Wednesday, 27 July 2016

Ed Hartwell Files For DIVORCE From Keshia Knight Pulliam!


We hoped it was a lie: Ed Hartwell Has Filed For Divorce From Wife Keshia Knight-Pulliam.

Aren’t they still newlyweds? Didn’t she just announce her pregnancy with a baby girl due later this year and show off her cute bump? But it seems the whirlwind romance of all-grown-up Rudy and a Real Househusband has come to a sad and unexpected demise. In this swipe right, on demand society the divorce filing was in our faces before even the woman it was addressed to. But the details of what happened between this couple can’t be our main concern. Our priority has to be the health of this mother-to-be and the baby girl growing inside her womb and sending them all the love their hearts can hold.

Keisha Knight-Pulliam’s baby is also listening and feeding off the energy of her surroundings and us, the society she will enter. If she could send us a message I’m sure it would include, “I can hear you.” She is not a faceless headline, but a woman in the making, already impacted by the lives and decisions of her parents. Resist your judgement of how she came to be and focus on her wellbeing and all the babies making their way to the world. We can send her love and be the light in our own relationships and families. Dear Baby Girl, we stand guard for your #blackgirlmagic as you prepare for your debut. You are loved.


Credits: http://www.essence.com/2016/07/27/get-out-keisha-knight-pulliams-business-baby-can-hear-you

France church attack: Normandy priest murdered by Isis attackers

Two jihadists murdered an 85-year-old priest , Father Jacques Hamel,celebrating Mass in a church in Normandy on Tuesday — with one forcing him to kneel near the altar before slitting his throat as the other captured the gruesome act on video, French officials said.


A nun, named as Sister Danielle,who escaped said she saw the attackers give a sermon in Arabic at the altar as they carried out their terror attack.
The two had fake explosives and used nuns as human shields, a prosecutors said, adding that the attackers claimed allegiance to ISIS and cried out, “Allahu ­akbar,” during the attack.
ISIS quickly claimed responsibility for the attack, in which the assailants stormed the church in the town of Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray and took the Rev. Jacques Hamel, two nuns and two worshippers hostage.
“They forced him to his knees, and obviously, he wanted to defend himself, and that’s when the drama began,” said one nun, who identified herself as Sister Danielle, The Guardian reported.
“They were filming themselves preaching in Arabic in front of the altar. It was a horror.”
Police killed the two terrorists as they came out of the church. One other person was arrested in connection with the attack, the 16-year-old younger brother of someone wanted by police for
trying to go to Syria or Iraq in 2015.
back by Turkish authorities and jailed in France. 12:30 p.m. The church was attacked at 9:40 a.m. is because we are a democracy.”


One of the attackers was identified as 19-year-old Adel Kermiche, a Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray resident who had tried to travel to fight for ISIS in Syria in 2015, BFM-TV reported. He was sent
He was released in March and allowed to live with his parents near the church while wearing an electronic bracelet that monitored his movement — allowing him to be out between 8:30 a.m. and
The church was one of several houses of worship that appeared on a hit list discovered on an ISIS suspect in April 2015, sources told the Express of the UK.
French President François Hollande, visiting the scene of the “ignoble terrorist attack,” said ISIS had declared war on France, which was already reeling from recent massacres at the hands of savage jihadists.
“We are confronted with a group, Daesh, which has declared war on us,” he said, using an alternative name for ISIS. “We have to wage war, by every means, [but through] upholding the law, which
ISIS claimed responsibility shortly after the attack. “The perpetrators of the Normandy church attack are soldiers of the Islamic State who carried out the attack in response to calls to target countries of the Crusader coalition,” the group said via its Amaaq news agency.
Pope Francis expressed his “pain and horror,” according to the Vatican.
The attack comes amid a spate of terror strikes in France, including Tunisian Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel’s truck rampage in Nice on July 14, when he plowed into Bastille Day revelers, killing 84 and injured more than 300.
After that attack, the nation extended a state of emergency until January, giving authorities extra powers to carry out searches and place suspects under house arrest.
France has been concerned about church attacks ever since Algerian student Sid Ahmed Ghlam, 24, was found with a hit list when he was arrested in Paris in April 2015 for allegedly killing a woman.
Authorities found documents about ISIS in his apartment and believe he had been in touch with a jihadist in Syria about an attack on a church.

Credits: http://nypost.com/2016/07/26/france-church-where-priest-was-killed-came-up-on-isis-hit-list/

We Happy Few: “A Survival Game” set in alternate reality English town called Wellington Wells!


We Happy Few is an indie survival horror video game developed and published by Compulsion Games. The game revolves around a person in a dystopian retro futuristic-fashioned world where everyone is controlled by a personality-altering pill called Joy. 



One of the first things I did in We Happy Few — which launches today as an early access game on Xbox One, Steam, and GOG — was eat an apple. My character needed food, and it was the only option I had. It also happened to be rotten, and eating it caused the game’s world to warp in a disturbing, nauseating fashion. I wasn’t hungry anymore, but I now had food poisoning — but like in much of We Happy Few, the solution was drugs. Take the right pill and everything is better.


