caption

>> Everybody watching today all
day and welcome to pop star plus for today. Coming up, we
have a good one. Lisa Kudrow tells us all about the return
of her popular show. Who do you think you are? Plus a
conversation with one of the stars of the Mindy Kaling
created show never have I ever. Lee Rodriguez sharing how it
rightly tackles representation. And for big finale today, this
week marks the 15th anniversary of the movie version of
Hairspray. We've got a glimpse of the one and only Michelle
Pfeiffer talking about here on today.

Back in 2007 will get
all that. But first, here are today's pop star headlines. >> Pop star a lot. >> House of Dragon first on FOX
are taking the Game of Thrones theme song. We are getting a
peek of the highly its spinoff series. >> In the first new full-length
trailer of the upcoming prequel set to take Place 200 years for
Game of Thrones and living up to the show's name. House of
Dragon will score that are gaining family who give us the
mother of Dragons are self. But of course, everybody's got
their eye on one thing, the Iron Throne. >> They considered the matter
of conscience that ago, 6 issue who else would have to play the
first born child? No queens of us.

At the front. The king has a man Damon talk
area. >> I'm not coming to choose
between my father and my >> A woman which not inherit
behind them because last and Queen Creek. >> Gary, are you a target area,
right? Are you a Game of Thrones? I never actually
settle a season. Okay. Okay. Haha matter of our counties.
This one is saying hit HBO Max on August. 28 to LA in fact
checks for all hot start. What's next? >> I don't know that Ryan
Reynolds and Rob Mcelhenney. Good job. This you might
remember. I didn't know this, but those guys bought a soccer
team. Well, soccer team couple years ago, a surprising
business move for American and Canadian actor. Let's 0 soccer
experience. If you've spent the last couple years wondering why
they did that. All is going to be revealed in FX is new show.
Welcome to WREXHAM. Yesterday the network dropped the trailer
for the Docu series that follows Reynolds and Mcelhenney
as they attempt to run the Red Dragons which also happens to
be the 3rd oldest professional soccer club in the world.
Wow.

>> I think the biggest
challenge is a community looking around going. What are
these 2 guys too? >> Welcome to Wrexham own lives
to throw to. Is that the gym? >> It will be at the gym.
Wow. Yes, these will work. >> Next news time that potholes
against aunts constantly. >> Well, the thing that we love
more than anything was the ballclub. It's an underdog story. >> And that's okay. That's Ted
Lasso. Yeah. You can check out Ryan and robs attempt to turn
that Football club into one heck of an underdog story when
welcome to WREXHAM premieres on FX next month. Next up with a
cop show for this weekend's edition of Sunday. They will be
caught up with the entrepreneur and Oscar winner at Goop in the
Hamptons.

She opened up about what it was like to step back
from Hollywood to grow our business from a news letter
into a major luxury brand worth more than 250 million dollars.
Plus West told Willie about juggling her favorite was the
states that CEO and of course, mom of 2 teens. >> Yes, I'm looking for a sleep
milk to him. You know you've come. >> Gwyneth Paltrow likes to
dabble in the detail means massaging just about every
aspect of it.

The company she has for the simple news letter
to a global brand valued at more than 250 million dollars. >> I never felt very fully
comfortable being in the public eye. That degree. I still
don't. But it's fantastic that I've been
able to do something that's very fulfilling and work with
the team that I adore. >> The 49 year-old is more
Eddie's in her roles as CEO as wife to producer Brad
Falchuk and as mom to the 2 teenagers,
she shares with ex-husband Chris Martin. >> And I do have one going off
to college. You realize how finite it went so quickly. >> And when you think when it's
about the Hollywood side of your life
now, what does it take to get you involved? I mean, if my
husband was doing something and wanted me to do it, I would do
it.

You have a big birthday come. >> You can catch the full
conversation this weekend on Sunday today. It's many
recently got a chance to spend time with. >> What at Goop? Yeah. You
know, if they had an event on Monday night I got a coach who
was a PJ Party. Yeah. Haha. There we are. Our PJs going it
even better at the Irish goodbye than I and he she
clipped shout outs to in Islip Town, White Knight. I sitting
30. He said it was 9. Give us the credit for staying out his
speech a at the fight card saying that the pop star
correspondent, sure us why you're fine. Yes. And all
that's left from TRL. >> He has been exploding all
over the Internet. It's because of the new mister and Missus
Affleck. But take a look at how this conversation because
President J Lo 20 years ago predicted this weekend
surprising Vegas nuptials. >> How are you guys going to do
like a a wedding like are you? How are you going to try?
And is there a deserted enough island? Want you guys get like the
plant like a bigger than a G 4? I get like.

>> But there you go. I guess. >> Now I forgot all about it.
Well, guess what? You are viral because his side a bunch of
places. There's another clip from TRL of me and Kid Rock
talking about a New York real estate magnate who would become
president 15 years later. >> Remember that time? I do.
Jail wasn't terror all the time. She'd been dating Puffy
who? I was good friends with the time. So they were always
there. Yeah. But that she did Geely the moving that then and
then it all centers dating Ben, who won Oscars like this young
up and coming superstar. And I'm Erin, all for you are
in article 20 years. >> All right. That's what's
going to happen in 20 years from now. I'll tell you after
the break. >> And there's more for you to
know today because it is pop star. Plus, after all, how
about this? The cast of weird the Al Yankovic story just
keeps getting better and better.

First, we have course.
Daniel Radcliffe has a weird Al the star of the upcoming
bio-pic. He completely embodies that hit parity maker with the
big hair and the whole thing. Then we got a little peek.
Evan, Rachel Wood is Madonna. Remember that spitting image of
the Material Girl will now check this out. Roku releasing
a new image that Abbott Elementary star cuenta Brunson
talk show Queen Oprah Winfrey herself fittingly. She standing next to
Radcliffe in a closet full of Hawaiian shirts Brunson between
the photo reading. Let's get weird.

Can we see how this whole thing
turns out weird. The movie slated to be released
sometime this fall. All right. Finally Lizzo I left a few lucky fans feeling
extra special. Last night joined Jimmy Kimmel Live with
the kindest prank ever told fans that they were being
brought in to listen to Lizzo's new album have their reactions record
with the fans did not know is that Lizzo was actually right
next door ready to serenade them in person. This was the bathroom. What a quiet like Lizzo has.
Of course we all bore witness when she was on our plaza
recently Lizzo having a hot summer. All right. Still coming
up here on FOX are plus Lisa Kudrow. She's got a preview.
The relatives revealed and the riveting stories told in the
newest season of who do you think you are? playing Phoebe on friends.
But recently her passion lies and executive producing.
He hit the knowledge you show called.

Who do you think you
are? She spoke to our 3rd hour about the new revelations
featured in this latest season. Welcome back this morning.
We are so excited to catch up with one of our favorites.
The very funny Lisa Kudrow for 10 seasons. You probably we
knew her for that in winning role as the buffet on that
little show called Friends and helped up the network for about
20 years. Yeah. She also starred in the 90's cult
classic Romy and Michele's High School reunion which just to
celebrate its 25th anniversary of the day. >> Lisa is an executive
producer for NBC's who Do You Think You are? It's a
documentary series that follows different celebrity guests each
week as they trace their family tree with geologists in his
story. So good. This week's episode follows award-winning
actress Allison Janney as her search takes her all the way to
Bermuda. >> I can't believe that to be
here. And the new to the fact that my grandmother died here
is is it's you know, it has kind of moving flying in and also thinking about my 11th
time, great grandfather.

Steven Hopkins came to America
via Bermuda because of a shipwreck. It's kind of extraordinary. >> It's kind of shot. Talk back
to the TV. I'm like, Oh, let's I was just I was just
looking at the line of of guests, Philly quarter, Bradley
Whitford, just to name a few. So you went through this
process yourself in this first season. So, you know, kind of
what they're going through there. Any stories that stick
out to you or just talk to us in general about this project?
Well, I mean, it can it can be incredibly emotional. And I
think the thing I love about it the
most is that it's personalizing history. And, you know, we
learn history. We don't learn all of it, number one. And
number 2, if we don't remember because it's just sort of these
in broad strokes, but when you personalize it through our
ancestors to expire instead, then it really sinks in. Thank you. We should pay
attention or he but it's so funny because the Allison
Janney think the other thing I love about this show are these
weird sort of inexplicable things.

These links to our
ancestors like for Alice. And she's learning about an
ancestor 11 times great grandfather who, you know was
coming to the new Jamestown colony in Virginia. 16 0, 9,
and got shipwrecked and ended up in Bermuda. Oh, my goodness.
But her grandmother who is the descendant of back? I as well. She had a house in Bermuda.
She had an affinity for me. Never died. And Bermuda.
Alice, like she wound or yeah, you said Shiels it. The right
thing is really fast. And I remember I got to follow my
genealogy a couple years ago. It took me to like a church in
lower Manhattan where my great, great, great grandmother got
married and I got to walk in that church and it was just it.

I mean, it just makes you
have feelings that you didn't know existed. So why why?
I think people are so into genealogy within the last
several years, because I think I I think we sense that there's
some connection to our past and we're curious about it. And
when you finally see what they endured and what they lived
through, it kind of makes you feel like I'm not here by
accident and it's a miracle. I'm here and thank you for
whatever you had to go through. >> That to me here. Yeah, with
3 teases earlier. So we have to ask you about this. This this
extradition that you had to. >> Her circle of friends with.
Yeah. What's the story there about that recently? I had a
special edition for Jim Burrows because he was directing it and
I assumed all the actors did. And then I found out like I
know 4 years ago. >> He allergy haha. I found out
that I was only one who had to audition for. It's so fun. >> I have to admit something to
you. I go to sleep.

Listening to your voice almost every
night. Is this the weirdest thing? Anybody on the today
show part because my wife is her happy place. Yeah. And she
puts it on and she falls asleep soundly and sleeps through the
night. So yeah, it's weird. I don't. >> He's not going to talk to me
during the commercial. All right. I did that, too. >> It's great having Lisa with
us. We should mention who you think you are airs Sunday night
right here on NBC. Coming up next, a star from never have I
ever on the show's importance especially when it comes to
representation in TV. Stay with us.

Ever show to. Mindy Kaling
created show features a quite diverse cast. Navigating high
school Rodriguez spoke to us about what the show
storytelling gets right about the coming of age experience. >> What do I think never have
ever gets right. They get it right in the sense that being
in high school, you don't always see like young girls.
You're wanting to have all these different experiences as
far as like sex and like David and Mike and also high school, like
you're figuring yourself out of line.

Oh, it's fabulous.
Late in season one, she was coming to terms that, you know,
she was gay. And so I feel like that's something that's that's very accurate. And yeah,
very big. You know, experience that a lot
of young routines, half what isn't in place? The for
me, it means a lot. >> Because I see a lot of
myself in her mind. She is. She's just like skyline layers.
She's got the whole 14 and on. She's clears you like a woman
of color to have his best friend group. You know, she's
always like a ride or die down late or whatever. But W*** her,
I feel like there's just one experience that I had. I went to this and then there
is this a young girl and she told me how much it meant
to hurt like seeing and awkward teenager in high
school and just said that like she really fascinating that
like being tall and the offer in itself is like a full
experience. So, yeah, just playing her.

I guess
I never realized how many different people would see
themself is have you less. So it's awesome and I love it.
I I we love playing. >> Gay? I'm sorry that I didn't tell
you sooner. I honestly just rely told to tear apologize to
me. I love this for you. I love
this for me. Finally, a gay friend really fits. My brand is
a, you know, and >> the season one day be has
this idea that they need to get a friend to take you to start
dating, lose their virginity county? You know, it wasn't
ideal because she didn't really know if she wanted out with
that. She tried out public, which was weird, very weird.
And then she sees this beautiful, a gorgeous girl,
didn't he? And she started to crush on her and so makes a
question or sexuality in so season one. She comes to term
that she let's pray. Love that season 2, she you think that things would be
easier after you come out. But the reality is right.
She highway more questions than she did and she's trying to fit
in to pop culture.

And she just
she just doesn't fit. And I feel like he's into it just
goes to show there's no one way. Okay. There's no wrong or
right way. Just it's it's what every seal. And so that's what
I really love about her journey in season 2 coming to terms
that she could be a robotics team and, you know, support
LGBTQ community. And so you can do it all. Yeah, I feel like
it's important because it's real. It's just
it's it's real life. It's realistic. Well, I constantly because the
question after never ever came out. So I really gauge is
tending to be less the end. And I would constantly see
people assuming my sexuality. And so it was always like kind of but makes I would feel
like, well, why not look like somebody who is here like, why
am I not a solid person? And so I kind of just came to
terms and also like, you know, play
for you.

What kind of also help to come to terms as well? That is such a like or a
relative thing like there's no one way to be gay. And you know
what? Sometimes you don't even have to come out like it's it's
all up to you. Not not come out. It's whatever makes you
feel comfortable.

And so I'm so thankful, too. You know, play 5 Yo la. Yeah, I
think I learned a lot and it really helps. We want to take
that stand. We feel confident enough to do
so himself. Yeah, I'm it's really a a moment. Yeah. I mean, I get the
comments all the time saying how fabulous like care to care
to the Orleans higher. They're coming out and inspired them
to, you know, come, you know this. They're gay awakenings
was pretty awesome. That always means a lot because
I do bring a lot of my own characteristics to fabulous. And so it also allows me to
feel less alone. 2. Yes, he's in 3. Yeah. You're going to see her
comments her own. There's going to be a lot of ice. A lot of surprises in the 3rd
season. Specifically the study, a lot
of things that people did not expect.

>> So that's all I can say.
I would like to say, but it's going to be awesome. >> Thanks to leave for hanging
out with us. And you can catch never have I ever on Netflix.
Its 3rd season premieres in just a few weeks. Still coming
up, Hairspray flashback. You're not going want to miss. 15 years since the release of
the movie version of Hairspray. You might remember it featured
a star-studded cast. John Travolta, Christopher Walken
Queen Latifa Zac Efron and Michelle Pfeiffer who spoke
with us back in 2007 right here on today about working on the
movie musical. >> And Michelle Pfeiffer joins
us this morning. Good morning to you. I understand the
premier was last night here in New York. How was it was
fantastic. >> Exuberant, it was. It's by
far the the the the funnest premier that not only New York
to Los Angeles as well, that of any movie that I've ever. >> And is it fun to watch it
with an audience who do get a little nervous? >> I I normally get really
nervous, really anxious.

I I realize about halfway
through with that stuff. >> But that was never nervous
with us because it is such an audience pleaser.
It's and it is. I tell my daughter and I watched it
together. We were dancing by the end of it. We were up and
dancing. Well, I wish you'd seen it actually with a big
audience because it's so much a part of the experience of it
because people applause and they, you know, they're
laughing and yelling at. It's just it's just that it's
not just for me up when the TV on. Yes, we're talking about
this. It was a real message. It has to get that without
being too heavy handed. You know, it has this really
important and powerful message that just kind of washes over you.

