'Nightline' Daily Line, Sept. 7: Party's Over, New Jobs Report Out

5:41 p.m. ET: Gangnam Style!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Psy's hilarious, viral music video, "Gangnam Style," seems to be all anyone is talking about these days. But there is more to the South Korean rapper, whose real name is Jae-Sang Park, than funky dance moves and over-the-top confetti drops. Here are a few things you might not have known about "Gangnam Style."

2:43 p.m. ET: Here's a fun Friday story…

Credit: Getty Images

A new study has found that drinking two glasses of red wine a day can help lower blood pressure and reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease - but only if the alcohol has been removed.

What a buzzkill. But find out more HERE.

12:29 p.m. ET: Ah. We were wondering about that …

In his first interview since the infamous invisible Obama empty chair routine that transfixed the Republican National Convention last month, Clint Eastwood tells the Carmel Pine Cone newspaper in Carmel, Calif., that the Romney campaign didn't know what Eastwood was going to say, and that he didn't come up with the empty chair idea until he was about to go on stage.

Read ABC News' Z. Byron Wolf and Emily Friedman's full story HERE

Credit: Daniel Acker / Bloomberg / Getty Images

11:33 a.m. ET: Party's over, convention goers. The morning after President Obama wrapped up the Democratic National Convention, the latest monthly jobs report came in and the numbers were below economists' expectations.

Read the full anaylsis HERE

Did you miss the president's speech last night? Watch "Nightline" anchor Terry Moran's recap here:

10:10 a.m. ET: Inside the Democratic convention hall in Charlotte this week, the lobbyists and special interests took a rhetorical beating from the party that has tried to carry the mantle of Washington reform.

But outside the hall, lobbyists and their friends in Congress were the toast of Charlotte, just as they had been in Tampa during the Republican convention.

Read ABC News' Brian Ross's full report HERE

Sen. Pat Leahy, left, and lobbyist Tony Podesta at a party at Charlotte's Mint Museum during the Democratic convention. Credit: ABC News