tv The Late News CBS June 19, 2024 11:00pm-11:36pm PDT
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is glad it happened during the middle of the dinner rush. a naked intruder makes himself comfortable. >> he ate the banana sitting in the kitchen, refusing to leave. he is now like i need to sleep. >> that was after he took a shower. june gloom is back. hi, i'm sara donchey. baseball fans across the bay area and country are remembering one of the greatest players in history. hall of famer willie mays died at age 93. >> willie mays means a lot to people and san francisco it is just the baseball world.
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>> linked to baseball past. he lived for a long time. >> never be forgotten. forever be missed. >> tomorrow at o are racle park. fans can pay tribute. gates open at noon and admission is free and then starting at 4:15, fans can watch the cardinals giants game, broadcasted on the big screen at oracle. we are heading to birmingham to bring you live coverage of tomorrow's historic event. there say brand-new mural of the say hey kid in birmingham. he started his career at age 16, he signed with the new york giants three years later. now, mays died just before people celebrated june teenth. many locals are remembering what willie mays meant to the black community. people gathered to reflect on those that paved the way before
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them. >> reporter: this is only the second annual juneteenth celebration. here with her husband and two boys. she was in disbelief when she heard of mays'passing. >> the first thing i said oh, no, not willie. >> reporter: she not only admired mays from afar she works at a law firm that he frequented visited >> when he would come it was, he was so down-to-earth. he knew the gravity of what he carried, the weight of his legacy. he did not treat people like he was above them. >> reporter: jackie robinson was the first to say hey, kid, continue to keep the playing field open for black players. >> i play shortstop, center field, pitching and first base.
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>> it lets my kids, my young boys know that can be them, too. >> on this juneteenth. the message could not be clearer. lisa sanders and her daughter are celebrating the progress that has been made and the work still left to do. >> i am my ancestor's wildest dream. so if i, stuff that my ancestors was not able to have opportunity and freedom of. i am the dream to show it is everything diverse and everything they fought for in the past we are able to do today. >> reporter: paving the way for black poem today. there is a message for mays? rest in peace, willie. you will always be remembered. never forgotten. >> reporter: for much more on how the bay area is remembering willie mays head to our web soit kpix.com. breaking news -- website kpix.com. we have breaking news.
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several police and ambulances converged near lake merit where people were celebrating juneteenth tonight. grand and euclid, multiple people loaded up. we reached out to get more information as to what exactly happened to the people who seem to be injured here but as of right now we have not heard back from them. >> we also saw vibrant sunsets because of wildfire smoke drifting across the bay area. a air quality was extended. that smoke is coming from an exploding wildfire. the fire grew from 15,000 to 19,000 acres. firefighters have upped containment to 10%. so, darren, is the air quality supposed to be better tomorrow? >> reporter: it is supposed to be better, sara. not gone completely. in fact, you can see everything that you need to know about why we still have an
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issue with smoke tomorrow but why we are getting had upon in this time lapse. come in and take a close-up look at this. watch the marine layer there. you can see it streaming on shore. and that is showing you how we are getting cleaner air in here. look above it. all of the dark stuff in the sky, that is all smoke. you got the two players up here. the smoke is streaming in the bay at the higher elevations. down here, the marine layer intensified. it is surging onshore. it is helping to clear out the air down here at the lower levels. as ominous as the sky looked in the sunset from the big pile of mostly cloudy going over head, the air quality centers are doing okay. we are not done with this. tomorrow f we go back to the high-resolution forecast where we can pinpoint the smoke coming off of the sites fire and use what the model is able to say about how winds are going to be blowing tomorrow, watch where some of the smoke starts to come back from the higher levels of the
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atmosphere. here is the takeaway. air quality advisory tomorrow. probably going to be a lot like today. hazy through the second half of the day. air quality is going to be touch and go. not as bad as yesterday. we are getting upon here. you can still plan for the possibility of not over doing it outdoors tomorrow as long as there is that much smoke getting pulled our way. elevated or not. the bigger story is the warm up coming our way. the temperatures are about to jump going into the weekend. we will look at that coming up in the forecast in just a few minutes, sara, back to you. >> that is important. we will stay tuned for that. thank you. all evacuation orders have opinion lifted in sonoma county for the point fire. hundreds of people can go back home tonight. the fire burning is now 60% contained. it broke out on sunday and exploded because of how strong the winds were blowing at the time. two homes burned and the fire did spread to multiple vineyards, thankfully no one was hurt. one of the most popular
