tv Good Morning America ABC July 17, 2018 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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a kangaroo, parrot, peacock, and a lobster. >> i could have used the lettuce one today. >> and a cupcake. >> everything is so perfect. good morning, america.t. breaking overnight -- [ chanting ] protests at the white house for president trump after that stunning summit with russian president vladimir putin. >> i have president putin, he just said it's not russia. i will say this, i don't see any reason why it would be. >> trump did not back down overnight siding with putin over american intelligence agencies, defying his own advisers. members of his own party call the summit disgraceful. the shock waves around the globe this morning. lava bomb. new video showing the moment a flying chunk of molten rock from that erupting volcano in hawaii crashes through the roof of a tour boat packed with 50 people injuring nearly two dozen. why were they able to get so
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close? caught on camera, two masked men lurking outside this home when a car of teenage girls pulls up. the men unleashing a barrage of bullets shooting out the windows and tires. the suspects still on the run. what the survivors are saying this morning. runway revolution. a model mom making waves breast-feeding her 5-month-old on the "sports illustrated" catwalk. ♪ welcome to my house and home run hero. >> there it is. >> the nationals' bryce harper blasting past the competition winning the home run derby in the final seconds. the crowd erupting and the man on the mound beaming. his father there pitching to him. ♪ welcome to our house
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good morning, america. welcome to our house, that's right. it's tuesday morning. what a moment for bryce harper. there he is with his father. he nailed 19 home runs at the derby yesterday. his father was the one behind the pitches and i absolutely love these parent/children sports stories, you know, comes down to those teary-eyed moments. >> very heart warming. we'll have more on that ahead. first we want to get right to that fierce fallout from president trump's summit with russian president vladimir putin. protests at the white house overnight and the backlash growing this morning. george is still there in helsinki tracking it all for us again this morning. good morning, george. >> good morning, guys. robin, that meeting with -- between president trump and president putin spanned about four hours yesterday afternoon here in helsinki. it may have been the
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fateful four hours of the trump presidency to date. vladimir putin committed an act of war against the united states, cyberwarfare against our elections. we saw president trump by his side taking vladimir putin's side, nothing like that has ever happened before. it is unlikely ever to happen with an american president again. as you said, the backlash is already growing. democrats using words like traitorous talking about impeachment, openly speculating whether the president has been compromised by the russian president. also seeing while most republicans are holding ranks some of the harshest criticism yet from republicans, even the president's closest allies saying it was a serious mistake that has to be fixed. i'm here with terry moran who was inside during that press conference. as it went on and on, terry, the president dug deeper. >> he dug deeper and his aides were looking at their feet and up at the ceiling because it was difficult to watch, as you say something an american president had never done before and today the world is reckoning with it. this summit like no other as george points out. people wondering, not so much what was done, but what was said.
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here's a sample of the world reaction right here in helsinki, trump 0, putin 1, as president putin presents trump with a soccer goal and a lot would say it was an own goal. >> reporter: just a few hours after a press conference that stunned the world and dismayed allies, president trump stood his ground and stood by vladimir putin in an interview with fox news. >> first of all, he said there was no collusion whatsoever. i guess he said as strongly as you can say it but i thought that president putin was very, very strong. >> reporter: the president said the summit was a success and that talk of special counsel robert mueller's investigation just gets in the way. >> i thought it was a really amazing time. not about that, i think it's a shame we're talking about nuclear proliferation, we're talking about syria and humanitarian aid and we're talking about all these things and yet we get questions on the witch hunt. >> reporter: and putin is making headlines this morning too denying again that russia has
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ever interfered with u.s. elections. it was a scene that many americans will not soon forget on the global stage, putin standing right there and president trump just shying away from holding him accountable for russia's attack on u.s. elections. >> do you hold russia at all accountable for anything in particular? >> yes, i do. i hold both countries responsible. i think that the united states has been foolish. i think we've all been foolish. i think that the probe is a disaster for our country. i think it's kept us apart. it's kept us separated. there was no collusion at all. everybody knows it. >> reporter: the president was asked to choose who does he believe, putin or his own intelligence agencies. >> i have president putin, he just said it's not russia. i will say this, i don't see any reason why it would be. i have great confidence in my intelligence people, but i will tell you that president putin was extremely strong and powerful in his denial today. >> reporter: for putin a
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question about blackmail. >> does the russian government have any compromising material on president trump or his family? >> reporter: i heard we had allegedly collected compromising materials on mr. trump when he came to moscow. respected colleagues, when mr. trump came to moscow, i didn't even know that he was there, and putin was asked point blank -- >> president putin, did you want president trump to win the election? >> yes, i did, yes, he said. i wanted him to win because he was talking about the normalization of russia/american relations. moments after the press conference concluded an onslaught of stinging reaction to president trump's performance, many from his own party. >> what the president said today is not accurate. >> the president's comments made us look, as a nation, more like a pushover. >> reporter: one of the president's staunchest allies former speaker of the house newt
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gingrich imploring trump to clarify his statements in helsinki on our intelligence system and putin. it is the most serious mistake of his presidency and must be corrected immediately. and even from the president's favorite cable news channel, this sharp rebuke. >> that's what made his performance disgusting. i'm sorry. it's the way i feel. it's not a right or left thing to me. it's just wrong. >> reporter: even his former homeland security adviser pushing back. >> i have seen that intelligence. i believe it and i concluded that there was russian meddling and overwhelming evidence of such. >> reporter: the shock waves extending across the globe, one british headline reads, putin's poodle, but back home the president has at least one lawmaker in his corner, rand paul calling it trump derangement syndrome from the left. >> this shows people's hatred for president trump more than anything. >> that cascade of reaction most of it negative came while president trump was flying back to the united states. he can watch television on board air force one. he was and getting angrier and angrier we hear. aides afraid to go up to the front of the plane. the irony is he came to this
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city to make a new start with u.s./russia relations, a lot of business to do, but his subservient performance may have set that goal back. >> only one tweet from the president so far saying he trusts the intelligence agencies but he's going to have to say more coming out of that. terry, thanks very much. i want to bring in senator jeff flake in washington, republican senator from arizona. senator flake, thank you for joining us again this morning. you tweeted out that the president's performance yesterday was shameful. i guess the big question is why, why he did it. have you ruled out vladimir putin has something on the president? >> i would have no way of knowing that. i'd have a hard time believing that but it's certainly the easiest explanation. i think that's why so many have gone to it. if that is what victory looks like as the white house said, i think we all would like to know what failure looks like in a summit. that was just a shameful performance. it really was. >> shameful and we don't even know what happened in those two hours when president trump and president putin were alone. don't we need to know what happened in that conversation?
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>> yes, we do. that was a big mistake to meet alone. if the president is as confused as he seems to be in terms of our relationship, in terms of what the russians are capable of, to meet privately with vladimir putin is just wrong. i'm very concerned. i think that our allies are most concerned, particularly those that border right on russia. i was with a congressional delegation in latvia just two weeks ago and what was unnerving is to hear them talk about the propaganda coming from moscow that plays to about 40% of their population which is russian speaking, about nato being weak and the u.s. being a nondependable ally for nato and then to have this kind of rhetoric from the president just play so well into that has got to be unnerving to them. >> you say you're concerned. you say this was shameful. the big question is what you can do about it. you're a republican senator. you've been quite critical as we said of the president.