We Happy Few is a survival game set in a retrofuturistic, alternate reality English town called Wellington Wells, a place that’s cute and dystopic in equal parts. Think quaint 1960s English village meets a Fallout-inspired urban decay; ruined homes sit nicely alongside colorful gardens. You may remember the game from the excellent trailer at E3 in June, which showed a character who spends his days combing through old newspapers in order to redact unhappy stories that might upset the general population. Every so often he pops a pill. Eventually he realizes that those drugs he’s been taking — called “joy” — are some kind of hallucinogen, that hide a dark, oppressive world under layers of cheer and charm.
The version of We Happy Few that’s out today — which is unfinished, but will be continually updated until the full release next year — lets you play through that same sequence featured in the trailer, but doesn’t go beyond that story-wise. You won’t be gaining many new insights into the world or how it got that way. Instead, the focus is on the survival portion of the experience. Once you finish that sequence you’re thrust into Wellington Wells without much in the way of guidance. You start out in a safe house that has a few supplies — some bandages, bits of metal that can be turned into a lock pick — but from there you’re on your own.
Like most survival games, We Happy Few forces you to keep track of a myriad of factors in order to keep yourself alive. You need to eat food and drink water, as well as find places to sleep when you’re tired. If you get sick, you can either wait for some time to pass — resulting in the hallucinogenic experience I had — or take a pill to sort yourself out. You also have health, of course, which goes down if the other residents of Wellington Wells attack you. And they probably will, because in order to get all of the things you need — food, medicine, scraps you can cobble into weapons — you’ll need to do a lot of scrounging and stealing. It’s a grim place that forces you to do whatever is necessary to survive, whether that’s eating rotten food or robbing a stranger in hopes of finding what you need. You can also just sit down on a bench and read the paper if you really want to.
Wellington Wells is a procedurally generated town — that is, it’s different each time you play — and at present it’s mostly filled with grumpy townsfolk who like to swear and ask for things, but will generally leave you alone if you don’t bother them. (Developer Compulsion Games says that the city “will continue to expand as development progresses.”) And while the current version of the game doesn’t have a proper narrative in place, you’ll still have a number of missions and quests to take on if you want. Some of these are small, like finding pills to help a man who can’t stop vomiting, or taking the risk to open a locked box that is clearly a trap. Others are much larger — I’m still in the process of trying to gather the right parts to repair what seems to be a bridge out of town.
These are all mostly fun, if simple, and there’s a nice tension between trying to explore as much as possible while also making sure that you don’t die of thirst or get too tired to properly function. It’s especially tense if you turn on permanent death, meaning you’ll have to start the game over from scratch if you die. There are also some great dynamic moments; at one point I got into a fistfight with a stranger because I was taking too long filling my canteen at a water pump (at least I think that’s why he punched me). In essence the early access version of the game shows that most of the nuts and bolts are in place — systems like combat work just fine, and the crafting appears to have a good amount of depth. But it also highlights just how important narrative will be for the final product. Without the impetus of learning more about this bizarre, fascinating world, I found myself getting bored after a few hours. Just staying alive wasn’t enough of a hook, and I quickly ran out of interesting things to do.
Of course, there’s plenty of time to add all of that in, as We Happy Few isn’t expected to be complete until some time next year. This early version is mostly just a taste — it gives you an idea of the world, and what exactly you’ll be doing while you’re in it. What’s available at present may not be enough to keep you busy for long, but it shows the game is on the right track, and it’s a solid foundation to build on with future updates.
And if you get bored, you can always pop a few joy and see what happens.

Credits: http://www.theverge.com/2016/7/26/12279698/we-happy-few-preview-xbox-one-pc


Thursday, 21 July 2016

Shannen Doherty Shares Touching Photos of shaved head during Cancer Battle


Shannen Doherty turned to Instagram to chronicle the latest step in her battle against breast cancer Tuesday night, sharing photos of friend and model Anne Kortright-Shilstat shearing the actress’ locks.
Doherty, who started her career as a child actor in the 1980s and became a cultural phenomenon with her portrayal of Brenda Walsh in “Beverly Hills 90210,” has been fighting breast cancer since March 2015.
The news of Doherty’s diagnosis came to light in August 2015, when the actress sued her former manager and management firm for, among other things, failing to pay her Screen Actors Guild medical insurance premiums for the 2014 coverage year, resulting in Doherty’s coverage being canceled. In the suit, Doherty said that because she was unable to re-enroll in insurance benefits until 2015, she was unable to see a doctor until March 2015, when she was then diagnosed with "invasive breast cancer metastatic to at least one lymph node” that spread while uninsured the previous year.
Rosa Elizabeth Doherty joined her daughter and Kortright-Shilstat for the head shaving ceremony and Doherty documented the preparations, which included chocolates, a razor and a cupcake pan.
The rest of Doherty’s photos from the process are in black and white and document a six-step process, beginning with a picture of Rosa Elizabeth Doherty hugging her daughter from behind before the shaving begins. 

