tv ABC7 News 600PM ABC February 22, 2021 6:00pm-7:01pm PST
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since they overbook appointments bylp roughly 10% to 15% to accot for theñi ó[■no-shows. in san jose chris nguyen, nbc 7 news.ñixd >> of course herd immunity has been discussedt( a lot when it comes to stopping the spread of coronavirus and i spoke with abc 7 news special correspondent 4:00 today who gave us a timeline. >> we could get there by julyd according to math models. if we double the amount of vaccines we're giving out every day to 3 million which we may get to if johnson & johnson gets and widely distributed we getçó there faster such as m. but remember this is based on some assumptions about the protection from the vaccine. about variants and what they may
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or may not be able to do. >> @ immunity. people cane1w3 get exposed to t virus or they can get vaccinated. the pandemic has taken anqñ enormous toll, claiming more than half a million american lives. are here in california. more than 5,000 are lives lost in thefá bay area. but the state is turning a corner. >> a month t(ago today we repord the highest number of deaths ever recorded in the state of california. 764.fáq xd l too many. 233 deaths. but a far cry of where we were just a month ago. >> for the first time in nearly three months t("á number of coronavirus patients in icus statewide dropped below 2,000. the number of newly diagnosed cases today is fewerñi than 5,0. at the peak we had more than ten times that number of new cases in a single day.çó the seven-day test positivity
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rate ist( dropping, approaching efore the winter surge.rze95yrrñ a covid- discovered inn discovered inn to be more dangerous than thesé. >> it's definitely more transmissible. right now it seems that it's not as transmissible as the uk variant, although that may pan out to be the case. first of all, it went from less than 1% in september to now accounting for more than 50% of cases at the endrof january. >> e1ucsf researchers say peopl infected with the variant were more likely to end up in intensive care or even die as the mutation appears somewhat resistant to the body immune response. a cdc report says teachers played a significant role in spreading covid-19 in some georgia elementary schools. about half of the infections were traced back to thei] educators. the cdc says this means it was more likely children who tested positive werefá exposed t virus by their teachers. but the reportçvó al[úcñxd stat social distancing was, quote,
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less than ideal and mask usexd students was inadequatexd in several inst!fnds. just one day after the pleasanton school board voted to return to in-person teaching some parents sayxd some teacher used zoom time to try to dissuade their kids from returning to the classroom. the district says the comments larger effort to get back to in-person learning. laura anthony has our story. >> essentially i'll have my desk sort of taped off and an area and i can't really leave that area. >> reporter: it seemed ) tangent in the middle of a friday zoom class for students at one pleasanton high school. just one day after the local school board votedñ=■ return to at least some in-person classes. >> if you want to go to school for social fáreasons, recognize tha2á you absolutely wiml not have that. there is no question that you are not allowed to interactc in any çófashion.
