl, stopping LSU at the goal line as time ran out for a 16-10 triumph in Baton Rouge. This was a game that was supposed to be played in Gainesville in October but was re-scheduled into a road game, amid great acrimony between programs and fan bases. And the fact that Florida won it means that it simply needs to win its next two games to crash the playoff: at Florida State and over No. 1 Alabama in the SEC championship game Dec. 3.
Thats all. Nothing too terribly difficult.
If the Gators somehow finish with three wins over ranked teams away from home, capped off by slaying the Bama dragon, they could not be denied a place in the four-team bracket. And Alabama likely couldnt be, either. If the SEC back-doored its way into having half the CFP field there would be no end to the caterwauling but there is a scenario in which it happens, no matter how unlikely.
No. 4: The happiest man in college athletics Saturday probably was a man who is no longer in college athletics recently retired Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley.
It was Foley and Florida who stood firm about postponing the original LSU date due to Hurricane Matthew, and it was Foley who bore the brunt of the barbs from LSU people over that decision. He also was the man who agreed to a rescheduling that turned that contest into a road game.
To see his school pull off the upset, despite a rash of injuries, had to be rewarding.
The bad feelings between the two programs were evident before kickoff, when a brief skirmish between sides took place on the field. That included star LSU running back Leonard Fournette shoving Florida assistant coach Torian Gray twice and then Fournette suited up and played when he was not expected to due to a nagging ankle injury.
Fournette finished with 40 yards on 12 carries. He was not in the game at the end when LSU was stacked up at the 1-yard line. Instead that was backup Derrius Guice, who appeared to start out in the wrong direction when taking a pitch from quarterback Danny Etling on the final play. Guice tried to go over the top and was stopped, resulting in a huge victory for the Gators.
Florida coach Jim McElwain now has taken the Gators to the SEC title game each of his first two seasons, another reason why Foley had to be a happy man Saturday. His hiring of McElwain was questioned by some Florida fans, but it has worked out well. Now wait until he gets a quarterback who can play.
No. 5: Mark Dantonio is the closest thing to a nemesis Urban Meyer has had in five years at Ohio State.
Meyer is now 3-2 against Dantonio, with two season-ruining losses and a pair of one-point victories. The latest one-point escape was Saturday, when the Buckeyes barely got out of East Lansing with their playoff hopes intact after holding off the 3-8 Spartans.
Dantonio coached a gusto-filled game, with reverses and a fake punt and other high-risk decisions. The most prominent of those decisions was to go for two after scoring with 4:41 remaining, when an extra point would have tied the game.
I had less of a problem with that decision it was consistent with his approach to the entire game than with the play call. After riding running back L.J. Scott downfield, Michigan State opted for a pass by Tyler OConnor who would finish the day 6-for-16 for 105 yards, with two interceptions. His pass into double coverage was picked off, and Ohio State survived.
No. 6: Dantonio wasnt the only coach to roll those two-point dice and see them come up snake eyes. San Diego States Rocky Long did it, too.
Longs gamble came at the end of a wild sequence of events. The Aztecs trailed Wyoming in Laramie by seven points with 1:07 left and were on their own 1-yard-line yet they somehow drove 99 yards for the score. The touchdown came when Quest Truxton captain and MVP of the All-Name Team made a diving catch of a deflected pass in the end zone. The play originally was ruled incomplete but correctly overturned upon review.
That gave Long the chance to go for the win. Like Dantonio, the fatal flaw was the play call. San Diego State went away from the nations leading rusher, Donnel Pumphrey, and instead tried a throwback to the tight end. It fell incomplete, and Wyoming moved a step closer to a wholly unforeseen Mountain West Conference divisional title.
No. 7: Michigan beat Indiana, but did little in the process to ease concerns about its quarterback situation.
With Wilton Speight out for the game (the year?) with a shoulder injury, John OKorn got his first start since October 2014, when he was at Houston. In precarious weather conditions, OKorn was less than OK he threw for just 59 yards and ran for 19, completing just 7 of 16 passes.
Michigan still is playing cute with Speights availability or lack thereof heading into the showdown at Ohio State on Saturday, but this much seems clear: if the Wolverines dont get more productivity out of the QB position in the Horseshoe than in the past two games (18-42 for 162 yards), they have little chance of winning.