The images that follow range from silly to serious, culminating in a shot of Doherty in profile, head half-shaven, skin covered with stray hairs not yet wiped away.














Tuesday, 19 July 2016

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Khloe Kardashian Explains Why She Lashed Out at Chloe Grace Moretz & slams her with X-rated photo!

Khloe Kardashian, 32, and Chloe Grace Moretz, 19, got into a bit of a Twitter war Sunday night after Moretz seemingly criticized Kim Kardashian for releasing the footage of Taylor Swift and Kanye West having a discussion about "Famous" prior to its release.


"Everyone in this industry needs to get their heads out of a hole and look around to realize what's ACTUALLY happening in the REAL world," Moretz wrote late Sunday. "Stop wasting your voice on something so petulant and unimportant."


Insulted for her older sister, Khloe responded to the teenage actress with two photos: one of Chloe looking off into the distance in a bikini and the other of a blond woman with her back turned to the camera being carried in the ocean on someone's back. In the latter shot, the woman's butt is exposed when the man carrying her accidentally pulls at her red bikini bottom. "Is this the a hole you're referring to @ChloeGMoretz ???" she tweeted. 

Chloe responded to the E! star by telling her she mistook her for someone else, and Ruby Rose also chimed in to defend theNeighbors 2 actress. "Yo Khloe I thought you were rad when I met you but this is awful and this is a 19 year old girl," Rose tweeted.
Now, Khloe wants everyone to know why she tweeted what she did. "I'm the last person to bully but have an animal instinct to protect and defend my family," she shared. "Refrain from commenting on my family and OUR business (and I will do the same). Now I hope everyone has a magical Monday! May peace be with you all."
Other stars, including Selena Gomez, Zendaya, Demi Lovato,Martha Hunt and more have made it clear whose side they are on in the escalating battle by either speaking out on social media or going the quiet route and subtly favoring tweets and photos that skew in favor of Taylor or Kim.

Zendaya, Demi Lovato and More Stars Tweets after Kim Kardashian and Taylor Swift's Latest Feud!!!



Though celebs like Selena Gomez and Chloë Grace Moretz have already shared their thoughts on the Kim Kardashian-Taylor Swift-Kanye West drama, the latest to chime in are Demi Lovato and Zendaya, utilizing some seriously strategic tweet fav'ing and un-fav'ing.

E! reported that Zendaya favorited (and then unfavorited) a few tweets, including one that said: "I'm glad Zendaya was never really down with that whole Taylor squad..." and another that featured a photo of her alongside Kim, Katy Perry, Taylor, and Selena with the caption: "Crop Zendaya out of this. She is pure." Right now, the faves are nowhere to be found, but screen shots are forever. (Though it should be noted that those can be faked, too.)
Demi Lovato also reportedly pulled a similar move, fav'ing a tweet that said, simply, "I LOVE KIM KARDASHIAN," with a series of laugh-cry emojis, on-point fingers, and other forms of emoji praise. No matter where their opinions stand, some people know how to keep their shade on the sly.

Credits:
http://www.teenvogue.com/story/demi-lovato-zendaya-kim-kardashian-taylor-swift-feud

Monday, 18 July 2016

Most Excruciating Moments from Donald Trump-Mike Pence ’60 Minutes’ Interview Dominates Morning’s RNC Coverage


Donald Trump and Mike Pence sat down with CBS's Lesley Stahl on Sunday night -- 
the duo's first joint interview since the real estate mogul officially named the Indiana governor as his running mate on Friday.  The interview, which aired on "60 Minutes," was a Trump tour de force. Also, Pence was there. 
To Watch Video Go To:
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/60-minutes-trump-pence-republican-ticket/