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many are demanding you take some action right now as well. senator schumer said it's time to ramp up sanctions and bring the president's team up to capitol hill to testify about what happened there and demand extradition of the russians. are you willing to call for that and back it up with action? >> i think we ought to do both of those things. one, increase sanctions, obviously we ought to target those who were implicated with the indictments as well as other russian individuals. second, we ought to have the national security team of the white house come up and talk to us on capitol hill about what happened there. third, i think immediately the senate ought to pass a resolution stating our support for the intelligence community and that we do believe them and we don't believe the denials coming out of vladimir putin's mouth. so i think that that can be done immediately. >> senator, you have a lot of leverage. one-vote margin for the supreme court in the senate. if you withhold your vote you can demand accountability from
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the president, from his team. are you willing to do that? >> well, i've used that on other issues like tariffs where we can look at a defined objective. for me it was getting a vote on tariffs last week, and we did. it's more difficult in this regard, however. the president -- the constitution gives the president a lot of power with regard to foreign policy and we'd have to see if there is an objective measurable that we can demand before using leverage like this. that's what i'm looking at. >> senator flake, thank you for your time this morning. >> thank you so much. >> robin. >> all right, george. we'll get back to you in just a moment. hours after that summit, the justice department announced the arrest of a russian woman on charges that she conspired to act as an agent of moscow to influence american politics. she is a self-described gun rights activist with ties to the nra. our chief justice correspondent pierre thomas has more on all this. good morning, pierre. >> reporter: robin, good
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morning. authorities say this new case is another example of russians allegedly trying to burrow their way into the fabric of american politics to influence and undermine the u.s. democracy. >> reporter: federal prosecutors claim maria butina here seen smiling with handgun in tow was secretly sent by the russian federation to infiltrate american politics. her alleged targets according to newly filed charges and intelligence sources, u.s. politicians and political candidates and the nra. the fbi says butina cozied up to nra officials and politicians trying to gain influence. here she is at a conference dubbed freedom fest. >> i'm from russia. i'm the founder and now i'm the board member of the right to bear arms. >> reporter: this is butina's voice at that same 2015 conference asking then candidate donald trump a question about foreign policy. >> do you want to continue the politics of sanctions? >> reporter: putin has no
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respect for president obama. big problem. >> reporter: a former member of russian parliament and one of putin's closest allies. foreign nationals actively working to influence u.s. policy on behalf of another country must register with the justice department. >> what's new about it is the speed and the breadth and depth of penetration they can get through digital media, social media and in this case with a woman sent here, much higher cost. >> reporter: the fbi allegation blunt that butina seen graduating from american university used her time as a grad student as cover for more nefarious activity. butina is denying the charges which were brought separately from the mueller special counsel investigation. her attorney called the case overblown, saying there's no indication that she is seeking
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to influence or undermine specific policy or law in the united states. robin. >> all right, pierre, thank you very much. i want to go back to george for a moment. i was struck by your remarks right after the press conference with president trump and vladimir putin and, you know, george, there are people who are going to agree with the president no matter what he says or does. there are people who are going to disagree with the president no matter what he says or does. i believe that the vast majority of americans are right in the middle. they are going to make up their minds on a case-by-case basis. in this case people from the president's own party are using words like shameful, disgraceful, bizarre. we heard from newt gingrich saying it is the most serious mistake of his presidency and he needs to correct it immediately. do you think he will do that? >> hard to know. i mean, it's something the president is loathe to do. he never likes to admit a mistake as you know. here's what's so important about that. i think your analysis of where the american people stand is exactly right. but there's something else going on and pierre thomas was just talking about it. even though that charge to maria
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butina was separate, it is also connected to the mueller investigation. there is a wide ranking investigation right now into russian activity, interference in our elections and saw the indictments on friday, robert mueller is continuing to investigate the president and his team and what i think after yesterday the pressure for the president to sit down with robert mueller is going to increase even more and if he defies it, you could see more backlash. >> that's true. all right, george, we'll check back with you later in the hour. thank you. michael. >> thank you, robin. now to those terrifying moments on that tour boat. nearly two dozen people injured by a lava bomb which is a huge chunk of molten rock crashing down from hawaii's kilauea volcano. abc's will carr has the latest. [ screaming ] >> reporter: watch as molten rock, ash and debris all explode hundreds of feet into the air off the coast of hawaii's big island monday.
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in the crosshairs, this lava tour boat. carrying over 50 passengers and crew. this passenger video capturing the chaotic moments after the explosion. >> there's a huge chunk of lava. >> it just exploded straight out at the boat. we could hear the rocks hit the boat and people yelling. >> reporter: authorities say the boat was on a tour when a lava bomb fueled by the erupting kilauea volcano went off. a boulder the size of a basketball smashing through the roof injuring almost two dozen people on board. >> do we have any medical assistance on board? >> we're right here. >> reporter: kilauea has been erupting since may 3rd. destroying businesses, schools and over 700 homes in the process. >> i was able to look back at where i was sitting and that there was a big piece of lava stuck in the handrail right next to where my elbow was. so i know it was a close call.
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>> reporter: this morning with that hole still in the top of this boat, the coast guard is now investigating if the boat went inside of the safety zone and got too close to that lava. robin. >> too close, all right, will, thank you. now to amazon prime day, still under way but off to a rocky start. the site temporarily going down for users just as the savings began and instead of deals they were greeted by dogs like this one. if you log on enough, you are very familiar with this. our chief business correspondent rebecca jarvis is here. she has those details. good morning, rebecca. >> good morning. you could say it was a rough start with all of those puppies. just minutes after the start of prime day the site and the app crashed for many. shoppers were met with these images of dogs and an error message but despite the crash just halfway through that 36-hour sale which is still under way, amazon is already breaking records saying that even with those technical difficulties customers ordered more items in the first ten hours of prime day than they did
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during the last year's sale of first ten hours during their prime day. some of the top sellers this year, amazon devices like the echo, the kindle and fire. plus this old favorite, the instant pot six-quart 7 in 1 multiuse programmable pressure cooker. it can slow cook, rice cook, steam, saute. it even makes yogurt, robin, and it is 40% off. no wonder it is one of those top sellers. >> i have been meaning to get that. >> i know you wanted it last year. >> i did. >> you got to do it now. thank you. now to ginger with severe weather for the east. >> we have severe storms coming already in parts of the northeast and they will be making their way over into the the i-95 corridor later this afternoon and evening.
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i'm abc 7 news meteorologist drew tuma with your afternoon forecast. afternoon sunshine up to 76 in oakland today. 88 in san jose. 69 in san francisco. napa, up to 86 degrees. overnight tonight, that cloud cover returning. mid-50s to low 60s as we get you into wednesday. here's the accuweather seven-day forecast. it is a warm afternoon today, even warmer wednesday, but by thursday and friday, the humidity will be on the rise, it will feel muggy before cooler air moves in over the weekend. coming up, how dna testing is leading to major breaks in cold cases like this new one. police tracking down a suspect accused of murder decades ago cold cases like this new one. police chasing down this suspect accused of murder decades ago.
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it's going to be so fun. ♪ ♪ new one. police chasing down this suspect accused of murder decades ago. she might not know what her passion is yet. ♪ ♪ but you're passionate about helping her find it. bye. ♪ ♪ how are you? how did it go? feed her passion, with the fresh roasted peanut taste she loves. where there's jif, there's love.™ they won't hike your ratest over one mistake. see, liberty mutual doesn't hold grudges. for drivers with accident forgiveness liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty ♪ before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn, lucy could only imagine enjoying a slice of pizza. now it's as easy as pie.
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meningitis b strikes quickly. be quick to talk to your teen's doctor about a meningitis b vaccine. (roosevelt)smoking just messed thaup your lungs. i never thought that at only 45 it would give me a heart attack. my tip is; do your heart a favor, and quit now. (announcer) you can quit. for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. what i do? i snack on blue diamond almonds. honey roasted? mmm!! let me control another one. don't control your cravings. eat 'em! all the flavors you crave, in a superfood. blue diamond almonds. crave victoriously.