You throughout
the entire film that you can change things in life that, you
know, and it sort of turns all of those stereotypes on its
head, you know, in terms of what is beautiful, what is
socially acceptable. And and it does it in such a
delightful entertaining way. >> And you play not a nice
little really. She's pretty hateful. She's very hateful.
But she has a sense of humor, know that she has haha, but you
could use a little sense of where we will find her funding.
We actually have a scene with you with Chris Walk and you're
trying to seduce him not too successful. Why can we put that
guy accidentally suffocated? You know, so it need a fella. The way to a man's heart is
through his funny bone. So here's a nice pretty good for
you. I think too many people are
surprised that you're funny at. Yes, funny ever. >> I don't consider myself.
I mean, I was still that I'm the straight man usually in the
movie. But yeah, and I don't find myself
funny, actually.

Even when you watch it, you don't know where
you are as critical as well of late. Yeah. Which is often the
case. Are you one of those people that thinks it any day
someone is going to discover that your pasta? Yeah. What is
that about? Because you're highly successful. I don't know
that p**** training. Haha deep and art that you probably don't
want to find a and I do want to share well, you have a 14
year-old and a 13 year-old daughter and a son.

They've
seen this movie of mom acting in this villainous way. What
did they think of it? I think they're delighted to
see May, you know, I think in the beginning they were sure
for so it's the first premier they have ever been to
any movie that I may actually the first command that had ever
been to. And it was so obvious that this
was the right one to bring them to in there at the right age.
And but when I first, when I was working on the film, I was
I would bring home photographs and color eyes of this and that their eyebrows with kind of
raise and you can cut it. One point said mom, little of that. But yeah, it is. But it's what you kind
of like about him playing against what people assume is
your type. I'm grateful that people think
it's against my type of. But I I like, yeah, I guess
it's nice to, you know, surprise yourself into surprise
others and, you know, to venture into sort of dangerous
territory.

I really certainly wasn't within my comfort zone, the character or the tone of
the put the piece or you may even identities to
indict and Baker boys a night. This was sort of for me the
first real musical. >> I was pretty cool stuff
there, guys. That's going to do it. You're off the hook up.
Some pluses done for today. Hope you enjoy the show as
always. We'll be back again tomorrow with another new
episode.

So be sure. And join us that she says >> Welcome to a special episode
of Shark Watch today where we're talking all things
sharks. I'm Kerry Sanders today. We're looking back at
some of the brave folks to go swimming with the oceans,
fiercest predators. And we're diving into shark science.
How these creatures are teaching us about more than
ourselves. But about the world around us from coast to coast. Early
shark season sightings are on the rise, putting beachgoers on
high alert. And just a few weeks ago, a fisherman had a
remarkably close call. NBC's Emilie Ikeda has his incredible
story and more on some of these close calls. >> Right off the coast to see
all of it is monster. A job dropping close-up of a great
white. A stunning 12 foot long shark. Witnesses say less than
a mile from the Jersey shore.

Look at the Joey Piazza
relieved to have caught a glimpse of the apex predator
from the confines of his bow. The see it in our oceans today.
The great joy of the world. It's just was impressive.
But the remarkably close encounters sending chills down
other beachgoers spines. A shark sighting as a spate of
sightings suggest the East Coast shark season is getting
an early start. In April 1000 pound Ironbound made his way up
to New Jersey and off the coast of Massachusetts. People have
spotted at least 10 sharks since Memorial Day weekend. I just one sending a SEAL
airborne near Nantucket and this may go shark spotted off
Long Island officials. There are already on high alert after
seeing a very significant increase in sharks last summer
prompting them to use more drones to keep watch. >> They are are early warning
system they could see before all I could spot a shark coming
in. >> The U.S. says the majority
of unprovoked shark attacks worldwide with nearly 50
reported in 2021. This California swimmer is among the
survivors. June marks a year since his harrowing dip near
San Francisco.

>> I kind of feel that does
this look aside and kind of like a Porsche and a little
steam as I was teaching me let you know, like I could see can
reflect on those chandler and those like it's cool, dark eyes
just kind of in a flash kind of boss. >> Overall, the number of
deaths from shark attacks is extremely small and trending
down, according to experts who offered this advice to
swimmers.

>> The real important messages,
the sharks are here. They're hunting. They're doing their
natural activities and we're sharing our area with them. >> Most people who see a shark
in the ocean would get out fast as possible. There are folks who get into
the water with sharks on purpose. I met some of them.
Here's a look back at a shark tour 6 miles off the coast of
Florida. >> It goes against common
sense. Get in the water with the ocean's most feared
predators, thousands of tourists all
around the world to it. Every year, shark tourism attracting
almost 600,000 thrill-seekers worldwide industry worth more
than 314 million dollars. What is it safe today? I'm going short. Diving
to show you before you even get on the boat. Do your research
look for a reputable and certified tour company on lawn
with good reviews. And when you get there, what do I need to
know? Making sure the operators do a safety briefing.

If you
can swim slowly with your feet, you're looking at least more
natural and a lot. So you know what to do and what not to do
as we're heading out. I'm a little nervous. Yeah, totally
natural jonelle Van Rutan been diving
with sharks for 6 years leading tours for curious divers like
me. Interesting if you can just I got we get to the dive spot. Holmes, the water to attract
the sharks and I sued off. If you're going snorkeling, try
on your gear before you even get in the water. So the host,
your face, practice breathing. So you're
comfortable if you're going diving like me.
All right. Well, to make sure safety diver
goes down with you as well with sharks swarming below, are you to die this? And that's because of what I'm
wearing. >> Another important to keep
your hands close to your body as you swim. So the sharks
don't confuse them.

Launch for shark does come toward you like
this one. Haha, this is a key eye contact.
Experts say let the shark go. You're a top predator and
establish dominance, which is exactly what happens when I
come face-to-face with this shark. >> Experts say sharks are not
interested in humans, but when you're underwater, you're on
their turf. So don't get too Armed with these tips, you
might just be brave enough to take a look.

One other tip, the experts say
if the shark is heading directly towards you, try
putting your foot up and getting the fin de directed
away from you. And if you can't just maybe use your arm like
the Heisman Trophy move, get the shark to go around you.
Not easy, but definitely worth a try. But we're going take a
look at bull sharks. Now there's some of the most
aggressive sharks in the ocean, but they are not out looking
for people to take a look. >> For decades, sharks of both
intrigued and terrified us even of statistically were more
likely to die from coconut falling on our heads.

The blockbuster movie Jaws gave
the shark a bad rap. >> Jaws was a pretty h*** o*
sharks in general. I think it it kind of painted them as a
monster. >> Marine biologist John Money
is the deputy director at Oklahoma Aquarium. He says in
reality, sharks are not looking to attack us. It's not an
attack. Usually the bite is is exploratory. They're looking
for food. They're hunting fish. And those accidental attacks
are more rare than you think they happen on average 80 times
a year worldwide.

More than half of them take place in the
United States and most of those in Florida, although last week
we saw 2 kids bitten by sharks off the coast in New York's
Fire island. The attacks just a few miles apart and within an
hour of each other. >> I was like, but I didn't.
Of the 465 known shark species living in our oceans today. >> The bull shark is one of the
biggest and the boldest.

It's considered the 3rd most
dangerous after the tiger shark and the great white. >> It can grow as large as 8
feet long and weigh up to 500 pounds and its teeth are like
razors. The strength of the plate could break bones.
But as long as we leave them alone, experts believe they are
not interested in eating us. We're not on the menu. They're
really not a threat to us or so. I hope since I'm now down
here with bull sharks and that little suit I was
wearing was made of change so that if a shark did try to bite
me, it wouldn't be able to penetrate the suit. When we
come back, more stories of brave men and women who went
swimming with sharks.

Plus of you close call. Welcome back to Shark. Watch
today. Dow. A lot of military men and women rely on support
animals when they returned home from service. Usually it's a
dog. Sometimes it's a horse. But in 2017, I visited an
aquarium in Georgia. It's offering up a unique program to
help vets from the Wounded Warrior Project. >> First plans to UT and
Serenity are would seem a world apart from >> the battlefields of Iraq and
Afghanistan. But today, those worlds
converge as veterans of both wars muster at the Georgia
Aquarium. >> You will have a mask and a
snorkel. >> Supplies and they say in
their civilian lives, there's comfort in those old military
routines like threat assessments.

>> You're asked he likes to
take masks. Find your name over >> The ball and Robin Young
Sergeant First Class U.S. Army retired shares with each of
these vets is an invisible will post traumatic stress disorder. >> ever-present fear. Dow
suspicion it all traces back flashes of
terror there sites that you cannot see. Bill Leg. Sergeant
First Class U.S. Army retired 2 tours around one Afghanistan
more than 4 years now with PTSD. >> To find like a bad
experience like a bad to never forget and never forget. >> But the women with the
largest fish in the world, the gentle will sure a new
memory that hopefully transcends the water. >> About 20 minutes now to the
die during that time down >> We're asking people to do
years experience, holding the excitement and the insight and
to see if maybe that is it will go down and just have the
excitement and fun that's left over for Robbins success. >> How does what you just did
here? Like what you're finding everything out? >> It showed me even I find
that I did it.

>> Still, PTSD is never sure
triggers never far away. >> Whenever I would be out
fishing, turn relaxed. I step on it right and site. Those are just things with PTSD
comes around and you can feel. >> But for a moment in a fish
tank in Georgia, those painful flashbacks are all but
forgotten. >> And that program has seen a
lot of changes in the 5 years since that first story aired, a
spokesman from the aquarium says they've added 2 new
options including shark cage diving and shark and ray
immersion. Pretty be back in the day. The only way to spot a
shark at the beach was that fit, though? We have technology that
can actually pinpoint the sharks location. I went under
water off the coast of Florida to learn more about where
sharks travel and just how close they get to the shore. >> Off the coast of Cape Cod,
scientists began tagging great white sharks 3 years ago.

>> Stellar amateur is on naming
them to including marylee. The shark is named Katherine
and Catherine. >> What's going on there?
It's counter intuitive. And now it's the real science emerging
that has experts like Greg Skomal from search excited. And Catherine right now is off
to the right there. She is right there in that little
orange dot. >> Since Katherine began
transmitting, she's traveled more than 13,000 miles Marylee
an astonishing 20,000 plus miles, the routes they swim
look like a plate of spaghetti and more often than anyone
realized. They're very close to the East Coast shoreline,
sometimes within 20 yards.

>> Yet, scientists say they
still cannot predict where a great white is going next.
They do, however, have a theory as to why sharks females in
particular are like tourists coming to these warm waters off
the coast of Florida. The 80 degree temperatures are
good for their pregnancies. >> Today off the coast of
Jupiter, Florida, we are looking for a great white.
We encountered 20 bull sharks but no great whites. They're
out there. A spear fisherman. Grayson, Shepard discovered
earlier this month. >> Off the Florida Gulf whose
world we have our monsters. >> We have are booking in and great white is definitely one
of them.

That particular book the man is now been proven to
be real. >> Real and closer than any of
us ever knew. >> Mary Lee and Catherine, the
Sharks Twitter accounts are still active and sharing
updates from search along with locations of some other great
white sharks. We know sharks rarely bite
people on purpose. Experts say it's usually a case of mistaken
identity. But for those who do get bitten moving on can be a
process. Let's take a look at 2 incredible survivor stories. >> It may be the scariest word
in the English language. And while the movie Jaws is a
big reason for that in real life. >> Sharks caused panic.

You
know, are Steve Robel survived an attack in California less
than 2 weeks ago and grabbed it snows and I started trying to
pull it off of me. On Tuesday. He and other residents demanded
a ban on anglers at the Manhattan Beach Pier. It's believed fishing, lures
dangerous sharks to closed to swimmers and surfers. >> Reckless behavior has to be. >> With another attack just
this past Monday, there have now been a total of 22 attacks
off the U.S. Coast so far this year, 14 of those in Florida. >> Extremely rare for shark
bite a human with the intention of the pack. Usually it really is just a
case of mistaken identity. >> Case in point of Sarasota,
Florida, 2011. >> I want one on the right now.
I got to find her. >> That friend was CJ
Wickersham Start. I thought, you know, I got 600 stitches. >> We first met CJ in recovery
after the 8 to 10 foot long bull shark attacked.

He and his
friends had been out spearfishing that day. >> Just that. And then right
question. I get. That's right. He punched the shark and it's
wham away. Would you say the shark attack to the use the
word attacks? So just curious, maybe it's because then it's
just kind of been my head like, you know, didn't like shake or
anything here. >> Come back, which is
especially lucky procedures, friend Connor by Strome who
jumped right in to the rescue. >> Do you think twice about
getting in the water, the state now? I mean, we still go out
and Speer all the time and that maybe the biggest surprise.

>> CJ and his friends say they
respect the sharks, but they're not afraid. So you have AIDS
shark attack you the worst day of your life. And now years
later, you don't even have residual effects as the sun
starts to h*** of a story. >> An update from Steven
Roadways, but he says he's scheduled to do his first major
open water channel swim since he was attacked by a shark that
set to happen in August. August 11 to be exact in Santa
Barbara, California. >> Coming up next, we'll dive
into what's causing the dramatic rise in shark attacks
from coast to coast.

Welcome back to a shark watch
today. While shark attacks are on the rise worldwide. >> There is one place where it
still happens more than anywhere else. The shark attack
capital of the world right here in Florida. Take a look. Well, the violent circle of
life on full display in Cape Cod. A great white shark
turning the water there. Blood red. Luckily this time
the meal was a seal.

Not a swimmer. Short feedings may be
routine, but rarely are. They captured and amateurs
camera just feet from the shore. >> It's been the recovery of
their food source and protection of what tricks that
are a lot of the population to come back. >> A comeback that
understandably makes some swimmers nervous. Just this
year there have been 60 shark attacks worldwide. 9 have been
fatal. The highest number since 2013, 7 of those deadly attacks
in Australia, which hasn't seen this many shark fatalities
since 1934. 2 were in the U.S. one off mean the other off
California. >> Well, shark attacks are on
the rise worldwide. Them shark attacks in the United States
happen right here in Florida. The so far this year, those
shark encounters in Florida have not been deadly. Like the
nurse shark to clamp down on the man's foot this weekend.
It took a hammer to point lose. And a week earlier on Miami
Beach, Mark Bowden was bitten by a 6 foot black tip shark
while he was body surfing.

Mark told me he didn't realize
sharks here hunt for fish so close to shore. >> I was in his territory.
There are a lot of fish around. It was murky. He's probably
just taking a little sample to see what it was. >> Biologist Chris Lowe tags
Sharks for research. He says his team has tagged more sharks
off the coast of Southern California this year than ever
before. >> When you think about the
fact that this population is coming back because of
conservation, but at the same time climate is
changing, we don't know which of the 2 are giving us the
scenario that we get to that. >> The oceans, silent predator,
not only so hidden from view. >> And so remember, there is no
reason to panic here. The reason that we're seeing more
sharks is because scientists and other patrols we are
looking for more sharks. One person who is fearless in
the face, a shark says Australian Valerie Taylor with
more than 10,000 dives in her life. She's familiar with the
feeling of coming face to face with a shark.