LESLEY STAHL:  First of all, Governor Pence, congratulations.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Thank you.
LESLEY STAHL: This is probably come as -- a huge, life-changing moment for you.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: It has. It's -- very, very humbling and I couldn’t be more honored to have the opportunity to run with, and serve with, the next president of the United States.
LESLEY STAHL: Before we actually talk about the politics, you know, there've been so many -- major world events very recently, in the last week. I don't know if you can remember the last time we have seen a world this much in chaos. You even said, "It's spinning apart." Are you ready for this world that we are facing today?
DONALD TRUMP: We're both ready. I've no doubt. We need toughness. We need strength. Obama's weak, Hillary's weak. And part of it is that; a big part of it. We need law and order. We need strong borders.
LESLEY STAHL: But all reactions to what's been going on -- aren't muscular. For example, look what happened in Turkey. There was a military coup in a democratic country; a NATO ally. How would you respond to that?
DONALD TRUMP: Well, as a president, I'm going to be -- you know, they've been an ally and I stay with our allies. They have been an ally. But that was a quick coup. I was actually surprised to see how well it was handled. And you know who really handled it? The people. So, I mean, we can say what we want, but the people handled it. When they surrounded the army tanks -- And without the people, you would've never had it. The military would've taken over.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: But I truly do believe that the larger issue here is declining American power in the world. I truly do believe that history teaches that weakness arouses evil and whether it be the horrific attack in France, the inspired attacks here in the United States, the instability in Turkey that led to a coup. I think that is all a result of a foreign policy of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama that has led from behind and that has sent -- an -- an inexact, unclear message about American resolve. One of the reasons why I said yes in a heartbeat to run with this man, is because he embodies American strength, and I know that he will provide that kind of broad-shouldered American strength on the global stage as well.
LESLEY STAHL: Let's -- let's talk about what happened in Nice, horrendous carnage, horrible, of innocents.
DONALD TRUMP: Horrible.
LESLEY STAHL: Horrible. You said you would declare war against ISIS. What exactly do you have --
DONALD TRUMP: It is war. By the way, it is war.
LESLEY STAHL: No, but does that -- when you say, "Declare war," do you want to send American troops in there? Is that what you mean?
DONALD TRUMP: Look, we have people that hate us. We have people that want to wipe us out; we're going to declare war against ISIS. We have to wipe out ISIS. These are people that --
LESLEY STAHL: With troops on the ground?
DONALD TRUMP: I am going to have very few troops on the ground. We're going to have unbelievable intelligence, which we need; which, right now, we don't have. We don't have the people over there. We are going to use --
LESLEY STAHL: You want to send Americans --
DONALD TRUMP: Excuse me -- and we're going to have surrounding states and, very importantly, get NATO involved because we support NATO far more than we should, frankly, because you have a a lot of countries that aren't doing what they're supposed to be doing. And we have to wipe out ISIS. And speaking of Turkey, Turkey is an ally. Turkey can do it by themselves. But they have to be incentivized. For whatever reason, they're not. So we have no choice.
LESLEY STAHL: But I still don't know if you're going to send troops over --
DONALD TRUMP: Very little. I'm going to --
LESLEY STAHL: But declare war --
DONALD TRUMP: -- get neighboring states and I'm going to get -- we are going to get NATO; we're going to wipe 'em out. We're going to --
LESLEY STAHL: But declare war?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Lesley --
LESLEY STAHL: What does that mean --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: This is -- this is the kind -- this is the kind of leadership that America needs and it --
LESLEY STAHL: But what --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: and it begins with deciding to destroy the enemies of our freedom.
LESLEY STAHL: How?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: And how we do that? I have every confidence. You -- you remember I served on the Foreign Affairs Committee. And I'm very confident that when Donald Trump becomes president of the United States, he'll give a directive to our military commanders, bring together other nations, and we will use the enormous resources of the United States to destroy that enemy
DONALD TRUMP: Now look, we are going to get rid of ISIS, big league. And we're going to get rid of 'em fast. And we're going to use surrounding states. We're going to use NATO, probably. And we're going to declare war. It is war. When the World Trade Center comes tumbling down, with thousands of people being killed, people are still -- I have friends that are still --
(OVERTALK – suffering the effects)
LESLEY STAHL: But we did go to war, if you remember. We went to Iraq.
DONALD TRUMP: Yeah, you went to Iraq, but that was handled so badly. And that was a war -- by the way, that was a war that we shouldn't have entered because Iraq did not knock down — excuse me
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: Your running mate --
(OVERTALK)
DONALD TRUMP: Iraq did not --
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: voted for it
DONALD TRUMP: I don't care.
LESLEY STAHL: What do you mean you don't care that he voted for?
DONALD TRUMP: It's a long time ago. And he voted that way and they were also misled. A lot of information was given to people
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: But you’ve harped on this.
DONALD TRUMP: But I was against the war in Iraq from the beginning
LESLEY STAHL: Yeah, but you’ve used that vote -- of Hillary's that was the same as -- Governor Pence
