tv ABC7 News 600PM ABC September 15, 2021 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT
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because the smoke from the nearby wildfires, and advisory is a step below an alert. >> let'>> let' our forecast. starting early saturday morning, at which point there will be a cold front from the pacific northwest bringing some rain, some light rain, to northern california. as it approaches the bay area on saturday into saturday night, you might see light rain in the north bay, but during the overnight hours into sunday, it could become more than just light rain, but measurable rain. it is expected to be a brief event and should end by sunday evening. let's talk about rainfall totals. in the bay area, most locations will probably get just a couple hundredths of an inch. san francisco might get just under a 10th of an inch and santa rosa could get more than a 10th of an inch. air quality is moderate right now.
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we have an air quality advisory in effect through tomorrow. we don't expect air quality to decline, but we expect a strong wind event early next week, which could raise concerns about fire. more on that later. >> according to the latest results, voters rejected the recall effort of gavin newsom by a 64-36 margin. the race was called within an hour of pulls closing last night. today gavin earned -- governor newsom was in the bay area. >> whatttt just out here -- >> yes -- reporter: governor newsom spent his first day on the job after defeating the recall election in oakland. >> are you honestly talking about special elections? was that serious? reporter: he met with a group of leadership students to discuss government and civics.
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>> you guys think voting is important? reporter: and then a flurry of excited third-graders, some of whom knew him and some who knew little about him. >> what do you know about governor newsom? >> nothing. reporter: the governor told reporters he chose to visit a school today to remind californians the importance of setting an example of kindness and unity for the future generation. >> if there is anything i have learned in the last six to nine months, being out on the campaign trail, we have to disabuse ourselves of all this false -- reporter: the governor doing his part as well. >> i want to express respect a deep sense of responsibility not just to those that voted no on this recall, but those that voted yes. they matter. i care. i want him to know i'm going to do my best to have their backs as well. reporter: the governor addressed
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how the state's handling safety in schools. we asked if once vaccines for younger children are approved, would he consider mandating them in public schools? will you mandates for k-12 students? >> there are other conversations, there is nothing off the table, let me make that crystal clear. of course there are conversations. reporter: the governor did not close the door to that, but he said there are various factors still apply, for instance, whether or not there is a rise in covid variance. he said the state is still committed to allowing local counties to determine most of their vaccine and mask mandate s. >> today we asked if the recall process should be removed, revised, or unchanged. the vast majority voted to revise it. today the california legislature's committee chairs,
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both of whom represent the bay area, announced a coordinated effort to examine reform to the state's recall system. >> voters want a more democratic process put in place that keeps elected officials accountable and prevents political gamesmanship of the rules. >> a majority of californians are very frustrated we just spent $276 million on this process, on this recall election , that from the looks of it has certified what voters said three years ago and what voters could have said next year. reporter: berman and glaser plan to hold joint hearings. as soon as next month. they want the discussion to be bipartisan. joining us now is fill material. we did not think it would take long before democrats started this reform process. sure enough, it is underway, and sure enough, republicans are saying -- >> absolutely right. but some of the democrats are
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saying not so fast as well. it is going to be tough to craft something that is seen as fair and workable. one of the issues, the first question is, should they increase the number of signatures required to make a recall go on the ballot? that is a hot topic because people would say, wait a minute. that could favor one side or the other. we don't want to make it impossible to recall people if we feel it is justified. one of the biggest considerations is saying, let's simplify the process and rather than having one vote on the recall and a host of people to vote for in case the recall passes, just say if there is a recall, it goes to the lieutenant governor. keep your eye on that idea. >> some of that could be done through the legislature. other ideas would have to go gog the voters. governor newsom is going to stay in campaign mode is into? >> i asked if he was going to be seeking reelection.
