tv ABC7 News 600PM ABC January 1, 2020 6:00pm-7:01pm PST
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couples. >> we have the pros and cons of the law. >> this is one of those laws that many thought already existed in california. people we spoke to today were surprised to find that straight couples didn't have the option to have a domestic partnership until now. for decades now, san francisco has had a domestic partnership law for all. people like charles sanderson and kelly wag were surprised to find out that in other parts of the state heterosexuals have been excluded until now. >> that doesn't make sense at all. it should be for everyone, of course. >> scott wiener authored the bill. >> we had a system where on some people were allowed to become domestic partners, but other people were prohibited from becoming domestic partners. that's just discriminatory. >> reporter: in 2013, same-sex couples were allowed to marry. so they had the opportunity to
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choose between marriage and a domestic partnership. the rights of survivorship can apply. one can adopt a child. you can add a partner to your health care plan and both have the right to own community property. >> people should do whatever they want to do, you know. >> reporter: but under federal law, there are things that a domestic partnership does not give you. one cannot sponsor a non-citizen partner. no adopting a child from another country. there are few rights when traveling to certain states, and you must file federal taxes as two single partners. brent and christian opted to get married. >> it's a form of recognition, recognition for your relationship. >> reporter: by the way, dissolving a domestic partnership is identical to getting a divorce. >> the institution of marriage. now according to the pew research center, today, 53% of adults 18 and older are married.
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that's down from 58% in 1995. also taking effect today, a head tax in mountain view. we look at the impact it will have for mom and pop shops to tech giants like google. >> reporter: google's foot print in mountain view is big. construction projects like this new campus are another sign of growth, but that growth comes at a cost for the city. >> we're holding accountable the companies that are growing for paying the money to solve our problems. >> reporter: those problems include skyrocketing housing costs and huge traffic problems. the head tax it that he initiated a few years ago was passed overwhelmingly by voters in 2018. companies from mom and pop shops to google will be charged a tax based on the employees they have living in the city. the revenue will fund infrastructure projects. >> right now the difficulty is
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investing in infrastructure. that's where we're targeting this. >> reporter: it's a progressive tax. so small companies may only pay a few hundred. half comes from google. >> you can't build a transit line based on donations. so you need regular money. over a period of years, it's actually going to generate a lot of money we can invest in our fru infrastructure. >> reporter: but regional leaders have raised concerns. the city could spend the money on other projects. google may not have put up a big fight against the tax. but a downturn in their economy could change their strategy. >> there's talk about, you know, the expansion that they're planning to do in downtown san jose. so i think they'll weigh all the factors when they consider those moves. >> reporter: so will other bay
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area cities considering a tax of their own. the new year means changes for transit agencies. b.a.r.t. naifares and ac transi are going up. muni is going to cost you an additional $1. smart trains in the north bay are on a new schedule but prices have not changed. the new year means a pay raise for minimum wage workers. workers got an increase in sunnyvale which now has one of the highest minimum wages in california, now $16.05 an hour. santa clara, $15.40. oakland, $14.14. and some places like san jose's flames restaurants are passing on the increase to customers. >> they think you made a mistake. oh, i thought it was $13.50, but
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now it's $14.50. we had to increase the price because we had an increase. >> many think the rates are still too low. some other laws involve hair care. new developments in a new year's eve tragedy in mont claire village. arrests have been made in a laptop theft that sadly ended in a man's death. laura anthony is live with the details. >> reporter: hi, larry. oakland police confirm they did arrest two people, possible suspects in what happened here yesterday afternoon on new year's eve. in the meantime, we still don't know the identity of the young man who was killed here. but we did talk to two witnesses, people who saw what happened in those crucial seconds and moments after that young man's laptop was stolen. >> it just all happened so fast. he was rlly fast. he was really brave. >> we were sitting next to him.