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abc 7 mornings. >> all news -- >> all morning. hi, good morning, everyone. i'm jessica castro from abc 7 mornings. the man accused of posing as a rideshare driver and raping women is due in court today. 36-year-old orlando vilchez drove his victims to another location and then raped them, prosecutors say. they have dna evidence linking him to four women assault offered the last five years. i.c.e. says he is here illegally. let's switch gears and check our traffic out there. kind of a rough start this morning. >> sure was. starting to improve, though, in san mateo. we are hearing from chp that this closure is being picked up right now. that sig alert that we've had all morning, northbound 101 ramp to eastbound 92, as far as i know, traffic has not been allowed through there yet, but
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they should be any minute, if they're not. and just south of there, westbound 84 across the dumbarton bridge, we've got a crash near the high rise. that is still blocking the left lane. and you are jammed almost all and you are jammed almost all the way back to ♪ ♪ ♪ raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens ♪ ♪ bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens ♪ ♪ brown paper packages tied up with strings ♪ ♪ these are a few of my favorite things ♪ ♪ ♪
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now your accuweather forecast with drew tuma. >> i want to take you outside. a live look right now from our rooftop studio at kgo here on the embarcadero. in san francisco, we have gray skies right now. temperature wise, a lot of 50s right now. 57 in oakland, but 62 in san jose. later on this afternoon, it will be a sunny afternoon, once that cloud cover pulls back to the coast. about 76 in oakland. 88, the high in san jose, but in san francisco. coming up, a break in the decades-old cold case. a suspect arrested in the brutal murder of a young girl. and how authorities say they tracked down that accused killer.
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♪ havana ooh na na >> welcome back to "gma." na, na, na. that's camila cabella's hit "havana" and everybody get ready. the superstar is going to perform live in central park this friday. >> look at them moving and grooving over there. yeah. >> our audience is getting their groove on. >> they're deltas. they feel it. they feel it. >> it's all coming to us on friday. we're looking forward to that. now the top headlines we're following this morning. president trump back in washington facing new fallout after that stunning summit with russian president vladimir putin where trump appeared to side with putin over america's own intelligence community.
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some members of his own party calling it disgraceful. president trump will meet with members of congress in washington this afternoon. also this morning, a wildfire burning near yosemite national park is growing. forcing more evacuations. it's already scorched more than 9,000 acres. hundreds of firefighters are battling it right now. and washington nationals star bryce harper is there winning the home run derby last night nailing 19 home runs. his father ron, well, he was a pitcher on the mound pitching to his son and bryce says afterwards, i love this man. he's my hero and to be able to do that tonight with him is a dream come true. and his father, he was like -- i was like, man, his dad is -- like son like father i guess you could say. >> runs in the family. >> runs in the family. >> it does. we turn to what authorities are calling a big break in a decades-old cold case thanks to
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dna and a genealogy database. a murder mystery from 1988. whit johnson is here. >> reporter: john miller confessed to the assault and murder of april tinsley 30 years ago, police say. his stunning arrest part of a new genealogy revolution in crime solving, providing fresh hope to families who have waited decades for answers. it's the murder that's haunted an indiana town for three decades. >> the frightened mother told dispatchers her 8-year-old daughter april had gone missing. >> reporter: 8-year-old april tinsley going to play at a friend's house, never making it home. >> there's a lot of times i'll get people come up to me and go, you should have kept her home. you should have kept her home. you can't imprison your own child. >> reporter: for years the killer taunts the community carving this message on a barn door, according to police, warning, i will kill again, and leaving notes like this for
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other young girls, saying you are my next victim. police putting out this composite sketch based on dna found at the scene but for decades nothing. until sunday a stunning arrest, police taking 59-year-old john d. miller into custody at this mobile home park where he lived about six miles from where april's body was found. >> i know he had a bad temper. he would always be outside cussing and swearing and throwing stuff. >> reporter: detectives finally cracking the case they say after plugging that crime scene dna into online genealogy database ged match and surrounding his home and collecting another sample. a match. according to investigators the little girl's murder just the latest in a series of cold cases they say was cracked through the same cutting edge technique. in april, police say that very genealogy website helped lead to the arrest of 72-year-old joseph deangelo, suspected of being the
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so-called golden state killer charged with a dozen murders. and just last month, dna left on a restaurant napkin leading to a break in the 1986 unsolved murder of 12-year-old michella welch. police arresting 66-year-old gary hartman. >> today we're at a point where if you're a criminal and you've left your dna at the scene you might as well turn yourself in now. >> reporter: and we spoke to john miller's brother who says he too was questioned by police and even provided them with a dna sample. so the genetic genealogy technique can have an impact on the relatives of suspects but many call it a game changer when it comes to solving crimes. robin. >> whit, thank you. joining us now is our chief legal analyst dan abrams and genetic genealogist cece moore.
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she helped find this suspect along with several others. looking forward to this discussion. let me begin with you. you were able to narrow it down to two brothers, one is now behind bars, explain how you go about doing this. >> so we're looking for people who share significant stretches of dna with the suspect. we find them in the database ged match and then we reverse the family -- we reverse engineer the family tree of the suspect based on the family trees of the people that are sharing dna with him. >> how many cases have you been working on and are continuing to work on? >> i've worked on about a dozen so far. but i have many more cases waiting for my attention. so i expect that we will see lots more arrests thanks to genetic genealogy. >> i know families are hoping for that. dan, in this case too the suspect confessed. >> yeah, and you find that a lot of these cases where you're able to use dna evidence and they can present that to a suspect and say, look, we now have your dna. there's now new testing out there that can confirm you're our person. that leads to a lot more
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confessed. sometimes you don't even need a trial. they'll plead guilty. we often talk about how dna helps prove didn't do it. dna also can help prove people did do it. >> police have to verify the research and the information and sometimes it means going through a person's garbage. is that going to be a problem in court? >> that's a supreme court case relating to police going through people's gar baej and in the 1980s the supreme court decided that it is not a violation of the constitution, that you don't have an expectation of privacy when you put your garbage out. now, if there are particular situations where if someone's garbage is in their home or in a closed garage, that's a different situation but once the expectation of privacy is lost, the police are allowed to go through your garbage. >> some have concerns saying that innocent people could become suspects. do you share that concern? >> actually genetic genealogy is capable of really eliminating hundreds or even thousands of people from consideration. the cases i've been working on
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often have had suspect lists or person of interest lists with hundreds or thousands of names on them. in genetic genealogy we're able to narrow it down to a handful, two or maybe one person. so it's actually helping much less number of innocent people being investigated for these crimes. >> well put. and thank you so much for your work and for your time this morning as well. >> thank you. >> dan, thank you. >> michael. thank you, robin. now to that scary close call for a group of teenage girls pulling up to one of their homes when they saw two men lurking outside. those men then opening fire on their car. abc's erielle reshef is here and, erielle, those teenagers are lucky to be alive. >> they certainly are. police tell us it is a miracle all three survived. the shadowy incident of the video viewed more than 5.5 million times on facebook. authorities say the video is
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very real and very disturbing. this video showing the moment sierra sims and her two friends returned from a fun night out and suddenly come upon this terrifying sight as they pulled into her driveway. a pair of masked men crouching by a fence in her backyard. >> there's somebody standing on the side of my house. it looks like they're trying to get in. they're trying to run. oh, they have a gun. >> reporter: sierra called dispatch and then tried to flash her high beams at the men to scare them off but the intruders went on the attack. unleashing a barrage of bullets shooting more than 30 rounds at the vehicle piercing the front tires. >> drive fast, go. >> they shot at my tires. they shot at my tires. i can't. >> reporter: the friends speed off and say the men followed them in hot pursuit still firing. finally they managed to seek refuge in a neighbor's front yard as glass shattered around them. >> even when we saw that he had a gun, i didn't think they were going to start shooting at us. i just thought they were up to something. >> sierra showed us just
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where the frightening incident happened. the remnants of the shooting seen in the neighbors' cars and hopes. >> i still don't feel safe. i'm still paranoid but i'm just -- i'm trying to live as normal as possible. >> reporter: one of sierra's friends speaking to abc affiliate ksat asking not to show her face. >> it wasn't like they tried scaring us away. they wanted to like kill us. >> reporter: this morning police say those three suspects are still on the run. there's now a $5,000 reward for any information that leads to an arrest. >> oh, my gosh. so scary. >> classic case of the wrong place at the wrong time. >> absolutely. all right. coming up we have the model mom revolutionizing the runway as you see there with her 5-month-old baby. come on back. come on back. woman 1: proof of less joint pain... woman 2: ...and clearer skin. woman 3: this is my body of proof. man 2: proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis... woman 4: ...with humira. woman 5: humira targets and blocks a specific source of inflammation
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that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain, stop further irreversible joint damage, and clear skin in many adults. humira is the #1 prescribed biologic for psoriatic arthritis. avo: humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. >> absolutely.