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restaurants on the peninsula in san bruno just opened up a second outpost only two months ago. it was just forced to close last night when a fire erupted right in the middle of of the dipper rush. one of the owners said before 8:00 a staff member spotted smoke before their smoke detector went off. then they saw fire burning behind their grill. >> the charcoal penetrated into the wall and the fire department came pretty quick. tore up the walls and was able to really extinguish it fast. >> the staff had to evacuate the entire restaurant. luckily nobody got hurt. the owner tells us it was a floorboard behind the grill that caught fire. he says he actually is grateful the fire started during dinner service because of what could of happened if everyone was gone. >> it was, you know, peak hour, full house, every table. we had a line outside. not the time for it to happen but we are
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happy it did. we would of closed at 9:00 p.m. and the fire could have been going on much longer if we were not there. really, just outpouring of support, you know, people tagging us on instagram, messaging us, you know, counsel members, people from the city. we just feel the love. we feel the community and we are really excited to get back. >> the owner told us they hope to reopen in the next 4-6 weeks. at the same time the restaurant has been closed for renovations, earned top 100 ranking on yelp. both locations serve up menu specializing from eastern mediterranean areas. earlier this week we showed you video of people climbing on top of a police patrol car and jumping on the windshield like it was a trampoline. tonight the police say they arrested two of the suspects the two men were both arrested in san juan. they will be booked into jail on charges including inciting a
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riot and felony vandalism. an intruder got too comfortable when he walked into a california home and left his clothes behind. cbs reporter that was not afraid to jump into dangerous flood waters to help. and these dogs are going paw to paw competing in an unorthodox beauty pageant here in the pay area
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. the next story is like a twisted version of goldilocks. a burbank man came home to find a naked guy eating his food and taking time to hop into the shower and clean himself up before the police got there. >> pushed him out. the guy asked for a place to sleep after eating. >> reporter: these friends retrace the steps a complete stranger, believed to be homeless, took after entering this home and yard. his roommate called him terrified asking him what to do >> are you scared? >> yeah. >> it is the first time it happening in these surroundings. >> reporter: wearing next to nothing, this man made himself at home using the bathroom, taking a shower, snacking while their stunned friend and room
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mate begged them to leave. afraid to leave him alone on the property their friend tried to keep his distance while pleading with the man >> he ate the banana sitting in the chair refusing to leave. he is like now i need to sleep. >> reporter: he office face time with his friend as it was happening >> when you were on the phone with him and seeing the guy were you like . >> i was like call 911 what are you doing. it is crazy. >> reporter: when the intruder went outside his friend locked the door saying he was scared by the man's back and intimidated to call the police. the stranger napped in the yard and stayed more than three hours. when their pal did call 911 officers arrived in no time and arrested the man on the sidewalk outside. no one was hurt. at least not physically. >> i would not imagine this kind of incident happening. >> it feels a little unsafe. especially with the incidents like this. we are definitely locking everything up. >> yeah, i will say. >> those guys are praising the
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police. a police helicopter was overhead less than a minute after their friend called 911. right now, tropical storm alberto is barreling towards mexico. it is bringing dangerous flooding to texas coastline. on rafts, rescuing people on their cars near corpus christi. he was not afraid to jump into the flood waters. >> yes, i feel this with my hand. i can feel that this is 86 degrees right now. that feels like bathtub temperature >> this used to be a street. right in the heart of corpus christi. on north beach. but now it looks more like a river. you can not even tell where the street stops and the bay begins. >> there is how bad the flooding is in surfside beach. the top of this abandoned car was almost submerged. we have seen people break out kayaks but someone decided it was the
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perfect time to use their unicorn floaty >> did you ever see the unicorn floaty? >> i don't know that i did. but i saw my fair share of tropical storms and flooding. >> oh, yeah, you shared those stories before. that part of the country. withy got our different types of headline making events. we are mildly experiencing one of them now. the smoke. we looked at that at the top of the newscast. i want to switch gears, first thing is first. tomorrow, an old friend is coming back with a little more intention than it had today. did you notice the marine layer this morning? searching it back in tomorrow. we are going to wake up tomorrow to june gloom. more than today. and, this morning it was pretty good. by 10:00, 11:00, this all melted back. just over just the peninsula. it gets everybody tomorrow morning >> and you can have a cold start. you may have noticed some of the numbers right now. they are quite already getting cold in the north bay valleys, let me get out of the way. you