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>> the victim dove into the car. >> yes. and then there was a struggle, and i think they tried to push him out and he got dragged. and i was just screaming in the starbucks, like they're dragging him, they're dragging him. it's like everything was in slow motion. then i walked up to him, and you instantly knew it wasn't good. >> the get away car blasted through the intersection. i made eye contact with the driver when he went through the intersection and he had a black mask on, which i thought was kind of peculiar. fortunately, he saw me and the four kids with me and avoided us going through the intersection, but it was kind of scary. >> reporter: what are your thoughts today? >> i feel really bad. i'm sure that person had parents, had a family. it's certainly not a way to ring in the new year. >> reporter: now the president of the local montclair village association said it was their cameras that captured the
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license plate as the car was speeding away, passed the information to the police and it led to the arrest of the two suspects. police emphasize that the investigation is ongoing, and there could be more arrests in the days to come. laura anthony, abc 7 news. new at 6:00, some neighbors in south san francisco were forced to evacuate a short time. it started with a medical emergency at a complex on calum boulevard where responders say they encountered unidentified chemicals. the area was declared safe and residents are allowed to return home. a highway patrol officer is recovering after fentanyl. officers detained the driver and he went under tests to determine
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if he was impaired by drug. some santa rosa residents feel unsafe following a propane fire in a homeless camp. a camera captured 12-feet flames. people are camping along the trail which runs next to highway 12. residents claim that camp is ruining their neighborhood. >> it used to be really nice. since the encampment, it's filled withlete litter, trespas, crime. it's horrible. >> they will spend $12 million to help the people living on it that trail, but it could take three months to move them all into shelters. building a better bay area means making a more beautiful bay area. meet a teenager making it all happen and making it easier for you to take part as well with an
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standards. you've got to go to the dmv in person. i know, i know, i know. you need to bring proof of identity like a birth certificate or passport, and two documents confirming your address, and the deadline is obje october 1st. on consumer news and a shocking new investigation into the gender of test dummies. >> all right, sounds interesting. >> it is interesting. >> i had no idea what that was about. >> this is totally fascinating. crash test dummies have made cars safer. but is there a lack of diversity? consumer reports has been looking at the testing dummies and believes there is a troubling flaw. you might think by the looks of this crash test dummy it would represent a wide range of drivers. but despite their blank faces and androgenous features, most dummies represent a very specific type of driver, an average adult male.
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which, researchers say, pose a safety risk to women. >> there are no crash test dummies that represent the average female in our country, and that's despite the fact that women are nearly half the drivers and are more than half the population. >> reporter: results from safety crash tests like this one have a direct impact on how cars are designed to make them safer, but if safety tests prioritize adult men, what does that mean for women? a seat belt-wearing woman is 73% more likely to be seriously injured in a frontal car crash than a man. >> this has been a clear problem since at least the 1980s, back when regulators first asked for there to be dummies starting to represent women. what they got was a scaled-down version of the male dummy that today is so small that really, it represents a young teenager. >> reporter: auto makers disagree that the change would
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help. a trade group told consumer reports it does not believe a female dummy would be useful, because the current american female is closer in height and weight to the male dummy currently used for testing. but consumer reports says carrr makers and crash testers need to consider more than just the seisize of a dummy. >> there are important physiological differences that makes our bodies react differently during a car crash. that's why it's port to accouim account for the differences in the design. >> they are evaluating a new series of dummies called "thor." however, there are currently no plans for an average female thor dummy. you just brought up a section ago, talking about 411, and it was because people at that point in time that were really being
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injured by the brand-new air bags were smaller. so i think that's what they did. >> they got to figure it out. >> absolutely. this is too important. >> thank you, michael. building a better bay area means taking care of our environment. and a fremont teenager it making it easier for all of us. lauren martinez introduces you to him. >> really easy for me to talk to the customer, even if i'm not there. >> reporter: this 17-year-old created his own website, keep the area beautiful, after he saw a need to bring awareness about electronic waste. >> they go near people that are impofred and people who have to work near those landfills. and because of the lead and kushme mercury, it's very dangerous. >> like the first day i would have to come every single day to
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collect the electronic waste and drop it off. >> reporter: his efforts got attention and recognition from richard tran. in april of 2019, he received the community hero award kenton chu. >> one day i could just go round up all the e-waste. >> reporter: he also personally picks up e-waste materials from people's homes. he also holds dropoff drives at local parks. with the help from his website and social media, he's hoping to expand his organization beyond milpitas and fremont. >> i think the younger generation, especially with social media technology, they have a voice that no other generation previously had. i'm not doing it for a payment or a stipend. i'm actually doing it because i actually want to help the community. >> reporter: in fremont, lauren martinez, abc 7 news. >> and we want to hear your ideas about building a better bay area, share them by joining our better bay area group on
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facebook. how about a better forecast? not to say that the previous ones were not good. >> how are we saying it, spencer. >> you're right. the current one is looking pretty good. here's a look at live doppler 7. in terms of what's happening in the atmosphere, i'll get to the wave heights in a moment. here's a live view from abc 7 looking along the embarcadero and all is calm under partly cloudy skies. 55 in san francisco, mid to upper 50s at all of these locations, san francisco, oakland, redwood city, gilroy and half moon bay. you see a hint of some low and mid-level clouds off in the distance there. but skies are mainly bright right now. temperatures in the mid-50s and low to mid-50s at concord and livermore, and a lovely view of the skyline of san francisco, or at least part of it, from the exploratorium camera at pier 15 in san francisco.
