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  • We're back to work.

  • We were off for two weeks for summer vacation.

  • We send best wishes to those of you

  • who are or may be in the path of Hurricane Dorian.

  • They've ordered evacuations in Florida, Georgia,

  • North Carolina, South Carolina.

  • This is a big one.

  • This is no joke, this hurricane, unless, of course,

  • you're a part of the graphics team at Fox 5 in New York.

  • We'll have to wait and see what goes on with that.

  • But Dorian actually has more of a threat

  • for the Lesser Antilles over the next couple of days.

  • Forecast to see winds at around 60, 65 miles per hour.

  • A high-end tropical storm, perhaps a low-end--

  • JIMMY KIMMEL: Wow. - --hurricane.

  • [LAUGHTER]

  • Weathermen get very excited in these types of situations.

  • Anyway, it's good to be back.

  • You know, the most interesting take

  • on the storm, in my opinion, was not from a meteorologist.

  • It came from a random guy in Florida--

  • yes-- who believes that we could put a stop to these storms

  • if we'd just use the resources we already have.

  • Can't see how they haven't come up with some kind of way

  • to combat these storms yet.

  • They keep saying, two days ago, three days ago, oh, it's

  • at this, but it's going to hit all

  • this warm weather, all this warm weather and warm water.

  • We have a Navy.

  • Why don't the Navy come and drop ice in the warm water,

  • so that it can't get going as fast as it's going?

  • There's got to be ways to combat this instead of just

  • pointing at the thing and saying, well,

  • it's-- now it's getting worse.

  • Yeah, we know it's getting worse.

  • But you tell us, oh, it's the warm weather, oh, it's

  • the wind.

  • Well, we have an Air Force.

  • Drive some Air Force planes around to get the winds going

  • the opposite way, the Navy to go in circles

  • to fight the other way.

  • [CHEERING AND APPLAUSE]

  • That's the thing.

  • Sometimes the-- answer is right there in front of our face

  • waiting for a man in a crazy Hawaiian shirt

  • to alert us to it.

  • Trump just named him director of FEMA, by the way.

  • The president has been tweeting up a storm

  • about this storm, which he believes to be

  • the bigliest he's ever seen.

  • It's possibly the biggest I have--

  • I'm not sure.

  • I'm not sure that I've ever even heard of a Category 5.

  • I knew it existed.

  • And I've seen some Category 4s.

  • You don't even see them that much.

  • But the Category 5 is something that I don't know

  • that I've never even heard the term,

  • other than I know it's there.

  • OK, so he's never heard of a Category 5 hurricane

  • before, except for, well--

  • well, this was four months ago back in May.

  • I've just come from a stop at Tyndall Air Force Base,

  • where I saw the devastating effects

  • of that Category 5 hurricane.

  • Category 5.

  • I never heard about Category 5s before.

  • Category 5 is big stuff.

  • He'd never heard of it then, and he

  • said he'd never heard of a Category 5

  • about 10 different times when Maria hit Puerto Rico.

  • This is the fourth Category 5 since he's been president.

  • He has the memory and skin tone of a goldfish, this man.

  • But while this storm was a-brewin', the president

  • was a-golfin'.

  • He played round of golf at his club in Virginia on Saturday,

  • and another one yesterday.

  • But his press secretary defended the decision.

  • She said the president received hourly updates while he

  • was on the course golfing.

  • She says that like it sounds like a good thing.

  • You know, all this nonsense--

  • I noticed this while I was gone--

  • really sinks in when you're away from it for a while.

  • Since we left for vacation, the president

  • canceled the trip to Poland to monitor Dorian from his golf

  • course in Virginia, tweeted 514 times, tried to buy Greenland

  • and threw a fit when they wouldn't sell it,

  • suggested firing a nuclear missile at a hurricane,

  • announced he would be suing people who worked

  • for him for violating confidentiality agreements,

  • attacked Grace from "Will & Grace," Debra Messing,

  • predicted Sean Spicer will do great on "Dancing

  • with the Stars," congratulated Poland on the anniversary

  • of the Nazi invasion, fired his longtime assistant,

  • who reportedly got drunk and told journalists that Trump

  • doesn't like to be photographed with his daughter

  • Tiffany, because he believes her to be overweight,

  • and wished a happy birthday to Regis, which that I don't mind.