>> I've never seen anybody had
feeding a great live shot of the back of the boat. I want to give that no shot was
a Porsche. >> Valerie Taylor is a pioneer
in the 1950's swimming with sharks just wasn't done.
But a young female scientist. It was just unheard of. Famed
oceanographer Jean Michel Cousteau says when everyone
else was swimming away, Valerie was swimming towards danger. >> She and her husband with
their underwater cameras brought the world the first
close-up underwater views of great white sharks ever filmed. >> They want dangers every
animal. Well, based on the >> They want to drown. >> If I could be in the field
for our most only use rate, just that was even best shot. >> You are either crazy or
incredibly courageous. Didn't take either of those things.
I'm incredibly curious.

>> At a time when sharks were
thought to be meticulous killers, Taylor and her husband
were taking a different approach, rescuing this great
weight tangled in wire and gently soothing it as it
returns to the sea. A memory now, Tim, just with sadness. >> I think she was only free
for another 6 months, an additional cost. >> Over thousands of dogs,
Valerie, his head count was close calls. She's even been
sitting for toys, but her attitude, he's never changed. >> If things went wrong like
it, frustrated and angry that not
released again. >> Taylor even proved firsthand
how a shark's bite really >> At age, 85 Taylor says she
has no regrets and that she's looking forward to getting back
in the ocean. The source of all life on our planet. >> The marine environment that
I knew when I first 2 cops open and then diving doesn't exist
anymore.

Its fate ocean hugely like
human impact. Do you believe that it can be brought back?
I think the shift in line and wait up to even a lot. >> Filmmakers at National
Geographic used more than 5,000 hours of footage of Valerie
Taylor's life to create the documentary playing with
Sharks. >> Up Next, Shark DNA could
help find a cure for cancer. Well, dive right into that when
we come right back. Welcome back to our special all
about sharks. We've talked about tracking them. Diving
with them. Now something a little different. Could sharks
those fears? Terrifying predators. >> Could they hold the key to
curing cancer? That's a question some scientists are
trying to answer. >> They are the oceans,
fiercest predator. >> And the reason many people
won't go in the water, we're going to approach. >> But now scientists say
sharks could help save our lives.

We compared the genomes
in a variety of different ways. Doctor Mark, should he from
Nova Southeastern University? And Doctor Michael stand hope
of Cornell. Let a team of international scientists in
mapping the genome of the great white shark studying its
genetic makeup. They're finding surprising even them. >> It's generated some amazing
discoveries that we had never anticipated. First of all,
sharks have 50% more DNA than we do. So the question became
Shull. What's old is extra DNA doing? Turns out, keeping the
sharks healthy, you see our DNA is made up of cells, which are
constantly dividing. Sometimes mutations happen. Change that
can cause disease like cancer. Our body has mechanisms to fix
them, but that doesn't always happen.

It turns out the sharks
extra DNA helps repair itself and keep its genes healthy. >> The other sort of unexpected
thing we found what genes that would tie to really fundamental
mechanisms off of one healing. >> The goal applying it to
human health and eventually turning it in the medication. >> You can take those genes and
you can make proteins out of them, which opens up whole
therapeutic >> avenue because proteins can
then be turned into medications. But scientists
warn us that sharks which are threatened by overfishing can
help us only if there are sharks in the ocean. >> There's so much more to
that.

We can get from these animals if you keep them around
and study how they function with potential applications to
helping humans down the road. >> Scientists point out this is
all at the genetic level. So eating sharks like shark me. It's not going
to help you cure cancer. That's our show. Thanks for
tuning in. We hope you've enjoyed this up. >> A close look at sharks and
the people who study the Jerry Sanders. We'll see you next
time >> Take this into account and
nice and flat. What you're yeah. >> Welcome and Dylan dishes
cooking with Cal today, I'm dishing up this sneaky secrets
I used to remake to classic chicken recipes, we've got
chicken noodle soup and chicken parm I mean what's the point of
sharing recipes if we don't dish on our secrets right
chicken is obviously one of the most versatile proteins out
there and it's something everyone in my family loves
frankly so I'm always thinking of different ways to use it so
it really depends on what making but I'm a big fan of
using rotisserie chicken wherever I can especially in
something like a chicken soup.

I do tend to keep some frozen
chicken on hand because you never know when you you need a
last minute meal. But my trick is when you start to thaw the
chicken I like to begin to cut it before it's totally thought
I find it's a lot easier to cut through when it's almost half
frozen. And if it is totally thought my
other trick is to see kitchen says chairs just you straight
up scissors to cut the chicken up into little bits of if
that's what you're doing because sometimes trying to cut
fresh chicken is just so difficult for staff chicken
noodle soup with my secret ingredient take a look.

>> That starts characters. >> where you literally feel bad
about it. You want to cut this. Cal you going to stay in. >> It's to the chickens. Instead of taking the time to
fly level check and I just try to cook chicken, and for r e okay perfect. Here's a secret. So I was in Korea and the lows. A chicken noodle soup every
single day and the noodles they use for those it was the best
super ever had to try to recreate that. further cut. It's up to you if you want to
use this face pack asked sometimes is a little bit of
sun a little something that sometimes you just need it. And look this summer 210. >> All right cutting onions has
been the biggest obstacle that Calvin and I encounter when we
are cooking together. >> Have no fear because you
guys have written so many wonderful suggestions and I'm
going give them a try. Here's the thing though the reason I
never cry when Calvin is like you know ball in his eyes out
over these ions I work on tax so I think that kind of
protects my eyes from whatever juices are floating around from
these onions so chances are you're not going to see me cry
because it wasn't my contacts, but these make sense to me the
first one is you want to keep a bowl of water near you when
you're chopping an onion and I think that is because when you
cut the onion the acids are released into the air and the
water actually attracts those passes so when you're cutting
instead of them, you know being drawn to the water in your eye
there being drawn to the water in the bowl itself.

So that
makes sense to me I will certainly try that one. Another
one which I think is along the same lines as you take a paper
towel and soak it in water and then you chop the onion right
on to the paper towel, which also makes sense because if the
acids are attracted to the water than the water in the
paper towel with drought. The acids however, I feel like
if you ever really sharp knife and cut a little bit of pain to
tell.

I'd rather tear up a little bit then have paper
talent, my food, but that's just me. Another one we've
actually tried because someone sent as a pair of these
unmanned goggles I think it must work the same way as it
does have my contacts, you know, so you put on the onion
goggles it's got a nice like you know nice little seal
around it so again these acids whatever juices are floating
around after private cut into an onion are not getting into
your eye and how cold it was. They need to make kids version
of and goggles because the Congo's Africa are too big for
space. Not only was he trying to cut the onion but then he's
touching his base with a knee injury is not as being ers so
it didn't necessarily work as well.

He just needs glass that
fit better. Can the last one is huge piece
of gum whether you want to wait until right before you start
cutting because you'll notice when you
put it is a governor Mount naturally dark talking and
breathing, you know where your mouth as opposed to breathe in
through your nose, so none of these and injure says are getting into your nasal
company is not making upset and although this is going to make
my mother very upset that I'm talking with a mouthful of them
sound. Thank you guys so much for
sending in all these temps I love to actually get a chance
to set up my science experiments and try what you
recommend I really do read through everything you suggest
and we're certainly going to try this in the kitchen, I
think the bowl of water might be our our first try coming up
next my take on an Italian classic chicken parm and this
one also has a secret ingredient stay tuned, I'll
tell you what it is.

Welcome back to Dylan dishes
cooking with Cal up next is my chicken parm with a secret
ingredient. It may seem a little unconventional but
instead of bread crumbs I actually use all team crackers
I know it sounds crazy, but I promise it works in addition to
the crackers for this recipe on the chicken of course Parmesan
cheese garlic powder Italian seasoning salt pepper eggs,
flour and deli mozzarella cheese. >> The chicken OK I need you to
do is take this and how nice and flat. So let's make our reading
here's the secret for these. So to ease the report but the crackers in
the food processor I use a little bit of Parmesan
cheese when the readings. As I put it in all right, I know these in
that.

It's frankly Carla power. A little bit of that high and
seasoning is a little a cane seasonings and just saw that we
don't you love salt because the assault teams. What do you think you can taste
in. Face again tell me all the
flavors This helps the red stick on. Last month. >> We're going to France our
chicken cutlets come here. >> I for one. It says. We're working really disease. >> And this year. We're going to add Delhi,
mozzarella cheese not freshman Sir, Alex, it ends up being too
watery it's now a pop of some of the
broiler.

Verify. >> Of that move. >> All right, let's take a
couple questions from social media Jenny ask do you serve it
with basil leaves or is that fresh spinach that's a good
question I never really explain that part of the dish so
another secret, I have I like to take my dish I put fresh
spinach in the bottom of the dish and then I drizzle with
some olive oil some salt and fresh cracked pepper then I
take the pasta right out of the water and let it rip just a
little bit that I put the warm POS on top of the spinach so it
starts to kind of wilt a little bit so it's it's cooked but not
really cooked and it still has that nice crunch and that fresh
flavor and all that is kind of the bed for the regular chicken
parm another question we got from
instagram do you feed the camera man that's a very good
question.

Why do you think I'm a chicken parm so my camera man
is actually my husband, Brian I'm the scenes. >> A cow I D on the shoot,
sitting right behind me that's what we have to bribe
him. Food. >> What he shoots and edits all
of these these cooking with cows for me so it's truly a
family affair by Bryant's favorite meal is chicken parm
so this this know is all for him. And Caroline asks where do
we find all these recipes very good question for all these
recipes go to today dot com slash still in dishes I fell again, this is kids in
the kitchen.

I mean is Isabella and I'm in
second grade and 7 years old when I first states Cook I was
4 years old and the first thing I ever made. I scrambled all
and mom. We had a cut. From my favorite to include
issues. I signed law isn't if I'm making that Staton and
my mom like that absolutely love a small khalfan such a great
great Grandma had a restaurant in Jeremy fact, everyone in my
family loves to cook so that's why I think the cooked through.
In my family. I have my own money for us and I called Saint Tammany and things I do are playing
well blocked with my friends plan a sign that read have a
sister well anything to get out to
have high rally. I'm also graphic out and I love
to ride my bike. >> Today and so excited because
today it will be making my ups am I have to pay and they send
kind of money and most about it is it's not too sugary and also
put Apple's OS effect and for people who are seeking this is
what you need to get started some cooking spray.

Some
coconut oil brown sugar kind of slices and there she
now very thing last year Terry says the money. you're going to need a 9 inch
pan summit. It's going to. cooking spray. What you're going to want to do
is you want to get your coconut The prime but make sure it is
now tipped coconut oil. The kids come out East and you're going to get around
a pinch and sprinkle the coconut oil and sugar it's
going make a nice can at least when it's done you can use the
all thing. Released today and not something really so today
no more mention a little. Now you're going to want to
grab pineapple in the same car. I'm going to make a flower
design. And then now in print another
pineapple right there. An apple right there. Right there One cherry cherry. The cherry. For Kerry. 5 Jerry sharing some cherries more
heat. >> The reason why we have a
shared on the bonnet is because the bottom is Tom when you flip
it.

It looked like a king cake and
now they're going to batter Now we're going to keep having
to what degree now I can. Yeah, make sure all that you're hiding from I actually
how rest so that's better. Be sure to coconut it's time for our shot. okay first we're going to hear
from coconut oil.

It might look very weird.
I promise you it's going to look better when it's on Sure it's one to go for. Now, yeah, just go to our surprise
how kind like from now. Now it's time for the pineapple
the U.S. oh my goodness is very tempting
coconut milk. Last but not least Apple cider
vinegar. >> Mix well combined coconut
oil and Apple sauce you can make the cake knife and was. Now it's time to make the way
for a handsome guy what's grab our handy dandy whiskey with an
8. This is very well. But the cake batter to the pan. I'm kind of having said why we
have to put it in the oven and after all of my mom got me.

So the cake it's in the thing
is I think our so while how about when they see to me can I
mean. This cake goes great with my I
think you make then sunshine, let me let me go grab the
ingredients. I want to show you how to make it Lenin's. So what you're going to need is
lending. Fresh direct question your area. Sugar and glasses and wanted to
some last starts when I keep food to move through and enjoy
some time really easy law.

You can look and see your
hands, sometimes you might want Let's start to include gender
new the also the ground to work and you're like using press,
thanks for that because it's a better flavor not just life
Eve, the for hire for me so this next piece and you've done. Okay, thanks Nauman at someone or to the
teacher to my implant to a Now it's couldn't up to 11 want to be really careful.
Make sure you don't leave because our kids are not good
nothing there Sunday. Okay we're going to get for
renting rooms or dying young. Reduced to pay to have real
cold too so. >> Move it from the town. >> Okay now that at centers in
the last and London.

I think all of it all and come
together so first, let's start with some sugar I don't want to
splash the U.S.. So make life more easy. You see how fast I can. Now it's time for them that.
So sticky. I tried it. It's a lot like, like I'd like
to have the lending news. We're going to let it cool
front. Great on top of there. Is my most favorite one made
ever it looks like just. Monday, This right here comes the sun. In a Mike Kate I think it's fit for having a lot of mess of
my life. Oh my goodness that's exactly
what we want and now. O one. It looks so good case I would
1, 1, Now that may keep an eye on a
ready, I'm so excited to share this with my favorite for
things like that.

I know. >> Thank you. >> Thanks for hanging out when
I left to die being a hopefully make to the people too. >> Hello and welcome to our
today. All day special cracking the case. America's obsession
with true crime. I've got a short summer off lapse in
Houston for an incredible story we'll get to later in our show.
But first we set the scene.

Why is it that our society is
so obsessed with true Crime >> from Jon Benet Ramsey and OJ
Simpson yelling. He's going to kill me.
He's going to kill me. I said, well, who's going to kill you?
She said just to mentally hauled away in Gabby Petito. >> Justice for Gabby is that we
see justice for her homicide. >> True crime has captivated
audiences for years with no end in sight. An explosion of true crime
content and television with shows like Dateline in Tiger
King, leaving viewers transfixed and searching for
more. In fact, audience demand for true crime is going more
than 73% in the documentary streaming sports. But the largest platform
podcast. We're 62 million Americans a year. Listen to the
guise of intricate cases. >> I think there's something
about these cases that feels unfinished. We want to try and
understand why it happened for Ashley Flower. >> Interest turned into a true
crime in Pinar started by a podcast Crime J*****. >> I was always what I now call
a crime j*****. Making it a career was a totally different
journey.