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and these are our forecast features. mainly bright skies for morning commuters. north bay sprinkles may develop late friday night into early saturday morning, and we'll have a cooler pattern settling in for early next week. let's talk about the high surf advisory in effect until 9:00 tomorrow, the surf is quite rough. we may see breakers up to 16-22 feet. there's there's possibility of dangerous r rip currents and sneaker waves. don't turn your back on the ocean. 7:00 this evening, notice we have a few clouds around, maybe even low and mid-level clouds. after midnight we'll see the clouds disappearing giving way to clear skies and the day will give way to a sunny start and remain that way for most of the day. overnight lows will be mainly in the mid-40s.
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tomorrow's highs upper 50s to the coast, and low to mid-60s in the inland locations. tomorrow night, 11:00, we'll see clouds thickening on the forecast animation. into friday it's going to be a mostly cloudy day and friday. friday evening we'll see a wave of light rain developing in the north bay, which will probably linger into saturday morning. so here's the accuweather, seven-day forecast. a slight chance of late-night showers. mainly in the north bay on friday. and some may linger into early saturday morning. then mainly sunny skies by afternoon. bright sunny days on sunday and monday. that pattern continues into about the middle of next week. next rain event. we're not quite sure how much of a rain event it's going to be. we'll keep watching and hoping. even with the lovely weather we have now, we need some rain,
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39 floral-covered floats made their way down the boulevard as well as 20 marching bands. this year's theme was the power of hope. >> today's the day, right? the day you're going to start your diet, start going to the gym, start saving money? so what are you going to stop doing? >> a lot of people -- a lot of people are going to stop drinking, perhaps. are you? >> no. >> he knows i hardly drink. >> you don't. >> we found growing interest in it. >> reporter: as we welcome in the new year, many people are saying good-bye to alcohol. >> i think it's awesome. >> reporter: but this isn't just dry january or the one-year, no-beer challenge. its a trend to cut out alcohol long term and make not drinking cool. like what might happen if i removed this thing from my life? laura mccowen is the author of this book. >> i started an instagram account five years ago, clear
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eyes, full heart, to talk about my own sobriety. it was still a very underground thing then. now it has got to be a really big thing. >> reporter: on instagram, hash tags like sober life have millions of tags online. sober bars are opening up around the country. so many bay area restaurants are getting on this trend. i'm here at trail blazer tavern. they have several zero-proof cocktails on their menu. >> they give people who can't consume alcohol an alternative. >> reporter: but there are concerns about the trend. >> the fact that sobriety might be having a moment and might be starting to be looked at as something cool is great. that said, there's always, there is a part of me that worries about the trendy side of it down playing the seriousness of it, for some people. >> reporter: still, for people who are sober, like jeffrey holland who stopped drinking for
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medical reasons, it's refreshing. >> it's ah tuthentic. if you want to talk to a girl or something, you're testing your abilities and innate characteristics 100% of the time. > reporter: abc 7 news. >> everybody's got to find the right balance for themselves, right? >> exactly. it may be a new year, but tere's still a lot of interest in history. >> the action 7 ranger! >> when it comes to getting things done, action 7 does it best. >> these actually aired on tv. looking back on 70 years of abc 7 ads and newscasts.