No. 8: The Colorado renaissance is the biggest surprise in college football in 2016.
The Buffaloes clinched at least a share of the Pac-12 South division by beating Washington State, although they would lose a tiebreaker with USC if they cannot beat Utah this week. Having a chance to win that division is amazing when you consider that the Buffs have finished last in it the previous four years.
Mike MacIntyre looks like the favorite for national Coach of the Year honors, having elevated Colorado to 9-2 in his fourth season. The home-field advantage is back at Folsom Field for a program that hasnt been good since the Gary Barnett era.
But in terms of in-season renaissance, its hard to beat Colorados competition for the Pac-12 South title, USC. The Trojans thumped crosstown rival UCLA late Saturday to improve to 8-3, after a 1-3 start. If Colorado loses to Utah and USC wins the South, then wins the Pac-12 title game, is there any chance a red-hot team with three losses against a rigorous schedule could wiggle into the College Football Playoff? Probably not, but nobody wants to play the Trojans the way they are performing lately.
No. 9: Rutgers is a member of the Big Ten East. Technically, at least.
In reality, the Scarlet Knights are the leagues scarlet letter, wearing an A for Awful. In five games against divisional opponents, Rutgers has been outscored 257-27, with four shutout losses. The latest of those was a 39-0 beating from Penn State on Saturday night.
But they can hold out hope of at least scoring in the season finale against Maryland. The Terrapins (5-6) have given up 38 or more points four times against division opponents.
No. 10: Remember how excited everyone was after the Texas-Notre Dame shootout on the opening weekend of the season? Yeah. The two teams now are a combined 9-13, with the Fighting Irish assured of a losing season after being beaten at home by Virginia Tech on Saturday. Notre Dame finishes the season 2-4 in South Bend.
Chattanooga vs Citadel football 2016 Week 8
This week"s episode of Inside Chattanooga Football includes highlights and commentary of the 38-25 win over WCU. We also have a closer look at Wrestling"s Blue-Gold match, which took place lastThursday evening on historic Chamberlain Field. As always, the Voice of the Mocs Jim Reynolds is our host and he is joined by head football coach Russ Huesman.
Inside Chattanooga Football is a production of Learfield Sports, Mocs Sports Properties and MocsVision.
CETTE FILLE DE 15 ANS EST LE SOSIE DE KYLIE JENNER ?
Kylie Jenner is building quite the beauty empire. From collaborations with her sisters to launching shades for a variety of skin tones and occasions (the holiday collection is high on our Christmas list and launches on Monday, Nov. 21), this is clearly more than a hobby for the 19-year-old; its a verified business. And now she seems ready for the next step.
About a week ago, Jenner took to Instagram to post two photos with little context. Soon. @KylieCosmetics, she captioned one. MY VISION. I cant wait for you guys to see what goes on inside my mind & what Ive been working on. 100% Kylie, she wrote in the other.
As the photos featured a team presumably discussing plansin an unfinished space, complete with a counter, it was easy to assume that Kylie was ready to open her first store. And now that assumption has been proved correct.
Kylie Cosmetics has announced that the first brick-and-mortar venture for the brand will be a pop-up to launchon Dec. 9. Afraid you might forget how far away that is? Well, the company hasbuilt a new website with a countdown as well as an Instagram account to keep you updated.
An image from Jenners new TheKylieShop Instagram account
The details so far are scarce. Reports say that the new shop, which will be at the Westfield Topanga mall in Canoga Park, Calif., will be open only as long as it has aproduct. And if Kylies online releases are any indication, you may expect that to be less than a day!
Productwise, it should hold her full line. Whether that means it will hold such special collaborations asthe Koko Collection, which she made with her sister Kourtney, is still undetermined, but the shopshould hold the lines staples as well as the new Holiday Gift collection. There will even be exclusives for the store.
Choosing to kick it off with a pop-up shop is following in the steps of another fashion-centric family member. Brother-in-law Kanye West favors that format of physical store. And for good reason: He said he once sold $1 million worth of products at apop-up in New York over the span of a weekend. He followed it up with opening 21 pop-ups all over the world. Lip-kit fans are likely tohope that she follows in hisfootsteps.