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can pick this one out for now. that one is comfortable. if we come down low there are cities down hoar with numbers, covered by the fog tomorrow morning, lineuping it up. as the marine layer -- lining up. as the marine layer comes in. go up to petaluma and santa rosa. chilly there now. you will be in the 40s tomorrow morning as we start out. if we switch from morning lows to day time highs what we did today was the coolest day in the whole seven-day forecast. so, tomorrow, you will warm up, probably another 5, some of us 7-8 degrees. did not get out of the 50s all day. you will still be that way in the morning. more sunshine by the afternoon. and, and, at least a little bit more than you did today. you certainly will inland. you will
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warm back in the 80s. this is the start of a much more significant warm up. not bad tomorrow. may not notice a whole lot tomorrow. technically we would of started the warm up. what happens is we look at the forcaste over my shoulder here and we got to go back by the time we get to the weekend. so, the way we have been tracking it so far this summer. watching the center of heat bubble up. go through the next couple of days. migrates as it pulsates, here is tomorrow, here is friday, then saturday t is over us. so, we can visualize the heat coming back. friday, saturday, the two hottest days. before i get to the specific numbers let's just see where the issues are specifically for the bay. on friday, we are already seeing some of the oranges creep in for the inland parts for the try valley and the santa clara valley. the orange on the heat risk map it is telling us where
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we have heat-related impacts. look at saturday. saturday is the peak. bigger issue in the central valley. those are the foothills that are deep read. you see red creeping over the pass. here at home, the area to focus on for saturday, santa clara valley, the try valley, and the diablo valley. right here. there is orange showing up for you guys, the key up there, moderate. what we are telling you there. the national weather service way of wording it and conveying the message. moderate risk of heat-related health impacts. under those conditions, look at saturday. start thinking ahead for your weekend. this is probably the most important day in the forecast. going to 95, we have been there already, coming back fast, coming on a saturday. start thinking about your outdoor plans, for friday, more, anyone who has to work outdoors on friday especially in the areas on the map shaded
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in orange, south bay, tri-valley, find shade, give yourself plenty of breaks and do the same thing. not as hot when we look at it for the bay. still enough ticking temperatures in the same pattern holding true. all right, sara, back to you. >> all right, thank you. one artist for oakland is getting recognition this juneteenth with a watermelon couch. it is more than a piece of furniture. using it to spark conversations with race. two years ago james was using his marketing background. he closed the chapter, returning to his roots and passion. >> a lot of the symbolism in my work has to do with like paying ohmage to nature. >> he tinkered with abstract art and pivoted to sculpture. designing what he calls watermelon couch. >> i was vaguely aware of why
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the watermelon represented black people. that was mostly associated to stereo types, it was a great conversation piece. >> he took his coach on the road. starting in california to the deep south state like alabama and georgia, striking up conversations with black farmers that overcome obstacles and racism over generations. >> i never, ever, gave up on my dream i continued forth. >> reporter: u.s. census numbers show less than 2% of farmers are black. he sketches a farmer who has been selling watermelon for two decades in front of the kkk leader to make a stand every day. >> there was a need to hear those stories from these farmers and showing a connection through my heart that could platform them. >> they took notice of the watermelon couch on a recent afternoon in oakland. the 39-year-old will soon embark on
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the second leg of his journey. this time, midwest, following the migration route of southern black families seeking opportunities.. >> this couch represents disbursement of stereo types, let's showcase black people who have a history of being master farmers. >> reporter: and not just farmers other workers too. >> all types of fields others cultural workers, artists, farmers, you name it. >> i think it is a great idea. >> shields is raising funds and applied for grants to continue his artistic adventure to discover and share untold stories >> it is a spiritual mission. regards to just being on a journey and tapping into the past that people laid before me. >> the road ahead for the watermelon couch is unknown. there is a seat for anyone
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willing to listen, connect and learn. >> he hits the road tomorrow, expects to log more than 20,000 miles through the midwest over the next throw months. up next, the people who found it is a this mysterious discovery in the desert looks like it came from another world. straight ahead in sports, giants in the deep south. honoring the super star, willie mays >> did not take long for caitlin clark
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. exploring a mountain range discovered this in the middle of the desert. shiny reflective slab looks like similar ones that have appeared around the world since 2020. now, u.s. fish and wile life are trying to figure out -- wildlife are trying to figure out where it came from. >> something that you would see in a black mirror episode. >> yes. stick mirror. so, now, the eve of the game we have been waiting for. i know, we talked about it earlier and yesterday.
