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Too soon to call presidential race, young voters turned out less than expected

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iStock/simon2579 (WASHINGTON, D.C.) — Election Day has turned to night as polls across the country closed with some municipalities announcing they will resume tabulating Wednesday morning.

In the early hours of Wednesday morning, former Vice President Joe Biden briefly addressed the nation from Wilmington, Delaware, projecting confidence in the race and called for patience as the nation tabulates a record number of mail-in and absentee ballots.

President Donald Trump teased he would make a statement from the White House, which took place an hour later.

For President Trump’s speech, which he made around 2:30 a.m. ET, he opened with a joke saying, “this is, without question, the latest news conference I ever had.”  The president made a fiery 10 minute speech, saying that “a group of very sad people” are trying to steal the election, which he called “a fraud” and vowed he would go to the Supreme Court to “have all voting to stop.”

As for the states that are already accounted for, President Trump is projected to win Iowa, Florida, Ohio, Idaho, Utah, Kansas, Missouri, Louisiana, South Carolina, the Dakotas, Alabama, Arkansas, West Virginia, Tennessee, Indiana, Oklahoma, Kentucky, Texas and Nebraska.

Meanwhile, former Vice President Joe Biden is projected to win Virginia, New Mexico, California, Illinois, New Hampshire, Colorado, New York, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Vermont, Minnesota and the District of Columbia.

As of 1:45 A.M. ET, Biden leads with 220 electoral votes while President Trump has 213 — the winner requires 270 votes to win.

Pennsylvania, a major battleground state, is projected to wrap up the count by Friday before the election, but did not provide an exact timeline. Philadelphia will continue counting absentee ballots, with the next updates coming at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

In Michigan, only 16 percent of the early vote is in with 49 percent of the expected vote in as of early Wednesday, with Tracy Wimmer, a spokesperson for Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson telling ABC News, “We’re still looking at some time tomorrow, but we really don’t have a guess of when.”

One of the most decentralized election systems in the country, Wisconsin state officials have repeatedly told ABC News that they expect full statewide results could come in the early hours of Wednesday morning

In the weeks leading up to Tuesday, at least 100 million early votes were cast. Nationally, voters have cast 73.4 percent of the total votes counted in the 2016 general election.

Hawaii and Texas have already surpassed their 2016 total and five other states — Montana, North Carolina, Georgia, New Mexico and Nevada — are close to doing the same.

Most surprisingly in the election however is, young voters did not increase their showing at polls, despite expert predictions.

The 18-29 year-olds and 30-44 year-olds make up the same percentage of the electorate as they did in 2016.

Those youngest voters are breaking toward Biden by much more than they did to Hillary Clinton in 2016, but among 30-44 year olds, Biden is only winning by about the same as Clinton. There are no major third-party candidates this year, while 10 percent of young people voted for a third-party candidate or gave no answer in exit polls.

Older voters, over 65, make up a similar percentage of the vote as they did in 2016, making up about 21 percent in preliminary exit polls compared to 20 percent in 2016.

There was concern that voting remotely for college kids who were not on campuses this year could be a factor, but after the protests this summer it is a surprising outcome.

By Megan Stone
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Too soon to call presidential race, young voters turned out less than expected

No Comments Country Music News

iStock/simon2579

Election Day has turned to night as polls across the country closed with some municipalities announcing they will resume tabulating Wednesday morning.

In the early hours of Wednesday morning, former Vice President Joe Biden briefly addressed the nation from Wilmington, Delaware, projecting confidence in the race and called for patience as the nation tabulates a record number of mail-in and absentee ballots.

President Donald Trump teased he would make a statement from the White House, which took place an hour later.

For President Trump’s speech, which he made around 2:30 a.m. ET, he opened with a joke saying, “this is, without question, the latest news conference I ever had.”  The president made a fiery 10 minute speech, saying that “a group of very sad people” are trying to steal the election, which he called “a fraud” and vowed he would go to the Supreme Court to “have all voting to stop.”

As for the states that are already accounted for, President Trump is projected to win Iowa, Florida, Ohio, Idaho, Utah, Kansas, Missouri, Louisiana, South Carolina, the Dakotas, Alabama, Arkansas, West Virginia, Tennessee, Indiana, Oklahoma, Kentucky, Texas and Nebraska.

Meanwhile, Biden is projected to win Virginia, New Mexico, California, Illinois, New Hampshire, Colorado, New York, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Vermont, Minnesota and the District of Columbia.

As of 1:45 A.M. ET, Biden leads with 220 electoral votes while President Trump has 213 — the winner requires 270 votes to win.

Pennsylvania, a major battleground state, is projected to wrap up the count by Friday before the election, but did not provide an exact timeline. Philadelphia will continue counting absentee ballots, with the next updates coming at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

In Michigan, only 16 percent of the early vote is in with 49 percent of the expected vote in as of early Wednesday, with Tracy Wimmer, a spokesperson for Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson telling ABC News, “We’re still looking at some time tomorrow, but we really don’t have a guess of when.”

One of the most decentralized election systems in the country, Wisconsin state officials have repeatedly told ABC News that they expect full statewide results could come in the early hours of Wednesday morning

In the weeks leading up to Tuesday, at least 100 million early votes were cast. Nationally, voters have cast 73.4 percent of the total votes counted in the 2016 general election.