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ice cream inspired iced coffee is here at dunkin' in the flavors you love, cookie dough, pistachio and butter pecan. and now, enjoy any medium iced coffee for $1.50. america runs on dunkin'. we're back now with that model mom revolutionizing the runway. breast-feeding her 5-month-old baby at a "sports illustrated" fashion show and, amy, do bring it. >> i will bring it, robin. you know, seeing a baby on a high fashion runway is unusual enough but to have a baby breast-feeding on a runway, well, that's created quite the reaction this morning. one model making quite a splash in this "sports illustrated" fashion show in miami. wearing a metallic gold one shouldered bikini mara martin hit the runway with the most valuable accessory, her 5-month-old daughter aria. in an unusual twist, mara breastfed her as she sashayed down the runway. little aria wore blue headphones
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to protect her ears from the thumping music and enormous cheers which greeted them. she wrote, i can't believe i'm waking up to headlines with me and my daughter in them for doing something i do every day. i'm so grateful to be able to share this message and hopefully normalize breastfeeding and also show others that women can do it all. thousands of moms took to social media applauding her decision writing, you look incredible. thank you for doing your part to normalize feeding our children. and, it was so beautiful to see that. there were also a few dissenters. displays of no value, no morality and no privacy will always be a headline. breastfeeding in public has become an increasingly divided topic. this woman says a man verbally attacked her for breastfeeding her 4 week old at a target in connecticut. >> you said a breastfeeding mom is sitting there defenseless holding her baby and feeding them. you can't just jump up and react.
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>> reporter: for her part mara hopes one day no one will make a fuss over a woman breastfeeding her child writing i can't believe it is a headline because it shouldn't be a headline. my story of being a mother and feeding her while walking is just that. i love this, she also pointed out there were several other women walking in the show who deserve attention for a variety of reasons. a woman on stage was going to boot camp to serve her country. there was a woman who had a mastectomy and two-time paralympic gold medalist. great to see all those different women walking strong on the runway. >> well put, amy. >> i'm sitting to two strong women right now. >> thank you, michael. well trained. well trained. [ laughter ] oh, coming up, do you two know what today is? >> emoji day. >> it is world emoji day. we have the brand-new emojis that are about to hit your phone when we come back. i don't know why you did that. >> like the heart emoji. (vo) what if this didn't
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we're back now with world emoji day and if you're wondering, yes, it is a real thing. celebrating those characters we all know and love. we love to use them in our text messages and diane macedo is here and these are some new ones you're going to show us. >> this is a big deal for those of us too lazy to type out maejss. apple is celebrating world emoji day by announcing more than 70 new emojis will be released later this year. there will be new smiley faces and expressions plus more hair options. you'll see red hair, gray hair,
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curly hair. you'll even see no hair. i brought these so i could show them to you. >> i like the 'stache. >> this one is the amy, by the way. i think we should -- >> because my hair is curly today. >> emojis for everyone. >> beautiful. >> coming around now. >> that's kendis. >> yeah, we put this one side by side with kendis gibson. uncanny. uncanny. >> how do they go about making these? >> it's actually intense, they say. they go through 15 to 30 different variations before they settle on it. it has to be iconic, timeless but also usable. >> so glad they made up a day for it. >> thank you, diane. >> complete with mustache. coming up speaking of our phones, summer screen time experiment. what happens when one family rolls back all the rules for a week. you'll find out. >> look at emojis. out. >> look at emojis.
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and if you don't have the right overage, you could be paying for that pricey love band yourself. so get an allstate agent, and be better protected from mayhem. like me. can a ring bearer get a snack around here? back here on "gma," the ferguson fire more than doubled in size in just 4 hours sunday into monday. you're seeing the flames there, but it's not just the flames but the air quality inside yosemite that is affecting a lot of people. this is a time lapse of how cloudy it got up in the mountains so
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good morning, south bay. let's get up and get going. >> this is abc 7 mornings. >> good morning. i'm jessica castro from abc 7 mornings. let's check in with meteorologist drew tuma for the forecast. it was pretty foggy out there a while ago. >> yeah, jess, we're still having issues with that fog. you can see visibility right now down to three miles at half moon bay and santa rosa. so some dense fog locally early on. temperatureswise, we're waking up to 50s and 60s at this hour, but it will be a sunnier afternoon, our warmest spots are headed into the 90s inland. >> all right. taking a look at the roads, i finally have some good news. almost nine hours after this crash happened last night on the northbound 101 connector to eastbound 92, it is all clear. the semiis gone. the cal transcrews are gone. you are able to take that across the san mateo bridge. not so good just north of there, southbound 101 ahead of third
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avenue, a new crash blocking at least one lane involving a motorcycle. and quite heavy here across golden gate bridge, it's foggy, too. >> alexi, thank you. coming up, the new warning about those urgent care centers. the new study that finds they are overprescribing antibiotics. that's next on "gma." another update in about 30 minutes and always on our news
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good morning, america. it's 8:00 a.m. breaking overnight -- [ chanting ] >> fierce fallout from president trump's summit with the russian president. >> i have president putin. he just said it's not russia. i will say this, i don't see any reason why it would be. >> trump does not back down overnight standing his ground standing by putin siding with him over his own intelligence agencies. members of the gop call the summit disgraceful. the backlash swelling this morning. health alert. are you being prescribed unnecessary medication when you head to urgent care? the new study this morning, the dangerous side effects you could be at risk for and what you should ask your doctor. no limits. what happens when parents roll back all the rules when it comes to summer screen time?
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our "gma" experiment unlimited access for these kids for one week using screens at all hours of the day and night, what happened, what parents should know, what surprised even our experts and the conclusions the kids arrived at revealed this morning. ♪ need your love the engagement that rocked bachelor nation. ashley and jared sitting dn with our cameras rolling. the ring, revealed. what they're saying about finally getting together having kids and the moment jared knew she was the one for him. ♪ i want you to take me to funkytown ♪ >> get ready to laugh. joel mchale is here live in times square and he's here to say. >> good morning, america! [ cheers and applause ] ♪ funkytown >> that energy. >> oh, yeah. he always does. >> he does. good morning, america. great to have you with us on this tuesday morning.
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hope you're ready to laugh because joel mchale is here and you're going to do that. >> can't wait to talk to him. also, we have an inspiring story from the breakout star of the world cup, the 19-year-old who is scoring big on and off the field. wait until you hear what he's doing with all of his winnings. >> all right. looking forward to that. first the fallout still growing from president trump's summit with russian president vladimir putin in helsinki. anger on both sides of the aisle and let's go back to george who's there in finland. good morning again, george. >> good morning, guys. yeah, i'm still here and both delegations have left. the president is back in the white house anas you said, the shock waves being felt in washington all around the world right now. no word from the president this morning yet. he has not gone to twitter since he's taken so much criticism from democrats, from republicans, from other world leaders, questions about whether he actually committed treasonous behavior in that press conference yesterday from some democrats. pressure from republicans to know a lot more about the meeting.