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obviously the mood and the tone of this game will shift given the passing of willie mays. it has that much more significance. >> yes. ryan is on the way. >> so, this time tomorrow night, the guy ants will be in st. louis. what happens between now and then will be historic and emotional. in the hometown of willie mays, birmingham, alabama. tribute of mays and the negro leagues. moment of silence for the say hay kid. announcing. as for the game, top 8, giants trail 6-1 bases loaded. bases loaded at the plate what happened next? how about a little power. 444 feet, grand slam, brought the giants within a run. 9th inning, patrick bailey is up. tying run
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at third. going run at second. bowing out to end the game. they held on and won it 6-5. giants dropped two of three at wrigley. ryan will be there. meantime, a's hosted the royals and they were all fired up about it. a chance to start a winning streak. led at the 8th. that is when he told kansas city get off my lawn. dope shot to center field. giving the a's a little bit of a cushion. now, he and miller, slammed the door. securing a 5-1 oakland win. one more game tomorrow, the a's won the series. the first since may 23rd. >>. mls soccer, quakes hosting portland. tied at one in the second half. and then, jonathan rodriguez used his head for the
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win. portland final of 2-1. san jose, playing at lafc on saturday. nba news and notes. gary peyton the second has 9 million reasons to feel good. they picked up his player option next season. limiting peyton to 44 games last season. tough one in the "w." sufficienter ising a torn acl last night -- suffering a torn acl last night, brick will miss the rest of the season and the olympic games. and around the league, super star rookie caitlin clark continues to grind against the washington mystics. the top overall pick scored 5 points in 14 seconds. deep ball, then a steal, then a lay in. 18 points, 12 rebounds, second
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career double double. first rookie guard to have multiple double doubles in 17 years. fever won the game, 88-81. they won a 3-game win streak. now, ryan yamamoto show. we can not wait to see him. >> i know, very exciting. a big tribute. ryan will be there. we will broadcast all of the stories around it. thank you very much. rather than to decide who is the prettiest this competition is all about who is the fugliest. the award trying to inspire
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>> yes. that, that is not bad. i have seen worse. >> just because his tongue is askew and someone dyed his hair. >> what else? >> this 3-year-old from new jersey adopted from the shelter in 2021. he is supposed to look like danny devito. this is freddie mercury. yes, now, moving on to this dog. this is daisy may. the 14-year-old. the queen of unconventional beauty in lafayette, california. high marks for the head wear. >> he is 14. he lives among . >> a face only a mother can love. >> he lives at the pug hotel. he winks and spreads joy at hospice centers and teaches kid yes, it is important to adopt
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dogs. >> and we have, i think, oh, my gosh. >> and we have a winner. >> oh, dude. >> oh. a senior chihuahua. her owner says despite many health issues she has plenty of energy and loves meeting new people. >> looks like the one from ren and stesmy. >> oh, yes, yes, yes. if my 5-year-old drew the cartoon. >> yes. eight dogs competing with the title for world's ugliest dog. we recommend you do. all loveable. we all love dogs. >> they are all winners >> most of those ♪ ♪ >> juneteenth has been an important holiday for many -- >> you will see
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