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throughout the past year, we at abc 7 have been sbracelebrat our station's 70th anniversary of serving the bay area. >> part of our series is focussing on the rich history of our station. >> dion lim looks back at the 1970s, when it was a tv news revolution. ♪ >> the channel 7 news gang. van the kid, he's not afraid to smokeout his own news story. big jerry jenson, a television news legend here. >> reporter: they rode in on horseback, deputized to rescue channel 7's ratings. believe it or not, this is an actual ad for channel 7 news in the 1970s, and it was followed
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by a decade of the highest local news ratings in bay area history. >> the bay area's most-wanted television news team. >> reporter: i'm dion lim, celebrating 70 years of great tv news. even though i worked here, i didn't know a lot about kgo news' amazing history. now that i do, i am so excited to share the incredible story of the 1970s with you. the year is 1969. van amberg is taking over as lead anchor. >> if you catch fish in the bay and eat them, don't. >> reporter: within months, there's a whole new format that will change local tv news forever. the basic format looks familiar now, but for its time, it was a revolution, with crazy commercials, ground breaking reports on social change and a decade of history-making news coverage. >> it's been almost six months now since the indians took over
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alcatraz. >> it was a no holds barred news operation that made up the rules as we went along. >> reporter: the shows always included a major dose of hard news. but compared to the formal broadcasts of the past, the new format focussed more on people's every day concerns. >> is the toll going to stay at $1? >> reporter: consumer health news. stories about children and pop culture got more attention. >> every single story revolved around people and what they were thinking and what they were doing. it wasn't events that we were covering. we were really covering people's lives. >> i got a job. and i don't care what it is. i like the work. i enjoy working. >> reporter: the news team itself became more relatable, and viewers responded. >> everybody was watching kgo tv in those days. the format had changed
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dramatically, and all eyeballs were glued to t t station. >> reporter: and van amberg was at the center of it all. van was the ultimate promoter, known for clever teases, delivered very fast. >> coming up next, marcus foster tight murder, this time in ohio, oakland's kill count continues to climate a record rate and the latest on the two men who spent all that time for the murder they didn't commit. >> reporter: the heart was always the heavy focus on local news, which in the early '70s included a string of terrifying stories, from the murder of marcus foster, the first black superintendent of oakland schools to 15 people killed in ra racially-motivated attacks. >> she was taken from her berkl berkley apartment. >> reporter: another key to the new format was sending reporters
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beyond the boundaries of san francisco. that idea got even more important when b.a.r.t. opened in 1972 and people began moving farther and farther out of the city. >> it was not just a san francisco station. it was a bay area station. so they encouraged us to go out to different neighborhoods and connect with people. >> reporter: david louie was hired in 1972, only the second asian-american on bay area news. >> there was a lot of curiosity, especially in the cinese-american community. they wanted to know what generation was i? where did my grandparents come from. >> reporter: and pete gidings. pete was the first professional meteorologist on bay area tv. he did his own forecasting and environmental reporting, like this 1976 series on what was then the worst drought in state history. >> right now at crystal springs where i'm standing, i would be buried underneath 12-15 feet of water had this been a normal
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year. >> reporter: he even bared it all to promote low-know showerheads. >> you can take a perfectly good shower with this, and believe me, you can. >> reporter: pete was also part of the attention-grabbing commercials that were an early news scene staple. other ads feature consumer reporter john bryan. >> a hearty hi-ho 7. >> when it comes to getting things done, action 7 does it best! >> reporter: commercials like this added to the team's reputation for what some called "happy talk." the chitchat between the anchors that did not necessarily have a serious news purpose but made them seem like regular human beings. >> the law would not outlaw massaging hands and legs. >> reporter: some nights the audience was so big channel 7
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news scene was one of the highest rated in the whole country. that brought mike wallace to san francisco to find out what was going on. he was not a fan and blasted kgo for showing what he thought was too much crime and sex and not enough national and international news. general manager russ coglin made no apologies. >> isn't crime and sex news? even the esteemed "new york times" has to put a little sex somewhere. >> reporter: van amberg stood by the people first format. >> i try to talk, i do get involved. i do solve problems, that we do things, that we get the old lady the house that she's been burned out of. >> so it's not really traditional news show. >> no. the traditional news show is the kind we knocked off the air here. >> reporter: van was already under fire for leading a show with a report that a man's severed genitals were discovered on a railroad track. >> if we had found a finger,