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also pressure to hear more from the president coming up. he'll be meeting with members of congress later today. you could get questions there. i'm here with our senior foreign correspondent terry moran. lots of reaction around the world. >> a lot of reaction as it is crossing lines, party lines in the united states, it's crossing borders around the world and the interesting thing that we're seeing in this reaction from around the world is it isn't so much alarm on a policy basis what does the future hold for our country as it is mockery of a leader that they see as a person who didn't fight his corner, a weak leader, so it seems that the president has some work to do. overnight president trump stood his ground and stood by vladimir putin in an interview with fox news. >> we said there was no collusion whatsoever. i guess he said it as strongly as you can say it. a >> reporter: on the global stage putin standing right there and president trump just shying away from holding him accountable for russia's attack on u.s. elections. >> do you hold russia at all accountable for anything in particular? >> yes, i do.
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i hold both countries responsible. i think that the united states has been foolish. i think we've all been foolish. i think that the probe is a disaster for our country. i think it's kept us apart. it's kept us separated. there was no collusion at all. everybody knows it. >> reporter: the president was asked to choose who does he believe, putin or his own intelligence agency? >> i have great confidence in my intelligence people, but i will tell you that president putin was extremely strong and powerful in his denial today. >> reporter: moments after the press conference concluded an onslaught of stinging reaction to president trump's performance, many from his own party. >> the president's comments made us look as a nation more like a pushover. >> reporter: and even from the president's favorite cable news channel, this sharp rebuke. >> that's what made his performance disgusting. i'm sorry.
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it's the way i feel. not a right or left thing, just wrong. >> reporter: the bottom line for officials in the united states and for people around the world is to figure out how to go forward from here with a president, george, who is seen primarily as unreliable, unpredictable and now unreliable. can't be counted on. >> a president who continues to be under investigation, terry moran, thanks very much. as we were here in helsinki yesterday as you guys remember, that russian agent also arrested in washington, in the united states, for interfering in our 2016 election and the mueller investigation is going to continue. >> so what is your bottom line, george, as you head back home here? >> that was the most stunning performance by an american president on the world stage i think we've seen in modern times. no question about it. john mccain said it, you've never seen a president act so abjectly before a tyrant who's committed an act of war against the united states.
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this is going to last. it is probably going to have more repercussions for the president than charlottesville had last summer about a year ago and the president will have to at least try to clean it up. >> at least try. all right, george, excellent work as always. safe travels back home. hope you make that connection so we can see you back here tomorrow. >> all right. >> see you, george. coming up on "gma" that health alert about antibiotics. are you being prescribed ones you don't really need? dr. ashton is here with that. and our series, cracking the kid code. what happens when one family gives their children unlimited screen time for a week. the result surprising even the experts. lara is upstairs with a great crowd? >> we do have an incredible audience. give yourself a hand. [ cheers and applause ] they're all very excited because this guy is here. >> well. >> the very funny joel mchale who is going to tell us all about his new series and so much more. >> and so much more. >> yes. we have a lot coming up. don't go away.
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i'm just saying they're very fit. hey, welcome back, lara spencer from vacation. >> thank you. >> pictures of greece. >> you got that glow. >> you do. >> i should. >> it's great to have you home. >> so happy to be back. shall we? >> let's do it. >> let's begin with "pop news." [ applause ] so we are going to begin with the crowning of a new queen. on netflix that is. the network releasing its first look at the new queen elizabeth for season 3 of the hit series "the crown." there she is, olivia colman will play the beloved monarch as it jumps ahead several years, taking over for claire foy who did an amazing job in seasons one and two and all eyes on colman who is said to be perfect in this part which will again change in two seasons when the actors will be replaced in order to portray the royals as they age. by the way there's just a single word captioning this photo, patience.
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and i hate to say it but we'll need it. season three of "the crown" doesn't return until sometime in 2019. >> '19? >> yeah. >> which isn't that far away. sounds like it's so far away but they're not saying what month. it will pick up, we believe, in the '70s when charles meets camilla. >> it will be worth the wait. they do such a good job. i love that series. >> looking forward to it. i couldn't wait to share that. in "pop news," the mtv vma noms are out. cardi b. pulled in ten. she is on fire. the most of any artist this year, the breakout star just gave birth to a baby girl as we all know. she was nominated for artist of the year, best new artist as well as video and song of the year for her collaboration with bruno mars.
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speaking of collabs, the carters, came in second with eight nominations and the awards air live on mtv in new york city august 20th. >> cardi b. is having a year. i mean, of anybody you can remember in recent years, she's having the biggest year. >> absolutely, it's going to be a big night for her. then finally, an act of world class charity from the young world cup superstar everyone is talking about. 19-year-old french striker kylian mbappe not only became the first to score a goal in a world cup final since pele he is scoring for children in need. he is announcing he is donating every dollar of his $500,000 to a charity called preiers de cordees, which teaches sports to disabled children. >> 19.
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[ applause ] >> i know, me too. >> the general manager of that charity describing the superstar as a great down-to-earth person helping disadvantaged kids reach for the stars. >> what a beautiful young man. >> that guys, incredible. >> thank you for sharing that. that was a feel good. >> let's end it on a high note. >> let's do that. i want to take a quick poll. i want to ask you all, raise your hand if you or someone you know, if you've gone to one of those urgent care centers in the last year. you know, those 24-hour urgent care centers. the reason we're asking is there is an alert about antibiotics being prescribed at urgent care centers for problems like the cold or the flu. a new study says half of those prescriptions are not necessary, so, jen, what are the numbers here. >> this is a perfect example of in medicine like in life just because you can do something doesn't necessarily mean you should do it and here we're talking about inappropriate prescription of antibiotics. so, the cdc funded a study. it was published in the journal of the american medical association that looked at antibiotic prescriptions in various locations.
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doctors' offices, emergency rooms, retail clinics, urgent care and found they did the worse, retail centers did the best in terms of accurately or inappropriately prescribing antibiotics. urgent care you had almost a one in two chance of leaving there with an antibiotic when not only was it not necessary it's inappropriate and potentially dangerous. >> you saw how many raised their hands. i was one of them too. we go to these places. >> it's not about bashing urgent care centers. we all need to do better. there are known risks when you inappropriately give an antibiotic and it's a massive issue in health care, public health. not just in this country. >> what are the risks? >> if you take an antibiotic when it's not necessary, number one, antibiotic resistance. that means that right now you're exposing that bacteria or a virus or organisms to something that can then make that
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antibiotic completely ineffective and when you're a little old lady and i need to treat an infection, if i can't go down our list of arsenal, you could be in big trouble. so antibiotic resistance is one. and something called c-diff which is a reaction that could be life-threatening in your intestines can happen with exposure to any antibiotic but we see allergic reactions, tendon problems. the list goes on and on. >> what questions should we be asking? >> first question you should ask, doc, how are you sure this is a bacterial infection and not a viral infection? most ear infections are viral. most upper respiratory infections viral and people say, oh, i have a cough, a sore throat. i need an antibiotic. not true most of the time so you should ask your health care provider. how do you know this is bacterial and then you should ask if you're going to give me a prescription, is this the gold standard? we have to use the right antibiotic and the right dose for the right period of time for the right organism and that's what they should be able to tell you. >> don't use old ones. you know how sometimes you use leftover from previous ones?