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you cannot work with a partner. you speak to anyone in class if they are closer than six feet away. >> reporter:w3 on a public facebook page several pleasanton parents say several teachers made similar comments to their students, strong words that made some kids think twice about going back to class at all. >> students were changing their minds, some of them, they were getting the information from the teachers and some ofi]q maybe not rolledi] out as positively as i would have liked to see it or know about because they are kind of changinge1çóxd minds. >> it's understandable to have concerns. >> reporter: the concerns come just as pleasantowp unified is asking families and stud(xpjf whether they prefer to stay all remote or return to a hybrid mode >> we have stu$dpás in classrooms now. and the results ofrsimply being in the classroom setting have remarkable. >> i cannot give you helpái"átek classroom. >> reporter: as discouraging as
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those words, parents here are telling us they're now hearing from other teachers who are excited to welcome their kids back to the classroom. >> last night an amazing teacher got on the phone -- got on zoom with me and my family on a sunday night. he gave up his time. he's a high schoole1 qteacher. he believes it's goingq amazing. he has no plan whatsoever ofxd simply zooming in theó[■ çóclas. pls and students have until wednesday to deci( stay remote or return to so person. laura anthony, abc 7 news.seyrrg schools to reopen appeared along bay area highways today. %om= yards. and they're beginning to draw reprisals. abc 7 news's wynne freedman has more from benicia where houses e been sxegd parent some kind of classroom e1feelin1 >> reporter: broken eggs and rotting yokes on a suburban sidewalk. if you post a sign about reopening california schools in your yard@lb may become a tar ñ■
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too. >> you can hide in the dark to do it i guess but your point will never be made because we don't know what you have to say. education into yourçó own home. you heard of one-room school houses. here's the latest iteration. ae1 two-car garage schoolhouse converted by jimmy and his wife sarah out of what tpu■ describe asnes sti.q >> we're advocating for our children. we're standing up asking for there to be an option. >> titus. wave to xu where are you? >> reporter: thee1 classes are taught by teachers in the benicia unified school district. the difference, instead of these kids being alone at home in front of computers, they're all together here. >> it's better here. socializing with my friends than just being at home. >> are youq learning as much ths way? >> no. >> what are you learning here? >> nothing at all. these sixth-graders from benicia middle school have been here five days añi week 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. working together,i] lunching together, playing together, doing holidays and ñr
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p.e. together, experiences their parents try togke as normal as áy >> i think it's absurd that we're the only state that our kids can't play sports, kids can't go to school, and it -- the social element for them is actually -- it's detrimental. >> let me have a show of hands. how many kids in this room have been vaccinated for covid-19? and how many kids in this room haveñi gotten covid-19? nobody? >> reporter: granted, they're a small sample and a bit of a bubble. street withçó broken egg shells out front. ok7 hours ago the state legislature approved a $600 stimulus paymen■ 5.5 million people inw72 california. you're eligible if you claim the earned income tax credit, aree1n immigrant who pays taxes with a% individual taxpayer
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identification number,e1 or if u receive assistance from certain state programs. if a person fits intortwo categories, they could get a double payment actually of $1,200. traffic is moving well tonight along 880 near the oakland coliseum. a lot of people are still working from home because ever the pandemic. but what about when things change? it coulde1 be an issue not justn the roads but also in the air.w3 i'm spencer christian. our late februaryçó warm-up cou take high temperatures into record territory tomorrow. i'll have the forecast.fác and we were shocked when we saw the value of our home was $254,000e1 less than the apprait . outraged might be another. the action the family's lender took after abc 7 news stepped in
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nation in mourning. outside the white house hours ago candles lined the south portico as the president, vice president, first lady and second gentleman stood for a moment of violence. they gathered to honor the american lives lost to coronavirus, a total which now exceeds :lañxd500,000. [ bell tolling ]e1 bells at the national cathedral tolled 500 times. it took nearly an hour. the president has ordered all flags lowered to half staff for the next five days. he spoke about the grief we're going through. >> for the loved ones left behind, i know all too well. i know what it's like to not be there when it happens. i know what it's like when you are there. holding their hands.
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looking in their eye andçó they slip away. that black holeq in your chest, you feel like you're being sucked into it. >> halflp a million deaths. it's a grief we could not imagine. it's something experts didn't predict. >> remember back in the late winter and early spring of 2020 when we were saying we could get as highxd as 240,000 and people were thinking we were being 4cm million deaths, justçó a stunni figure. >> last may when the american death toll approached 100,000 "the new york times" headline read "an incalculable loss." the front page of the paper was covered in the names of those who had died beginninge1 with patricia dowd, a 57-year-old san jose woman who lost her life on february 6th, 2020. the first known coronavirus death in the entire united states. yesterday's "new york times" featured a timeline of
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coronavirus deaths down the front 5a■page. in the graphic each of those tiny dots represents a life u■ lost. nearly 500,000 in total. andrbefore we move on here tonight, a few thoughts about what really matters as we mark this grim milestone. 500,000 lost to coronavirus in the united states.fá that's more americans than were lost in the two world wars and 95■ fácombined. world wars and that's around 20 years of war. the deaths from coronavirus in the past 350 days. put another way, that's roughly the place of sacramento or atlanta, gone. but of course the story, the tragedy of what's happened is not an aggregate but the number 3éú'e.w3 one individual life, 500,000 times. maybe someone you know. maybe someone you love.xd the vaccines are a tipping point in the right direction. the variants, unfortunately, are not. too many lives lost. millions more disrupted and
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upended. and no rest for the weary. we have in the words of robert frost the poet miles to goçó before we sleep. it's been a broken roadfáqe$p'd there's more up ahead, but we will get xdthere. and as we go to break, a live lookjf a)1 the sunset and a mom to reflect on the 500,000 americans lost to the pandemic. but what really matters, as it always does after it sets, the sun returns in the morning, a fresh start and new hope for brighter days ahead. we'll be right back.