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: -- as the example of her bad judgment.
(OVERTALK)
DONALD TRUMP: Many people have, and frankly, I'm one of the few that was right on Iraq.
LESLEY STAHL: Yeah, but what about he -- (OVERTALK)?
DONALD TRUMP: He's entitled to make a mistake every once in a (LAUGH) while.
LESLEY STAHL: But she's not? Okay, come on --
(OVERTALK)
DONALD TRUMP: But she's not --
LESLEY STAHL: She's not?
DONALD TRUMP: No. She’s not.
LESLEY STAHL: Got it.
LESLEY STAHL: I have to move on or we're never going to find out why he chose you. (LAUGHTER) Why did you pick him? You had other candidates--
(OVERTALK)
DONALD TRUMP: Okay, I did. I had a a lot of people that wanted it; a lot more people than anybody --
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: That came to you and begged you for it?
DONALD TRUMP: That called me and came to me and wanted it badly. And you know, the press didn't report that. The press said, "Well, maybe he's having hard time picking --"
LESLEY STAHL: Well, what about the governor? Did he want it like that?
DONALD TRUMP: I actually brought it up to him.
LESLEY STAHL: Okay.
DONALD TRUMP: I got to know him during the -- when I was in Indiana during the primaries, and I did very well in Indiana, like I did just about everywhere else in all fairness. But -- (LAUGH) I got to know him very well and I gained great respect for him. And I looked at the numbers, meaning the financials, which we would say in business.
But I looked at the numbers. Unemployment? What a great job he did. Jobs? What a great job he did. Triple-A rating on his bonds.
LESLEY STAHL: -- but you went to him and said --
DONALD TRUMP: I did --
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: Would you want to be considered --
DONALD TRUMP: I broached it
LESLEY STAHL: He didn’t --
LESLEY STAHL: And then he said, "I -- I really want it." So why did you pick him?
DONALD TRUMP: I would say that he thought about it a little bit. And about two seconds later, he called me, (LAUGH) with his incredible wife, and said --
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: That I'd like to be -- but wha t--
(OVERTALK)
DONALD TRUMP: Like many others.
LESLEY STAHL: How does he help you? How does he help you win in terms of groups of people? And what is your weakness that he compensates for and so forth --
(OVERTALK)
DONALD TRUMP: Well, I went for the quality individual rather than I'm going to win a state, because I'm doing very well in Indiana, and I guess I'm a lot up. And I think I'm going to win Indiana. I have a great relationship and Bobby Knight helped me so much with Indiana. Indiana's a great place; great state.
LESLEY STAHL: Why didn’t you pick him?
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: No, I'm joking -- moving on
(OVERTALK)
DONALD TRUMP: He would've been very good. (LAUGH) But he's a terrific guy. But -- but I really like him as an individual.
LESLEY STAHL: So you must've considered, obviously, by the reaction to your choice, a lot of the conservatives are very happy.
DONALD TRUMP: Very happy.
LESLEY STAHL: Was that part of the --
(OVERTALK)
DONALD TRUMP: Yes, it was party unity. I'm an outsider. I am a person that used to be establishment when I'd give them hundreds of thousands of dollars. But when I decided to run, I became very anti-establishment because I understand the system --
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: Is he establishment?
DONALD TRUMP: -- than anybody else. He's very establishment, in many ways, and that's not a bad thing. But I will tell you --
LESLEY STAHL: That’s kind of interesting --
DONALD TRUMP: -- I have seen more people that, frankly, did not like me so much, and now they're saying, "What a great pick." You see the kind of reaction. He -- he has helped bring the party together. I understand. Look, I got more votes than anybody, but I also understand there's a faction --
LESLEY STAHL: Is it already unified, do you think?
DONALD TRUMP: I think it's very close to unified. And I will say --
LESLEY STAHL: Just because of this pick?
DONALD TRUMP: No. I think it's be-- I think it was much more unified than people thought. You saw that with the recent vote where we won in a landslide. You saw that with the big vote, the primary vote. I think it's far more unified than the press lets on. But having Governor Mike Pence has really -- people that I wasn't necessarily liking or getting along are loving this pick, because they have such respect for him
LESLEY STAHL: And that was (UNINTEL)--
DONALD TRUMP: And the party unity is okay. You know, I think it's okay to say I picked somebody, because I -- as one of the things. But I really believe the main reason I picked him is the incredible job he's done. Just look at the economics of Indiana --
LESLEY STAHL: (UNINTEL) Indiana--
DONALD TRUMP: -- and what's going on.
LESLEY STAHL: But what about the chemistry between you two? You don't really know each other that well. You’re -- at least I've read, a very low-key, very religious, you're a brash new Yorker --
DONALD TRUMP: Religious.
LESLEY STAHL: Religious?
DONALD TRUMP: Religious --
LESLEY STAHL: Are you?
DONALD TRUMP: yeah, religious.
LESLEY STAHL: -- you wouldn't --
DONALD TRUMP: Hey, I won the evangelicals. The evangelicals --
LESLEY STAHL: That doesn't --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: You know, nobody thought --
DONALD TRUMP: -- well, I think it means a lot. I don't think they think I'm perfect, and they would get up and they would say, "You know, he's not perfect," but --
LESLEY STAHL: They’d point to the --
DONALD TRUMP: -- they like me --
LESLEY STAHL: -- divorces --
DONALD TRUMP: -- but I won -- I won states with evangelicals that nobody thought I'd even come close to --
LESLEY STAHL: Well, that's true --
DONALD TRUMP: -- and I won --
LESLEY STAHL: --so you didn't (UNINTEL)--
DONALD TRUMP: -- with landslides --
LESLEY STAHL: -- need him for the evangelicals?
DONALD TRUMP: I think it helps. But I don't think I needed him, no, because -- I won with evangelicals.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: But I think we have more in common —