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>> no bueno. >> all right. muchas gracias. >> michael. >> i can't say i haven't done that old medicine usage, robin. i'm guilty as charged. to our series "cracking the kid code." it is the middle of summer and many parents are struggling to keep their kids off of their screen. we'll see what happens when you give them unlimited access for a week. will they moderate their time? one family, they tried it out and becky worley has the results. hey, becky. >> good morning, michael. it's the dream we have as parents, the kids can use their tablet for an hour, so then they'll spend the rest of the day, oh, climbing trees and playing with friends but then reality hits, it's only lunchtime. they've been on the device for five hours and you're yelling at them again to put it down. so our experiment with one family, if the parents didn't intervene for a week would the kids ever go out and enjoy summer? summertime means screen time and for the sergeants of phoenix,
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arizona, limiting screen time is a struggle with grayson, 10, wesley, 7 and lily, 4. on a day when there's no school, what's usage look like? >> ideally an hour or two hours. >> are you just going that keep watch hag. >> reporter: mom and dad are exhausted that. >> let's go here. they are so addicted they don't know how to come off them. >> reporter: we asked them to try something. giving their kids unlimited access to devices for a week. do you think you'll get bored with screens? >> after a while, probably. >> nope. >> reporter: we used this disney circle, a device from abc's parent company that you plug in and an app that tracks the kids' usage. on day one the boys' hours are astronomical. grayson more than 8 hours, wesley, more than 12 hours. >> hey, wesley, you hungry for lunch? >> huh? >> you want some lunch, bud? >> no. never.
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>> bedtime was shot. >> what time are you guys planning to go to bed? >> whatever time i fall asleep. >> reporter: all three watched a lot of videos and played some games. carly noticed a definite shift in behavior right away. >> mom, make them stop annoying me. >> i worked today and the kids basically spent, i don't know, seven hours on their computers and -- >> five. >> five hours. >> this is another great example of what happens when they spend too much time on them and they're coming off of them. fighting, taunting. >> reporter: while the 4-year-old's device usage was all over the place averaging three hours but spiking with more than 6 1/2 hours, the older boys showed an interesting trend. after the first two days of binging because they could, they settled into a routine of about five hours a day. >> they're choosing other
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activities over the devices quite frequently. i thought it might be a lot worse. >> reporter: dr. victoria dunkly, a child psychologist and author of the book "reset your child's brain" makes an astonishing on sever vegas. she thought she would use them even more but the kids did self-regulate. >> max was about the average of what most kids in america are doing right now. >> like five hours a day. >> oh, yeah, for this age group, five to seven hours a day is common. >> reporter: five hours a day is way more screen time than mom carly had in mind. for kids over 5 the american academy of pediatrics no longer recommends an exact time limit for screens but does recommend an hour per day cap for kids 18 months old through age 5. dr. dunckley has her own recommendation. >> less than an hour or two a day is the healthiest. kids that have the least amount of screen time have the highest grades, they read more. they sleep better. >> reporter: even the kids agree. what do you think is the right amount of time for you? >> maybe like one or two hours a day.
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>> reporter: so your mind says one or two hours. but when you're actually in it, it would go longer. >> yeah. >> why do you think that is? >> kids just get addicted to it. >> well, one thing the entire family said, it was really nice not to fight about screens. the kids felt the sense of control, the parents loved not having to be the screen police. but five hours a day, that is a lot of screen time and, michael, they decided going forward to use that circle device and limit the kids to just two hours a day. >> all right. thank you so much, becky. i agree five hours seems like a long time. if you have five hours to spend on a screen, i'm going to make you get a job, how about that? let's go over to ginger. >> i think it's a great idea. thank you, michael. time for your "gma" moment and today it comes to us from franklin square, new york. have you ever been seeing someone sleep and i just want them to wake up.
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rocky the cat just wants his baby cyst olivia to wake up. so he's doing that tender like and then she does that whoo! it worked, rocky. please send your "gma" moments, something that makes you smile or laugh from your family, friends or pets right to my facebook page and we'd love to share it right here on "good morning america." for now i'm just going to do it to you. i'm abc 7 news meteorologist drew tuma with your afternoon forecast. afternoon sunshine up to 76 in oakland today. 88 in san jose. 69 in san francisco. napa, up to 86 degrees. overnight tonight, that cloud cover returning. mid-50s to low 60s as we get you into wednesday. here's the accuweather seven-day forecast. it is a warm afternoon today, even warmer wednesday, but by thursday and friday, the humidity will be on the rise, it will feel muggy before cooler air moves in over the weekend. now to the newly engaged couple, shocking bachelor nation, ashley and jared finally figuring out their relationship after years of drama.
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"bachelor in paradise" stars sat down with kayna whitworth to tell her all about it. >> i've never felt this for anyone the way i feel for you. >> reporter: the saga of jared and ashley that began with tears. >> it's just how am i supposed to find another you? >> reporter: now ending happily in an engagement. >> let me see this ring. >> i can finally be out about the ring. i'm hiding it from all our instagrams. there's been times where i posted it and i'm like, oh, my gosh, i have to take it down immediately or blur it out. >> it's been a top secret mission to keep that hidden. >> it's gorgeous. >> so gorgeous. it's exactly what i've always wanted. >> reporter: the pair who could never quite get their timing right during two seasons of "bachelor in paradise" already discussing wedding venues and the possibility of televising their nuptials. >> we are liking the sound of august 2019. >> reporter: ashley says she knew jared was the one the second she saw him and believe it or not, she already has baby
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names picked out. >> how many babies do you want? what are their names? >> we know the name of one of them. >> really. >> but i'm not putting it out there. >> she says she wants three. >> i say two and we'll see after two. >> that's exactly what i want too. >> reporter: jared admits it took him a little more time, three whole years to realize ashley was the one. >> i mean, i think one of the biggest things that i had to put aside in my pursuit of ashley like all the shame and guilt. i think that really consumed my life for the past couple of years and it was very difficult to tell whether i was doing the right thing and whether i was making the right decisions. >> reporter: jared seen breaking up with ashley during season 2 of ""bachelor in paradise."" >> you're crying. i don't want to make you cry. >> reporter: now he's all in. >> we had a lot of adult conversations, tough conversations about what we meant to each other, who we are in each other's lives.
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>> yeah, i knew it, guys. see, i knew there was something more. >> reporter: and yet despite overwhelming support for the doting couple, they haven't been able to avoid fans' skepticism entirely. what do you have to say to the people out there that are wondering like is this a publicity stunt? is this real? >> out of all the engagements that have happened recently, we're the publicity stunt? >> that's the one thing -- that's the one comment, the one hater comment that really gets to me. >> reporter: with ashley's fairy tale now coming true jared admits he almost missed out on his happily ever after. >> i was ready to settle for a lesser life and i had a decision to make whether i fight for the things i want, whether i fight for ashley or i continue living in my bubble. >> isn't that just the most beautiful thing you've ever heard a man say. >> reporter: for "good morning america," kayna whitworth, abc news, los angeles. >> and we'll be right back. news, los angeles. >> and we'll be right back.
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good morning, north bay. let's get up and get going. >> this is abc 7 mornings. >> and good morning. i'm reggie aqui from abc 7 mornings. it's 8:27. it looks like b.a.r.t.'s new cars are spending a lot of time in the shop. according to the chronicle, b.a.r.t. records show the first ten new cars needed nearly 500 fixes and that's just since they started service in january. b.a.r.t. says most of this is preventative maintenance, but the records show each car has had an average of 20 mechanical problems every month. by the way, those cars are not cheap. up to $2 million each. so tell me that traffic's >> yeah, you know, you're that? probably moving better on b.a.r.t. than if you're trying to drive right now. although, some better news here on the peninsula.