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beside a railroad track in the east bay, we would have had it on. i was not uptight about the fact that it was a male's sexual organ. to me, there was a victim somewhere, something had happened. this was grabbed by many members of the press and saying hey, look what they're doing. we didn't cut that thing off and put it over there. >> reporter: whatever varks tmote motivation, the ratings kept growing. that's rico saccone. >> it was like going from the little league to the majors. >> reporter: the population had doubled in the past decade. so he launched the first south bay bureau while also working to define his role as the first latino reporter on bay area news. >> when i would explain to people in the mexican community that i have to be objective, that i couldn't be a spokesman, they said, well, what good does
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it do, then, to have you there? >> reporter: the good came from rico's determination to cover stories that better reflected the diversity of the community. >> i brought to the table stories that had never been told. i brought to the table stories that wouldn't be told. i brought to the table stories that broadcasters hadn't thought of. so yes, we made a difference. >> reporter: valeri coleman also joined channel 7 in 1974 as a reporter and weekend anchor. valeri was the first anchor to appear on bay area television pregnant. at first, she hid it. >> i wore a huge belt all the time. that was just my fashion. because i'm, i did not know what would happen if i said i'm pregnant. >> reporter: even after management found out, valeri stayed on the air and became a popular part of the news team. ♪ we're the one you would
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treasure ♪ ♪ the one it's a pleasure to see ♪ >> reporter: but despite the look of this ad, women in the newsroom were still considered secondary. in later years, valeri would go on to push management to make female anchors equal to men. >> when you see the number of women in key anchor positions, it's like, okay, i feel good about this, because 50 years ago it was not that. 50 years ago it was a pretty solitary course. >> reporter: one place the news team was always u nietsd was serving the community, even when it was controversial. back in the 1970s, coverage of child abuse fell into that category, leading to this editorial. >> look, i know i've upset some of our viewers every time we do a story on child abuse. we're not doing it to be popular. we're doing it to save some lives. i'm russ cog lynn. we're going to continue to serve the community in speighite of t
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criticism. >> reporter: meanwhile, it was changing. one story was the demand for gay rights. >> the statistics are overwhelming. look at any crowd in san francisco and the odds are that one out of three is gay. >> reporter: for many the topic was still off limits. but jerry jenson and the channel 7 news team spent six months working on a ground breaking series. >> this has always been known as a place that could accept people with different lifestyles, and certainly the gay lifestyle is a different lifestyle. >> there's never been anything like it. >> reporter: during the mid 1970s, channel 7 led reporting on other major stories, too. the failed attempt to assassinate gerald ford. and in 1978, the passage of proposition 13, rolling back property taxes. >> the greatest tax crusader in
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american history, howard jer advice! >> reporter: the station was also known for hard-hitting investigations. >> i don't think you're going to like this story. it's about lending institutions that won't lend money for housing in certain areas. it's called redlining. it's illegal, more than that, it's disgraceful. >> reporter: steve davis was asking questions about jim jones and the people's temple of san francisco, well before hundreds of thousands died. >> a mass suicide rehearsal going on in jonestown. >> reporter: the reporting on the cult led to death threats. he and his family actually had to move out of their house as a precaution. then just nine days after the jonestown tragedy, we brought another moment. >> both mayor moscone and supervisor harvey milk have been shot and killed. >> oh, no! >> jesus christ!
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>> the suspect is supervisor dan white. >> reporter: the following year, channel 7 cameras were there as riots broke out when white was found guilty of manslaughter rather than murder. it was a saddened to end to a d. but a new era was beginning. in december 1979, van amberg and david louie led the first local news team to visit mainlands china, which had been closed to westerners for 30 years. >> in this country of pafwoe das, temples and beautiful gardens is racing toward the year 2000. >> reporter: it was an ambitious effort, connecting the bay area's chinese community with its roots, a sign of how much broader the reach of local news would be in the next decade. de. heading into the 1980s, stations all over the country were
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copying channel 7's format. the format that mellowed a little, but abc 7 kept the focus on real people and the issues that matter to them. then, as now, we are committed to building a better bay area. i'm dion lim, sbratsing 70 great years of abc 7. >> that was fascinating. >> it's so cool to look back. >> can you imagine telling the bosses now, we want to ride in on horseback? hi-ho 7. >> yeah. >> if you want to watch more, you can catch our series, find a really cool, immersive experience, so much more about abc 7's iconic past, history, at abc 7 news.com. 2020 is off to a mild start here in
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yeah. only pay for what you need with liberty mutual. only pay for what you need with liberty mutual. con liberty mutual solo pagas lo que necesitas. only pay for what you need... only pay for what you need. liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ this is fun. some people skating at san francisco's union square ice rink. looked like they should be at the beach. you saw a shark there skating. right? we're not talking about the hockey team. the polar bear skate, a new year's tradition. people brave the cold and wear their wildest outfit, most inventive beach attire in the hopes of winning prizes. actually a good day.