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>> announcer: building a better bay area. for a safe and securee1 future. this is abc 7 r we want to thank julian glover for amplifying our voices and for making it -- for giving us the platform to make sure that people understand that 3m%1 people of color are having these experiences. >> the storyc of paul and tennisia austin has gone viral, shared all across the world, az÷ now we are hearing of5a■ more cs of housing discrimination here in the bay area. >> the marin city couple put
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$400,000 into renovating their home and were stunned when the house barelyeó.s gained any val during thee1 appraisal process when they had a white friend pose as the homeowner that changed by half a million q dollars. >> abc 7'sq race and culture reporter julian glover first shared the austins' story of housing discrimination two weeks ago. >> and tonight julian joins us live. and julian, you've heard from people all e)@ross the country with similar stories and you're sharf> story and how others with can fightñiok back. hrptry. good evening, dan and ama. truly heard from families all across the country, so many ofe people here in the bay area wi+d similar tales of housing discrimination like the curtisu sfleem. they reached out to me after they were lowballed in their appraisal by more than $250,000. they knew something was wrong because both the husband and the wife workfá in real estate. >> my parents told us 4rjt they saw one of your stories on the news about the marinxd couple. >> reporter: @olald and d dominiq me after seeing my now viral
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story on the austin family in marin city being lowballed half believe is a racially biased appraisal. the curtis family, ronald black, dominique puerto rican, feel they got the same treatment. >> we wereq doing the refi. the appraiserw the value of our home was e1 $254,000 less than therappraisal we gotp,■ was it -- >> five months earlier. >> fq,m■ months earlier.e1 >> reporter: the family's lender rocket mortgage ordered the appraisal through an independent appraisal management company in december 2020. the home wase1e1e1 valued at $9. but just months earlier in april the home appraised for $1,154,000. a quarter million-dollar difference. meanwhile, housing prices went upñi and interest rates fell. >> you all were uniquely positioned to be able to do your own investigation, pté$ your own comps, to realize this ain'tftñ right. because you all are both in the business. >> i've been a realtor for over
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ten years, and currently i'mo licensed real estate broker and my wife -- >> i've been training toó[ an appraiser for about 2 1/2 years now. >> qvá that the reason why they did it was because we were black or puerto rican or people of color. but absolutely,ok that's theok reason why. >> we kind of felt it the moment that he came to our house.?7 >> reporter: the curtises immediately pulled reports of the comparable homes the appraiser used from the market listing service they have access to as a licensed real estate broker5a■ and agent. that was listed in theçó apprail report? >> and this is the garage that's fallif"qjr( on the roof line to hold the shinglese1 e1down.e1 he was just deliberately looking for property to fit his price so he could lower our value. >> reporn from the extensive complaint the curtis family filed with the state board of real estate. they're waiting for ther investigation to play out. meanwhile, interest rates have increased,w3 meaning the family missed out on a chance to save
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thousands of dollars a year on their mortgage by refinancing. 3éjeachedfá out toñ1 rocket more for comment and the company provided this statement say, in part, "quicken loans truly regrets the frustration that mr. curtis and his family have experienced with their home loan. we've reached oute1 to mr. curt to gain his permission to order a new appraisal from a second licensed appraiser at our expense as an accommodation to oure1 cdivnt to obtain ane1 additional opinion of value." but the curtis family forwarded me this voicemail showing quicken loans only reached out to offer thefá second appraisal the day after i stepped in to help. >> we%@ow the implications of that. we know what that means. it doesn'te1 mean that it affec us for a month or two and then it goes away. like this is stuff that affects us for generations. >> reporter: discrimination in the housing market is systemic and detrimental to marginalized pmocle ws.$e1çó t4jutáuences suíúi a 2018 report by the brookings institution on the devaluation of assets in black neighborhoods found in most metro areas in the country homes in majority black neighborhoods were valued for significantly less than homes in