Follow us on Facebook, Instagramand Pinterest for nonstop inspiration delivered fresh to your feed, every day.
An audience disruption took place at the Saturday eveningproduction of "Hamilton" at the PrivateBank Theatre in downtown Chicago.
According to audience member Brea Hayes of Batavia, who was at the performance, anaudience member seated in the front of the balcony shouted profanities and election-related political statements afterthe cast sangthe line,"Immigrants / We get the job done," which is part of the show"s "Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down)" number.
That lyricis among the most overtly political references in the show and generally gets a big reaction from the audience.
Tribune reporter Jodi Cohen, who was seated in the dress circle at the performance, said that thedisruption from the man above lasted for two songs. Cohen also said that the "Hamilton" actors seemed strikingly somber during the bows at the end of the show.
Hayes said that the man appeared to be intoxicated, shouted "We won" among other things, and was resistant after being asked to leave. She said hefinally was ushered out by Broadway in Chicago staffers.
Other audience members took to social media to describe the incident. Broadway in Chicago has not yet commented on what happened at its theater.
The situation in Chicago followed a Friday performance of"Hamilton" in New York City attended by Vice President-elect Mike Pence. At the close of the show, a cast member read from a prepared statement that addressed Pence politely but directly.
In the hours that followed, President-elect Donald Trump made several criticisms of the Lin-Manuel Miranda musical, which can be seen in Chicago and New York and that became a political flashpoint over the weekend.
On Sunday morning, he tweeted that he had heardthe show was"overrated."
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PAULIE MALIGNAGGI IMMEDIATE REACTION TO ANDRE WARD"S WIN OVER SERGEY KOVALEV
LAS VEGAS Andre Ward survived a second-round knockdown Saturday night to do just enough to win a narrow decision over Sergey Kovalev in a battle of unbeaten light heavyweights. Ward took Kovalevs light heavyweight titles in a fight that lived up to its advance billing, winning enough rounds late to eke out a unanimous decision.
He remained unbeaten in his last 20 years in the ring, but it wasnt without some moments of worry. All three ringside judges had Ward winning, 114-113. The Associated Press had Kovalev ahead, 116-111.
Kovalev knocked down Ward in the second round and chased him around the ring much of the early part of the fight. But Ward dug deep and managed to land some good punches of his own in a fight that built to a climax in the later rounds. The crowd at the T-Mobile Arena roared its approval as the two fighters went after each other, neither giving an inch. In the end, the judges favored Wards counter punching against the aggressive style of Kovalev.
The fight was billed as a matchup of U.S. and Russian fighters, with the 2004 Olympic gold medalist Ward against a Russian who lives mostly in the Los Angeles area. It was a classic matchup of puncher versus boxer, and for the early part of the fight the puncher was winning.
Kovalev flashed his power early, hitting Ward with a left hand midway through the first round that briefly wobbled Wards legs. Ward grabbed and held on and finished the round jabbing at the Russian, but the tone of the fight was set early. Midway through the second round, both fighters threw right hands but it was Kovalevs that landed flush to the side of Wards head, putting him on the canvas.
He got up quickly and smiles as if not hurt but needed all of his supreme defensive skills to make it out of the round. Ward seemed unwilling to go inside after that, moving backward and trying to land jabs to control the action.
But he abandoned the style that had served him so well over the years and fought moving backward, throwing only one punch at a time, as Kovalev constantly pressed the attack. Ward did have some moments, including the seventh round when he landed a good left that snapped Kovalevs head back. Ward earned $5 million, while Kovalev was paid $2 million plus a percentage of pay-per-view.
Olympian Shields wins pro debut
Claressa Shields didnt feel at her best, but her pro debut was a winning one anyway.
The two-time Olympic gold medalist won a decision Saturday over Franchon Crews in a four-round super middleweight fight, making the transition to the pros after the most successful amateur career for an American woman.
Shields came back from a slow first round to land the bigger punches in an entertaining fight on the undercard of the Sergey Kovalev-Andrew Ward light heavyweight title fight on the Las Vegas Strip.
Its not what I wanted but to be called on, last minute, for a fight of this magnitude, Shields said. I am proud of myself. We will fight again in the future.
Both women were fighting without headgear for the first time but it didnt seem to be a factor as they traded punches freely before a sparse but appreciative crowd. Shields won all four rounds on the score cards of the three ringside judges.