And I wanted to find a way to actually Starr making a
difference and not just listen to or read the story is true
crimes impasse. >> It's close to home for Kim
Goldman. We experienced the death of her brother Ron
Goldman in the public eye. >> My brother's case is still
relevant today because it was the first opportunity that we
had to peek inside the courtroom to understand how
money and celebrity and race plays a part and with the
Internet being what it is and social media being what it is
allows the new generation of younger generations to come, he
can again and it just drums. A tremendous amount of energy
been recently launched a new podcast Media circus to hear
the stories of victims. That thing, then it's the
subject of a high-profile case for so on. I was first in line
to see how the streets and rumors and conspiracies and
negativity and can be incredibly damaging to the
healing process to Greece.

>> Others are turning to social
media like TikTok to amplify cases. >> And that's what you're
trying to talk because I want to see people of my skin tone
here. Everything I wanted to be one of the ice. >> Kimberly Chapman also known
as true crime. Kimberly has amassed over 100,000 followers
for her take some captivating cases. >> Is just mind blowing how
people who can commit such crazy. I can get away with the
I want to know what's going to people's head when they're
doing those things.

>> What started as one hot take
became like TikTok phenomenon. >> From that video, it really
just took off in the comments was killed with people saying
how about this president? Talk about that and I have this
new president. I want you to talk about it. >> But what's behind this
American obsession with true crime? We ask psychologist
shove on a child's. >> We deep dive into it so that
we can get the whole picture. We want to know how this person
takes.

We want to know what was behind this story. It's a look
into their deeper lives. Women are particularly
interested in sure kind because it becomes a template of what
not to do, how to save themselves. Should they find
themselves in similar situations? We want to know
that we can survive. Is there such a thing as too much to
crime? Doctor Childs warns psychological impacts can
occur. Find that releasing sleet. If you find that you're
isolating from your friends, if you find that you're nervous
situations that you typically wouldn't be because you've been
watching true crime. It might be time to pull back. >> But the public's interest in
true crime doesn't look like it's slowing down impacting the
lives across the world. >> I think the future to Crimea
is figuring out how we can do it the most equitable way
possible.

And I think that is ensuring that we're working in
tandem with with victims, with law enforcement, making
sure most importantly that were not retraumatizing victims and
their families by telling the stories, if people like myself
can operate in the true crime space, then we need to find a
way to give back. And I think that is going to be a lot more
Main Street in coming in the future. >> You might know actress
Marisol Nichols from the show, Riverdale, but far from the
glitz and glamour of Hollywood. Nichols has assumed a role of a
lifetime, a real-life undercover operative working to
end human trafficking. >> In her acting career spanned
nearly 3 decades.

Marisol Nichols has played detectives
yesterday and principles. >> OK, I won't suspend or if
you do me one favor. >> In CEOs ton of work to do
come with me committee where she is best known for her work
on hit show Riverdale. >> You disrespect no longer be
tolerated. Not by me. And certainly not by your father
when he comes home. >> But it's a roll out of the
spotlight. She's most proud of. >> It's described as an
undercover operative. What does that mean? >> I'm literally undercover
pretending to be someone else into a situation where were
infiltrating different scenarios. >> As a license informant
Nichols helps crack down on human trafficking. 150 billion
dollar industry that involves LIBOR and sexual exploitation.
One in 4 victims of modern slavery are children. According
to the International Labor Organization leaning on her
acting progress. Nichols has posed as just about everything
to lure perpetrators in even a young child seen here.

What was
going through your mind? And that first Operation?
I'll never forget this one guy. He's like, hey, can now. >> And I wanted to just like
you want to reach to the phone and just annihilate this person because I need to I need to
make this guy and these men come out of hiding who have done this so many
times and are used to doing this by the way. And I need
them to show up because I've got a roomful, a law
enforcement with semiautomatic weapons in the room next to me and they're waiting to take
these guys down and get him off the street.

>> The 48 year-old partners
with police district attorneys governments and nonprofits like
Operation Underground Railroad founded by former special agent
Tim Ballard. >> And when I met him, I was
like I've been looking for you because I go. It's great way to
raise awareness. And that's wonderful. But I want to know
who's getting the kids like who is going out there and like
rescuing these people is is anyone doing this? And I was
like, that's the guy.

>> That introduction proved to
be pivotal, pushing Nichols to the front lines of rescue
operations that led to the arrest of dozens of people
being so close to this. This is dark stuff and very cold. >> It's it's I'm not gonna lie
to you. I don't come home normal. Some of the things that
I've done and brought me to a very dark, dark, dark places on
the planet. But then I go if my kid was taken and that was my kid, I would hope to God that
someone else would risk their life for her.

>> The risks are not lost on
Nichols. She's a 13 year-old daughter at home and thanks of
are often ahead of operations which can get messy. Was there
ever a moment where you're like shouldn't be doing this?
This is too risky. >> 100%. The last one I did.
I wrote a letter to make it because it was pretty
dangerous. Men like if I don't come back from this, I don't want her to be mad that
I died saving someone else's kids essentially. So I wrote a letter to her to
explain her like why I was doing this. >> Nichols says as a survivor
of sexual assault in her adolescence, the mission is
personal for her. >> I got right about each. I want you guys and it was
pretty traumatizing. I woke up in the police department.
I don't know what happened to this day. I don't remember. >> Much years later, Nichols
leaned on the Church of Scientology to pull away from
drugs and improved her mental health weep restaurant.

Recent
accusations in the lawsuit of trafficking within the church
accusations. The church tonight in a statement to NBC News
saying in part the allegations are both store lists and
ridiculous and the lawsuit is both a sham and scam. Has that
ever given you pause? >> Not not in the least.
It's so absurd. >> And for me, I know what I've
seen. I know what I've experienced in Scientology.
It saved my life. >> She set to take a deep dive
of the ups and downs in her life and volunteer work in a
new podcast released this month. What's your home?
What's your goal for your efforts? >> My goal is to have enough
good people know about this so that they demand an end to it. >> Still to come, celebrity
medium, Tyler Henry Mom, Theresa Share, their personal
true crime story to their first sit-down interview and later
how this forensic lab is working to make cold cases
obsolete. Stay with us. coverage of true crime cases
but most of that coverage seems to spotlight missing and
murdered white with Jennifer Buckley is working to change.
Take a look.

>> Jennifer Buckley carefully
applies. Read to her hand. The page you soon will it
speaks of vials of silence and resumes. It's are intended to having him
to wake in the state and the continent to the tragedy of
missing and murdered indigenous women. >> I think collectively it just
doesn't seem like they're indigenous lives are as
important as some others.

It doesn't matter if it's on
the reservation off the reservation when people go
missing, their not looked for the same way. >> Missoula, Montana County
Attorney Kirsten Pabst. >> It's an epidemic. It is a huge problem in Montana
are missing persons and you look at the numbers. 25 to 30%
of our missing persons, our native, they only make up about
67% of our population. >> There are issues of
jurisdiction was probable tribal, municipal and state,
local or even federal law enforcement.

What do you think
the roots of it? >> I think you have to go back
hundreds of years to colonization and cultural
degradation, cultural degradation of our Native
American cultures. And you combine that with this, a surge of methamphetamine and
domestic violence that we're seeing today. We're to the
point now where we have to do something different. >> For an epidemic mostly
unnoticed and rarely publicized that something different filled
agenda. Buckley was an unrolled member of the Chippewa Cree
tribe's out of Rocky Boy, Montana.

>> I just came up with that.
Well, may be able to see if anybody wants to get their
picture taken with the red handprint on their face to
raise awareness. So that's how it started. >> One of the first places the
photos landed was in the office of the county prosecutor. >> It's so powerful because not
only because of the intense and beautiful images, but you
almost also captured the isolation visually as well to
some of the the murdered and missing women. >> Face when you decided to put
these up in your office, I mean, it just speaks volumes
to you guys. You know, I mean, the putting these up in such a
platform and it's just really humbling.

>> Jen, though, began to dream
bigger. >> Much bigger and just started
to think like what is a large scale thing that people see
that they have to see to. And I just like courts. >> Lamar Billboards donates the
space, but Jen and her project are on a shoestring budget. >> They can raise the $200.
It's up for a month and then it comes down because I got to wait till I have the
the next $200 to put it back up. >> Funded by the sales were
photos. The occasional donation. Jen has big dreams. >> My hope is definitely that I
can get them on permanently, not only in Montana but through
the United States into Canada. >> It's needed because too
often the attention goes elsewhere. Just look at. >> That white female that went
missing from New York that was found dead in Wyoming and how
much national exposure she got with a cabbie. How many
American females went missing that same time period and there
was nothing it. >> Not a blip veteran Missoula
Police Detective Guy Baker.

>> Those billboards are a great
way to bring awareness to this very important issue. And you
know how many thousands of people driving by them every
day, see it. So generous to a good job of kind, making that a
personal issue that can relate to. >> Important to Detective Baker
because maybe a billboard will help him solve the case.
He's worked on for years. The missing Jermaine Charlo
Jimmy is the news sister of a Linda Moore show who
volunteered to be photographed by Jennifer Buckley. >> The work Jennifer is doing
is important and I'm hoping that her work reaches outside the Montana
that we can get billboards in New York all the way down to Texas and up into
Canada. This this is crisis and needs to stop. >> How was it for you to know
your sister has been all these years? It's. >> It's been extremely hard. The hardest thing I've ever
been to, maybe this could make a difference it well, I know it well. >> Coming up, celebrity medium
Tyler Henry and his mom Teresa reveal their very own very
personal, true crime mystery.

She shares her story of kidnap
being raised by serial killers. And much more after the break. >> We need your true crime.
This on the Go. Dateline episodes are available
as podcasts. Mister with a twist from the true Crime
original. Wow. Listen to live where ever you get your
podcasts. known for a spot on psychic
readings, helping celebrities and even working with law
enforcement to solve cold cases. But now he's speaking
out about a cold case that is very close to his heart. >> How many are names can you
think of the family to? Okay? Because I represent the 2 ARES
news coming out. >> As Tyler Henry was finding
fame as the star of these Hollywood medium, helping
celebrities communicate with their loved one from beyond the
grave, even helping detectives and investigators solve cold
cases.

>> His own Mother, Teresa
Colon, was coping with a dark secret of her own. >> 3 years ago, my mom
discovered that she was taken as a baby. >> Before then, tourism
believed her mother was Stella Guidry missile, a career
criminal who murdered and tortured to people in the
Central Valley motel. >> I still just can't come to
terms with that part. I mean, it's one thing to murder,
someone to touch that. I think one of the important
things we learned in this is really just the
intergenerational effects of trauma. >> Still as crimes devastating
the lives of not only her victim's family, but Teresa's
own family, too. This traumatic history revisited in Tyler's
Netflix series life after death. >> So you're building was wave
that this has to do his job. So I know my birth certificate. >> Has been doctored. Teresa
Learning Stella was not her birth mother.

Her birth mother
now deceased had been tricked by Stella. The exact
circumstances still unknown. >> And she raised me and use me
in a way that she needed to benefit herself. >> The series capturing
Teresa's emotional reunion with her biological family. >> My feelings when I met with
my biological family were actually bittersweet as well.
Because while I loved them and adored them immediately,
they're just wonderful, wonderful people. I also feel a
loss because I felt like a what if I had been able to. >> He raced with him.
Ironically, Tyler says his psychic abilities were able to
reveal much about those closest to him. >> Really, for me, my process
has to not be impeded by logic or by information.

And so
because it's me because I have my own feelings and thoughts
and expectations that bias basically prevent me from being
able to kind of connect intuitively. >> It was a realhe says, to
be on the other side of the reading for the first time. >> Wfound myself in a veryd of
vulnerable position in the pursuit for answers. So I felt
myself really feeling a sense of desperation. And I think it
taught me and gave me and saying the closure, it's not
really something you chief as much as it's something that you
have to kind of grow through and find acceptancaround. >> For Teresa, the revelations
brought an emotional release. >> No one really that you're
not like I know I'm a good person.

>> But also raise new questions
about the nature of family. >> What made me happy that
Tyler doesn't have a grandmother who's a murder?
And the bittersweet part of that is that while she it means that she's
not my biological mother, it also means that my siblings
that I love so much, you're not my biological siblings, but >> does it matter? Because
we're always going to be close. We learned in this journey, the
importance of asking questions if there's a blind spot for
some reason, there's a reason there are entire generations of
silence. And it's important to break that silence and that the
truth really can say for it.

>> And coming up, we take you
behind the scenes of some of the technology solving hundreds
of cold case. Stay with us. >> Deption it. n story. Only Dateline and Keith
Marson can take a listen to the full season now. technology in this lab has
helped sve hundreds of cases and never let cameras in until
now, when we've got the exclusive firslook on how
they solve the otherwise unsoed. >> This is no longer something
yosee on TV. That's all some cases here. ere are all these
cases that we're looking at here. These are the e Absolutely. Just outside of
Houston, autholabs is solving the unsole when it comes to your
laboratory. When it cometo difference? We're taking this
really challenging edencesn historally been unusable for
testing and then we're in a blink hosting and we're doing
that with ndreds of thousands of markers.

Insteaof say 10,
some markers of what are you doing? >> Traditional Frenctoast.
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plf hour focrking thee. caseAmerica's seion with
true cri. Gotti Schwar's. ay >> Well, just how you doing.
I know every d's dferent how you feel today Yes, and is it is the range
thing about a mask. It really changes.'m feeling reay it red great now. Iean, I'm here wie re and my dog. I'm going to
see my horseite wrote a bo. The book is phenomenal. ll
just sayt. You are right or o
te a book. It's it's hardarder
stilto do it when you don't have all your
facults about you evy day. Itas the kindness, strangers
who are no lger strangers. Britta Bloom am my my my book agent at Booke
and Juli the space theyeld for me and
helping me and helping the type.

I wod send a note, you
know, yelloa picture.d and take >> Really? Can you write ts?
And now, of course, now the Bucs finished a reke. You can
just haha. >> Have that work. You got
through . We got to it. >> Andow do you feel knowing
it's about to be out in the universe? >> I'm thrilled cause when I
did come out with them as diagnosis, it really felt freeing, but mostly to see that it
helped other people just have and we feel really good made me
fe more useful.

I'd always get mysel You're
lazy, you want to sleep. But then when I realized just
at least by the acof being as honest as I could, it did something for other
pele and that in turn empowered me. And, you know,
it's just whole thing of we're all we're all in
this together. Wl. >> It's called mean, Baby.
You've got explain the title. >> When I was just born, people
came over to visit the new bike, that baby.

That's my last
name. And they ran out of that >> This teenagers don't go or
the bikers have a mean maybe. house. >> That stock the things you're
called, how they become part of your
story, whether you mean to or not sometimes write in the book about some
very painful episodes, including he wrote about a teacher, an
educator who violated shoe.

And you say he didn't rape me,
but he broke me Romain. I loved them. Love to father figure having a
personal betrayal of someone that loves you be so inconsiderate of your
life path. Really? It hurt me. And I miss am still
as a friend. The person that I had Matt and and cared
for as a mentor, it feels to me were quite
courageous and discovered wonderful things writing the
book like how much I'd witnessed a friend's and what
I've witnessed want to get that was here.

