tv Good Morning America ABC August 31, 2018 7:00am-8:59am PDT
7:00 am
ill." >> he tried not to overthink it and released it. >> the lyrics are something else. good morning, america. holiday weekend washout. millions now in the path of severe storms and flash flooding as you travel for labor day. the watches already issued in the midwest and the northeast bracing for heavy rain. ginger tracking it all. and as millions hit the road for the holiday, the deadly bus crash. this greyhound bus full of passengers colliding with a semi. the front of the bus completely torn off. the death toll climbing this morning and the investigation now underway. final farewell. new images this morning of senator john mccain returning to the nation's capital one last time. his family there by his side after an emotional last service in arizona. the touching tribute from friend and former vice president joe
7:01 am
biden as the nation says good-bye. hotel scam. the new warning. this couple saying someone racked up thousands of dollars of charges after they checked out. how did it happen? lizard on the loose. the family terrorized by this six-foot beast with a potentially deadly bite roaming around their backyard for weeks. why not even trappers can catch it. ♪ we're riding on the freeway of love in my pink cadillac ♪ and the star-studded good-bye for the queen of soul. the powerhouse performances honoring aretha franklin and the five-hour ceremony getting underway. more than 130 pink cadillacs lining up for an incredible tribute this morning. good morning, america. i love that song so much. it is a gr that's right. it's a huge morning becaus
7:02 am
greats, senator john mccain, of course, and the queen of soul, aretha franklin. we're going to be celebrating both of their lives with some very special tributes on this friday. but first as we head into labor day weekend, millions are on the road right now and they are in the path of some serious storms. a major washout for the midwest. take a look at this flooding there in wisconsin and the northeast is bracing for heavy rain. ginger is here tracking it all. good morning, ginger. happening just east of i-95. there is a flash flood warning in new jersey. medford. jonesboro, arkansas, images coming out of there from the severe storms and up to 2 inches of rain. that bus trying to navigate the water. not a good idea. and in wisconsin, on the kickapoo river, people's homes filled with water and more where that came from. especially for that same region. that central wisconsin back through minneapolis. it comes along today not just with heavy rain but damaging wind, large hail and isolated
7:03 am
tornados. traveling along 94 or 35, something to watch, whit. >> thanks so much. as the storms move in, millions are on the move for the holiday weekend. aaa estimating some 35 million people will hit the roads. abc's eva pilgrim is on the new jersey turnpike right now. eva, how is traffic looking where you are? >> right now, whit, it's not too bad. if you're planning to hit the road, you have to realize you're not going to be alone. the best time to travel is right now. if you look at the roads, you'll see the cars are on the road, but it's steady, it's moving. you're not in gridlock at this hour. as the day progresses, the traffic is going to get worse and the worst time to leave for the holiday weekend is actually going to be later tonight after that rush hour time between 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. that's when everyone is off of work and rushing to get to their holiday weekend. now, if you are thinking about already when you're going to come home and not dealing with
7:04 am
the traffic then. monday wake up early. if you leave before noon you'll be able to avoid a lot of the traffic. the other thing, everyone who hits the road is thinking about gas prices. gas price, the national average right now is at $2.83, a four-year high for the holiday weekend, up 43 cents over last year and, whit, analysts say they're not really going to be budging. those prices will stick around for awhile. >> we'll have to get used to it. eva pilgrim, thanks so much. amy. now to the nation's final farewell to senator john mccain after emotional tribute notice his home state of arizona, he was flown to washington, d.c. to lie in state at the u.s. capitol after a private ceremony for his family and others. the general public will be able to also pay their respects. our chief global affairs correspondent martha raddatz has all the latest in washington. good morning, martha. >> reporter: good morning, amy. thousands are expected to line up here today to pay respects to john mccain after that emotional arrival last night.
7:05 am
overnight, senator john mccain's final return to the nation's capital. his body arriving at joint base andrews with his family greeted by defense secretary jim mattis. mccain on his way to lie in state at the capitol this morning. on thursday in phoenix the service for mccain -- ♪ amazing grace >> reporter: -- at the church where he worshipped for 25 years, speakers honoring his legacy. larry fitzgerald, the star wide receiver on mccain's beloved arizona cardinals, lionizing mccain through their seemingly surprising friendship. >> i'm black. he was white. i'm young. he wasn't so young. he celebrated differences. he embraced humanity. >> reporter: and mccain's friend
7:06 am
from across the aisle -- >> my name is joe biden. i'm a democrat and i loved john mccain. >> reporter: former vice president joe biden lauding his political legacy despite their differences. >> i always thought of john as a brother. we had a hell of a lot of family fights. >> reporter: and honoring mccain for his ageless code. >> i think john believed in us. i think he believed in the american people. >> reporter: of course, tomorrow a service at the national cathedral. former presidents barack obama and george bush will speak, will eulogize john mccain. president trump will not be there. in an interview yesterday with bloomberg news, president trump said he made no mistakes in handling any of this. amy. >> all right, martha raddatz in
7:07 am
washington, thank you. we will have live coverage this morning as senator mccain lies in state at the u.s. capitol and we will bring you live coverage of his memorial service tomorrow morning. that starts at 9:00 a.m. eastern right here on abc. george will be leading our team coverage. cecilia. >> okay, amy, thank you. the president as martha said will not attend that funeral tomorrow and he made no mention of the senator at an overnight campaign rally in indiana. instead he blasted his justice department and the fbi. this as a new abc news/"washington post" poll on president trump is out this morning showing the president's disapproval rating now at an all-time high and take a look at this number, an overwhelming majority of americans back robert mueller's russia probe and jonathan karl joins us with more. the president is threatening to intervene in that investigation. >> he sure is, cecelia. as the president's complaints about the russia investigation grow louder, he is hinting at a shake-up of his justice department.
7:08 am
>> reporter: overnight in indiana, president trump came out swinging at his own attorney general. >> our justice department and our fbi have to start doing their job and doing it right and doing it now. because people are angry. what's happening is a disgrace. >> reporter: in an earlier interview with bloomberg news the president declared the special counsel robert mueller's russia probe is outright illegal. telling bloomberg, quote, i view it differently. i view it as an illegal investigation. multiple legal challenges to mueller's appointment have failed, but the president is adamant telling bloomberg there should never have been a special counsel. >> are you going to fire jeff sessions, sir? >> no interview with robert mueller? >> reporter: president trump won't say when he'll part with his attorney general but hinted to bloomberg sessions won't be on the job after the november elections.
