Inside the Democratic Debate: Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders Spar Over Wall Street, Health Care

January 17, 2016 8:23pm PT by Marisa Guthrie

Sanders points out that Clinton took $600,000 from Goldman Sachs last year.  Getty

Sanders points out that Clinton took $600,000 from Goldman Sachs last year.

It wasn’t the Republicans, who have provided much of the heat and dominated the news cycle during the 2016 nominating debates. (And it’s possible that NBC News may not get a chance to host a Republican debate, though network executives are hopeful.) But in NBC’s first debate of the season and the last one before the Iowa caucuses on Feb. 1, the Democrats were as animated as they have been all season thanks to Bernie Sanders’ ascending poll numbers in Iowa, where he’s pulled within the margin of error of national frontrunner Hillary Clinton.

Moderated by Nightly News anchor Lester Holt in his first go-around as lead debate moderator (Holt co-moderated a 2004 debate on MSNBC), much of Sunday night’s debate was dominated by domestic issues including gun violence in America. This, of course, gave Clinton a chance to attack Sanders as being soft on guns, a narrative that her campaign has been hammering in the days leading up to the face-off.

It was a resonant issue for the audience at Charleston, S.C.’s Gaillard Auditorium, which is directly across the street from Mother Emanuel, where last June a white gunman massacred nine African-American churchgoers at their Bible study class. But so was income inequality, health care and police violence.

The most heated exchanges between Sanders and Clinton were over Wall Street and the influence of money in politics and on the economy. A favorite Sanders theme, the Vermont senator pointed out that in 2015, Clinton was paid in excess of $600,000 in speaking fees by Goldman Sachs. Clinton did not deny the assertion and several fact-checking sites confirmed it.

When Sanders asserted that the American justice system imprisons “young people who smoke marijuana” while bankers walk free, he got perhaps his biggest applause of the night. And a shout-out from Dr. Cornel West:“Tell it, Bernie!”

The audience was chock-a-block with stalwarts of the Democratic party: Elijah Cummings, James Clyburn, Donna Brazile, Nancy Pelosi.

Holt and his co-moderator, Andrea Mitchell, succeeded in highlighting some of the differences between Sanders and Clinton, especially on health care and financial reform. But a question from Mitchell to Sanders about Sanders’ assessment of Bill Clinton’s past behavior as “deplorable” drew a sharp retort from Sanders.

“That question annoys me, Andrea,” said Sanders. “I’m going to focus on issues facing the American people, not Bill Clinton’s personal issues.”

The audience applauded. But Hillary Clinton also seemed to appreciate Sanders’ not taking the bait. When Holt cut to commercial, Clinton and Sanders shared a warm moment and exited the stage together. 

There may have been three candidates on the stage — Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley’s poll numbers were rounded up so he could make the debate cutoff — but for all intents and purposes, the debate was really between Clinton and Sanders. And everyone knew it. In the final minutes of the debate, Holt asked if there was anything the candidates wanted to say that they did not have a chance to. And then he said: “We’ll start with you, Gov. O’Malley.” Cue uproarious laughter and applause.

Afterwards, in the “spin room,” where surrogates and supporters try to convince the press that their candidate won the debate, O’Malley lingered to talk to the media. (Robert Smigel was also there, interviewing NBC’s Chuck Todd with his surrogate, Triumph the Insult Comic Dog.) But neither Clinton nor Sanders made an appearance.  

Politics

Marisa Guthrie

Marisa Guthrie

THRnews@thr.com

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Samantha Bee’s Late Night TBS Show to Premiere in January

Samantha Bee’s Late Night TBS Show to Premiere in January – Hollywood Reporter

September 02, 2015 8:14am PT by Marisa Guthrie

The former 'Daily Show' correspondent teases her "ten pound lady balls."Samantha Bee Martin Crook

The former ‘Daily Show’ correspondent teases her “ten pound lady balls.”

Former Daily Show correspondent Samantha Bee enters the late night competition in January with her TBS program Full Frontal.

The announcement came via a ribald promo which stresses the gender differentiation between Bee and TV’s late night comedy landscape. Noting that she is “a woman entering a male-dominated field,” Bee describes her show as a “sharp, topical late night comedy show” and promises a “nuanced perspective on world events” and interviews with “newsmakers from across the ideological spectrum.”

It is a description that echoes her former home on Comedy Central.

It is the second promo for Bee’s show; the first was released last May. (TBS has yet to announced a premiere date or time slot.) And it comes as Stephen Colbert is about to make his debut on CBS’ Late Show on Sept. 8, and Trevor Noah prepares to take over for Jon Stewart on the Daily Show, Sept. 28. 

Marisa Guthrie

Marisa Guthrie

THRnews@thr.com

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NFL Analyst Cris Collinsworth on Deflategate: “I Don’t Know that Anybody Recovers”

August 13, 2015 11:46am PT by Marisa Guthrie

Brady and the NFL are currently engaged in settlement talks in front of a federal judge, where Brady's lawyers are arguing that his four-game suspension should be wiped out.Tom Brady  AP Images

Brady and the NFL are currently engaged in settlement talks in front of a federal judge, where Brady’s lawyers are arguing that his four-game suspension should be wiped out.

The ongoing saga of Deflategate will continue to unfold over the next four weeks leading up to NBC’s Sunday Night Football opener between Tom Brady‘s New England Patriots and the Pittsburgh Steelers on Thursday, Sept. 10.

And NBC Sports analyst Cris Collinsworth sees no window for compromise between Brady and the NFL. The two sides are currently engaged in settlement talks in front of a federal judge, where Brady’s lawyers are arguing that his four-game suspension should be wiped out.

“There were a lot of mistake made in that situation: the referees letting the balls out of the locker room, Tom Brady’s cell phone [being destroyed]. Where the compromise is, I don’t know,” said Collinsworth, during the Sunday Night Football panel Thursday morning at the Television Critics Association summer press tour.

“It’s going to come down to Tom Brady cheated the game, either directly or indirectly, or he did not and the NFL is embarrassing and tainting the legacy of one of the greatest players we’ve ever seen. I don’t know that anybody recovers from this totally. If you’re going to tell me there’s a compromised position between those two, I can’t figure it out.”

If Brady’s suspension is upheld, the first game he will plays will be the Pat’s Oct. 18 matchup against the Indianapolis Colts, which is also an SNF production.  

Of course, the NFL has been beset with negative headlines over the last few years. But Al Michaels, NBC’s play-by-play announcer, noted that the controversies have failed to ding the NFL brand. 

“As much of a train wreck as some things can be, it almost creates more interest. I hate to say this. People keep asking, where’s the tipping point? If there is one, I don’t know where it is.”

Marisa Guthrie

Marisa Guthrie

THRnews@thr.com

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