And even you know how much I love
sharing things with people. But it wasn't until writing this
book. And and there is this mention of a rate that was
something I didn't even think of because I think there's so
many trespasses on my life or things were cloudy with my
Shane, my such a deep shame of my drinking in the past that ice talking one day to
Britney. And I immediately told this after this spring break
trip and then and I said, I want I want I'm
not going right down the block. And she said maybe you want. And I thought, of course, I have to so many
people, some similar experiences that
you just talk away because you think people can say what
did you do in mind? A new report? Why didn't you do it?
Why didn't I was Ken as young and even now
it's hard to report stuff.

It's hard. It's really hard. And so I put it in the book.
And I even cringed as I was doing audio books. I thought how many more stories to have
like this that I didn't even acknowledge
because there's so many and I felt so sad for my body. I felt so sad. It kind of took that book in
this process. Even make you realize that you you
were a victim, people can take advantage and then you're just too
ashamed to say anything. And then you just very and
you've area you really do and things do come back later
when you're in a safer spot.

But you still feel that say
they feel unsafe to say it, but I realize I am safe. I am glad it's in the book.
It's a big deal to have these things happen and told that shame in your
cells like it to you like it's all you are is
someone that's not worth helping on the side of the road
that you're worth some one to say.

She's offering a mother, see
her again. It's just probably passed out home. I know.
You know the body, the body remembers. I want to turn member some lot.
I want to turn a number of this day. I want to remember this
pink sweater and this dog and my son. I want to remember off. I want other people to 2 don't be so indignant because
we can all have our ways. Let's move forward and help
each other. Sometimes an horrible things
happen. People the shame cycle is so bad. I want to say there's no real
room for guilt and moving forward.

There's not much I feel ashamed
of anymore because it just happened and I did or someone
did it to me and I'm I'm OK now things will keep happening and
I'll keep having to figure out how to rise above. In some ways, it's that frame
of mind that helped to finally get rid of alcohol and kick
alcohol out of your life. How did you finally conquer it? What made the
difference for you? It was only self-medicating and I wasn't
working anymore. And when there is public humiliation and I own
data, there's no going back. I mean,
now that was a mother. It just changed everything. I think that's incredibly
inspiring.

When you've made mistakes on them and you turn
the page and you smile and go forward, you do what you can to
make it right for those affected and yourself. And it's important that you
acknowledge really acknowledge and and nothing's going to help.
I still beating yourself up. You write in the book I
desperately Love story. We all have one eye care mine inside
me.

You carry your is inside you. I can hear my now in my
own voice strong and clear. >> What's your story? My story
is that people would say to me and I would roll my eyes when
it gave up before the mayor called don't come in sick
because I really was I could not picture living
longer. But I think that my story really is that I. >> And figuring it out now and
I am myself and I really do. I really do have the capability to live. You're not the mean baby. And that to be I mean, we all
can be a mean baby son. What she needs to come out some
time. We have for sure. It struck me that she was
extraordinarily complex, glamorous and beautiful and
dynamic and also emotionally elusive to you at
times and sometimes cruel.

I mean, I still adore my
mother. She's the most important, my sisters. We
cherish her door her. She's on a pedestal. No, she was not a cuddly woman.
She was a role model. She was a judge has a million things.
But her idea of me was not going to be met with what I was. I guess I find
it is so universal that we adore our parent so
much. But it is complicated. I felt how torn you could be
about your mom, who you clearly adored and she adored you.

And yet they're worth stories
that you reveal in the book that are kind of jaw dropping. >> It's hard because when you
grow up with someone like that, you don't realize because I'm a
little like her, too. You know? So you don't realize how like Atlanta. Some things can
seem in some kind of eccentric. Yeah, but my son said it to me.
I told him, you know, my mother, she was so critical by
nature. And he's like, like I am. But I think you're
perfect is like all you do is nags at me. >> Wow. >> Like that's my kind of love
language thinking I could pick apart someone's make them
better. Something I was really struck by when you're a little
girl. One of the first things you learn to stream on saying I
wasn't sure when I was pregnant with my last baby that I really
wanted to have a baby.

>> But you know, in her defense
to say I didn't want you, it wasn't meant to be hateful.
She meant it to say that would have been such a
mistake to get rid of you. Thank God I have baby Blair.
What was it like to grow up in that house? I felt
like dying growing up. I mean, I did. And that's why I feel
like I'm such a miracle right now that I actually want to live.
I want to be here. I want to >> enjoy this. I was so
confused and lost and terrified. I was a terrified
baby and your mom would introduce as and this is Blair
was some way both about this is some of this is the manic
depressive. I have never been diagnosed with media ordered
depression time. That's a label to put on a little. But you
know, as dramatic, I think she meant it as a badge of honor
like I don't suffer fools like we've got real problems and my
kids, my kids very ground and she's very deep undisturbed.
He felt that gravity.

Why were you so scared as a little girl who won a look at where we are.
It's so weird. And then, you know, you're
going to die one day and your mother's going to die. Your
sisters? I mean, it's terrifying to be a child and so readily be able to explore the scarier
things in life. It was a preoccupation. And and I'm sure
that drinking probably really cement that. I'm feeling in me. You started
your first streak when you were a little girl. 7 years-old.
Yeah. My first drunk when a 7 I my first drinks in a much
younger. Can you tell me about that? I thought it was got is a
Passover Seders that I had my first drink size that that was
God. And then when I realized it wasn't, I was like how convenient. >> It's I mean, it's it's even
as a little kid. You're right. That's a comfort to started at
7. You drink through elementary school, middle school high
school college. How did you do it and how did you function?
I don't know how I did it.

I do. It all makes sense why I
was so exhausted. But it was as hard. I don't know. But maybe it was
easier. Maybe I would have never survived without a drink.
How did it relieve your pain and your fears? >> Transitions of always been
hard for me and I'm asking that very evident. So the drinking would it made
me feel warm and comfortable and part of people on this
Earth, you have a lot of physical.
And and since you're a little girl, I mean, you tell the
story about so tell your mom, your leg
hurt. >> Cut it out. So Merrill, I
mean, that was made from my whole life for that. Like he's
like this. It was. >> You had a fever for 3 years.
They did. It was a big deal. I mean, doctors thought Island,
Kenya, we didn't know.

I didn't. I didn't. But it was I
had a constant I fever. I have so many things that were so
indicative of mass growing and optical or write us young and
losing my vision for good to feel when you look at those physical
ailments as a child, do you think have you ever been told
that probably was the beginning of Ms with absolutely that it
absolutely the elements as a kid connected. I don't know if
I really did have juvenile a massive Lake 6 when we notice
my I was first going or movements.

But I do know for sure I had by
the age of 23. It was definitely there for so long.
And the pain is still there. I'm in remission. I built no
new lesions, but ice to have, you know, some brain damage and
things that are there. But I'm OK with it.
It's I'm OK, I'm grateful because I'm doing so much
better. about the fact that it took so
long to get a proper diagnosis? It never occurred to me to
never occurred to me to have a neurological on this. >> Just a symptom of a really
unhealthy means to serve.

>> I thought I had a million
things that weren't what they were. And I would
have been a lot kinder to myself. If I I didn't feel the need to self
medicate or check out our get through. I mean, I wasn't
always check. And I was really trying to be as capable as I
could be. And I have no idea. I was really cool to myself.
I treated myself like garbage and the medical community
sometimes saying maybe it's in your mind. >> It's like, oh, you're fine.
You're dramatic. Your talkative, your. >> But I would say I'm so
tired. I can't move in. This is have this been going on for 20
years, even that doctor the diagnosed me, he's saying this
might be functional, emotional, what traumas happen.

And I fell
asleep in his office and he said to my boyfriend, the time was she doing things like she
falls asleep everywhere. And he's like a way to stand
up. Put your arms out. Show your
eyes. Plant fell over. Lake had no
idea. Proper reception. I didn't know. And pro perception
issues. I didn't know that my vision was a hallway because if
you've had your whole life, you just think that's how
everyone is. It was the big it I'm glowing to realize there is
a diagnosis for this and that was. other people have it and don't
know. And I don't mean to be tough on the doctors that you
really cut. It really got to do better for
the women. It's better for all of us in diagnosing these things.
You don't have to come out publicly and have share your
journey. Why did you make that choice have worked for years?
Because I've been so sac and that it was kind of flaring
because worse because I was going back to work as getting
on planes.

The planes make it worse as falling apart an
airport. You can get out of the fetal position or else. My body
was found them and I was getting ready to go all the
time. And the doctor even said with the best intentions, don't
people just don't we're going to get
this under control. But because I had such a bad
reaction to the first treatment, made it something
worse. I was really I'm having a lot of movement
and speech difficulties that were exacerbated by the
president and just kept getting worse as the diagnosis went on.
So it was so this time, so really help,
but coming out and talking about it, the story will be
told that. So I wanted to gain control of
that. I didn't realize how empowering it would be and how
empowered I would be to then tell the truth for ever more
after that. What did you think when you
start seeing the reaction? I was so touched and I felt so
thrilled. This is what it is to just be a human and show up.
And to think that there's even a moment that I could have come
comforted someone or given them an option or think about maybe
of stem cells, right for them.

I'm really, really happy to be able to walk
into this space of empowerment and realizing I I
am a calm and stable or not buy milk, even though I've not
always spent. You had a big night at the
Vanity Fair party. That was the first night coming out since your
diagnosis. What did it take to do it and what did it mean to
you to be there? I have no idea how much it would mean to show
up trying to look my best in a really aggressive flair.
And that was a real coming out party for me because I know it
meant something to other people and certainly to people with
more radical disabilities to see it.

And, you know, I write
this world is ours to might not see the ramp there on the
stage. But there's people moment meeting and I've loved
you so much. And you're such a girl. You are such a sister to
me. We're in the bathroom. I felt really nervous. And you
really took my hand. I had the came. I had the dress, but
everyone scared away as they should. And you stayed.

I was
overwhelmed that night. It was hard. I was afraid that I would
vomit. That used to happen out of nowhere as afraid at trip.
The dress just really very real things of oh, my God, I'm not
in the same body and I just cried because of gratitude.
But also I don't know if I can get through this night. It's
courageous. >> You wrote that you never
practiced the Oscars speech in front of a mirror that you
never really. >> Had those leading lady
aspiration. Yes, why not? I never felt I was I was the
one leading the pack here. I was very comfortable to
witness the greats. And how is it going to be a part of it?
But I dare say a smart thing. >> I probably chase that
leading lady role a little harder now, but I didn't have
it in me before. I didn't want >> Well, maybe they don't want
to, but maybe I will one day. to. Maybe it will be there for me.
I mean, I'm improving all the ways.

But consistency is really
key on a set. And the energy am certain triggers roommate.
My body do different things and I'm not embarrassed of it, but
I don't want to take people's time. But yet I would like to I saw
Christina Applegate know she did the last season of dead to
me and she was really dealing with a lot of help major health challenges and
watching her do it.

That was an inspiration. So it's like, OK,
if I were ever be able to go back to work, I want to expand
credit. documentary really tells the
story. When I watched the documentary, the word that I
thought of was fearless. You are fearless. >> I'm sorry. I can't talk,
right? We're shooting the final days
of my life. >> You showed it all. Yeah. Why did you want to do
that? Because what I was going
through with that mask looked nothing like I just couldn't find it.
Gender area should the documentary I saw how the
unrest she's like an inflammatory. If there's an
incident latest share very similar to what I was going
through. I thought, wow, I can't believe a woman is
showing us and not afraid someone is going to turn a
straitjacket.

>> If you see too much, we think you were mental
patient. The doctor would tell me you're just hydrated. Everyone get stressed. >> I was always so afraid of
losing credibility. And so she gave me permission.
That documentary of opening her life made me feel like I have
permission to also have that impact for
someone. I have a mask. Many is at a very late night.
No, some have at least 25 years, at least. So I'm not there is any embarrassment I could get
over. But if there's someone else
that it would move the needle for them to have some agency in
their life and to trust themselves, no matter how or dramatic or nothing their
symptoms might be from day to day because this is the stuff I was
afraid of. Let's talk about >> That sweet boy in a way the
documentary was for him. Why did you want him to see
this someday? Has he seen it? >> He has seen that.

Finally,
he went to the premiere. You know, he is. He's like it
wasn't that one. Thanks. You liked it. When I was going
to do stem cell, I thought because I felt so physically and emotionally
so awful and drains, they did think there's a chance
I won't make it. And so I did want that to be to him knowing
that if I did go because my body and given now that I
wanted them to know that I really wanted to be here with
them, I really want to take the steps it took to be here.
I was really one of those people that was like no way to
fight cancer.

All never do chemo. That's just the worst
thing for your body. I had a real feeling about that. And then when I felt the chemo
and I felt better just like all of what you're
thinking and just trying to feel better for your son.
But yeah, you can die. I thought if
anyone would, I would be me in that moment.

I just was so I
was just so tired. So I did it for him really to just say, I I
did want to communicate with you. You're too young to really
care now. And I don't tell you, but I want you to know you have the
last year. The first thing on my mind in the last thing on my
mind, you you fight still be here. Yeah. And everything. Yeah, I really
did. And I know we we all will come to times where we're going
to have to fight harder than we think. And and I was supported. I was
lucky. What do you hope he sees?
He sees you moving through the world. I hope he sees that. When you
have something that could potentially be a real setback in time. It might not happen
right away. But in time set yourself up to recover, you
know, and I don't want him to feel ashamed or too scared that
he can move forward. I am so grateful that I'm
moving forward because I did not want to my whole life.
I wanted to figure out how to die with the least pain
possible.

I don't. Now. What kind of mom
do you think you are comparison? Haha. Talk too much
to strangers, but I think I am fun. He loves that. I'm
willing. If he wakes me up in the middle of the night, he
can't sleep. It's like I'll go back spread. There's
things that I see that I was scared of that he doesn't have
at all. I give it. He does not want the if use of love that I
craved for my mother. So he'll have his own memoir about how
I, you know, tried to kiss him too much.

But I give him I'd
give him tons of space. I can really see him as his own
person. But I love I love that. I'm the person. He he comes to
the trust the most. He went and saw a psychic or fortune
teller. And this person told you you're
going to be an advocate. This time a Henry was like, is
there anything in my future? And he's like, hopefully see, you actually was
like, cut the tapes, guy. What? I've been really sick for
a long time. And he he did say, I see being an advocate.
I never saw on millionaires that I would be an advocate of let's calm, regroup and figure
out how to move forward. And I'm here. Your inspiration
comes from overcoming whether it's mask or addiction.

Yeah,
abuse or hardship are having such a relief to give myself
permission to say it's OK, no matter what the guilt
doesn't move through after realize that. Okay. So glad
that I'm being cocky and saying like, oh, forgive myself for
these things. But truthfully, you're not going to help anyone
else tell you for giving yourself >> What's up, everybody.
We've got a jam-packed pop star plus for you on the show.
Today is the woman behind the voice of Bart Simpson.