7:09 am
>> i'd just like to have jeff sessions do his job and, if he did, i'd be very happy but the job entails two sides, not one side. >> reporter: if democrats take control of the house in the midterm, the president warns impeaching him would be a dangerous mistake saying, quote, i don't think they can impeach somebody that's doing a great job. it was over a year ago that the president told me that he would be 100% willing to be interviewed under oath by robert mueller. it now appears that he is unlikely to do that voluntarily raising the possibility that the special counsel could subpoena the president. asked if he would comply with such a subpoena, the president told bloomberg, quote, i'll see what happens. cecilia. >> gearing up for a showdown. jon karl, thank you. whit. >> cecelia, thank you. turning now to that horrific crash on a new mexico highway, a greyhound bus packed with passengers colliding with a tractor trailer. the ntsb now investigating and
7:10 am
this morning the death toll is climbing. at least seven people killed. dozens injured. abc's marci gonzalez is in new mexico with the very latest. marci, good morning. >> whit, good morning. we're told 30 people are still hospitalized this morning, the most critically hurt air lifted from that devastating scene. >> reporter: at least seven people are dead and dozens more injuries after this violent head-on crash between a greyhound bus and a semi truck on this new mexico highway. the bus with 48 people on board was headed out of albuquerque on its way to phoenix when the semi blew out a tire, swerving into the path of the bus. the head-on collision shearing off the bus' front end scattering debris over a stretch of interstate 40. many inside thrown from the bus left lying on the asphalt. >> the officers did a great job of sifting through the wreckage and the rubble to pull the people that were survivors out of the bus. they did a really great job. >> reporter: emergency crews on
7:11 am
the scene quickly worked to reach any victims trapped inside. bystanders springing into action to help. >> i got out of my truck, grabbed some gloves and started helping people. seeing that many people, it was very chaotic. >> reporter: the ntsb is investigating. so is greyhound. a spokesperson telling us they are fully cooperating with authorities. amy. >> all right, marci, thank you very much. we're going to turn to stunning allegations against nbc. a former producer who worked with ronan farrow is now accusing the network of effectively killing his story on harvey weinstein which helped catapult the me too movement. abc's adrienne bankert has the story. >> reporter: overnight a former nbc news employee is now accusing network executives of effectively killing ronan farrow's story of harvey weinstein's alleged sexual misconduct which he had been working on for eight months at the network. the sweeping report spawning the me too movement. >> what the women have done
7:12 am
coming forward in this article and now far beyond as you say industry after industry is something i could have never fully anticipated. it's incredibly moving. >> reporter: he won a pulitzer for his coverage in "the new yorker" of the disgraced movie mogul accused of sexual assault by many women. originally he worked on the story for nbc alongside one of the network's top investigative producers. overnight that producer, rich mchugh tells abc news as we were about to interview a woman with a credible allegation of rape against him, i was told not to do the interview and ordered to stand down, thus effectively killing the story. those orders came to me from the highest levels of nbc. mchugh resigned in protest from nbc news last week, nearly a year after farrow left. the network tells abc news overnig overnight, the assertion that nbc news tried to kill the weinstein story while ronan farrow was at nbc news or even more ludicrously after he left nbc news is an outright lie. adding that farrow was allowed by nbc to take the story to the "new yorker."
7:13 am
mchugh who formerly worked at abc news said nbc owed it to those brave women who spoke to us to get their stories out. but nbc says at that time farrow did not yet have a single victim of or witness to misconduct by weinstein who was willing to be identified. according to an nbc official who spoke to "the times" one of those women, rose mcgowan was willing to go on camera but at the time unwilling to name weinstein and eventually became his most vocal accuser. >> i have a visceral need for him to have handcuffs on. >> reporter: farrow went on to publish in "the new had on the report accounts from asia argento, mira sorvino, rosanna arquette and four other women and nbc says not one of these seven women was included in the reporting farrow presented while at nbc news.
7:14 am
and rich mchugh tells abc exclusively as the father of four girls i knew if i did not pursue this story with everything i had how could i live with myself and what example would i have set for my daughters? there was only one way forward and that was to get the story out. back to you. >> thank you so much. cecilia. this morning we are also celebrating the life of the queen of soul, aretha franklin. she will be laid to rest in detroit today sent off with a star-studded hours' long funeral and zachary kiesch is in detroit with the details. good morning, zachary. >> good morning, zest i can't. we're outside the greater grace temple here in detroit. you can see a lot of last-minute prep happening. it will be a final send-off for the queen of soul. what an incredible story aretha had she was born the grand daughter of share croppers, but used her love of people and voice to have a positive impact on the world. >> we're going to miss her. >> reporter: top artists, activists and 6,000 of areth franklin's biggest fans blowing the top of the shane park amphitheater in the legend's
7:15 am
hometown. >> she was the best singer in the world. >> reporter: patti labelle with an incredibly moving performance remembering the queen of soul. ♪ ♪ come running with you >> reporter: the four tops and johnny gill also taking the stage. ♪ y'all sound so good and you sound so sweet ♪ >> reporter: showcasing what aretha loved most, gospel music and prayer. her friends saying it's the tribute she would have wanted. despite humble beginnings, aretha was bound for glory. the seeds of her musical greatness planted in her father's church. thousands of mourners their respects to the queen. >> she gives me feelings. she gives me soul. she lifts me up when i'm down. >> reporter: more than 130 pink cadillacs will lineup in a procession for aretha, a
7:16 am
to her 1986 hit "freeway of love." cecilia, the last ride will be inside the same vintage hearse that carried civil rights icon rosa parks. cecelia. >> the send-off she deserves. thank you, zachary. whit. >> cecelia, thank you. now to an unusual scene at the u.s. open raising a lot of questions this morning. australia's nick kyrgios getting what some critics describe as a pep talk from the umpire in the middle of the match. he then went on to win. espn's ryan smith is here to explain. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, guys. very strange situation this morning. tennis superstars and its millions of fans are asking for an explanation for this pep talk between an umpire and a competitor. now, in a second match nick kyrgios seemed like he was on the ropes and barely lunging for serves when the umpire, mohamed lahyani steps down from his chair to offer advice and now some fans and other players are calling foul arguing that it
7:17 am
might amount to interference giving the 23-year-old the edge he needed to bounce back. the usta is saying this is about communication and player safety saying layhani told kyrgios if he was feeling ill, that the tournament could provide him with medical hem. >> what about his opponent? how's he reacting to all this? >> he was not happy with this. kyrgios' opponent pierre-hugues herbert after seeing the video saying he's angry and also added this, i am even more upset against the statement of the usta that it's clearly taking us for fools. how about that? kyrgios for his part called the notion that the talk helped him ridiculous and added, he just said he liked me. i'm not sure that's encouragement. >> it seems like there's been one thing after another. the t-shirts and pep talks now. >> yeah, but i like a pep talk. >> sure, everybody does. yeah. >> serena/venus showdown. >> exactly. >> speaking of that tonight as well, all eyes will be on the williams sisters. venus and serena in the third
7:18 am
round. you can see all the action on espn. 30 times they faced each other before. >> fun one. a lot of action on the image behind ginger. an update on the tropics. >> we're starting to see action because it's been an incredibly slow august. we're going to end up with no hurricanes in august, which has never happened before. florence stays away from land. that's the good news but that will bring rain at least by monday to south florida. your local weather in 30 seconds. first, the weekend getaways sponsored by febreze.