  • Happy birthday, Regis.

  • But this thing with Tiffany--

  • [APPLAUSE]

  • Oh, no, let's--

  • don't encourage him.

  • After the story about Tiffany broke, Trump, who, again, fired

  • his longtime assistant for this, Trump

  • was in the unique position of having to convince reporters

  • that even though he fired the woman for saying he didn't want

  • his daughter around, he had to tell

  • them he never said he didn't want his daughter around.

  • Here he is responding to the question,

  • have you spoken to Tiffany?

  • We have a call in.

  • She's going to be calling me back

  • as soon as I get to Camp David.

  • REPORTER: What are you going to tell her?

  • I'm going to say it's just absolutely false.

  • She's a wonderful person.

  • She's studied so hard.

  • She's a great student.

  • And she's just a great--

  • she's a great person.

  • So I look forward to talking to her.

  • I'll be talking to her as soon as I get--

  • and I love Tiffany.

  • Tiffany is a great person.

  • Thank you very much.

  • Poor Tiffany.

  • Her father shows more affection for Kim Jong-un than he does--

  • meanwhile, the vice president, Mike Pence, and his family

  • are in Ireland on official government business.

  • Just when you thought Ireland couldn't get any whiter,

  • in come the Pences.

  • And while they're in Ireland, they're

  • staying at the president's golf resort--

  • he has a golf resort in Doonbeg--

  • even though Doonbeg is 181 miles from Dublin,

  • which is where Pence is having his meetings.

  • Trump apparently suggested Pence stay at his hotel

  • while he's there.

  • And Pence said, woof, woof, which is his way of saying,

  • yes, I will.

  • And while some took exception to the vice president's choice

  • of hotel and the fact that the US government is paying

  • for rooms at a Trump-owned hotel,

  • Mike Pence had no comprehensible thoughts on that subject

  • at all.

  • REPORTER: Just to give you a chance to respond,

  • Democrats have criticized you today for staying at the Trump

  • property in Doonbeg.

  • They say you're enriching the president.

  • What's your response to that criticism?

  • It's wonderful to be back in Ireland for many reasons.

  • Ireland is so important to the United States of America

  • as a trading partner.

  • But in so many ways, for more than 30 million Americans,

  • Ireland is family.

  • And I'm one of them.

  • He's like a broken Teddy Ruxpin doll.

  • Do you think Mike Pence would eat

  • dog food if Trump told him to?

  • I bet he would.

  • But the vice president's visit to Doonbeg is historic.

  • It is the first time a Trump property has ever

  • stayed at a Trump property.

  • And so--

  • [CHEERING AND APPLAUSE]

  • That's not the only item of interest.

  • The White House deputy press secretary tweeted

  • about this trip last night.

  • This is good.

  • This is a real tweet from a senior official on the White

  • House communications team.

  • It refers to the fact that, you know,

  • the prime minister of Ireland is gay.

  • So this guy wrote, "For all of you who still think our VP is

  • anti-gay, I point you to his and the second lady's

  • schedule tomorrow, where they will join Taoiseach Leo

  • Varadkar and his partner Dr. Matthew Barrett

  • for lunch in Ireland."

  • So I guess that settles that.

  • You had lunch with gay people and didn't throw up.

  • That's-- if that isn't proof that he's open-minded--

  • [CHEERING AND APPLAUSE]

  • --what's he gotta do?

  • Pence, by the way, is traveling with his wife and his mother,

  • which that's got to be confusing, because he

  • calls his wife "Mother."

  • So what does he call his mother, "Wife?"

  • I don't know, "Snookems," perhaps?

We're back to work.

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