Of
course, Nancy Cartwright shared some memories from over 30
years of The Simpsons. And Brian Baumgartner who played
Kevin Malone in the office. He spoke to us about why fans
love the office so much. And later, Fran Drescher told
us why every human should own a pet. And our buddy Leah remedy
revealed what she likes to watch my surprise. Some people.
I was good teaser for you. Let's get to today's first
item. It's Nancy Cartwright right in the most recognizable
voice from The Simpsons because she plays part. Simpson.
She's the voices month behind the knot in rebellious parts of
30 years in the Senate told us what it's been like to be part
of such an iconic show. >> You know what? I was cast as
ward. He was like he was such a dream come true for me because
everybody has a little bit apart to see in him or her, you
know, in them, it's true. We all have these personalities
were, of course, such a such a conglomeration of so many
personalities. I described court Susan has seen 10 year old school hate
underachiever and proud of it.

That was the description that
I've read in the original audition when I win. And I was
supposed to go in for Lisa, but I decided I wanted to do
Bart and he just seemed more interest to 8 year-old little
child. His description was so much more clear. So I went in
that Green was there. And I had an idea in mind and I said I
love above all the cycle and I was hired to on the spot. It might show us he was short.
But Simpson, who the h*** are you? I'm back since and now you I think Burton says probably
got the most catch phrases of anyone is I'd
like to see who the h*** are. You eat my shorts. Got that.
No way, man. I love that. I mean, all these
things are like, oh, store.

It's such a hard question to
answer about, like, what's my favorite? I don't really it's
kind of like asking what's your favorite chant? There's a good
handful of episodes that definitely rank up. There are
some of my favorites are the musicals I Love. The musical is
like Super Khalaf Angeles to get
steals. Don't just you know, that's a really good one.
Is that such takeoff? And Pierre Poppins in Sherry, Bob
is so funny in the city of it is just crazy. If you want to
be nice to to please be safe and not for her if you wish to
be asked to 10.

>> And took me by my eye.
I my shot. >> When Barr kits and masks, that's the title of its the
first show of the second season ends kind of her plea speaking.
I guess honestly speaking, that would be it got a lot of
attention. It takes Bart. It turns and into from the
first 13 that we did the first season. That episode really shows you a level of
parts of Sunday you had never seen before and he goes into. He just gets really, really
sad.

Any super sincere about how we tried to study and he
starts to cry, can see feels like he's going to flunk the
4th grade and that that stands out in my mind. >> I would think you'd be used
to feeling like I really, really dry. >> Early on the show, it was made very clear to us
that the actors are not the stars of the show, the
characters of the stars of the show. Nobody had any calm with that.
I don't think anybody had any idea that the show was going to
go on. You know, 33 plus years and in turn into the icon is
that we're instead we're all like armpit to arm pit elbow to
elbow in one little tiny boost. That was not meant for
recording. And so we had like moving carpets up on the walls
because they were one thing. Wall was all class pass.
And when we spoke at least 5 rate, so they had to put a
carpet in front of it in.

We would all share the same own
arm to check, you know, and here I am very pregnant.
It was a lot of given tape from from all of us actors that it
was. I look at that in mind that is such a such a humble,
modest beginning for what came to be. You know, it's pretty
cool when I meet fans, it's light. It's it's pretty cool because
most of time and I recognize most the time I'm just this
anonymous celebrity and it doesn't matter where E nobody
is. I don't look like him. My skin is not yellow. 9 spikes
and 19 year-old way. I can have more cars ation over revealing who I really am in.
So it's just a spontaneous thing and I'm talking to
somebody and I asked him. So what changed the safe
homies, KTLA sale. Hi kaity. I'm but since how you this is like the jaw drops to
the ground. It's really fun for me. It
still is to this day. I love surprising people.

It's kind of
a cool thing is sometimes pops people out of their funk.
And there's not kind of what we need right now. We need some
kind of enlightenment. We need some humor or some lightness.
Some the 76 on question. If people
like to ask me, does why is this instance so successful?
How is it lasted this long? And I think it's just that she
doesn't even matter what this is funny to see is what
decade you look at his worry when Arthur decade, that's
crazy. But no matter what decade you look at The Simpsons
hasn't consistency in the the business model. If you know the
way that it's done, it's got this family. It has its own
kind of rules or for lack of the lack of rules. We're kind
of a nice quote, unquote, normal family. And I do think
they represent a lot of people that can say, well, that's not
us. You know, whether it's The Simpsons or all the citizens of
Springfield site, people can find things that they can
relate to. And that has been such a success.

And the tip of
the hat to the writers, the executives on the show. >> Thanks to Nancy for sharing
all those memories with us. Next up, we're revisiting the
Dunder Mifflin paper company with the office star Brian
Baumgartner. Pennsylvania on the mind.
This next flashback interview. Hard to believe it's been 17
years since the premiere of the office hit TV show about the
work lives of paper company employees. Brian Baumgartner
played the lovable Kevin Malone and weighed in on why he thinks
people still love the show so much. >> At least once a year.
I like to bring in some of my Kevin is famous. >> Showing at least one see
here. I like to bring in some of my Kevin's famous chili. >> I want to hear it in the
bank. >> It's not asked to call
charge. It's Kevin. Most law. Equally handsome. Equally
smart.

Well, Kevin Malone helped I
described Kevin Malone. I think Kevin Malone is a man
of some unique skills who is is misunderstood in a way his
childlike sense ability fits into the rest of the ensemble
of the office very well. I had such a blast playing them
and continue to be delighted by my how fans react to him. I do think that of all of the
other actors and and and characters on the office.
I do think that that probably I'm the most to similar to
mine. >> Mike Lee, that shoes were a
huge conversation piece. Well, and my dogs are barking. >> You know, look, I loved.
I loved his ability to be in the moment. I used to
say he has no memory of what happened before or any
ramifications for what might happen in the future. But in
the moment, he if you enjoy the moment he was willing to show
that often didn't think too far ahead.

But I had I had a blast playing
with him. And and you know, our little our little group in
the corner of the accounts, Oscar and Angela Kevin, I
described it as as kind of a perfect comedy triangle.
Well, I need to get my cat up for adoption. >> The one who uses the
doorbell or the one with the Mexican have or the one with
the rain galoshes or the one that you let go around making. >> Which nothing to do with us,
which had to do with the riders in the construction of the
characters. But the way that the alliance is kept shifting
their specific personalities and how they played off of each
other was so much fun to do for almost a decade. I think for me now my favorite
episode would have to be stressful, otherwise known as White's, fake Fire. Drill. >> Door, check that one out and
it for haha. >> And I think, you know, for
me now there's so many great episodes. But I think for me
what was happening outside of the show carries special
significance for me as well.

So I think it's a hilarious
Lee. Bonny well written episode. >> I saw friends today and why we forgot each other's name. >> A lot of things spring to
mind thinking about finale that basically shot the show.
My 30's, my full 30's was dedicated to being together,
which is his high school and college and then 2 more years
at spending a lot of time with those people. So it was really
knowing that whatever happened to the friendships would be
there, relationships would would remain. But we wouldn't
beast vending 60 to 70 hours a week together anymore. And that
was going to be a huge change for us. A huge feeling of loss, but also tremendously proud of
the journey that we had in the fact that we chose to end it.
We had a story that we wanted to tell and we make sure that
that we got that story in and told him, you know, largely
with with the original people who were cast.

I mean, I don't I don't think
anyone who was on the show could have ever guessed that
the show would end up doing becoming what it has become
today. I mean, we were we were almost we almost made a pilot
and was never on the air. And then, you know, the fact
that that an audience picked up on it, I always knew what we
were doing was special to people given a chance. I just
thought, well, people are going to get a chance. So I'm I'm I'm
tremendously proud of the show.

As I say to
people on, I'm a fan of the show and and
and love watching it. And I'm so proud of that apartment, you know, in examining. >> Through this book that I
have coming out, welcome to Dunder Mifflin. You know, one
of the things that need we are looking at is why the
show has not just survived. He's thrived 8 years after we
have filmed any anything. I think that it's really about
the people. It's really about the
construction of of of the idea and the aesthetic of the show
that was so really revolutionary and
groundbreaking at the time. But the hiring of the specific
actors to play the roles and the writing staff that was
brought in, which are now the top comedy writers television
today. You know, it was just just that
show and you need collection of people led by Greg Daniels who,
you know, created the show and and his
genius and in finding the perfect people for
their job.

And that's really why I think. >> What a classic we love that
show in our House. Hope you enjoyed that one office fans.
It was for you. Coming up, we've got many star Fran
Drescher sharing the key to easing her anxiety happens to
be her furry friend. is a huge, huge dog lover.
She's even had a famous dog fur and get this Chester. That's
the dog on the man. He was actually Franz real-life dogs.
She told us all about that and how her pets of Shape for Life.
In this episode of our series, My Pet Tale. >> I start on the nanny and I
wrote a part for my first dog ever. Chester Drescher. >> And if I'm pleased he
doesn't like change. >> Chester was an amazing job
because he was extremely consistent and his behavior.
We knew what he would do under certain circumstances. So we're
towards that. And that was why every time,
you know, S**** back. I grabbed him away from. We knew that you
grab. >> So we always had her do that
need some time to get used to >> Contact a doctor.

Just jump
in jobs and not the first size >> And it was great working
with him because he was always on the said anyway, I'm always
of the camp must love dogs. I have a dog now, Angel Grace
and I rescued her just days before lockdown and then she
rescued me. And for the first couple months of our
relationship at my house, you know, it's just turn.
I don't think she ran away new what's ahead and pay.
But all of the 7, you know, it's just the 2 of us for a
couple of months. And so it really is bond to us. And we're
very, very close now in just 3 years old. And I travel with
her and she is my service animal. So I'm just very
grateful to have the first big dog I've ever had. And, you
know, she gives me and security and yeah and helps may through
situations that sometimes would otherwise they can choose.

She's kind of different shades
of white and bone and I want she was so loving
when I met her at the rescue place and so sweet that I said, you know, are you
in a job that Samson same to Tim and Sampson, the dog that
said, Lee, I had died just days earlier
from the stroke. I said, are you in a show? Is that your
name? And it just seems to devote to her because she is
such an end. She is definitely a big part of
the family.

She's got all these kind of mind is who come and
take care of her. I have to go to the tenant can take her with
me. He's got spelled backwards.
And I think that don'ts are here to teach us unconditional
love. Sure, in our hearts, the love
another, even if you loved and lost. I think that every human should
experience and condition. It's just a want to treat his
issues really is unparalleled. I just, you know, that without having canine to love and care for and
feel loved by and share my Baldwin. Just be there. We as a friend
and companion and company, wonderful company as a cancer survivor. You know,
I always tell other people recently diagnosed make sure
you had sleep some of it this year because that night is when
your imagination and fear starts to run while because you
don't have the distraction of the day and you don't have a
pet.

>> Well, it's really nice to
hear people's stories. They mean so much. All right.
Still to come, we are many breaks down. Her must watch
list. friendly women when she can't
fall asleep. She turns to one particular show that just might
surprise you. She spoke to us for our what I watch series. >> When I have to fall asleep
when I can't sleep, I I'm present filed. No, no lie.
Listening to stories. People who murdered that's been
asleep. That's probably set in a psychologist and probably
have an answer. >> It was a deliberate. We never expected. >> The older version of
forensic files, the guy's voice. It's so soothing and
he's like and then without it the cap ticket. Something about the guys.
I don't know what it is.

What I watch, what I eat.
Comfort food is a reality show. Cake, anyone, housewives of any
state. >> Or I watch a lot of islands
or I watch below deaths. Basically problem. What I love about reality shows
in general is that I just feel like it takes me away like
that. Some 9 take a shot. And I I find myself, not multitask.
All of my brain like what I'm watching, something that's, you
know, who's worthy? I start to think about all the things I
need to do in my life is I'm not doing right.

I think I
should be better daughter of that that under this better and
other says that, you know, but when I watch reality shows,
it's almost like my mind is suspended. It is literally
frozen. And I mean, I this picture of I get myself while
I'm watching reality shows this was kind of cool, kind of it
isn't. But I don't think that's what I picture myself doing
because it's mind numbing. My daughter, Sophia, got me on
some Love Island. But only UK version was like, you know, we
find that you look better versions of of along with
scant.

So I really tense it to go to those or like a watch, a
marathon of like, say yes to the dress. It's the knot.
Having to think about change, though, China, all or you know.
So it's usually if I see there's 5, 6, 7, 8, eases of
something I'm in because then somehow I like fall asleep
within one week. We'll have to get on the season 4. And it's just anything that has multiple
season. What I watched that might
surprise flip. All I do. I know that what I watch
myself. I would like to watch a lot of documentary. I don't
know that that's surprising to But when people talk about
documentaries that you probably haven't seen it so much, seen
it like all watch a documentary on flies like I just love. Got the
letter. Doesn't really matter what it is. I just love Stuart's. >> And traffic on the
Queensboro Bridge tonight. >> I didn't need to prepare for
the king of clothes because I carry. There's no need for me
to prob.

She's a girl from both been married to a neighborhood
guy who has a crazy father and a place for those nothing.
I need different form. I knew the character. I know
the character of a war. But you know, it's funny about
the king of Queens. As I remember our producers. I first
got the ball. We did a pilot and our executive producer is
like, you know, why? Why are you wearing makeup? And I was
like, first of all, have you been to a borough in
New York late? What do you like? The idea of
what Borough Park Lake was like? It will get their nails
done to wear makeup ours. Like first of all, everything
from the borough like from Bensonhurst, don't tell me like I didn't
have a lot of money going up. But my stuff was coordinated. You know, like my outfits were
nacho the shirt. And, you know, back in my day was matching
T-shirt with your sought since like everything was called a
cordon aid.

So late, the idea of what somebody from New York is like
was so off that I was like, I just go get her nails done
this for concern here, Don, late because this girl is me.
So we're not doing sweat pants and shoes. Oh, and by the way,
if we wear sweatpants, it's color coordinated. What I watch, what I did cry in terms of endearment. No fun. >> Steel magnolias. >> What about friendships?
It's about family. It's about I'm losing people that you
love. I know it's just for a notebook. Just like just kills
me just every time there's not a time. And then one rouge.

I know that
sounds crazy. But I cry every time every time she dies. >> Every time I seen it, 56
times, probably just Sarah last year. It's a wonderful life. Every
holiday crying. >> What I watch with my family
is anything my order ones to watch it starts done by roads or even with her
parents would want to watch because as they get older, they have their own rooms.
They have their own computers.

They can watch whatever they
want swap. So if my daughter says I want to watch such and such
with you guys, life Kay doesn't matter, doesn't matter whatever she wants to watch
like I will watch. >> Thanks to Leah for hanging
out with us. We appreciate it. Well, there you have it.
That was his pop star. Plus, thanks for being here and join
us again tomorrow will see that fight >> Oh, my God. I wasn't even
ready to learn what I'm always asked away all day. So you got
a read on all day. Have to be ready all night to our stream.
The show today.