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he wasted no time, he said yes. glad to clear that up. he is already out and running. some people were saying at the event today is an oakland, is this the opening of the new campaign? it may be. maybe a contrite, reaching out gavin newsom, but one who also had a 64-36 victory. chances are he is not going to face any opposition within or challenge within the democratic party, so he's going to be the democratic nominee, and with numbers like 64-36, whoever the republicans put out, it's going to be a tough fight. >> looks that way. thank you so much. we have complete recall coverage on our website. they are still updating as more ballots are tallied. just go to abc7news.com. >> crime in san francisco, a growing problem. the city says it is working on a new approach. the mayor announced a new program to help small businesses recover from vandalism. mariah carey shows you how the
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program works, all part of building a better bay area. >> from the vandalism relief fund, so it can go right back in your store. reporter: mike is ecstatic as he accepts a check from mayor london breed. someone took a blow torch to his shoe store and started stealing items from inside. >> they went through the glass door, took some high-end items, and later, some looters ransacked the store. reporter: the check is part of a new program from the city. store owners can receive up to $2000 to help with repair costs insurance will cover. >> we still have to pay deductible and that is not free. our deductible is what this grant helps us cover. reporter: the money comes from a one million-dollar grant from the general fund of the city. store owners need to present a police report and photo of the damage. mayor breed says the city needs to do its part to support small
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businesses. >> to support them and their businesses that not only help owners, but support employees, is significant. reporter: the gallery of jewels in know he valley is still recovering from their last incident. >> someone backed a van into the storefront and literally shoved everything in that direction. reporter: he says vandals have broken into his store four times the last two years. he says grant money could help with some of the cost, but he would need to see more money from the city. >> $2000 is -- it is pocket change. i think $50,000 would b $50,0 better figure. reporter: he says on till then he will except the original grant money and hope to reopen his doors soon. michael finney joins us live.
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unemployment benefits are cut off, but thousands of californians are still waiting to get paid. also. >> we have families right now that are completely -- the whole family is sick from the baby, two months old, the oldest person. >> no one is safe from the coronavirus. next, a live update on when vaccines will be available for children as young as five years old. joint pain, swelling, tenderness. my psoriasis. cosentyx® works on all of this. cosentyx can help you look and feel
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two homes were flooded and the city is working to pump the water out of those buildings. all homes within a six block area will be without water for the next few hours. >> when it comes to coronavirus, there is an encouraging sign in california. our positivity rate has dropped to 3.5%, setting a new low in a downward trend we have been enjoying for the past x weeks -- past six weeks. greg adams of kaiser permanente, brad smith of microsoft, and bob chapek of the walt disney company are among the ceos who spoke with the president today. soon the labor department will require a vaccine mandate for companies more than -- with more than 100 employees. >> this is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. >> biden hopes more businesses will choose to require vaccinations before it becomes the rule. >> pfizer is planning to submit data to the fda by the end of
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the month with hopes for a green light to start vaccinating kids, ages five to 11, by late october. across the bay area, starting to repair to distribute those shots once the vaccine is approved for emergency use. deveney sierra is digging into what we can expect. there is a lot going on here with little kids, boosters, etc.. >> it could happen before halloween. while there are several steps that need to happen before the decision is made, counties across the bay area tell us they are preparing now. vaccination clinics can open immediately after. >> protecting the unprotected. that is the hope pfizer's covid vaccine is giving anxious parents with young children. mission district. he constantly worries he is putting his five-year-old son at risk.
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>> talking to every different people. reporter: and he is not alone. >> we have families the whole family unit is sick from the baby, two months old, to the youngest person. reporter: susanna rojas is with the latino task force. her staff is preparing to expand the mission's 24th and cap street pop-up site to vaccinate 500 children per day once pfizer's vaccine is authorized. >> we have a lot of families asking, trying to figure out if their name is on the waitlist. reporter: how can parents sign up to get an appointment? >> you can come to one of the sites. we have the qr code. reporter: pfizer is expected to submit data for fda review by the end of september. a ucsf doctor expects a decision will be made before or by halloween. but added we should be prepared
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for potential delays. >> there's a lot of pressure that divert resources to have all hands on deck. reporter: the american academy of pediatrics reports a 240% increase in covid cases among children since early july. >> not so much of the bay area, but nonetheless, getting an infection would lead to a very small proportion of kids having chronic symptoms. reporter: health departments across all nine bay area counties are expanding vaccination clinics to accommodate the heightened demand next month. in addition to coordinating vaccine clinics with local pediatricians, ramirez hopes he will be first in line. >> yes, because you need it. reporter: the city's latino task force is additional resources to staff the mission and bayview test sites. i do add that site we nd cap is hosting a youth event every
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sunday from 9:00 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. to vaccinate 12 to 17-year-olds, and also offer free covid testing. i hope you can take advantage of that. >> we have an entire vaccine team dedicated to getting you the latest information on covid and vaccines. if you want to ask a question, all you have to do is go to abc7news.com/vaccine and click on the box. >> around here we get excited even if it is just the prospect of a little bit of rain. >> that is what we have. we have the prospect of a little bit of rain and maybe slightly more than a little, but today's weather story is the cooldown. it has cooled down sharply since this time yesterday. look at our graphic here. you see in the inland areas, where it was warm yesterday, hot in some spots, we have 12 to 15 degrees cooler in many inland locations than this time yesterday.