7:19 am
and coming up next as you travel this holiday weekend and alert the couple who thought they checked out of their hotel but then got slammed with a huge bill saying someone used their reservation to rack up thousands of dollars. the warning this morning. reservation to rack up thousands of dollars. the warning this morning. if youo severe rheumatoid arthritis, month after month, the clock is ticking on irreversible joint damage. ongoing pain and stiffness are signs of joint erosion.
7:20 am
humira can help stop the clock. prescribed for 15 years, humira targets and blocks a source of inflammation that contributes to joint pain and irreversible damage. 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. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. help stop the clock on further irreversible joint damage. talk to your rheumatologist. right here. right now. humira. somebody burned down my she shed.. your she shed was struck by lightning. is my she shed covered by state farm? your she shed's covered, cheryl. that's wonderful news. go with the one that's here to help life go right. state farm.
7:21 am
during the color sweet color sale. look from august 30th to september 10th, ask sherwin-williams and get 30% off paints and stains. visit your neighborhood sherwin-williams store today. where the sun soaks the leaves with 4000 hours of sunshine before we pick them at the peak of freshness for a smooth refreshing taste and aroma in every cup of lipton. your to-do list if yjust keeps growing. me, (laughs desperately) it never stops. which is why the online financing application at carmax.com is so convenient. get some of that finance stuff out of the way from wherever you are, at the doctor's office, karate practice or my favorite...
7:22 am
back at the doctor's office. hd 4 mrs. davis... ha ha ha, yay kids! ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ in your gut, you feel confident to take on anything. with benefiber, you'll feel the power of gut health confidence every day. benefiber is a 100% natural prebiotic fiber. good morning mrs. jonhson. benefiber. trust your gut.
7:23 am
good morning, east bay. let's get up and get going. >> this is abc 7 mornings. >> and good morning. it's 7:23. i'm reggie aqui from abc 7 mornings. counselors are on hand at balboa high school in san francisc tg. students are going back to class after a chaotic day. a gun went off inside a classroom around 11:00 yesterday morning. police swarmed the campus and the school was locked down for about two hours. a 14-year-old freshman was arrested. we're told the student brought the gun to school in his backpack. the gunfire did not injure any students. alexis, how are we looking, traffic wise? >> we're looking okay, although we do have a new crash to talk about. this is a rollover on the peninsula. northbound 280, just before woodside. two vehicles involved. again, with one of those vehicles flipped over. that is blocking the two left lanes. so definitely heavy for about a mile and a half approaching that scene. and we have a small b.a.r.t. delay about them minutes out of antioch creek. that's due to an earlier
7:24 am
7:26 am
now your accuweather forecast with mike nicco. let's open up the weather window. pretty cloudy as we look at the bay bridge toll plaza. let's talk about what's going on with driving. we have some thick fog across the north bay for the next hour and a half or so. breezy, south of the bay bridge this afternoon, if you're going to be on the water, and cool to warm for mass transit. stepping out right now, it is cooler than yesterday, low 50s to about 60 degrees. here's a look what's going to happen this afternoon. about 2 to 11 degrees warmer than yesterday, as we get back into the 70s and 80s with 90s to fall inland, sunday and monday. regg reggie? >> thank you, mike. coming up, a man arrested for allegedly posing as a doctor. he's accused of giving one patient a medical diagnoses. how he managed to slip past security at a children's hospital. and a
7:28 am
"have you lost weight?" of course i have- ever since i started renting from national. because national lets me lose the wait at the counter... ...and choose any car in the aisle. and i don't wait when i return, thanks to drop & go. at national, i can lose the wait...and keep it off. looking good, patrick. i know. (vo) go national. go like a pro.
7:29 am
discover.o. i like your card, but i'm absolutely not paying an annual fee. discover has no annual fees. really? yeah. we just don't believe in them. oh nice. you would not believe how long i've been rehearsing that. no annual fee on any card. only from discover. you won't find relief here. congestion and pressure? go to the pharmacy counter for powerful claritin-d. while the leading allergy spray relieves 6 symptoms... claritin-d relieves 8, including sinus congestion and pressure. claritin-d relieves more. this is the pepsi for worthy of hundred mile detours, and a thousand likes. looks good! this is the pepsi for mopping, dipping, and dousing. whatever you're craving, this is the pepsi for you.
7:30 am
>> announcer: this is an abc news special report. john mccain, celebrating an american hero. now reporting tom llamas. >> good morning. we are coming on the air to bring you a true ly historic moment at the u.s. capital. john mccain here represented the people of arizona. for 36 years. he never was elected president, but today he'll be treated as a head of state. what we're witnessing is a rare honor that hasn't happened since 2012. he will lie in state in the rotunda at the center of your screen. it looks like a simple black rectangular base. it's an artifact more than 150
7:31 am
years old. it held the president of our 16th president, abraham lincoln and today will hold the casket of john mccain. we have seen several of mccain's colleagues enter the rotunda earlier today along the celebrities and actors like warren beatty and annette benning. he called his job the most important job i had in my life. senator susan colins saying the lions of the senate are gone. i want to bring in jonathan karl. jonathan as we see the hearse arrivi arriving, your thoughts. >> seeing john mccain go into the building for the last time is an emotional experience.