And 3rd, you know how it goes. We bring
you the latest from all the hours. We put it in a mere 30
minutes. Coming up. First after weekend's record-setting temps,
so many people are looking for relief from the heat and it
looks like we might just get that things cooling down.
Everything you need to know. Straight ahead while waiting
for this cooler temps are resident culinary producer
Katie Ceelo is here with some refreshing summer treat.
Everybody's got 11. They're really easy to make. Now that
and on the 4th hour we caught up with the author behind
Janice latest book play. Everybody's talking about it.
The book is called the measure.

It's so good. Even caught the
attention of the Obamas. You don't want to miss any of
the shows how to get started a go. I'm ready. It's time for
today and 30. >> Let's start with NBC's Jesse
Kirsch II was sweating it out in Philly this morning. Hi,
Jessi. >> Hey, good morning. Guys were
trying to find shade every chance we get here because the
city's he health emergency has been extended until this
evening. There is a cool down coming in the east but out
west. More excessive. Dangerous heat with that wildfire.
Now on the move this morning, a brutal heat
wave still has millions of Americans searching for relief
trying to end the heat. It's the kind of hard over the
weekend. Sweltering temperatures reaching record
highs across the northeast.

Newark, New Jersey breaking
triple digits for 5 days in a row. This week's long heat wave,
disruptive and deadly claiming at least 5 lives so far,
including a 22 year-old hiker in South Dakota who officials
say died from suspected dehydration and exposure.
In Boston. The mayor extending the nearly weeklong heat
emergency through today. The city's annual triathlon
postponed out West hot and dry conditions are feeding the
flames of California's fast-moving oak fire forcing
thousands to evacuate. >> The fire has games
exceptional acreage out. >> Overnight, firefighters
battling the rapidly growing blaze outside Yosemite National
Park just weeks after a previous fire threat in the
park's historic Sequoia trees. Authorities say the blaze was
0% contained overnight and in towards the state Sierra Nevada
mountains. Sunday on meet the press. Former vice President Al
Gore calling extreme heat a global emergency, but one that
could be controlled if action is taken now. >> If we got the true net 0,
the temperatures on Earth would stop going up with a lag time
of his little as 3 to 5 years.

>> As they cope with the rising
temps, Americans still trying to enjoy summer, even heading
to the ballpark blazing Philly. >> It's tough enough sitting up
there to watch. But imagine stepping up to the plate to
take a swing when the batters box is clocking in at 100 degrees. >> This wet from the sprinkler
has a little sweat too. >> Across the country, millions
looking for ways to cool off and hoping for relief. I had
what? >> Thankfully some still
finding a way to have some fun but no question.

This heat wave
has been dangerous and is causing headaches including
Amtrak slowdowns. Now the Pacific Northwest gets a taste
with excessive heat alerts already in place out there. >> Going to Friday. Savannah,
Jessica, Ashley, this. Jesse, thank you. All right. Let's
check out the forecast. We hear there's a rumor. There could be
some relief in sight. W NBC's Janis Help. We're happy to see
her this morning. Good morning, ladies.

It's not just a rumor
that some areas are getting some relief today across parts
of the northern Plains. But in the meantime, 49 million people
will be impacted by more heat, the southern and says planes
into the Pacific Northwest going to get a heat wave in the
northeast. Of course, right around here. We're still going
to see 90 degree temperatures today, but there's a cold front
coming and that's bringing relief to Cincinnati today with
the Mid-eighties St. Louis around 81. But it's still
really hot south of the front from Raleigh to Atlanta.
And yes, DC with a heat index of 105 today.

So it's still
pretty hot, but there's not going to be 80's in New York
City tomorrow. We're thankful for that here. 70's up in
Portland and 80's from Pittsburgh to St. Louis.
Still hot, though, down toward Charlotte. The heat index
tomorrow at 101 degrees and Nashville at 102 these late
week high temperatures across the region to Wednesday to
Friday. So Chicago is better in the 70's by Friday, Columbus,
Ohio, around 80 better in DC and New York City 80's, though,
90's still in the 90's down around Raleigh and Nashville
also. But that's kind of typical summer weather there.
But it is still hot across some of the southern states. It
looks like there's a cold front that's coming that will bring
that relief.

However, along with that will come the chance
for severe thunderstorms. We had a few yesterday. The
parts of the northeast already getting storms around Albany
and only on to down towards state college and back towards
Pittsburgh. That's moving towards New York City and DC in
parts of the northeast for later today. But on the
backside of that is where it gets a whole. >> Well, a lot better in
Savannah. Watch Live. It's Janice have to bring. I know
that knew what happened. Yeah. Thank you, Janice. >> With millions flocking to
the nation's beaches to escape the heat. You know what's
coming next. New concerns over the sharks that are sharing
those water. Yeah. The weekend was filled with sightings on
both coasts and a popular spot here in New York had actually
be closed to swimming. And he's Kathy Park is right there.
She's at Rockaway Beach in Queens. Hey, kept. Good
morning. >> Hey, guys. Good morning.
That's right. Well, the good news here is that the beach is
back open for swimming, but it does come with a warning.
They're encouraging people only get on the waters between the
hours of 10:00AM and 06:00PM.

And when a lifeguard is
present, that's because of recent shark sightings in the
area. Now, experts say, look, sharks just aren't that into
us, but they are the shore because it appears
conservation efforts are working. >> Terrifying images of sharks
this morning after nearly 2 dozen sightings off Cape Cod,
some just 30 yards from shore. Well in Alabama and South
Carolina apparent shark's seen swimming just feet from the
beach. And a California surfer is getting uncomfortably close
to what appears to be a large shark if massive. Oh, my God.
This following a rash of shark attacks of New York's Long
Island. At least 6 people bitten in the last 3 weeks
alone. >> We're joking about sharks
actually. And then. >> It got me. 16 year-old Max
Haynes was surfing off Fire Island with a friend when he
was attacked. Jaws clamping down on his foot leaving a
nasty gash. I felt. >> All my foot like a bear
trap. Just get me from below.

And he's like hard. It felt
like it broke my foot. >> Experts say the long island
shark attacks may be explained by an nursery of sand. Tiger
sharks just off the coast and a large school of bait fish.
They feed on. >> The shots, mistake the
people for the food that they're off to. >> New York's governor now
ramping up the use of drones for shark surveillance. If we
have a sighting or potential sighting, we're able to pop
that drone up in just a matter of minutes and then make a
decision on whether or not we feel it's safe enough to open
up the water. While sightings can be scary, experts say and
most encounters sharks. >> Often ignore us. We have
footage of juvenile. What tricks of the 8 or 9 people
assuming greater need surfers who never knew they were there. >> But many communities not
taking any chances, launching extra measures to make sure
it's safe to go in the water.

And it's not just sharks
shaking things up off the coast this summer in Plymouth,
Massachusetts, this weekend, a humpback whale caught on
camera breaching the water and landing on a boat. Authorities reporting there
were thankfully no injuries. >> Oh, wow. That video. I so
Kathy mentioned that sometimes sharks mistake swimmers for
prey. So how do we avoid that? >> Yeah, that's a great
question. If you do plan on going out into the water, try
not to splash around too much because that can actually
attract a shark thinking you are wounded prey.

And also if
you're wearing a lot of jewelry, do not go into the
water with all that jewelry because the light might reflect
off of that bling and meet be mistaken for fish scales and
that the last tip of that I can pass along. And that's probably
an obvious want try not to go into the water with an open
wound. I'm probably not a good idea. Experts say that
typically sharks are not attracted to human blood.
And once again, we do want to underscore that shark attacks
are extremely rare and humans. >> We're just not on their menu
out. Okay. All right. Calf of the room. But that's that's
float.

Don't flounder around jewelry, counter and don't be
chomping down herself. Got shot down by going in when. Well,
yeah. All right. Thank you. We're back with today. Food
this morning. We're helping you beat the heat. We've got cool
summer creature. Entire family will love it. Here to show I
asked her favorite easy-to-make recipes is a very own today
show culinary producer. >> Katie Steel. Okay to say
You're killing it.

Yeah. History behind the scenes
height. Haha. >> He treats that are frozen.
Yes, but it wasn't. Lover is Krispy Treat. When I developed
this recipe, I wanted to be the ultimate most over the top
because you know me, I don't do anything halfway full force yet
shall can attest to that personally. I think them all
the time. And I'm always so you can hear one of the sites.
Okay in here, I got a little bit of melted butter.

I cut the
butter and half what you typically would do for a
special recipe. So an ad one bag of marshmallows melted
together once. So at enough law first, this is my secret to a
look. What is this one container flock? This is my son
the most. Oh, yeah. Oh, my God. This is what makes it like old
to me. Well, I OK, treat extract now. Yeah, it's all at
the Christie's look at this big old ball right now. This is
amazing. So if you're going to be doing a started a challenge,
I'm not I get all mixed. Looks like you dump those into
season are like I said, Ides of March Miles in here. Okay.
Then you come here. Yeah. We have our fluff mixture.
Look at this press.

Haha. This point is this more last
year average rice krispie recipe. I'm pretty much how
you're going to freeze it. Yes, from here. What I decide
to do because it's summer and it's hot out. What a nice
little treat. Why not take your eyes. Christy Sheats up a
notch. I put a little popsicle. Stick in the like to I would.
I put some Oreos your face, but it didn't end. There was
the whole thing.

They want that and you drip. But what is
chocolate just regular smell to it? 63 1% talk isn't waiting to
sweet because the Krispy Kreme. Yeah. Yeah. And you can garnish
with I have some for Yahoo. Now a new way to look at that.
He shape that you want to have kids. You can do like a cool
cookie cutter and a beef. An elected body, right? Its
second OT. What this recipe? My quite honestly make this
with your eyes closed. Haven't tried it. But I'm almost
positive that I had so putting next. I want to add some whole
milk and just with the staff putting make you don't need
your so for this.

Okay. I've literally takes 5 minutes to
play Taylor Swift all too well when the cow to the glass of
wine. Haha. So this is just some with topping it off in
from the store. Are favorites, just folded. All that and
withstand. That was a night at a little bit of almond extract,
the Senate just to kick up a fuss at Zahid.

What the nickel
over here. A new one of these cookies. This is a lot. Okay.
So instead of Graham crackers, I was like why not do sandwich
week? Because I like a little cream. Middle to get a little
bit of cry. A little bit of that. I'm here to coach.
The waivers has halted so refreshing because I'm good and
you could strawberry. You could do like 11 your things nashi.
Oh, I'm sorry. My topic with some Sicilian pistachios
because, you know, I'm not done talking about it.

Yeah, color
so fine. It right here and it was gone. But in the fridge and
let the what the fridge you to work, at least I mean, you can
get away with 2 hours, but preferably overnight, the
cookies offense. Haha inside the top of the drink. When I
was a kid, the ice cream man came around. I was always good
for him. Orange creamsicle as mobbed by all the time. 5 pop
orange creamsicle. I you know, so what I hear half of an ice
cream. I'm going to add some orange juice concentrate from
the freezer member, the right grace. Honestly, delicious.
And I know it's been a little bit water taught here all to
okay and I'm making Tuesday because we're not. This is not
to take a little bit. Sandra Lee for she did.

I'm a little
bit arms. The core top that and how for the time for the sake
of one's peers, I'm not going to let this case led to premium
was oh, my gosh. This is so when the economy gets
addicting, his food is the straw that you do. Talk is like
lipstick. Ladies. Yeah. What you're doing this so proud of
you. Thank you. You can find other recipes from Haiti at
today dot com slash food. >> This one's going to make you
hungry this morning in our series behind the brand.
The woman who is that name in Pita chips. Her creations are
on store shelves everywhere. And now the Stacy behind
Stacy's chips is diving into something new. >> Measuring success is like
the mission, the culture and the revenue. Right? So the
mission is you get to do the right thing. The culture is you
get to have fun doing it and then the revenue is what you
have to do in order to do a number one.

And number 2, Stacey Madison has been through
it all, Mary, just 4 years had 2 kids on my own b***** cancer.
Yeah, a lot of slips along the way. I think as part of that
journey really have to be. You have to be prepared.
But safety is journey started with the chimps. How does one
get it up to chance? The company originally started on a
food cart in downtown Boston serving up healthy sandwiches.
I didn't read it was had this access inventory makes the mob
and it's different flavored chips and gave them away for
free to people standing in line. So Stacey started cooking
up those pita chips and her sisters, catering kitchen.
It was no such thing as a V chip factory.

So we had to just
get creative and build the machines and do all that out. >> Around back in the 90, she
and her then husband focused all their attention on the
chest, getting on shelves, one local grocery store at a
time. What started as a snack to keep customers happy.
While they waited in line for their sandwiches became
Stacy's, pita chips and in 2005.

>> So it's a Frito-Lay for
millions of dollars. >> When I say that, what goes
through your mind? I still use mark a little bit, but that
must be in your wildest dreams. >> Now it's my, you know, my
first born in a sense, so very rewarding to see, you know,
been on the shelf to see how the company has grown and Stacy
isn't done.

>> Wanting a place for health
food, foodies like herself to come together. She opened
Stacy's Juice bar near her hometown in Massachusetts.
When the pandemic hit, though she was forced to close the
shop after just 7 years. But it was at the Juice Bar.
Thanks again to extra inventory that you came up with her
latest idea. The bold bars a refrigerated snack made with
ingredients like not butters. Chocolate chips, chia seeds and
oats. >> When you find a great
product like that, like the puck lines, you almost I think
it's an interesting guy wants that you have created the brand
so that it is not next to all of the other bar sits in a
literally a lane of it. So the refrigerated one piece of it is
a hurdle because it's different distribution is different shelf
space.

Yes, we could have put stuff in it and gone into the
far aisle. That's not what we're about. >> And in order to get the word
out there this time around, she's taken to TikTok. >> It's a whole new ball game
when you step outside that far aisle. And it's a whole new
ball game now with social media. I mean, look, you saw my
TikTok. >> And throughout all her food
ventures states, he's made it a family affair. Her twin
daughters are now 18 years old. They don't think the full list
on. I'm very impressed. What advice would you give other
women are moms out there who are in a position where they
want to do something that might feel a little stock. >> When you get into a pool of
cold water, you know, some people have. That's right.
You get to go to the edge and they're going to get and slowly
a little bit of time. And then others like, you know what, just going to jump. And
sometimes. >> Sometimes you just have to
jump, you know, that that's the shortest way sometimes.

And
then you have to take the leap by it. We all tried them.
What do you think? I like of delicious against like it sets
a taste like you'll be satisfied for a while right
wing and you know what I like to do? I freeze them and then
crumble them over yoga. You may dislike for a little extra
something to do harm. Ladies and gentlemen. He tips, but I
just never really thought about the woman behind the name.
Yeah. I mean, it's so these segments are good. You get to
see who's behind it. They say who handed them out because it
was actually enjoyed for people waiting for sandwiches. You
never know where the big ideas going. Kind of good stuff. >> All right. What would you do
with your life if you found out exactly how long you have left
to live as the central question in my latest read with Jenna
Book Club. Pick the measure.

