In this week's Sunday Sitdown, "Aquaman" and "Game of Thrones" star Jason Momoa joins Willie Geist to talk about his latest action movie "The Wrecking Crew." Momoa opens up about growing up in the Midwest while identifying more with his Hawaiian roots and also reveals the lie he told at an open casting call to land the first role of his career. A crippling winter storm is on the move across the United States with nearly 200 million people from New Mexico to Maine caught up in the middle of bitter cold, dangerous ice and more than a foot of snow in some places. At least 23 states have declared an emergency as southerners shelter from freezing temperatures. NBC's Ryan Chandler reports for Sunday TODAY. Snow, sleet and freezing rain have battered Memphis, Tennessee, and now a city not accustomed to this kind of extreme winter weather is facing a dangerous layer of ice. NBC's Kathy Park reports for Sunday TODAY. About three inches of snows has already fallen in Washington, D.C., only half is what is still expected to fall throughout the day. Freezing rain could make for icy conditions and treacherous travel. Officials in DC, Maryland and Virginia are recommending everyone stay home. NBC's Ryan Nobles reports for Sunday TODAY from the Capitol Building. Up to a foot of snow is expected in New York City with even more north of the city. All three of the NYC-area major airports will be seeing hundreds of flight cancelations throughout the day. Mayor Zohran Mamdani has announced that students will still have school either virtually or in-person. NBC's Valerie Castro reports for Sunday TODAY. Conditions are continuing to deteriorate from the Northeast and as far south as the Gulf Coast as a massive winter storm moves across the United States. Cities like New York, Boston and Washington, D.C., are expected to see impossible travel and blizzard-like conditions. NBC's Angie Lassman tracks the latest forecast for Sunday TODAY. Famed climber Alex Honnold of "Free Solo" fame, scaled the Taipei 101 building in Taiwan with no ropes, no net and no parachute live on Netflix. Honnold took a selfie from the top of the spire after his successful climb of a building almost exactly the same height as New York's One World Trade Center, the tallest in the United States. Sunday TODAY's Willie Geist shares the Photo of the Week.
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