Wednesday night, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump take the stage in Las Vegas for their third and final presidential debate – and they’re meeting in the midst of a slew of controversies.

First, there was a leaked Access Hollywood video where Trump made lewd comments about women; then nine women came forward and accused Trump of sexual assault; Wikileaks released internal documents that were troubling for Clinton; and Trump is now campaigning against fellow Republicans as much as his opponent. (And let’s face it, the word “first” might not be entirely accurate up there.)

But Public Policy Polling director Tom Jensen says all the headlines have not really changed the dynamic of the presidential race – and he says that shouldn’t be too surprising. The headlines are salacious, he says, but they’re not actually telling us anything new about the candidates that we didn’t already know. Besides, each candidate’s supporters hate the other candidate so much that very little at this point could change their minds. (Trump supporters, naturally, take this to an extreme: 40 percent of Trump supporters in Florida actually say they believe Hillary Clinton is a literal demon.)

Jensen discussed the state of the race last week with WCHL’s Aaron Keck.