Take a look. >> What started like any
ordinary day quickly took a turn. Millions of people around
the planet wake up to find a small wooden box on their
doorstep with the cryptic inscription on the lead in a
single string claiming to indicate the League of One's
life, the world in chaos. Where did
these boxes come from? Is there truth to what the streams mean
from suburban doorsteps to desert? Hence every person on
the continent is faced with the same decision.

What to do with
their life now that they know when it would. >> Huawei New York Times best
selling debut by author Nikki are like much, just say hello
to summer book club members who have joined us and we're going
to get to their questions and just a bit. But Nikki,
first of all, I hope you like that little trailer we put
together. I was crazy. I've never seen anything like that
home or so happy to meet you in person. And I loved this book
because it made me thank and about what life is, how it's
meant to be lived. How did you come up with that? You wrote it
during the pandemic. >> I'm actually started a
little bit before the pandemic and then I'm finished really in
quarantine. And so certainly the pandemic influence the way
to the story unfolded. But it really started with me just
thinking about.

So I think so unpredictable and
how much power to really have over our fate. And I'm someone
who turns 2 to stories to really help me navigate those
questions in life. And so I wanted to seek I write a story
about fate and was sort of sitting with that question and
ended up thinking about the ancient Greek mythology around
fate and the belief in these 3 sisters who would spin these
threads of life on their spindle. And and just thought,
what if these are real, you know how we use them as
individuals as a society, what happened and everything
was sort of unfolded from there. >> Tim McGraw has that song
Live like You're dying like you wonder how much time you
actually have left. >> And it really makes you
think like if someone gave you the opportunity to to learn if
you would live long ally for a short life, what would you
choose? What did you explore your own emotions? What you
would have chosen? >> I I thought about it a lot.
And, you know, sort of through the eyes of my characters, each
character kind of internal monologue is my own monologue
on a different day or another.

But it definitely brought a lot
of emotions. The service writing this book, especially,
you know, during during the pandemic and during a very
difficult time. >> You're out. You're still in
your 20's, right, 20 and you wrote this book and The New
York Times bestseller, it's picked up by higher ground, but
just president and misses Obama's production company to
make it into a series. Like, does it feel like a dream? >> Absolutely. I mean, this is
just always been my dream my whole life. And so to to be
here now, to to to to hold the book with us, you know. >> But is the fruition of of a
little under some time? I mean, I've looked because I wanted
this book.

I mean, I love all agenda, but this one in
particular. And even if you sometimes if you go to
bookstores, are sold out, this is like that book. I mean,
to have that happen, we have. So we have a bunch of beautiful
readers who have questions that they would like to ask you.
We've got our first question from at least Wagner in Dayton,
Ohio, at least. What's your question for Nikki? >> Hi, everybody. So maybe
that's the question for you. But I'd also like to hear how
to answer this, too. And it's what you open your own box.
Wow. >> What hot potato for Nikki
that survived? >> I think right now I would
not open the box, but I know that we change so much in life
and I'm very open to the fact that I would change my answer
later. Yeah. >> I think I would. Neither I
feel like I'm you know, life is also meant to be sort of live.
And I'm like you're dying, you know, to know that that it
could happen any day.

But I don't know that if I would want
to know if it's happening to our I feel the exact same way.
I definitely without question would not. >> You're the boss. Haha.
Yeah. Sarah Street don't. Yeah. I definitely would not
out of just what not. Okay. >> Our next question comes from
Joslin Kelly and Marblehead main. Just fun with your
question for Nikki.

My question is for small, this
book are really stuck with me. And so my question to you is
what was the message that you hope to readers would take away
with them when they finish the book? >> I think help there's this
message that we can all measure our lives in our own way and we
can all find meaning and happiness and fulfillment in a
way that feels right to us. You know, because we are all so
different. But despite these differences,
everyone's life has equal impact and value and purpose.
And for me, I love reading I love reading because it's an
adventure and empathy. And, you know, as soon as you open
up cure empathizing with these characters you've never met
before.

And so if I can just add, you know, a little bit
more empathy into a world that that needs it, then I think
that would be enough to make an adventure in empathy. Yes, why? >> As and it does say and let's
say hi to your mom and sister to. Yeah. Thank you. Thank you,
Mickey Mickey, thank. Yeah. All right. To check out the
measure at today Dot com slash shop.

We also find Nikki's book
recommendations. Nicky, thank. Thank you. Nikki is also going
to be joining me on our read. But an Instagram live starting
at 11:15AM, Eastern. Bring your questions. And I'm really
excited because I'll be announcing next months read
with Jenna Pick. It's a really incredible one next week.
Look forward to it. >> Coming back tomorrow with us
what I do see a bad guy >> Take this into account and
nice and flat. What you're yeah. >> Welcome and Dylan dishes
cooking with Cal today, I'm dishing up this sneaky secrets
I used to remake to classic chicken recipes, we've got
chicken noodle soup and chicken parm I mean what's the point of
sharing recipes if we don't dish on our secrets right
chicken is obviously one of the most versatile proteins out
there and it's something everyone in my family loves
frankly so I'm always thinking of different ways to use it so
it really depends on what making but I'm a big fan of
using rotisserie chicken wherever I can especially in
something like a chicken soup.

I do tend to keep some frozen
chicken on hand because you never know when you you need a
last minute meal. But my trick is when you start to thaw the
chicken I like to begin to cut it before it's totally thought
I find it's a lot easier to cut through when it's almost half
frozen. And if it is totally thought my
other trick is to see kitchen says chairs just you straight
up scissors to cut the chicken up into little bits of if
that's what you're doing because sometimes trying to cut
fresh chicken is just so difficult for staff chicken
noodle soup with my secret ingredient take a look.

>> That starts characters. >> where you literally feel bad
about it. You want to cut this. Cal you going to stay in. >> It's to the chickens. Instead of taking the time to
fly level check and I just try to cook chicken, and for r e okay perfect. Here's a secret. So I was in Korea and the lows. A chicken noodle soup every
single day and the noodles they use for those it was the best
super ever had to try to recreate that.

Further cut. It's up to you if you want to
use this face pack asked sometimes is a little bit of
sun a little something that sometimes you just need it. And look this summer 210. >> All right cutting onions has
been the biggest obstacle that Calvin and I encounter when we
are cooking together. >> Have no fear because you
guys have written so many wonderful suggestions and I'm
going give them a try. Here's the thing though the reason I
never cry when Calvin is like you know ball in his eyes out
over these ions I work on tax so I think that kind of
protects my eyes from whatever juices are floating around from
these onions so chances are you're not going to see me cry
because it wasn't my contacts, but these make sense to me the
first one is you want to keep a bowl of water near you when
you're chopping an onion and I think that is because when you
cut the onion the acids are released into the air and the
water actually attracts those passes so when you're cutting
instead of them, you know being drawn to the water in your eye
there being drawn to the water in the bowl itself.

So that
makes sense to me I will certainly try that one. Another
one which I think is along the same lines as you take a paper
towel and soak it in water and then you chop the onion right
on to the paper towel, which also makes sense because if the
acids are attracted to the water than the water in the
paper towel with drought. The acids however, I feel like
if you ever really sharp knife and cut a little bit of pain to
tell. I'd rather tear up a little bit then have paper
talent, my food, but that's just me. Another one we've
actually tried because someone sent as a pair of these
unmanned goggles I think it must work the same way as it
does have my contacts, you know, so you put on the onion
goggles it's got a nice like you know nice little seal
around it so again these acids whatever juices are floating
around after private cut into an onion are not getting into
your eye and how cold it was.

They need to make kids version
of and goggles because the Congo's Africa are too big for
space. Not only was he trying to cut the onion but then he's
touching his base with a knee injury is not as being ers so
it didn't necessarily work as well. He just needs glass that
fit better. Can the last one is huge piece
of gum whether you want to wait until right before you start
cutting because you'll notice when you
put it is a governor Mount naturally dark talking and
breathing, you know where your mouth as opposed to breathe in
through your nose, so none of these and injure says are getting into your nasal
company is not making upset and although this is going to make
my mother very upset that I'm talking with a mouthful of them
sound.

Thank you guys so much for
sending in all these temps I love to actually get a chance
to set up my science experiments and try what you
recommend I really do read through everything you suggest
and we're certainly going to try this in the kitchen, I
think the bowl of water might be our our first try coming up
next my take on an Italian classic chicken parm and this
one also has a secret ingredient stay tuned, I'll
tell you what it is.

Welcome back to Dylan dishes
cooking with Cal up next is my chicken parm with a secret
ingredient. It may seem a little unconventional but
instead of bread crumbs I actually use all team crackers
I know it sounds crazy, but I promise it works in addition to
the crackers for this recipe on the chicken of course Parmesan
cheese garlic powder Italian seasoning salt pepper eggs,
flour and deli mozzarella cheese. >> The chicken OK I need you to
do is take this and how nice and flat. So let's make our reading
here's the secret for these. So to ease the report but the crackers in
the food processor I use a little bit of Parmesan
cheese when the readings. As I put it in all right, I know these in
that.

It's frankly Carla power. A little bit of that high and
seasoning is a little a cane seasonings and just saw that we
don't you love salt because the assault teams. What do you think you can taste
in. Face again tell me all the
flavors This helps the red stick on. Last month. >> We're going to France our
chicken cutlets come here. >> I for one. It says. We're working really disease. >> And this year. We're going to add Delhi,
mozzarella cheese not freshman Sir, Alex, it ends up being too
watery it's now a pop of some of the
broiler. Verify. >> Of that move.

>> All right, let's take a
couple questions from social media Jenny ask do you serve it
with basil leaves or is that fresh spinach that's a good
question I never really explain that part of the dish so
another secret, I have I like to take my dish I put fresh
spinach in the bottom of the dish and then I drizzle with
some olive oil some salt and fresh cracked pepper then I
take the pasta right out of the water and let it rip just a
little bit that I put the warm POS on top of the spinach so it
starts to kind of wilt a little bit so it's it's cooked but not
really cooked and it still has that nice crunch and that fresh
flavor and all that is kind of the bed for the regular chicken
parm another question we got from
instagram do you feed the camera man that's a very good
question. Why do you think I'm a chicken parm so my camera man
is actually my husband, Brian I'm the scenes.

>> A cow I D on the shoot,
sitting right behind me that's what we have to bribe
him. Food. >> What he shoots and edits all
of these these cooking with cows for me so it's truly a
family affair by Bryant's favorite meal is chicken parm
so this this know is all for him. And Caroline asks where do
we find all these recipes very good question for all these
recipes go to today dot com slash still in dishes I fell again, this is kids in
the kitchen. I mean is Isabella and I'm in
second grade and 7 years old when I first states Cook I was
4 years old and the first thing I ever made.

I scrambled all
and mom. We had a cut. From my favorite to include
issues. I signed law isn't if I'm making that Staton and
my mom like that absolutely love a small khalfan such a great
great Grandma had a restaurant in Jeremy fact, everyone in my
family loves to cook so that's why I think the cooked through.
In my family. I have my own money for us and I called Saint Tammany and things I do are playing
well blocked with my friends plan a sign that read have a
sister well anything to get out to
have high rally. I'm also graphic out and I love
to ride my bike. >> Today and so excited because
today it will be making my ups am I have to pay and they send
kind of money and most about it is it's not too sugary and also
put Apple's OS effect and for people who are seeking this is
what you need to get started some cooking spray.

Some
coconut oil brown sugar kind of slices and there she
now very thing last year Terry says the money. you're going to need a 9 inch
pan summit. It's going to. cooking spray. What you're going to want to do
is you want to get your coconut The prime but make sure it is
now tipped coconut oil. The kids come out East and you're going to get around
a pinch and sprinkle the coconut oil and sugar it's
going make a nice can at least when it's done you can use the
all thing. Released today and not something really so today
no more mention a little. Now you're going to want to
grab pineapple in the same car. I'm going to make a flower
design. And then now in print another
pineapple right there. An apple right there.

Right there One cherry cherry. The cherry. For Kerry. 5 Jerry sharing some cherries more
heat. >> The reason why we have a
shared on the bonnet is because the bottom is Tom when you flip
it. It looked like a king cake and
now they're going to batter Now we're going to keep having
to what degree now I can. Yeah, make sure all that you're hiding from I actually
how rest so that's better. Be sure to coconut it's time for our shot. okay first we're going to hear
from coconut oil. It might look very weird.
I promise you it's going to look better when it's on Sure it's one to go for. Now, yeah, just go to our surprise
how kind like from now. Now it's time for the pineapple
the U.S. oh my goodness is very tempting
coconut milk.

Last but not least Apple cider
vinegar. >> Mix well combined coconut
oil and Apple sauce you can make the cake knife and was. Now it's time to make the way
for a handsome guy what's grab our handy dandy whiskey with an
8. This is very well. But the cake batter to the pan. I'm kind of having said why we
have to put it in the oven and after all of my mom got me. So the cake it's in the thing
is I think our so while how about when they see to me can I
mean. This cake goes great with my I
think you make then sunshine, let me let me go grab the
ingredients. I want to show you how to make it Lenin's. So what you're going to need is
lending. Fresh direct question your area. Sugar and glasses and wanted to
some last starts when I keep food to move through and enjoy
some time really easy law.

You can look and see your
hands, sometimes you might want Let's start to include gender
new the also the ground to work and you're like using press,
thanks for that because it's a better flavor not just life
Eve, the for hire for me so this next piece and you've done. Okay, thanks Nauman at someone or to the
teacher to my implant to a Now it's couldn't up to 11 want to be really careful.
Make sure you don't leave because our kids are not good
nothing there Sunday. Okay we're going to get for
renting rooms or dying young. Reduced to pay to have real
cold too so. >> Move it from the town.

>> Okay now that at centers in
the last and London. I think all of it all and come
together so first, let's start with some sugar I don't want to
splash the U.S.. So make life more easy. You see how fast I can. Now it's time for them that.
So sticky. I tried it. It's a lot like, like I'd like
to have the lending news. We're going to let it cool
front. Great on top of there. Is my most favorite one made
ever it looks like just. Monday, This right here comes the sun. In a Mike Kate I think it's fit for having a lot of mess of
my life. Oh my goodness that's exactly
what we want and now. O one. It looks so good case I would
1, 1, Now that may keep an eye on a
ready, I'm so excited to share this with my favorite for
things like that. I know. >> Thank you. >> Thanks for hanging out when
I left to die being a hopefully make to the people too.

>> Good morning, Elaine. Trying to chew and he's become
a hard cap. A little temperatures on tap from coast
to coast today after another weekend of record shattering new heat emergencies declared
in the northeast and out west. The weather fueling the flames
to 70 forcing thousands to.

Motivateyourhealth

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