7:32 am
this is a senator who made a lot of enemies in that building. he sparred mightily with democrats and sometimes more mightily with republicans. in my 20 years covering the capital, the congress, that i saw somebody more widely respected, more ultimately beloved than john mccain. i suspect you will see a long, long line of staffers, of members of congress, the general public, everybody coming into to pay their respects. i know, tom, when we get off the air, i'm going up there. mccain has a unique relationship with the press. he would fight with reporters. he could be cranky and spar with you, but nobody was -- i don't think any public figure i ever
7:33 am
covered had more of a respect and belief in the importance for what we do, the importance of a free and vigorous press, even a press that on more than one occasion could annoy him. >> we're looking at a hearse carrying the body of senator john mccain which will lie in state. i want to bring in coky roberts. talk to us about this moment. 11 presidents have had this honor. a handful of senators. it was decided pretty quickly that senator john mccain would receive this treatment as well. >> he's had extraordinary treatment all week, honoring his unique place in history. as jon said he was very respected in the senate although often irritating them. the previous senator to lie in
7:34 am
this spot was the senator from hawaii. he was a medal of honor winner. that's the kind of person that has his unique respect from the congress and the country. here in washington today there were announcements being made on television and radio stations, you can come to the capital at 1:00 and be there to pay your respects to john mccain. i suspect that many, many thousands will do that. what we've seen in the past is people who have been in the rotunda surprising the capital police and the capital architect who runs the place, with how many people come and come all night long. it is really something that the american people want to pay respect to their heros. john mccain was certainly a hero. >> stand by for us. we just got our first glimpse of the flag draping the coffin of senator mccain. there have been so many moments
7:35 am
we've seen in the last few days, kle including when senator mccain took his last flight leaving arizona coming to d.c. there will be a lot of moments today and tomorrow at a ceremony and later sunday when he's buried. you can see the veterans who senator mccain fought so hard for, a veteran himself. last night as the plane landed, it was secretary mattis who was there with cindy mccain. he'll be one of the pal bearers as well. he greeted her just last night. these are some live pictures we're looking at right now. excuse me. this was just last night as senator mccain arrived here in washington, d.c.
7:36 am
secretary mattis will be a pal bearer tomorrow and so many across the sprek trum will be pal bears. people like warren beatty to joe biden, senators phil graham and gary hart there to honor their friend and colleague. we're waiting to the ceremony to start. jon karl, your thoughts on everything that's transpired over the weeks, all the speeches we heard and the touching notes from people like senator lindsey graham and joe biden. >> tom, what struck me is the way mccain planned his on memorial. he knew when he was diagnosed with brain cancer that he had a death sentence. he started working with his closest friends and advisers on planning this memorial. it wasn't about memorializing
7:37 am
himself. he was looking at a political situation that horrified him. he said it doesn't have to be this bad. he actually used a word i can't say on television. he said the divide in this country doesn't have to be so bitter, so awful. he wanted this week of events to be symbolic about the way -- the way political differences in this country should be overcome. he wasn't particularly close with barack obama or george w. bush. symbolically it was important for him to have both those former presidents who he ran against and lost to, one a conservative republican and one a progressive democrat. he wanted to have both of them come together to speak at his
7:38 am
memorial. that was a large part of what was behind joe biden speaking in arizona. he touched a lot of people in this country, a lot of people who knew him personally and a lot of people who simply knew his story. this was his final moment. this is what we're seeing transpire this week designed and choreographed by john mccain himself. >> we'll looking at cindy mccain and their sons jack and jimmy. that's the first glimpse of the mccain family. so much about today is about tradition. we talked about the lincoln pedestal that's been there 150 years. there is something about today that will be different. that's that the president of the country will not be there. vice president mike pence will be there. the president is sending general john kelly, secretary mattis and
7:39 am
john bolton. he will not be there and he's in washington right now. >> there's a couple things going on there. clearly president trump doesn't -- never has had much of a high opinion or respect for that matter for john mccain. famously during the campaign said as far as war heros he prefers people that weren't captured, something that wasn't simply a slip of a tongue. he had actually said it on "60 minutes" in 1999. it was a deeply felt lack of respect. the feeling ran both ways. mccain -- as you see really quite a moment again, his casket about to come out of that hearse and to go into the capitol building for the last time. john mccain as he planned these events made it clear through friends that he didn't
7:40 am
particularly want the president of the united states taking part in this. >> even from the grave refusing to build a bridge with the president. that relationship was just too fractured. as jon mentioned, we're getting our first look at the casket. it's about to enter the rotunda and lie in state all day. first his family and colleagues in the senate and house and some of the administration to pay respects. there's a service about 30 minutes where the chaplain will speak, the senate chaplain who used to be the navy chaplain as well, barry black. we'll hear from senator majority leader mitch mcconnell, house speaker paul ryan and vice president mike pence along with chuck schumer. it will be interesting to hear the stories they share.
7:41 am
coky, your thoughts. >> this is a difficult moment as john said coming to the capitol for the last time. it's difficult for the pal bearers carrying up these long steps into the rotunda. the rotunda is such a special place. i think john mccain would have preferred to be walking through it to the other side of the capital to take the oath of office of president of the united states. that was not to be. he will be honored in a way that others have been honored under pictures that matter a great deal, picrehat are george washington su rendering his commission saying it's not going to be a military government. it's going to be a government of consent by the people. john mccain understood when his military career was over, the way he could serve the country
7:42 am
7:43 am
>> as we watch this, you have to admire the diligence and discipline of our men from the navy carrying senator john mccain as the rain is starting to fall, making sure they don't miss a step, marching in precise perfect order. though senator mccain served the people of arizona, he also served the people of our
7:44 am
country. in many ways senator john mccain is coming home. he was so much a fixture in washington and on the senator floor. >> so much a fixture of the capitol, the people that worked there not merely his colleagues democrats and republicans, not merely the staff, but the people that worked there. i saw him and walked all over the capitol with john mccain and rode the capital subway from the capitol building to the russell senate building where he had his office. there's a movement to rename the building the mccain senate office building. he had a relationship with the people that drove the subway between the capitol and that building. the police officers that guarded the building. the people that worked in the .