LESLEY STAHL: Yeah, tell me --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- than --
LESLEY STAHL: -- what you think you have in common.
DONALD TRUMP: what might be immediately obvious.
LESLEY STAHL: Besides issues. Values and things like that.
DONALD TRUMP: I think we will have very, very good chemistry. I feel that. And I can feel that pretty early on. I don't think you need to be with somebody for two years to find that out. My feeling is --
LESLEY STAHL: Your gut feeling.
DONALD TRUMP: I knew him during the primaries, during many trips to Indiana, I’d be with him. I think we have a great chemistry.
LESLEY STAHL: I want to ask you though about something you've said about negative campaigning.
DONALD TRUMP: Yeah.
LESLEY STAHL: You said negative campaigning is wrong, and a campaign ought to demonstrate the basic decency of the candidate.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Right.
LESLEY STAHL: With that in mind, what do you think about -- your running mate's campaign and the tone and the negativity of it?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I think this is a good man who's been talking about the issues the American people care about.
LESLEY STAHL: But name-calling?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: In that --
LESLEY STAHL: "Lyin' Ted?"
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- in the essay that I wrote a long time ago, I said campaigns ought to be about something more important than just one candidate's election. And -- and this campaign and Donald Trump's candidacy has been about the issues the American people care about.
LESLEY STAHL: -- but what about --
DONALD TRUMP: Lesley, Lesley
LESLEY STAHL: -- the negative side? He apologized for being a negative --
DONALD TRUMP: We're different people. I understand that. I'll give you an example. Hillary Clinton is a liar. Hillary Clinton -- that was just proven --
LESLEY STAHL: That's --
DONALD TRUMP: -- last week.
LESLEY STAHL: -- that's negative --
DONALD TRUMP: Hillary Clinton --
LESLEY STAHL: By the way --
DONALD TRUMP: -- you better believe it. Hillary Clinton is a crook.
LESLEY STAHL: That's negative --
DONALD TRUMP: I call her "Crooked Hillary." She's crooked Hillary. He won't -- I -- I don't -- I didn't ask him to do it, but I don't think he should do it because it's different for him.
LESLEY STAHL: But -- he --
DONALD TRUMP: He's not that kind of a --
LESLEY STAHL: He probably --
DONALD TRUMP: -- person. We're different people --
LESLEY STAHL: -- don't you think he --
DONALD TRUMP: -- to me she's --
LESLEY STAHL: -- thinks that's --
DONALD TRUMP: -- Crooked Hillary.
LESLEY STAHL: -- wrong?
DONALD TRUMP: I don't think he should use that term. I've never said one way or the other. But to him, I don't think it would sound right, but he will say how dishonest she is by going over the facts.
LESLEY STAHL: But would you go to him -- let's say you won, you're the vice president, your office is, I assume, down the hall, and you go in and you say, "You know, you shouldn't be saying -- name-calling." Would you do that? Would you go in and say, "You crossed the line, I think you should apologize?"
<p">LESLEY STAHL: Would you do something like that?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Look, I --
LESLEY STAHL: He's laughing.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- it's probably -- it's -- it's probably --
LESLEY STAHL: It's okay.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- obvious to people that our styles are different. But I promise you, our vision is exactly the same.
LESLEY STAHL: No, but would you --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: And let me be --
LESLEY STAHL: -- will --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- clear --
LESLEY STAHL: -- will you answer that? Would you go in --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Well the -- one of the things I found out about this man is he appreciates candor. And --
LESLEY STAHL: So you would go in --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- I -- I --
DONALD TRUMP: I'd like him to if he thinks I was doing something wrong --
LESLEY STAHL: Would you listen --
DONALD TRUMP: -- just say --
LESLEY STAHL: -- to him --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Yeah.
LESLEY STAHL: -- if he said you --
DONALD TRUMP: Absolutely --
LESLEY STAHL: -- crossed the line.
DONALD TRUMP: -- absolutely. I might not apologize. You know, you said apologize, but --
LESLEY STAHL: I did say apologize.
DONALD TRUMP: but -- I might not do that, but (LAUGHTER) -- I would absolutely want him to come in -- if he thinks I'm doing something wrong, Mike, I would want him to come in and say, really, you're doing, you gotta -- and that's okay. I accept that from my consultants and my people and  If Mike came in and told me, you know, "I think you should do this or that —
LESLEY STAHL: back off that
DONALD TRUMP: I would listen and very likely listen to him.
LESLEY STAHL: Do you think John McCain is not a hero because he was captured?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I have a great deal of respect for John McCain, and --
LESLEY STAHL: Do you think he went too far?
DONALD TRUMP: You could say yes. I -- that's okay.
DONALD TRUMP: that one, you could say yes, I mean, you're not — it’s fine -- hey, look, I like John McCain. But we have to take care of our vets.
LESLEY STAHL: No, but I want to know if --
DONALD TRUMP: Okay, but I'm just --
LESLEY STAHL: -- Mr. Pence would go in and --
DONALD TRUMP: -- I’m just saying, that's --
LESLEY STAHL: -- say to you
DONALD TRUMP: -- why not that many people are that upset --
LESLEY STAHL: what are you -- what did you say? You know, would you do something like that?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I -- I promise you that when the circumstances arise where I have a difference on policy or on presentation, I -- I -- I have -- I can tell you in my heart, I know -- I would have no hesitation, were I privileged to be vice president, to walk into the president's office, close the door, and share my heart. And I also know this good man would listen, and has -- and has the leadership qualities to draw from the people around him.