Shields, who became the first American woman to win a gold medal in the 2012 Olympics and added another in Rio in August, had vowed to be impressive in her first pro fight. And she wasnt shy about trading punches with Franchon, a Baltimore fighter who lost to her during the Olympic trials in 2012.
Shields was pushed to the canvas twice by Crews, who started strong but seemed to tire quickly.
It feels so good to have just made my pro debut, she said. This is what Ive been training for. Im faster and I hit harder.
Shields, from Flint, Michigan, weighed 167 pounds to 168 for Crews.
The 21-year-old Shields said she plans to fight up to 10 times in her first year as a pro. Her goal is to one day headline a pay-per-view card of her own.
I believe 150 percent in my boxing ability, she said before the fight. I know Im a great fighter. I fight better than 90 percent of the men who box now. I just know that, and Im not at my best yet.
Womens boxing has largely been a fringe sport in recent years, and women have rarely appeared on televised cards. While the fight was on the undercard of Kovalev-Ward, it wasnt a part of the pay-per-view telecast.
LSU linebacker Duke Riley"s name seemingly comes up every week on Tigers coach Ed Orgeron"s radio show every Wednesday night.
A caller always asks about the John Curtis product and Orgeron is always willing to give a glowing review of the senior.
"What more can you say about Duke?" Orgeron said. "He"s one of our heartbeats of our football team. He"s always around the ball. He"s always enthusiastic."
Riley came up during a question from a caller about some of the more underappreciated players on the team including Riley, nose tackle Greg Gilmore and safety John Battle.
"You have to be strong in the middle and we are," Orgeron said. "You mentioned Greg Gilmore, he paid the price. He got better. He lost some weight. He spends all the time in the world with Coach Jenkins. He"s playing good nose tackle for us.
"John Battle has come in and done a tremendous job. We"re proud of those three guys as we are about everybody. (LSU defensive coordinator) Dave Aranda preaches team defense. All 11 doing their job. Not just those 3. When all 11 do their job, we have success."
Here are some other highlights from Orgeron"s show
On the health of St. Paul"s defensive back Michael Doherty, who suffered a broken vertebrae...
"No. 1, the young man that got hurt from St. Paul"s, we wish him the best. In fact I tried to call him but he was sleeping. We send out prayers for him. We know he"s going to get better and get strong and he"s going to fight."
On the comparison between on former USC RB Reggie Bush and LSU RB Derrius Guice...
"You bring up a good comparison. Reggie had a tremendous cut. He rushed to the left and cut to the right as good as anybody I seen until I seen Derrius. Derruis" cuts are just as sharp and just as quick as Reggie. Reggie may be a little bit faster than Derrius and Derrius is probably a little bit stronger than him. But they are both similar runners and that"s a great comparison."
On the players wanting to bring "The Golden Boot" back home...
"They were on a mission. They wanted that Boot. They wanted to bring that Boot back. It"s back at the office. It looks good. We shined it up. Especially the Louisiana part. We left the Arkansas part unshined. There was a lot of pride. They wanted to get that thing. Arkansas had beaten us for two years. They went up there on a mission and came back successful."
On the lack of holding calls the Tigers are getting this season...
"First of all, when an offensive lineman holds one of our defensive lineman, we get their hands off. We work on hand blocks with Pete Jenkins. We do it all the time. Holding nowadays seems legal in some situations so you got to fight it. You can question it but if they don"t call it there"s nothing you can do about it."
On a caller asking about top recruit Marvin Wilson...
"Well I can"t comment on any recruits right now. I just can tell you that we always going to go after the best players in the country and LSU usually gets them."
On how LSU will change its schedule for Saturday"s noon kickoff...
"Our guys are going to go to bed a 9:00 on Friday night. We"re going to go to bed a little earlier. We have 18, 19 seniors that"ll be saying goodbye to the LSU fans. It"s going to be an emotional day. We"re going to get up about 8:00 and do the things we do to get ready for the football game. We"ll leave Lod Cook (Hotel) with a clap session that gets everybody fired up and we"ll get on the bus and have a tremendous tiger walk and lets go. I mean, its 12:00, 3:00, 5:00, 6:00 let"s play ball. It don"t matter."