7:45 am
he always had a word to say to them. this was a place that really grew, as i said, to love john mccain. even as he waged some pretty epic battles in that batting and ruffled a lot of feathers and irritated a lot of his colleagues. look at them there. above all, above all, it was respect that they had for john mccain. >> we see john kelly right now, one of the members of the administration, chief of staff. lindsey graham one of the quote unquote three amigos. kellyanne conway from the administration. rod rosenstein as well. an unexpected out for some of the administration, clearly
7:46 am
showing their respects. the governor of arizona. inside the rotunda, coky, it's standing room only. it doesn't look like you can fit anyone else in there. they leave the center of the rotunda completely open. >> on that pedestal that was build for abraham lincoln and until recently kept underneath the dome in a kind of creepy place in the united states capitol, now we have nancy pelosi, elliot engle. >> joe crawly. >> people of both parties there to say good-bye. that really shows you how mccain did cross that line. this is not a republican event. the minority leader of the
7:47 am
senate, chuck schumer we saw. here they're sitting under pictures, by the way, of columbus coming to america and pochahntas saving james smith. the earliest pictures of people in america are over the family as they come in to have this ceremony, the last civic ceremony before the religious ceremony. >> i was noticing the entire mccain family walking in. i noticed someone sitting down. that of course is senator mccain's mother, 106 years old, roberta mccain who has lived such an incredible life. her husband a navy admiral. she travelled all over the world and country in service. you can see her sitting down. again, 106 years young i should
7:48 am
say. she also had to withstand and stay strong while her son was in a vietnamese prison camp for five and a half years. senator mccain would share interesting stories about her how she went to europe and she was too old to rent a car so she bought a car. in her 90s she was driving across country in her 90s. clearly someone of strong character. she too has served her country. no doubt a tough moment for every single person in that family, including our colleague meghan mccain. earlier we saw chuck schumer who suggested they change the name of the capitol building. senate mcconnell tabled that for the moment. it will be one of many honors that they would like to
7:49 am
memorialize john mccain. we see some of the democrats there, senator nancy pelosi, john krauter. the in vocation will be given by the house chaplain. we'll hear others speak, all set to speak about five minutes. i mentioned the chaplain of the senate, barry black, he too a member of the navy, a decorated veteran and someone who senator mccain few as we. we're waiting for -- we see other senators there, dianne feinstein. jon karl joining us now. jon, it's a collection of all the faces we know in washington and all the people start mccain worked with and fought with
7:50 am
during his time in the senate. >> i'm struck thinking of a line that mccain often used. he said he was never elected mr. con jean yalt of the senate. he loved to fight. in his last book, "the restless wave" he said his enjoyment of the fight was in disproportion to the chances of him winning the fight. when i see these senators from both parties, some of who fought mightily with mccain come in and show respect for somebody who -- mccain -- there you see vice president mike pence coming in representing the white house at this ceremony. mccain was somebody who always seemed to be in a hurry. he never had a tough re-election. he won in arizona.
7:51 am
he had a little bit of a scare last time. ultimately he won every race by ten points or more. he always seemed like a guy that was in a hurry. you had to almost sprint to keep up with him walking through the corridors of the capitol. he wanted to do things. he wanted to as he would say over and over encourage us to dedicate our lives to a cause greater than ourselves. he felt that he had survived that horrific ordeal in vietnam. he was not going to waste his time now that he had been given what he saw as a great honor representing the state of arizona in the united states senate. he was going to make the most of it, even if that meant clashing and run a bit like a bull in a china shop in the senate. going up against his colleagues in both parties, he was going to
7:52 am
7:53 am
7:54 am
you could never doubt this man was a patriot. >> that's true exactly right. looking at the line of democrat and republican senators and their wives is quite moving. this whole ceremony is very impressive of course, but so appropriate for john mccain who was of course not only such a hero himself in the military, but the child of the military. you see sitting in the last picture, sitting in a wheelchair senator tammie duckworth who was severely injured in the iraq war losing legs and an arm. she talked about what an inspiration john mccain was to her and how he always reached out to her and encouraged her even though she was a democrat, because she understood what she had suffered. >> as we watch the capital
7:55 am
police honor guard take over for the navy honor guard, i'm thinking of all the things that happened in john mccain's life. he wanted to command an aircraft carrier. let's listen in. >> we give you thanks all mighty god for the appearance among us of great men and women who serve as inspiration for all americans to be their best in service to god, country and neighbor. this day we honor a true american hero, senator john mccain. he dedicated his entire lo public service as a vocation, first in the military and then
7:56 am
in elected office. he placed himself directly in harm's way during the vietnam war and his great sacrifice of personal freedom is well-known. as a senator he served with honesty and integrity working both with those with whom he agreed and many with whom he did not. his willingness to speak the truth as he understood it, even when it was not politically expedient to do so, proved to be a rare phenomenon. for that reason it was all the more precious. as we continue this celebration of honor, grant that all who attend to these proceedings might transcend smallness and
7:57 am
limitation and emerge of people desiring to be our best selves in service to all our brothers and sisters as you might call each of us to be. dear lord, thank you for inspiring such greatness in senator john mccain and continue to bless the united states. amen. >> mr. vice president, mr. speaker, colleagues, distinguished guests and the mccain family, it's an honor to welcome you this morning. we gather to recognize a great
7:58 am
loss and celebrate a great life. we celebrate six decides of devotion to the american idea and the cause of human freedom. generations of americans will continue to marvel at the man who lies before us. the cocky, handsome naval aviator who barely scraped through school and then fought for freedom in the skies. who witnessed our values even through terrible torture and who became a generational leader in the united states senate where our nation airs its great debates. now airing our graeat debates i a gentle way to describe how
7:59 am
john approached the work of a senator. i long joked that his guards in hanoi probably needed group therapy after he was finished with them. he treated every issue with the intensity it deserved. he would fight tooth and nail for his vision of the common good, depending on the issue, you knew john would either be your staunchest ally or your most stubborn opponent. at any time he might be preparing an eloquent reflection on human liberty or a devastating joke served up with his signature cackle and that john mccain glint in his eye. he had that fighting spirit, our
8:00 am
solid pa tri tichl all rolled into one. i'll miss my friend who proved that service is a tribute and whose scars reminded us of what great souls paid for our freedom. john felt like family. of course it is cindy and robert the and joe and doug, andy, cindy, meghan, jack, jimmy and bridget who truly call this man their own. on behalf of the senate and the entire nation, thank you. thank you for lending him to us longer than we had a right. thank you for supporting him while he supported us. half a world away wearing our
8:01 am
nation's uniform john mccain stood up for every value that this capitol building represents. then he brought that same pa tri tichl inside its walls to advocate for its service members, our veterans and our moral leadership in the world. it is only right that today near the end of his long journey john lies here in this great hall, under this mighty dome, like other american heros before him. here, as a restless wave approaches the shores of eternity, we thank god forgiv g
8:02 am
giving this country john mccain. >> on behalf of a grateful nation and on behalf of congress, i want to begin by giving thanks to the mccain family for your many years of service to our country. we share your anguish in losing this great man. rarely does this glorious rotunda fall silent at this hour. on a day like this john would usually be bounding this way or that way right through here, visitors turning to each other asking if that's who they think it is. in this quiet hour we are left to ponder how his life speaks to
8:03 am
us. john mccain deserves to be remembered as he wished to be remembered, a patriot who served his country, a man, yes, of the senate, but also a man of the house. a navy man, a family man, a man who made an enormous difference in the lives of countless people. a man of conviction, a man of state. there's a line from his farewell statement that really just grabbed me. our identities and sense of worth are not sir cup skriebed but enlarged by bigger circumstances than ourselves.