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neighborhoods with virtually no black residents. the study found the difference in home and neighborhood quality don't explain thee1 devaluationf homes in black neighborhoods. the study showed homes in the bay t(area's black neighborhood are valued at 27!k less than homes of similar quality in white neighborhoods, a difference of s7■$164,000, o'am the worst diffeñoces in the nation. >> we shouldn't have to scrub blackness fromlxmur home 8-■ gea fair shake. >> reporter: andre and perry wrote the brookings institution study and the book "know your e1 price: valuing black lives and property in america's black cities." as the austin story went viral several people on5a■ twitter tad me and perry's work. >> whether it's appraisals, whether it's real estate agent behavior, lending practices, all of these things in housing markets impact price, and it's clear that something isxd goingn today that throttles the price of black homes. that's about 156 billion in lost
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equity across the country. than 8 million college degrees based on theq average amount ofa public four-year institution. it would have replaced the pipes in flint, michigan 3,000 times over. it's a big number. >> those losses often go unseen and unreported. that's why non-profit advocacy groups like the fair housing advocates of northern california encourage families to file formal okcomplaints. the executive director caroline peete stunned when hearing the austins' }uju+y >> it was a half a million-dollar difference. come on. >> reporter: the fair housing advocates represent victims of housing discrimination. in california someone basis of race, religion, gender, sexual orientation, disability.p classes canfá file a complaint. >> folks can file an administrative discrimination complaint with hud's fair housing and equal opportunityñi department. they can also file with the california department of fair employment and housing.
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>> reporter: there are remedies in both rentals and real estate purchases. most often in the for but the process can drag on, taking months or even years for resolution.jf peete said victims have better odds if they're represented. >>e1 racism. either way it needs to bee1 addressed andw3 remedied in way that will be remembered. >> reporter: the austins are now considering filing a formal complaint. átj it mean to you to see that you have shared your story and it's encouraged other people to come forward toi] sha theirs? >> with people starting to fighd back for social justice, thee@(p world is primed to have this conversation. >> people are talking and they are standing up and letting people know that this is not just a one-off thing, that this is a systematic thing that needs to be changed.7e,ti (urtis fami tell me the offer from quicken loans to get a second appraiser out is just too5a■ little too l. at this point they've missed the chance to lock in thoseg
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rates to lower their mortgage payments. they've already signed a lease to rent a homexd and they are considering selling their property. now, if you have faced housing discrimination, there are resources out there to help you on this storyq on abc7news.com. i've added axd link to the fair 9■ california. they are waiting to hear from you. reporting livee1 this evening, covering race, culture and social justice, julian glover, abc 7 news. >> yeah, julian, this is so painful to see but so important. gu?pá job. thank you for shedding light on this. arñ■ if you have a story fo julian, reach out to him online, on twitter and facebook. you can find him @juliangabc7 and on instagram. he's julianglovertv. and our work on racial and social justice continues next with an exclusive story about the social media efforts that helped arrest a man accused of targeting people based on race. plus the legacy ofxd "jeopa
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brings us the story you'll see only on abc 7. >> reporter: the posts made on social media by reginald jackson wereq alarming. references to beating up,eohr(to robbing and blowing up asians ahead of the start of the lunar new year. these now-deleted posts which are being used in an oakland police investigation were sent to me by the dozen. using these images, lawo6k■ enforcement quickly identified the person behind this account as a felon with a lengthy rap sheet including attempted robbery as a minor and later weapons charges including being ine1 possession of anróáklma"o o assault rifle. here he is posing with a firearm in his profile photo. jackson was out onlp post-community release supervision until today. i stoodñ behind him as entered the courthouse in dublin. i] courtroom but yd+tened in via livestream. >> this is him. >> reporter: after reading a list of jackson's previous charges the judge said he had incredible concern over the frequency of his cases(" set bail at $190,000.