LESLEY STAHL: Let's talk about -- some of the issues. Because there seems to be some daylight between you two, and we can just tick -- go quickly through these. Immigration. Mr. Trump, you have called for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States. Do you agree with that?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I do. In fact, in Indiana we -- suspended the Syrian refugee program in the -- in the wake of the terrorist attack. We have no higher priority than the safety and security of the people of this country, and -- and Donald Trump --
LESLEY STAHL: Now --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: --i s right to --
LESLEY STAHL: -- in December --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- articulate that view.
LESLEY STAHL:-- in December you tweeted, and I quote you, "Calls to ban Muslims from entering the U.S. are offensive and unconstitutional."
DONALD TRUMP: So you call it territories. Okay?  We're going to do territories. We're going to not let people come in from Syria that nobody knows who they are. Hillary Clinton wants 550 percent more people to come in than Obama --
LESLEY STAHL: So you --
DONALD TRUMP: -- who doesn't know what he's --
LESLEY STAHL: -- so you're changing --
DONALD TRUMP: -- so we're going to --
LESLEY STAHL: -- your position.
DONALD TRUMP: -- no, I -- call it whatever you want. We'll call it territories, okay?
LESLEY STAHL: So not Muslims?
DONALD TRUMP: You know -- the Constitution -- there's nothing like it. But it doesn't necessarily give us the right to commit suicide, as a country, okay? And I'll tell you this. Call it whatever you want, change territories, but there are territories and terror states and terror nations that we're not going to allow the people to come into our country. And we're going to have a thing called "Extreme vetting." And if people want to come in, there's going to be extreme vetting. We're going to have extreme vetting. They're going to come in and we're going to know where they came from and who they are.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: You just asked me -- if I'm comfortable with that --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- and I am. What -- what Donald --
LESLEY STAHL: You're on the same --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: --(UNINTEL) which --
LESLEY STAHL: -- page on that?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- clearly -- clearly this man is not a politician. He doesn't speak like a politician --
LESLEY STAHL: He’s done pretty well.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- he -- he speaks from his --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- heart --
DONALD TRUMP: Is that a good thing? I think that's a good thing.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- he speaks from his heart. And --
LESLEY STAHL: Well, I --
DONALD TRUMP: Well, I -- I speak from my heart and my brain. Just so we understand (LAUGHTER).
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Right.
DONALD TRUMP: This is maybe more important.
LESLEY STAHL: -- Let's go to trade. You have voted for every trade agreement when you were in Congress --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I have.
LESLEY STAHL: -- that came before you. You’re supporting the Trans-Pacific Partnership that Mr. Trump says would rape this country. Now, are you going to be able to go out and campaign in support of his protectionist positions?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I support free trade, and so does Donald Trump.
LESLEY STAHL: Not really --
DONALD TRUMP: I do. I’m free trade, but I want to make good deals. No, no, I'm all for free --
LESLEY STAHL: You’ve talked
DONALD TRUMP: -- trade. You --
LESLEY STAHL: -- about --
DONALD TRUMP: -- know I'm not an isolationist. A lot of people think because I want to make good deals --
LESLEY STAHL: You want to undo --
DONALD TRUMP: -- these are stupid people --
LESLEY STAHL: -- these --
DONALD TRUMP: -- wait a minute Lesley, these are stupid people that think that. I want to make great deals for our country. We have deals like the deal signed by Bill Clinton, NAFTA, one of the worst things that ever happened to this country in terms of trade, in terms of economics.
LESLEY STAHL: What do you think about NAFTA?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE:  You're absolutely right. I've supported free trade throughout my career. But --
LESLEY STAHL: Okay.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- the truth of the matter is NAFTA has provisions in that law that call for it to be reviewed, that have never been -- never been -- initiated. What -- what I hear Donald Trump saying is let's -- let's look at these trade agreements and reconsider them and renegotiate them. And --
LESLEY STAHL: And you're okay with --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- with regard to --
LESLEY STAHL: -- that?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- and with regard to other trade agreements, we’ve talked about this. I-- I really do believe when the American people elect one of the best negotiators in the world as president of the United States, we would do well --
DONALD TRUMP: We're going to bring back jobs --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- to negotiate individually -- with countries.
DONALD TRUMP:  We're going to bring back our jobs, we're going to bring back our wealth, we're going to take care of our people. Very simple.
LESLEY STAHL: Okay. More issues. Waterboarding. Mr. Trump wants to bring back waterboarding, and quote, "A hell of a lot more." Are you comfortable with bringing back waterboarding?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I don't think we should ever tell our enemy what our tactics are.
LESLEY STAHL: But what about that? What --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I don't --
LESLEY STAHL: -- about -- he's publicly --
DONALD TRUMP: I like that answer.
LESLEY STAHL: -- said that --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I don't think we should -- I -- I think --