Hawaii and Texas have already surpassed their 2016 total and five other states — Montana, North Carolina, Georgia, New Mexico and Nevada — are close to doing the same.

Most surprisingly in the election however is, young voters did not increase their showing at polls, despite expert predictions.

The 18-29 year-olds and 30-44 year-olds make up the same percentage of the electorate as they did in 2016.

Those youngest voters are breaking toward Biden by much more than they did to Hillary Clinton in 2016, but among 30-44 year olds, Biden is only winning by about the same as Clinton. There are no major third-party candidates this year, while 10 percent of young people voted for a third-party candidate or gave no answer in exit polls.

Older voters, over 65, make up a similar percentage of the vote as they did in 2016, making up about 21 percent in preliminary exit polls compared to 20 percent in 2016.

There was concern that voting remotely for college kids who were not on campuses this year could be a factor, but after the protests this summer it is a surprising outcome.

By Megan Stone
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jeffrey Dean Morgan's real-life wife Hilarie Burton to play Negan's wife Lucille in 'The Walking Dead'

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AMC(NEW YORK) — Jeffrey Dean Morgan is keeping it all in the family on his series The Walking Dead. His real-life wife, actress Hilarie Burton Morgan, tweeted the news that she’ll join the AMC show playing Lucille, the TV wife of her husband’s character Negan in a flashback episode. 

“Been pretty hard to keep this a secret,” Burton wrote about the reveal. “But I love working with @JDMorgan. I love watching him become #Negan and take on that swagger. And I love the @TheWalkingDead family. They’ve been a part of our family for ages and I’m so grateful for their kindness.”

The One Tree Hill veteran signed the post. “Xoxo #hereslucille.”

Fans of the show can tell you that one reason Negan was so attached to his infamous barbed wire bat — other than it’s handy for bashing people both living and undead — is that he named it after his wife, who died of cancer before the show’s zombie apocalypse. 

Burton will reportedly play the bat’s namesake in a throwback episode that’ll air early next year among six smaller-scale “bonus” episodes of the show’s already-wrapped season 10. 

The Morgans, who have two kids, recently collaborated on their home-brewed quarantine series Friday Night In with the Morgans.

By Stephen Iervolino
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Kyle MacLachlan brings back 'Twin Peaks' Agent Dale Cooper for damn good "Dreams" TikTok

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JC Olivera/WireImage(LOS ANGELES) — Ever since Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams” went viral on TikTok — thanks to the video of Nathan Apodaca swigging Ocean Spray Cran-Raspberry Juice and lip-syncing to the song while riding on a skateboard — thousands of people have tried their hand at it. Even current and ex-Fleetwood Mac members Mick Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham posted their own takes on the challenge.  Now actor Kyle MacLachlan has a strong entry for the title of “Most Creative” attempt.

MacLachlan brought back his most famous TV character — FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper from Twin Peaks — for his video. Wearing a blazer, dress shirt and glasses, McLachlan cruises along while “Dreams” plays and he sips what we assume is “damn fine” coffee from a Twin Peaks mug.

He then brings a miniature tape recorder up to his mouth — just like Cooper used to do. However instead of saying “Diane…” he starts lip-syncing to the Stevie Nicks-penned classic. 

He captioned the video “Damn good vibes only” — a play on Apodaca’s original video, which was captioned “Morning vibe.”

Fans loved it: One replaced “Dreams” in the video with the haunting Twin Peaks theme, while another made up some fake dialogue for McLachlan based on the things he used to say on Twin Peaks.

“Diane, it’s 7:30 A.M. on November 2nd. A BRISK morning,” the fan wrote. “The perfect morning for a damn fine cup of coffee. I’m currently skateboarding down a neighborhood street listening to Fleetwood Mac’s Rumors Damn, damn fine album.”

When a fan asked if he was actually on a skateboard, MacLachlan answered, “Pulled by tiny mice.”

By Andrea Dresdale
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Reba McEntire, Darius Rucker, Maren Morris & more to appear on ABC's 'Country Strong' pre-CMAs special

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ABC/Heidi GutmanABC has revealed the date for Country Strong 2020: Countdown to the CMA Awards

The annual, hour-long special, again hosted by Robin Roberts, will air November 10, the night before the CMA Awards ceremony.  This year’s show will observe how the COVID-19 pandemic impacted the country music industry and how it’s adapting and moving forward. 

2020 CMA Awards hosts Reba McEntire and Darius Rucker will appear, along with Luke Bryan,Maren Morris, Keith Urban, Mickey Guyton, Kelsea Ballerini, Dierks Bentley, Luke’s fellow American Idol judge Lionel Richie and many more. 

Darius will also moderate a roundtable conversation with rising stars Ashley McBryde, Jimmie Allenand Charlie Worsham. Additionally, he and Reba will offer insight into what viewers can expect from the show.

Country Strong 2020: Countdown to the CMA Awards airs at 10:01 p.m. ET on Tuesday, November 10.  The CMA Awards air live from Nashville the following night at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

By Cillea Houghton 
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.