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little did jackson know oaklandq police, who we saw e1outside, worked with the alameda district attorney's office and were already inside and took jackson into custody. his next court appearance is tuesday morning. in dublin, dion lim, abc 7 news. as the bay area deals withe issues of race and social justice we are here to help. just head to our website, abc7news.com/takeaction for a list of local resources. the mayor of antioch release a new police reform e1agenda. it includes a mental health crisis response team, a new training pl/"ram focused on conflict resolution and mediation, and a ban on purchasing military equipment for the department. the city council will also discuss its body camera policy. >> quite frankly, if our police department is going to do the same thing five, ten, 20 years from now, we have all failed as a cis because we did not evolve with the times.
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including our changing demographi demographics. >> the announcement comes just days after a family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city of antioch. the family of angel keento says police used an illegal choke hold on him as he was suffering from mental healthe1 issues. the district attorney's office 70s !oy sunny.lpok it is quite pleasant in the bay area right now. spencer has a seven-day forecast spencer has a seven-day forecast that might make y ♪ ♪ are you ready to join the duers? those who du more with less asthma. thanks to dupixent. the add-on treatment for specific types of moderate-to-severe asthma. dupixent isn't for sudden breathing problems. it can improve lung function for better breathing in as little as 2 weeks and help prevent severe asthma attacks. it's not a steroid but can help reduce or eliminate oral steroids. dupixent can cause serious allergic reactions including anaphylaxis. get help right away if you have rash,
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tomorrow and wednesday. so look for a sharp cooldown on wednesday but still mild wednesday, thursday, and friday with highs in the upper 60s. . cloudy skies and a 5a■slight, slightw3 chance of some light rain. dan and ama? >> well, we'll take any chance we can get. thank you, spencer. >> all right. chris alvarez is here with all the sports. andfá a lot of good stuff tonig, chris. >> yeah, it's a busy monday, dan. x green speaks for the first time since his ejection on saturday since his ejection on saturday nigx( hr(t&háhp &hc so you went to ross to refresh your look for less? and snag top brands for prices that have you, like "oooh yeah"! styles that take you here or here or even right there. slip into the best bargains ever... at ross. yes for less!
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>> announcer: now abc 7jf sport with chris alvarez. some encouraging newsmo(om the warriors ahead of their game tomorrow in new york against the knicks. th guy, steph curry, recovering well from an illness. is expected to play tomorrow. klay thompson, he was there but he's not going to play obviously. he's out for the year. kerr addedt( a$[ centers, kevon loony, james wiseman practiced fully. the hope is both of those guys will be able to play. the warriors need some help up front. draymond green spoke for the first time since being ejected in the final seconds saturday night.r his actions, that is, led to the hornets eventually tying and winning the game at the bj[+q). it was a heartbreaker. draymond spoke at length today and said he felt worse about this ejection than he did for being suspended during the 2016 nba finals after an altercation with lebron. >> you know, i canr faults and when i'm wrong, and i was wrong. and i have to do what i have to do to make that up to my
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teammates. like i told the guys, i appreciate the support but that action does not warrant support. >> he made a mistake but ò%wq)ybody in that locker room loves him and respects him and he's our leader. so there's nook5a■ lingering ef. u for sunday. that's just six games from now. preseason that is. giants enter the 2021 season looking to avoid their fifth straight losing season, which has never happened to this point in franchise histhey're hoping streak alive. mike yastrzemski seems to have =&[" last year's playoff miss a] fuel for this off-season. he had his best year as a pro in 2020, finished eighth in the mvp voting. giants, though, lost four of their last five games, missing the playoffs by one game last year. according to the ads, there's some unfinished business. >> it's still frustrating. you know, because we haven't had the chance to redeem ourselves yet. so i think until we get a chance to get out on the field it's