8:04 am
that's john mccain. what stands out about john mccain is what he stood for. the rich blessings that only freedom can bestow. the sense of purpose that a battle joined can bring. the common humanity that burns in each of our hearts. hemmi hemmingway once wrote the world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places. no one, no one was stronger at the broken places than john mccain. the brokenest was his ballast. he never lost the joy that time can dull or the edge that political life sands away.
8:05 am
i myself found myself on the receiving end of john's candor, happily so. i remember thinking more than once, yeah, he really does talk like a sailor. you see with john, it was never feigned disagreement. the man didn't feign anything. he just relished the fight. he showed us that in the arena, the honest back and forth, that's where the cause gets bigger. that's where the triumph is all the sweeter. we get stronger at the broken places. though the highest office eluded him, he attained what is far more enduring, the abiding affection of his fellow citizens
8:06 am
and an example for future generations. so i think ahead now. i think ahead to the day when i like so many will bring my own children and perhaps their children to that haloed lawn in annapolis. i think about that. i think about what i might say to them. this is one of the bravest souls our nation has ever produced. however you choose to do your part, i hope you do it the way he did with energy and urgency, playing for keeps, never back on your heels, never letting principle yield to ex paid yens. resisting the lure of the
8:07 am
fleeting and battoning down the hatches when things get rough and always, always, having a really good story to tell. today our nation bows in grief. but here, under the work and in the gaze of the greats, where soldiers known and unknown have laid before, we have this beautiful thing, the chance to do for this man what he did for us, to stand up. to stand up and embrace the cause of his life. no one of us can fulfill this charge, but all of us sure can try because all of this, all of this, it's worth fighting for. god bless john mccain and go
8:08 am
8:09 am
oall, to the mccain family, to cindy, his children and mrs. roberta mccain, it is deeply humbling to stand before you today at the united states capitol to commemorate the life and service of an american patriot, senator john mccain. the president asked me to be here on behalf of a grateful nation to pay a debt of honor and respect to a man who served our country throughout his uniform and in public office. it's my great honor to be here. in the long history of our nation only 30 americans have
8:10 am
laid in state here in the united states capitol rotunda. today as a reflection of the esteem in which his colleagues and our country hold him, senator john mccain joins those ranks. the son and the grandson of four-star admirals, john came from a family that prized military service. he entered the united states naval academy when he was just 17 years old. his service as a naval aviator took him around the world and eventually to vietnam. it was there on his 23rd bombing run that john was captured. refusing early release, he endured five and a half years of confinement and torture. then as now, americans marvelled
8:11 am
at the iron will of john mccain. captivity did not diminish john's sense of calling, or his commitment to mission. as he would later say, i fell in love with my country when i was a prisoner in someone else's. after he made it home, john traded service in the juuniformf the united states for service in congress. exchanging the rank of captain for congressman and later senator. for 35 years john served in these very halls under this very dome. he fought for what he believed in. in my years in congress and as vice president we didn't always
8:12 am
agree either. he almost always noticed. his support for limited government, for tax reform and support for our armed services surely left our nation more prosperous and more secure, he will be missed. as president trump said yesterday, we respect his service to the country. lierk many like many of you gathered here i had the privilege of traveling with senator mccain to visit our troops. earlier i told cindy of a time during a trip to iraq after an 18-hour day when i was literally falling asleep in the middle of a dinner with iraqi officials. after the dinner, john who was more than 20 years older than
8:13 am
me, walked up, put his hand on my shoulder and said, "mike, wea we've got a few more meetings tonight tonig tonight. why don't you turn in. you look like you could use some rest." i never travelled with a colleague who was better to our enlisted or harder on our generals. john mccain loved the men and women who served in the uniform of the united states. he was a champion of our armed forces throughout his career. in every generation there are those who putountry first, who prize service ahead of self, who summon idealism from a cynical
8:14 am
age. john mccain was such a man. today he lies in the place where he served to the last, the congress of united states. soon he will go to rest on the grounds where he served first, the united states naval academy. the eyes of the american people will be upon him as he goes. so too will their prayers for him and especially for his beloved family gathered here today. we will pray that those who mourn shall be comforted. so we mourn with those who mourn and we grieve with those who grieve, but we do not grieve like those who have no hope because john mccain, like
8:15 am
millions of americans, held firm to that hope from an old hymn that became a title of a book he wrote some 20 years ago, "fatit of our fathers." that reads a faith of our fathers living still in spite of dunge dungeon, fire and sword. oh, how our hearts beat high with joy whenever we hear that glorious word. john mccain held firm to that faith. the faith of his fathers, through dungeons, fire and sword. he held fast to his faith in america, through six decades of service. we gather here today to honor an
8:16 am
american patriot, served a cause greater than himself and we gather here remembering a man who knew how he wanted to be remembered. so let me say to all those gathered and his beloved family, on behalf of a grateful nation we will ever remember that john mccain served his country and john mccain served his country hon god continue to bless the united states of america. >> we were listening to vice
8:17 am
president mike pence deliver his remarks at the ceremony there in the rotunda. the vice president saying quote he will be missed and sending this message from the president, we respect his service to the country. we now expect senator mitch mcconnell and senator chuck schumer in a spirit of bipartisan ship, he wanted them both to they this wreath together as a testament to his fight to compromise and work together in the senate.