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around 60 degrees, not too bad. >> i think i'd rather do that than jump in the water. >> let's get a look at the forecast. >> chilly water. you don't want to be in any of the coastal waters right now, the surf is rough. we have a high surf advisory. there's a possibility of dangerous sneaker waves or rip currents. overnight lowe overnight lows and light sprin s sprinkles late friday. maybe next week a little more rain will come into the picture. looks like a pretty dry forecast overall for the first, what, six days of 2020. >> all right, thanks, spencer. >> i'm in for dan. kc pride is in, or should i say
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former nba commissioner david stern passed away at 77. he died as a result of a brain hemorrhage he suffered approximately three weeks ago. he helped take the game of basketball from tape delayed games. the revenue increased from $10 million annually to $900 million per year during his tenure. he was inducted into the naismith memorial hall of fame. >> it's hard it to imagine a world without david stern. i don't think there's any doubt that he is the single most important individual in the history of the nba. >> he modernized the nba. he had great strength of conviction. a force of nature type personality to move the league in the direction that he wanted it to go.
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>> everybody who's part of the nba, we all owe him a great debt of gratitude for his service, for his impact and for everything he has done for our own individual lives. >> stern truly transformed the nba. now the final bowl game of the pac 12 season, the granddaddy of them all. oregon and wisconsin in pasadena, a win in pac-12 finishes. there's been 106 rose bowls, an iconic setting for january football. oregon down 4. oregon's brady breece picks it up. ducks go up 21-17. he just drops it! what happened? wisconsin responds. they march right down the field and take back the lead. huge fourth and one play. looks like it may be happy moo year for wisconsin fans. breeze forces the danny davis fumble.
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oregon recovers. recovers. reco. mario christobal fired up. he'll be on a nfl field near you very soon. oregon wins, 28- 27. citrus bowl, two of the most visible coaches going at it, and there would be hurt feelings, oh, yes. 85-yard touchdown. judy could have sat this game out and been a first rounder. nick eubankss with a seven-yard touchdown. saban was not happy with his team's performance at times. he ended up taking it out on his head set. bama up28-16. could have taken a knee to end it, instead, harris punches it in. hmm, running up the score on harbaugh? minnesota versus auburn in the outback bowl in tampa bay. 30 seconds left in the half. check this out, tyler johnson to
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tanner morgan. unbelievable one-hand catch. did he get a foot in bounds? yes, but barely. johnson and morgan connect again. this one much more obvious. a 73-yard touchdown. the golden gophers win it. harbaugh, 1-4 in bowl games. that is going to be a problem. >> you can't help but wonder if the new york giants would call him up and say look, you want to come back to the nfl? and what his response would be. >> the problem is he kind of wears thin on the players after a few years. college is good
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join us tonight for abc 7 news at 11:00. >> i'm in half moon bay. traffic and tall waves. we're talking about sneaker waves hitting the california coast. that's at 11:00. >> dramatic video of a dog's leash getting caught in an elevator. hear from the quick-thinking doctor who jumped into action. >> that's the second time i've seen one of these things in the past couple weeks. starting at 8:00, catch the goldbergs, schooled and modern family. then stump town and abc 7 news at 11:00. >> i'm ama daetz. >> i'm larry beil, thanks for joining us.
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♪ this is "jeopardy!" please welcome today's contestants-- a brewery representative from chicago, illinois... an educational consultant from new york, new york... and our returning champion, a political consultant from woodbridge, virginia... ...whose 4 day cash winnings total $74,401. and now here is e host of "jeopardy!"-- alex trebek! thank you, johnny. hi, folks. happy new year. look how excited i am. now we know you have a lot of football games
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to watch today, but we thank you so much for taking a half hour to spend with us here at "jeopardy!" shane, val, karen, happnew year. let's go to work. here comes the jeopardy! round. and today, this new year, we feature... mm-mm. ...followed by... sounds like it's about egypt... hello. [ audience laughs ] the writers are being cute to start the new year. karen, start us. let's do pharaohs for $600. pharaohs were known to wear headdresses with a uraeus, a symbol of power in the form of this snake. val. what is an asp? we'll accept that. okay. uh, toot for $600.
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