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still a side. we all have the same chance right now. that's the beauty ofqfá spring training. it's day one and everybody gets to go out there and have thelp same opportunity. right now we're really focused on us andfá making sure we're t best that we could possibly be and if we keep that mentality and not worry about who we're facing and not getting star struck by big names or anything like that we're going to be jus1 fine. meanwhs"■qin mesa the a's position players reporting. two-time goldw3 gloverfá matt chapman actually arrived last week. chappy coming off a shortened 2020 season cut shortlp by righ hip surgery. last season he hit a career low ft. 232 with ten home runs in 37 games. the hip was bothering him. the former first-rounder is entering his age 28 season and by all accounts ready to return to the form that made him an all-star in 2019. >> want to come back and show healthy but i'mok back at the t of my game and this is behind me and i want to be the player that i know i'm capable of being and do it consistently. >> he's goode1 to go.
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he's -- like i said, he's been chomping atlp the bit. it's not surprising he's put himself in the position he's in right now. >> did you see this? the nhl played two games in lake tahoe over the weekend and it was w3awesome. these views from the t( edgewood tahoe resort. they built a hockey rink on the 18th green of the golf course. the views especially from last night in the late afternoon were stunning. and then there's always that one ñ freezing cold water. part of the reason they did this is because there's no fans at thesefñt(sqj and they like to have a huge fan presence at the+c■ outdoor games but what a great event. i think next year just bring it back to lake tahoe. one game with no fans i think you can do it because those >> yeah. looked really nice. all right. thank you so lplittle bit cold . >> but it's nice.5a■ coming up at 8:00 it's5a■ "the bachelor" followed at 10:00 by the good doctor, thenfá stay wi us for abc 7 newsg >> and you can watchxd all our
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newscasts live and on demand on the abc 7 news bay area tve1uh connected pap it's available for apple tv, android tv, amazon fire tv as well as roku. &umq that is going to do it, though, for this edition of abc 7 news. wáháhank you so much for joining us tonight. i'm ama daetz. >> and i'm dan ashley. for spencer christian, chris alvarez, all of us here we appreciate your time. hope to see you again tonight at 11:00. have a good evening.e1 it's back, guys! check it out! what up, people? jack! what are you doing in my car? oh, just sharing my triple bonus jack combo... triple meat and cheese, secret sauce... go ahead, tell them how much it is... it's just $5.99! only at jack in the box. sorry, what were you going to say?
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it's...a pretty legit combo. ♪ this is "jeopardy!" here are today's contestants-- a magnetics engineer originally from richmond, virginia... an academic advisor from walnut creek, california... and our returning champion-- a college consultant from los gatos, california... ...whose 1-day cash winnings totaled... and now here is the executive producer of "jeopardy!"-- mike richards. [ applause ] the great johnny gilbert, thank you, sir. and welcome to "jeopardy!" as johnny said, i'm mike richards, the executive producer of "jeopardy!" and i'm hosting today and for the next two weeks to keep the greatest quiz show in the world going.
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we have some amazing guest hosts coming that i can't wait for you to see. but with the covid outbreak here in la, folks were understandably a little reticent to shoot. ken jennings did a great job, but he's unavailable due to obligations with his show, "the chase". so as the producer, my job is to quite literally live the mantra, the show must go on. so let's do what alex did 8,244 times. let's play jeopardy! and prove that nothing can stop this show. sam, natalie, and david, are you with me? - absolutely. - yeah. okay. let's jump into the jeopardy! round with these categories. they are... we'll take a look at... and... notice the quotation marks. sam, you are the returning champion.
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