8:18 am
>> senator schumer a close friend of senator mccain. now house speaker paul ryan who also spoke will deliver a wreath from the house where senator john mccain served two terms before he entered the senate. >> the house minority leader nancy pelosi will also be joining the house speaker. >> now representing the white
8:20 am
house, vice president mike pence and his wife karen. >> i want to bring back in jonathan karl and coky roberts. jon, we're about to head into labor day weekend for many americans, even though there will be more ceremonies for senator john mccain, this may be the last ceremony they see. they saw republicans and
8:21 am
democrats coming together to lay down the wreath and of course vice president mike pence and not the president to represent the white house. >> and i think, tom, a memorial remember rans that john mccain could say greater than himself. i saw something i never saw before. i saw mitch mcconnell choke up as he spoke about john mccain, somebody who he fought with bitterly, especially about campaign finance reform. to see the way he touched mitch mcconnell, hardened closing tho want to read you something mccain wrote at the close of his last book. he said i've lived very well. i've been deprived of all comforts. i've been as lonely as a person can be and i enjoyed the company
8:22 am
of heros. i suffered the deepest despair and experienced the highest ex hull tags. i wish you all great company and lives as lucky as mine. >> an incredible statement. coky roberts i was struck how paul ryan said we get stronger at the broken places, talking about his time in that p.o.w. camp. he also said he didn't win the presidency but he will be an example to future generations. >> that was another broken place. i think that was a very eloquent testimony. looking at this and seeing john mccain's 106-year-old mother, nothing is harder than to lose a child no matter how old you are and how old he was. it must be incredibly painful. also the incredible gathering
8:23 am
there, not just senate members, but cabinet members, supreme court justices. as i looked around the room, all officials from the last 30 years was gathered in that rotunda. now they will leave and the public will come. that in a big way is a testimony. the american people who he served for so long and so nobly will have their chance to come in and say good-bye to john mccain. >> jon and coky, our thanks to you and thanks to our viewers witnessing thi mn history with us. senator mccain never became a president, but he's being treated like he should, like a head of state. we'll return to regular programming now. please join us tomorrow morning when george stephanopoulos leads
8:24 am
8:26 am
8:27 am
good morning, north bay. let's get up and get going. >> this is abc 7 mornings. >> and good morning. it's 8:27. i'm reggie aqui from abc 7 mornings. take a look at this video of a violent scuffle on a muni train. more than 200,000 people have watched this since it was posted on twitter last night. many of the people commenting remarking that they see two white men throwing a young black man or trying to throw him off the train. in the video, someone can be heard saying that the yuoung ma was playing music. of course, we'll continue to look into what happened to cause this fight on muni. alexis, what does traffic look lake this morning? >> well, we're in recovery mode now from an earlier rollover crash on the ni woodside. chp saying all lanes are back open, but we have several miles of residual delays there. that is not thinning out. i would stick to the 101 corridor. what is thin is all the traffic here, the bay bridge toll plaza, metering lights came on briefl
8:29 am
now your accuweather forecast with mike nicco. >> if you're thinking of getting out and about in the north bay, you have some real thick fog from petaluma to windsor. that will be around for another hour or so. temperatures in the mid-50s to low 60s. the 80s are back, even some 90s this weekend inland. reg reggie? >> another abc 7 news update in about 30 minutes and always on our news app and
8:30 am
♪ we could be heroes [ cheers and applause ] a big welcome back to "good morning america." and a very happy holiday friday, everybody. we have a fantastic crowd as you can see in central park this morning minutes away from grammy nominated deejay alesso taking this stage. first into that crowd where cecilia has something for us. >> thanks ginger. how about a little shopping. labor day weekend and we have almost two-thirds it turns out of americans will hit the stores this holiday. our chief economics correspondent rebecca jarvis is here with what to wait on what, to buy. you have your paddles. ready to go? okay. let's talk grills and end of summer, wait, buy? what do you say? >> do you buy them now? >> or wait on grills? >> wait.
8:31 am
>> wait. >> all right, we have so us. it is a buy now item. so right now this time of year -- >> get your grill. >> -- stock up on grills, patio furniture because they're trying to close it out. lowe's up to 75% off. patio furniture at wayfair, 59% and walmart, 39% off grills. so great deals out there. >> buy them now. >> okay. >> always our favorite conversation. shopping for clothes. what do you guys say? is it time to shop for clothes now? buy clothes now? wait? >> yes, indeed. mostly buy now. a lot of buy now opportunities in clothes especially if you want to buy summer c old navy, lord & taylor, h&m, up to 60%, banana republic, abercrombie and great deals at all of those places and probably wherever you shop. >> did you do your back-to-school shopping yet? >> no.
8:32 am
>> electronics. we got ipads, phone, computers. what do you guys say before we head back to school? time to buy, yes, no? some very smart people over here say, wait. you are correct. you do wait on this because the deals on electronics are better come black friday so even though there are some discounts right now, unless you absolutely need it, hold off until black friday. >> that seems counterintuitive. you would think it's time to buy them. >> wait for the big tvs. >> holding up. speaking of big items, guys, you know, you're going to college. maybe you need a mattress, you want to clean out your bedroom. what do you say? big items like home furnishings, buy now, wait? give us your best stuff. no pressure, last one. >> she's waiting on a good night sleep. right now is the time to buy those mattresses, 60%, 70% off macy's, sears, jcpenney, all have deals right now on
8:33 am
mattresses. so a great time to stock up and a great time to buy that living room furniture because, again, they're making room for the winter inventory so you can get a really good deal right now. >> all right. you guys love it? going shopping? [ cheers ] they're going shopping. you can get a full roundup of all of these deals on our website, goodmorningamerica.com and coming up, of course, alesso performs live. bowls to serve teriyaki. see that right there? you can't say that. i can't tell people to try my bowls? no. check out my bowls? nope. what about my billboard? (sighs) what? try my teriyaki bowls.
8:35 am
8:36 am
welcome back to "good morning america." it has been the summer of the ♪ it has been the summer of the block party here with our sponsor king's hawaiian and have offered so many tips to turn you into a grill master. well, now we've got one final tip for your labor day block party. when grilling, let the steak sit there for two to three minutes. let it sear and put it in a different part of the grill, cooler part to finish the cooking. i learned that from chef david rose. these eyes, my lady. your name?
