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  • -Hi, Shepard. Welcome to "The Tonight Show."

  • -What's up, man? A creative name, right?

  • "The News." A lot of thought. -I love --

  • -How did you get the rights to just calling it "The News"?

  • It's genius. -Many focus groups, man.

  • Just, you know -- These things come if you take time.

  • -Welcome to the NBC family.

  • We're excited to have you at the network.

  • You're at CNBC right now? -Yep.

  • -You are the first interview not on Zoom

  • that I've done in six months since we've been in quarantine,

  • so thank you for doing this.

  • This is really cool for me.

  • -I'm happy to do it.

  • But back when you were in quarantine

  • and your kids took over for The Roots,

  • those were great shows, man.

  • I loved those sitting at home in the box.

  • That was a lot of fun. -Oh, I'm happy.

  • Thank you. Yeah, they stole the show.

  • I had to push them off a little bit.

  • They were getting too big-headed.

  • I want to ask you about a couple things from over the weekend.

  • Obviously "The Times" obtained Trump's tax information.

  • Can you tell us about that and what is that news?

  • Explain the big takeaway there.

  • -We haven't confirmed it at CNBC, but from the reporting,

  • I feel like what stuck out for me was

  • he spent 70 grand on hair for television.

  • I'm not sure that there was great value.

  • But, seriously, you know, 11 of the last 18 years,

  • according to "The Times'" reporting,

  • he didn't -- he avoided paying taxes at all.

  • -Yeah.

  • -He had a lot more dealings with special-interest groups

  • in the United States and overseas

  • than we knew before this reporting,

  • though there's nothing new on any Russian parts of it all.

  • We know that Ivanka was receiving some consulting money

  • that cut down on his taxes.

  • And, you know, there was a lot of that sort of thing.

  • What does it all add up to?

  • I'm not sure it'll matter to his faithful.

  • The Never Trumpers are still Never Trumpers.

  • And whether the people in the middle pay attention to that

  • or not, I don't know.

  • But "The Times" says there's more investigating coming

  • and more reports, so we'll watch for it.

  • -Yeah.

  • Well, obviously the sad news

  • that Ruth Bader Ginsburg passed away.

  • And over the weekend, Trump nominated conservative

  • Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.

  • And he says that he wants her to be confirmed

  • before the election.

  • Do you think that's going to happen?

  • -It could. They say it's going to happen,

  • that they can make it happen in that amount of time.

  • She's the darling of conservatives.

  • The evangelical crew loves her.

  • He wants -- He's been talking from the very beginning

  • about how judges will be his legacy.

  • And whether it'll affect the election or not,

  • it probably will.

  • You just don't know which way it's going to play, Jimmy.

  • You know, will conservatives be so happy about it

  • that they come out and vote for more

  • or will Democrats and people on the left say,

  • "We can't let this happen again,"

  • and come out and vote in bigger numbers?

  • I don't think we'll know till we know.

  • -Yeah. Trump is now questioning the election --

  • the validity of the election should he lose.

  • -Well, of this, I'm certain.

  • There is nothing to indicate

  • that there's widespread voter fraud

  • on a local level or on the national level.

  • That's reportable, and that's factual.

  • The rest of it, I'm not exactly sure

  • what it is he's trying to accomplish.

  • Because there is no evidence of that.

  • I'm sure that there's some thinking

  • that if it doesn't go well maybe he'll be able to point to that.

  • He made these same sorts of accusations

  • before the last election regarding Hillary Clinton.

  • So sometimes you have to just watch what's happening

  • and listen to what they're saying just a little bit less.

  • Not just the President, but most of them, Jimmy.

  • -Yeah. Maybe he's just trying to hype up his base and be like,

  • "Yeah, it's going to be rigged, so you better get out there

  • and vote because it's going to be rigged,

  • and if we just win by a landslide,

  • then we won't have to have this conversation."

  • -And, also, "If I don't win, here might be the reason."

  • He's managed expectations in this way

  • throughout his business career.

  • You wonder if maybe he's taking a page from that now.

  • I don't know.

  • -The first presidential debate is tomorrow night.

  • It is going to be moderated by your former

  • Fox News colleague Chris Wallace.

  • What do you expect to see in the debate tomorrow night?

  • What should we expect?

  • -I expect Chris Wallace to be prepared.

  • Nobody who has watched Chris Wallace

  • thinks other than that he's a very tough,

  • very thoroughly prepared journalist.

  • And he's said repeatedly over the years,

  • to me and publicly,

  • "My job is to stay out of the way

  • and be unnoticed as much as possible."

  • But he's not one to let a falsehood or a misrepresentation

  • or a "look over here" kind of shiny object thing

  • just slide by the way.

  • He will hold them. Both of them.

  • He's not a partisan guy. He's searching for truth.

  • He's trying to speak truth to power

  • and trying to get information to the public.

  • That's what all journalists want to do.

  • It's not about Chris.

  • He'll be the first to tell you that.

  • It's about finding out what they are really about.

  • -That's a good segue into your new show.

  • You certainly couldn't have picked a more critical time

  • in our nation's history to start your new show.

  • There's so much news to cover.

  • Tell us about "The News with Shepard Smith."

  • -It'll be that simple. It'll be the news.

  • We're not going to have pundits. We're not going to have opinion.

  • We'll bring you facts. The facts, the truth, the news.

  • We'll try to bring it to you in context and with perspective.

  • When we see things that are not true, like that shiny object

  • I was talking about, we'll point that out.

  • And we'll cut through the disinformation.

  • Jimmy, there's so much of it. It's all over our feeds.

  • Sometimes people live in a world of just lies.

  • And when that's happening

  • and it rises to the public discourse, we'll point it out.

  • Look, there was a time when all newscasts

  • or most of them were just,

  • "Here are the facts, so you can decide for yourself.

  • Here's what's happening in the world

  • so you can plan for your family

  • and your business and your community and your church."

  • That's what we want to do.

  • We want to be a source of truth and honesty,

  • and we'll hold truth to power because that is our job.

  • The founding fathers didn't only put journalism

  • in the Constitution for no reason.

  • They put it there because it's important,

  • and journalists have a responsibility to get it right

  • and tell it straight, and that's what we're going to do.

  • -It premiers this Wednesday at 7:00 p.m.

  • You're going to be on every night.

  • Congrats on this and good luck with the new show.

  • I'll be watching.

  • -Thank you, Jimmy. Really appreciate it.

  • -Thanks again for coming on the show. Stay safe, please.

  • Shepard Smith, everybody. "The News with Shepard Smith"

  • premiers this Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. on CNBC.

  • Set your DVRs.

-Hi, Shepard. Welcome to "The Tonight Show."

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