LESLEY STAHL: But are you okay with the idea of --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- I think --
LESLEY STAHL: -- waterboarding?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- I think enhanced interrogation saved lives.
LESLEY STAHL: And you're okay with --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I --
LESLEY STAHL: -- that?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- what I'm okay with -- what I'm okay with is protecting the American people. What I'm okay with is when people have the intent to come to this country and c-- take American lives, that -- that we are -- or that -- that we are prepared to do what's necessary to gain the information to protect the people of this country--
DONALD TRUMP: But Lesley, let’s step further. We have an enemy, ISIS and others, who chop off heads, who drown people in steel cages and we can't do waterboarding --
LESLEY STAHL: Okay, but, but why --
DONALD TRUMP: -- okay, they're not playing --
LESLEY STAHL: -- would you use their --
DONALD TRUMP: -- under (UNINTEL) because you know --
LESLEY STAHL: -- techniques?
DONALD TRUMP: -- what, those techniques get information. I don't care what anyone says.
LESLEY STAHL: Are you agreeing with him?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I am --
DONALD TRUMP: And get information --
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- what I --
DONALD TRUMP: -- using those things.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: -- what I can tell you is enhanced information gleaned information that saved American lives and, I was informed, prevented incoming terrorist attacks on this country from being successful. The American people expect the president of the United States to be prepared to support action to protect the people of this nation, and I know Donald Trump will.
LESLEY STAHL: Have you answered me?
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I have.
LESLEY STAHL: Let's talk about the convention. You're a showman. What are you going to do to keep it (CHUCKLE) from being a snooze-o-rama, as some have happened.
DONALD TRUMP: Well, I think we're going to have an exciting time. We've got some wonderful speakers. We have some very talented people. My family's going to speak.
LESLEY STAHL: Worried about violence outside? This is -- an open-carry state. People can carry guns. There'll be demonstrators. They've already said they're going to carry assault rifles. Are you worried? And would you call on people not to carry their guns?
DONALD TRUMP: I have great faith in law enforcement. If they don’t want to take their guns, I think that's fantastic. But I have great confidence in law enforcement. The police like Donald Trump. It's law and order. And I have great confidence that they will do a great job.
LESLEY STAHL: There’s no question in anybody's mind that you want to win this election. I don't think anyone would doubt that. But what about being president? Do you really want to be president of the United States?
DONALD TRUMP: I want to make America great again. Honestly. I want to make Am-- I'm not doing this because -- I'm sacrificing tremendous things. I could be doing other things. It's lovely to sit down with you and be grilled. That's okay. But I could be doing other things right now. And I have some of the greatest properties in the world. I could be out there --
LESLEY STAHL: Would you rather be out there?
DONALD TRUMP: I tell you what. I’ve really enjoyed this process. I've gotten to know the people of this country. I've gotten to know places that I didn't know, that I read about, but I didn't know. I've also gotten to see the problems. And it's a movement.
DONALD TRUMP:  Now, when you ask me the question, do I want to be?
LESLEY STAHL: Yeah.
DONALD TRUMP: I want to be for one reason. I want to make America safe again, and I want to make America great again. That's why I'm doing this. And I love it.
LESLEY STAHL: And you want to govern? I mean it --
DONALD TRUMP: I do want to govern.
LESLEY STAHL: It is different --
DONALD TRUMP: I do --
LESLEY STAHL: -- building a movement--
DONALD TRUMP:  I govern my -- I --
LESLEY STAHL: -- and than -- going in there with the nitty gritty and --
LESLEY STAHL: -- all that tough decision-making.
DONALD TRUMP: Sure. No, no I want to govern
LESLEY STAHL: Okay, this is my absolute final question.
DONALD TRUMP: Okay.
LESLEY STAHL: You're not known to be a humble man. But I wonder --
DONALD TRUMP: I think I am, actually humble. I think I'm much more humble than you would understand.
LESLEY STAHL: As you think about -- prospect of running this country in these tough times where the world is spinning apart -- are you awed? Are you intimidated? Are you humbled by the enormity of this?
DONALD TRUMP: You just said it best.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Mmm.
DONALD TRUMP: In a world that's spinning apart. That's what I'm thinking of. I'm not thinking of, "Oh gee, isn't this wonderful? Isn't this great what I've done?" I've had people that said, "It doesn't matter if you win or lose, what you've done has never been done before. You're going to go down in the history books."
You know what I say to 'em?" I say, "You're wrong." I will consider it, 'cause I funded my own primaries, I'm funding now a lot of this campaign. I'm putting in, you know -- I've spent $55 million in the primaries. I'm spending a fortunate now. I’ll tell you, it is spinning. Our world is spinning out of control. Our country's spinning out of control. That's what I think about. And I'll stop that.
(OVERTALK)
LESLEY STAHL: Not-- humbled or-- awe.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: I can say to 'ya -- what --
LESLEY STAHL: Go ahead.
GOVERNOR MIKE PENCE: Talking with him in private settings, I love the words you used because this man is awed with the American people, and he is not intimidated by the world. And Donald Trump, this good man, I believe, will be a great president of the United States.
DONALD TRUMP: I love what he just said.

Credit:https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/07/18/donald-trump-is-way-more-humble-than-you-could-possibly-understand/