tonight on all in. a ■ç i know i m not a young man. to state the obvious. about last night through the eyes of the undecided. i think this debate was bad for our country. we are in a very difficult spot as a nation. tonight, how gettable voters view the debate, and what it means to the x essential threat of a trump presidency. i would vote for biden even if he was dead. and i m a republican. plus, as barack obama enters the conversation, the historical precedent and practical reality of picking a candidate in the convention. and today s radical opinion from the supreme court as we finally get word, a decision on trump s immunity for insurrection is finally up next. all in starts right now. good evening from new york, i m chris hayes. the first thing to keep ■çin mi in the aftermath of last night s presidential debate is that if you are watching this program right now, you are almost certainly not the person whose opinion about it is the most important. at
that is that is our show for tonight. now it s time for the last word with lawrence o donnell. good evening, alex. you know it is friday night when i have not remembered to turn off my phone. weight, my phone rang during the show. that has happened to me but it won t happen tonight because it s fixed. it s been a long week. it has, and we are going to talk about the supreme court decisions and i need this because i don t know the difference between nitrous oxide and whatever the other thing is and so, which chris hayes and you both explained beautifully but neil is going to take me through it again. he is the guy to ■çhave. it s a very big day at the high court. i will be watching. okay, 24 hours later, if you are ready for some calm analysis about what we also last night, this is the place to be for the next hour. the very first thing you need to know about what we also last night is that most voters did not see it. it was the lowest rated presidential deb
family. tried to protect her anyway we could. family-turned army, when she vanished. this is how many people we have right now. we just started searching. they just wanted to find her. that kind of emotion really drives you. where was she? was someone following her connected someone attacked her? after scrutiny, the ex- boyfriend, and three others she encountered that night. scared. how many times did they talk to you? 30, plus. tantalizing clues, a handprint. there was blood on their hand you could almost see this happening in real-time. ■ç could she solve her own mystery? she s fighting him off. it was so emotional. i wanted to jump out of my seat. never in 1 million years would you expect something like that. on long island, about 10 miles down the shoreline from the mansions and fancy cars, and the elites of the hamptons is a blue-collar beach town some call the poor man s paradise, but life was rich for these brothers and sister
i m the responsible one. craig melvin: a working mom, new at the office. she loved her job and really loved her handsome, young boss. the thing that i never wanted to face was the hurt that i was going to cause. craig melvin: a passionate 9:00 to 5:00 affair. the problem she was married. and so was he. i grabbed his face, and i was like, you know what, i love you. i m not going anywhere. just tell me what s happening. craig melvin: cheating husbands, scheming wives suburbs are full of secrets. but being unfaithful to your spouse isn t a crime, is it? that would come next. it was just like every emotion possible all in one second. i went, [gasps], oh my god. craig melvin: murder in the dark who was behind it, and who would pay? when you see him on the video, he s armed and ready. craig melvin: two couples, two families, and the single moment that shattered it all. i knew, one day, that this was all going to come out. hello, and welcome to dateline. it s a cautionary tal
welcome to the beat weekend, let s get right into the headlines. this is a debate that certainly is memorable. but not in a very happy way. it seems to be another in a series of shared american experiences and memories that feel more infamous than famous, more traumatic than cathartic. and so tonight, together with you right now, as we are still within these first 24 hours of that face-off, we re going to take stock with the evidence, trying to look at the significance and the fallout and the actual real possibilities. we are not going to devolve into, or take too much time with the fantasy screenplay scenarios, because while there is talk of rain play style solutions, what matters more, for what this is about what we are going to do, is what is possible. indeed, the screenplay talk, the fantasy talk me tell you about the reactions of the dark of the democratic party, it may matter in that sense but not of the screenplay coming true. what if it is true, in what we ve seen i