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we had a crash involving a motorcycle southbound 101 before third, that was blocking two lanes. got the all-clear now. just some residual delays. and bay bridge toll plaza, thinning out a bit on the left, but those metering lights still but those metering lights still on and you're backed up into the ♪ but those metering lights still on and you're backed up into the ice cream inspired iced coffee is here at dunkin' in the flavors you love, cookie dough, pistachio and butter pecan. and now, enjoy any medium iced coffee for .50. america runs on dunkin'. ♪ ♪ ♪ raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens ♪ ♪ bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens ♪ ♪ brown paper packages tied up with strings ♪ ♪ these are a few of my favorite things ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ these are a few of my favorite things ♪ ♪ strummed guitar you can't experience the canadian rockies through a screen. you have to be here, with us. ♪ upbeat music travel through this natural wonder and get a glimpse of amazing, with a glass of wine in one hand, and a camera in the other, aboard rocky mountaineer. canada's rocky mountains await. call your travel agent or rocky mountaineer for special offers now. now your accuweather forecast with drew tuma. >> and we're having a couple of issues with visibility and fog, north bay especially right now. you can see santa rosa down to three miles with the allow cloud cover right now. similar story, half moon bay.
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waking up to temperatures in the 50s and 60s. later on today, highs in our warmest spots will be in the mid-90s. reggie? >> all right. thank you, drew. another abc 7 news update in about 30 minutes and ♪ i can make your hands clap welcome back to "gma." we've got an enthusiastic tuesday audience with us here this morning. [ cheers and applause ] and things are about to get even better because we have a very funny guest to bring to the table. you know him from community and also from "the soup." now he's got a new show called "the joel mchale show" with joel mchale, obviously. please welcome, you guessed it, joel mchale. [ applause ] >> good to see you. so many people. hi. >> hi, nice to see you. >> nice to see you.
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>> come on. >> i don't -- >> have a seat. >> great. okay. >> i love that look from you right there. that hmm. >> i'm smelling my finger. it's a little weird. this is clearly not george's seat since his is much higher, right? [ laughter ] too soon. >> too soon. >> keep it warm, joel. don't crush it. well, good morning. >> good morning, america. good morning, america. >> you know what, we're happy to have you here, man, and, you know, hopefully you're having a good summer so far. i saw you came from camping which sounds like a lot of fun. >> i did. we were not stranded or anything. we did it on purpose. it was glamping so dmrafrp something when you don't have to do anything. it's a hotel outside. so it's a bit of a rip-off but, yeah, we went glamping. my wife and i ended up in a corn hole tournament and i don't know if you know about corn hole. >> who won?
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>> okay, so it was a huge group and we -- we were on separate teams and ended up in the final against each other and my wife and i are very competitive. michael, you know nothing what i'm talking about. if you had tried more when you were playing football, you would have had some success but i'm glad you had this to fall back on because i know you needed the money, but he literally has his own line of suit, guys. wearing his own label. >> you know what's so funny, i'm like, i'm sitting here going, well, george isn't here and i'm here and you're still saying it to my face. you're a good man. >> oh, no, i'm not. robin, do you have your own line of clothes. >> no, i do not. >> let's get on that. >> a women's line. >> let's get on it. >> thank you. >> so then we're throwing bean bags into a hole and it became
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very spirited and very intense. i will say that i did win with my partner and i felt terrible and i'm still reaping that, but there will be -- we've already scheduled a rematch. i mean, my wife and i have been so competitive when we played tennis 20 years ago and i won, she was like, great, we'll never play again. and then we started playing again so it all -- >> celebrating your 22nd wedding anniversary. >> yes, 22nd wedding anniversary. she is very nice to agree to continue to be married to me. >> you were in another tournament. fortnite tournament. >> i don't know if you've heard of this video game called fortnite but it's the most popular thing on the planet right now. >> yep. >> and my kids play it and they said, hey, we don't ever have to go to college, let's just do this and i got into this fortnite tournament and i was playing against the hundred best players in the world.
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>> are you good? >> i'm terrible but i'm playing people like ninja myth and -- you know who that is, right? those names i just said them and at homes there's kids that went, what. ninja. >> how did you do? >> you can hide in fortnite and i just hid like a coward. and just waited -- >> you survived. >> ninja got eliminated before me and my kids were like we are not horribly embarrassed by you now. we can go out in public. they were warning me, they're like, dad, you suck at this and you need to practice forever. and even my 13-year-old goes, he's like, i'm not the greatest at it but i'm way better than you. get on it so for like five minutes they liked me as a father. so it was -- it worked out. thank you. [ applause ] thank you for the pity. the pity clapping. thank you. >> we want to talk about the show. >> let's do that. >> the "the joel mchale show" with joel mchale. how did you come up with the name? >> well, it was hard -- it was
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weeks and weeks of discussion. no, this way i've ensured that if they fire me, the replacement will be very awkward because it's becomes the "the joel mchale show" with michael strahan which i don't doubt there's a future when that happens. then they'll have to change the whole thing but i wanted to make sure that if people didn't catch my name the first time -- i'm desperate. i'm in a desperate -- i just want to stay on netflix. >> we will watch a clip and it has guests and we'll look at something. about one scene from the show where you're discussing this. here's the "the joel mchale show." >> we spent 18 hours listening to music and full moon and we saw a white fox in the middle of pch in the middle of the morning. like everything was an omen. >> that's -- what a great story.
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do you have one that explains how straws work? [ laughter ] >> oh, that's it? oh, thanks. all right. for that entire clip go to the show and you'll see -- it'll make total sense. jack black is on the end of that. >> you have a lot of celebrities on the show. one of them your "community" co-star jillian jacobs and chatter about a "community" reboot reunion. what say you? >> well, as everybody knows, donald glover's career is tanked and he's not a successful rapper, actor, director or writer, so he's been begging for it. look, if donald has the time which he will in about 35 years, then -- and dan harmon just got picked up for 70 episodes of "rick and mortgay" so he's a
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little busy and we want michael. >> he needs another show. >> he needs one more show. and he needs to start working out more. >> i need a twin. >> why? that's what i want to know. why haven't you exercised since you retired? >> i don't know. i just -- figure why. who am i -- >> you should get back in shape. i don't know -- >> i've been slacking lately. >> you played football. >> oh, yeah, i played football. >> look at that build. >> you did play football. >> yeah, okay, this is -- >> he did. >> this is the difference between -- yeah, you're right but this is the difference between me -- my football was getting a twinkie at like a gas station and he was the porterhouse steak that cost $250. he would have ripped -- yeah, he would have torn my airports off and beaten me with my own arms. >> what position. >> tight end. >> you would have had a field day. >> yes. he would have hit me so hard my
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ancestors would have felt it. [ laughter ] yeah, no, i -- >> that would have been fun. >> when i see someone like him downing field, running and crying, michael strahan is chasing me, run for your life. so, yeah, no, we -- yes, i played poorly on a very good college team and he played very well in the most competitive league. so it's not -- there's no sort of -- i'm sure amy would have hit me harder than i was hitting people out there. >> i tell you right now you can come back they time because this has been -- >> i'll come back tomorrow. >> you're my biggest cheerleader. >> see you tomorrow. >> you know what i love we were talking about this downstairs. birthdays. i wish we had a cake because you're november 20th. i'm 21st. >> i'm the 23rd. >> really. >> and amy -- >> february, february 6th. sorry. >> and amy has a birthday. how about that? >> all right. well, then i'm coming back on my birthday? >> yes, you are. we're having a cake in all right, i'll see you then.
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i'm turning 34. turing 34. 34. yep. >> i'll be launching my clothing line with michael. >> on our birthdays. how about that? we lover it when you're here, man. >> thank you for having me. >> everybody will love this show. "the joel mchale show" with joel mchale streaming on netflix. make sure you go check out this funnym funnyman. >> watch it on netflix. we have "hamilton" stars daveed diggs and rafael casal. they are here live wi.