8:37 am
>> this weather report brought >> this weather report brought to you by subaru. let's get this party started. amy. >> ginger, thanks. it's time now for our final concert of the summer and i am here now with world renowned deejay alesso. his new single, "remedy" is out today, already, by the way, number two on spotify's new music play list and will debut it in a moment. but let's chat. you were talking about the energy. you bring so much energy to the table every time you come out and perform. where does it come from? >> sleep. i try to sleep a lot as much as possible. >> we know when we listen to your music, it's fun to dance in
8:38 am
the car to, on the dance floor. there is a deeper meaning to a lot of it. tell us about it. >> i come from, you know, a very small city in sweden stockholm where it's pretty much gray 80% of the year so, you know and it's a beautiful place but as a kid i got to experience a lot of emotional things there and i try to bring that in my music and make it memorable. >> your fans love it for sure and you're an incredible performer as well. in fact, we'll see you at the music festival electric zoo this sunday. celebrating its tenth year. what can your fans expect from the show? >> a lot of new music, yeah, so new intro, new single. yeah. >> you collaborated with the likes of usher, david guetta, one republic, post malone. l pee
8:39 am
you haven't worked with? >> i haven't worked with post malone but i really want to. >> you started playing piano at just 7 years old. you got into dance music when you were 16. so do you have any advice for any of the young people out there who want to pursue a career in music. >> just stay hungry. i know a lot of people say that. just be fearless. be different. trust your instincts. hard work really. >> hard work is always a good single featuring conor maynard. this is "remedy." thank you. [ applause ]
8:40 am
♪ ♪ i didn't know that i was broken until i found my missing piece ♪ ♪ it seemed like every door was closing on me and you were so far out of reach ♪ ♪ drunk on the night you got lips like your wine ♪ ♪ i got nothing but time for you ♪ ♪ feeling like that with that look in your eyes i got nothing but time for you ♪ >> here we go. ♪ o-o-o-o-o-oh o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ i believe i believe i believe i believe o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ that loneliness is my disease o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ i believe i believe i believe i believe o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ that you are the remedy-y-y-y-y o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪
8:41 am
♪ that you are the remedy-y-y-y-y o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ that you are the remedy ♪ i didn't know that i was broken ♪ ♪ i was circling the drain ♪ now you show me i can learn too yeah how to be okay again ooh ♪ ♪ i got nothing but time for you ♪ ♪ o-o-o-o-o-oh i believe i believe i believe i believe o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ that loneliness is my disease o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ i believe, i believe, i believe, i believe o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ that you are the remedy-y-y-y-y-y o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ you are the remedy ♪ you are the remedy
8:42 am
♪ o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ i believe, i believe, i believe ♪ ♪ i believe that loneliness is my disease ♪ ♪ i believe, i believe, i believe, i believe that you are the remedy-y-y-y-y-y ♪ ♪ i believe, i believe, i believe, i believe o-o-o-o-o-oh that loneliness is my disease ♪ ♪ i believe, i believe, i believe, i believe i believe it now ♪ ♪ that you are the remedy-y-y-y-y-y o-o-o-o-o-oh ♪ ♪ you are the remedy-y-y-y-y-y
8:43 am
♪ you are the remedy [ cheers and applause ] "gma's" summer concert series sponsored by king's hawaiian. irresistible since 1950. ♪ i believe i believe i believe i believe ♪ sleep number 360 smart bed. it senses your movement and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. and now, all beds are on sale. it's the last chance to save 50% on the new sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. ends labor day.
8:45 am
8:46 am
myself." ♪ ♪ i stared up at the sun thought of all the people places and things i've loved ♪ ♪ you can feel the light start to tremble washing what you know out to sea ♪ ♪ you can see your life out of the window, tonight ♪ >> here we go. ♪ if i lose myself tonight it'll be by your side ♪ ♪ if i lose myself tonight
8:47 am
wooh, wooh, wooh ♪ ♪ if i lose myself tonight it'll be you and i lose myself tonight ♪ ♪ wwh wooh ♪ ♪ i woke up with the sun thought of all the people places and things i've loved ♪ ♪ you can feel the light start to tremble washing what you know out to sea ♪ ♪ you can see your life out the >> he tonight ♪
8:48 am
8:51 am
and with savings on wireless, this is a relationship with more money to spend on the important things. this is how xfinity makes life... simple. easy. awesome. xfinity delivers the fastest, most reliable internet learn more, or get started for $29.99 a month for 12 months. click, call or visit a store today.
8:52 am
♪ heroes all right, everyone, before we go as we wrap up another summer in the park we want to remember someone so essential to putting these summer concerts on each and every week. robert mccalister legendary sound engineer worked for us mixing concerts every friday for the past 16 years. well, he passed away unexpectedly and he is survived by his two son, ian and tyler who have worked with us on these concerts this year so our thoughts and prayers to his
8:53 am
family and our thanks for all that he did for "good morning america." >> we certainly are thankful for that. amy, thank you very much. we want to say good-bye to everybody and thank alesso for being here for this final friday in the park with his final song. this is "heroes." [ chanting ] >> hey, guys. you been good? thank you for coming out ♪ we go hide away in daylight we go undercover when under sun ♪ ♪ got a secret side in plain sight where the streets are empty that's where we run ♪ thgsan be one of them ♪ ♪ i know you hear me now we are a different kind we can do
8:54 am
8:58 am
8:59 am
happy friday to you. i'm reggie aqui from abc 7 mornings. mike nicco has a look at your morning forecast. >> we'll start by looking at the beaches. kind of cloudy right now, but 75 this afternoon with sunshine in santa cruz. small craft advisory south of the bay bridge this afternoon. the et ready sunshine. temperatures warmingac to average, near 70 in san francisco. mid-70s around the bay and mid- to upper 80s inland. we'll see a touch of 90s inland for our hottest days sunday and monday. alexis? >> okay. overall, it has been a really quiet morning on the roads, as expected. it's friday. the beginning of a long holiday weekend. we do have some residual delays southbound 280 before woodside. that's due to a rollover crash on the side. bay bridge meters lights are off and nice and light into san francisco. >> time for "live with kelly & ryan." we'll see you at 11:00 for the midday news. you can find us on >> announcer: it's "live with kelly and ryan." today join us as we celebrate the co-host's one-year anniversary.
9:00 am
check out the amazing moments of the past year, wild action in and out of the studio, surprises, bloopers, and family fun, plus a special co-host-to-co-host interview, all next on "live." and now, let the anniversary party begin. here are kelly ripa and ryan seacrest! >> ryan: look! beautiful. hi! hi. >> kelly: hi! [cheers and applause] >> ryan: hi! all right. [upbeat music] ♪ you look stunning.
527 Views
1 Favorite
IN COLLECTIONS
KGO (ABC) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on