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♪ 24 karat magic in the air we are back with the new mov movie"blindspotting" that has critics raving. it was written by daveed diggs and his best friend rafael casal. so, fella, come on out. ♪ 24 karat magic in the air [ applause ] fellas. good to see you, man. >> how are you. >> i'm good. i'm good. >> have a seat, fellas. >> be nice, i don't trust you. >> you know, it's got to be nice to work with your best friend, man. >> it's pretty all right, you know. >> but you guys have been working on this for nine years.
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this is not an overnight thing, nine years, you met in high school. we decided we'll dig up some photos from your yearbook. >> oh, dang. >> three duck tails. >> so what were your impressions of each other when you first met. >> i was a senior and he was a freshman so i was like unimpressed. >> too cool. he was too cool. >> no, but he was a really good poet. we met at a poetry slam becauses th that's some real berkeley stuff but i watched him perform. thought he was incredible then i left for college and didn't think about him. >> wow. >> but the friendship came around. >> i was -- when he got out of school i was running a recording studio and a mutual friend was like you should hear daveed's music. and he came by and we just started working on music all night and sort of been that way ever since, working on projects
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for the last 14 years. >> long time, man. but daveed, we know you from "hamilton." you won the tony award. [ cheers and applause ] so well deserved. and -- >> good job, man. >> but rafael, i hear you were in his dressing room so much that people thought you were in the cast. >> yeah, i had to move to new york for us to keep working on projects because he didn't respond to emails. >> don't respond to email. yeah. >> thought i'd hang out in the dressinging room and on a break what do you think of this idea? we need to get this done. >> you trust him so much you let rafael run your social media. >> yeah, nobody really knows this but like early days if you were dm'ing me you were talking to rafael. >> if you got a happy birthday i wished you happy birthday. >> i have since taken over, you're talking to me 65% of the time in you guys have worked together on this movie. we'll take a look at a clip right now. in this clip you two are fighting over a woman who's trying to come between best
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friends. so here we are. the clip of "blindspotting." >> you're not a thug. drug dealer. you went to jail on a fire technicality. >> did i? >> yes. how are we supposed to know that hipsters are know flammable? [ applause ] >> went to jail on a fire technicality. all right. and you two did a rap battle on one of my favorite shows growing up "sesame street" as a carrot and sweet potato. how do you get into the frame of mind -- >> as a sweet potato. >> how do you go et into the frail of mind and write the swag for a carrot in a sweet potato. >> bars are bars but actually bill sherman wrote all that. he does a ton of writing -- >> there's a hype man. broc-broc. >> doing our overdubs, the best part of that battle.
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>> well, the best part -- >> carrot won just to be clear. >> they wrote it that way. >> well, you guys, you guys are both winning and both wrote an incredible movie and excited for everybody to get a chance to see it. rafael, the movie is "blindspotting." it opens in select theaters on friday and it opens nationwide july 27 szott mae shiek you are get out there and check it out. appreciate it, ginger. >> now i have a goal. i want to be broc-broc. one of the coolest videos we have even all week. a waterspout on the colorado river right next to a brush fire. you guys see that video. isn't that unreal? yeah, it looks like they created that for a film. no, that is real life and that's happening there in california when they have a big difference in heat you can get that spin in the atmosphere i'm abc 7 news meteorologist drew tuma with your accuweather forecast. a sunny afternoon. it's warm inland in the 90s.
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we are back with hip-hop group rae sremmurd. the brothers going on tour with wiz khalifa and here to perform their new single off their triple disc album "srem 3.""" this is "guatemala." >> let's do it. ♪ it was way more than a $2 holla stole your heart like alibaba oh your heart ♪ ♪ seen the way you talking up my phone last night, on god on my phone last night ♪ ♪ hey, hey, hey ♪ do it on my jet let's keep this private ♪
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♪ she wants me too she ain't even in denial denial ♪ ♪ hey hey ♪ wanna make love she ain't even in denial in denial ♪ ♪ we can get away, maybe to guatemala ♪ ♪ got me going deep got me all in freshwater going under ♪ ♪ baby when you laughing is it 'cause you feel an excellent vibe, yeah, yeah ♪ ♪ this was just a fraction of the good love i provide come on, come on ♪ ♪ see some people talking on the side can you keep that silent keep that quiet ♪ ♪ maybe saying something but you didn't mean nothing by it ♪ ♪ hey hey hey ♪ took her to the room in other words kept that private kept that private ♪ ♪ she was my heartbreak i told her keep those violets, let's go ♪ ♪ seen the way you talking up my phone last night on god talking on the phone ♪ ♪ do it on my jet let's keep this private ♪ ♪ what she say ♪ she wants me too she ain't
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even in denial denial ♪ ♪ come on, come on ♪ wanna make love she ain't even in denial in denial ♪ ♪ we can get away maybe to guatemala guatemala ♪ ♪ got me going deep got me all in freshwater freshwater ♪ ♪ sing it sing it ♪ flew in on a jet what's that stylish ♪ ♪ take another sip then get superpowers whoa, oh, oh ♪ ♪ if she got the hots for me then damn it i'm buying, i'm, i'm buying ♪ ♪ i've got more pull than him and him combined go go go ♪ ♪ pouring out dreams 'cause we're really this high really that high ♪ ♪ i just had my hand on her hip she had her eyes on the prize eyes on the prize ♪ ♪ seen the way you talking up my phone last night on god talking on the phone ♪ ♪ come on come on come on ♪ do it on my jet let's keep this private ♪ ♪ she wants me too she ain't even in denial denial ♪ ♪ wanna make love she ain't even in denial ♪
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♪ in denial ♪ we can get away, maybe to guatemala, guatemala ♪ ♪ got me going deep got me all in freshwater freshwater ♪ ♪ she belt she roller coaster riding put you on a plane been thinking about it ♪ ♪ sipping on fiji yeah you taste like water, hey, hey ♪ ♪ chasing me tryna make me your partner tryna make me your partner ♪ ♪ maybe we can lock in later on yeah i can't guarantee i'll fall, fall ♪ ♪ baby we should look in later on hey i can't guarantee my heart, hey ♪ ♪ baby don't take too, too long, too long ♪ ♪ i ain't never missed my mark my mark ♪ ♪ yeah my ex-girl had to move on, there's no pictures on the wall ayy, ayy ♪ ♪ seen the way you talking up my phone last night on god talking on the phone ♪ ♪ do it at my house let's keep this private keep this private ♪
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good morning, bay area. let's get up and get going. this is abc 7 mornings. >> and good morning. it's 8:59. i'm reggie aqui from abc 7 mornings. let's head over to meteorologist drew tuma. how's it outside? >> we're seeing conditions changing pretty rapidly. fog right now on the coast is creating visibility issues. but you look inland, a live look from our east bay hills cameras showing you sunny skies are prevailing at this mid-morning hour. 76 in oakland, 88 in san jose, about 69 in san francisco. enjoy. >> all right. i actually have two trouble spots if you're traveling northbound on 680 out of the fremont area. the first one is near durham. and that is blocking one lane, once you make it past that one, another crash northbound 680 just past vargas, blocking two lanes headed towards sunol. a little onlooker delay.
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and you're south and go down towards the caldecott area due to an earlier crash. >> thank you, alexis. it's time now to watch "live with kelly & ryan." we'l >> announcer: it's "live with kelly and ryan!" today, from the series "claws," niecy nash. and mind reader, comedian, mentalist, eric dittelman. plus, one of the stars of the hbo drama "succession." all next on "live!" ♪ [cheers and applause] and now, here are kelly ripa and ryan seacrest! [cheers and applause] ♪ [cheers and applause]
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