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closer to the coast and bay, single digits, cooler nonetheless. looking toward the bay bridge, you see partly cloudy skies, low clouds working across the bay. oakland 63, 67 at mountain view. a cool 57 at half moon bay. looking down to the bay, you see how hazy this ghaisar along with low clouds mixing in -- how hazy the skies are along with low clouds mixing in. here is the view from the exploratory in camera, looking back toward the skyline in san francisco. widespread low clouds and patchy drizzle during the overnight hours. chance of showers this weekend. we expect gusty, offshore winds and elevated fire danger on monday and tuesday. for tonight, this is what the forecast animation shows us. low clouds expanding across the bay and into quite a few inland
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areas. you may have seen a patch of green indicating the chance of some light drizzle, mainly near the coast, but there could be damp roadways in other locations as commuters had up to work. we will see low clouds and fog pulling back to the coastline, giving us a day much like we had today. overnight low temperatures will be in the low to mid 50's. relatively cool overnight, even cooler in some northbay locations like cloverdale, napa, and santa rosa. tomorrow, we expect mainly sunny skies, hazy sunshine by afternoon, breezy at the coast. high temperatures will be around 61 at half moon bay. around the bay shoreline, upper 60's to close to 70 tomorrow. inland areas tomorrow will warm to upper 70's. maybe low 80's in livermore, antioch, and fairfield. now to the all-important forecast animation for the weekend, 7:00 a.m. saturday. a cold front will be dropping from the pacific northwest.
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it will bring rain to northern california, start to push into the bay area late saturday into saturday evening and saturday night, then overnight we will expand beyond the northbay, which is the first place that will experience rainfall, and into early sunday it will reach other parts of the bay area. it will be a quick event moving out by sunday evening, not likely to leave much measurable rain behind. cooler than average through the weekend, then monday we get the gusty wind event i was talking about, which will be producing an offshore flow, warming up the winds, drying out the fuels, raising the prospect of potential wildfire. that will be monday and tuesday. it will be warming up all over again. >> delays. what an
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more brain performance? yes, please! neuriva. think bigger. >> part of our efforts to build a better bay area include making our communities are safe. in oakland, the rollout of a civilian crisis team is delayed once again and now there are questions from the community about how the program is coming together. reporter spoke to activists and city leaders. >> there is no reason we need to prolong this. >> a report delivered to the
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oakland city council public safety committee outlined macro, the mobile assistance community responders of oakland, will not hit the streets until november at the earliest. february next year at the latest. a considerable pushback from earlier discussions. >> the administration must implement this timely and well. the delays in action to implement what the council has authorized and funded is creating all kinds of problems. reporter: the report outlined a projected $6 million budget for the 21-22 fiscal year for the nonpolice response program. that will be housed in the oakland fire department and respond to quality-of-life calls from 7:00 a.m. 2:11 p.m. devon days a week -- 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. seven days a week. it could be ramped up to 24 hours, but it is a challenge thanks to training and staffing issues.
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>> going to be needed. they are going to be needed in the dark. reporter: the report calls for macro responders, each team made up of one emt and one community intervention specialist, to handle 911 calls identified from public intoxication, panhandling, indecent exposure, and well-being checks handled by police. one should be shifted toward the street and away from administrative roles. >> those positions may not be needed. which would have provided the funding needed to make it a 24/7 program. reporter: the council voted twice to establish an advisory board to oversee the program's development. that has yet to be created, leaving some to wonder how much say oakland is will have. >> if we let it go as it is being presented, it is a recipe
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for failure. >> it is time to have that community input and it is not too late. reporter: plans to expand to a 24/7 model, a revised spending plan, and plans to increase wages for macro responders, are expected to be discussed at next month's public committee meeting. >> you can get intouch with him easily online. on twitter and facebook, or instagram. >> next, whistleblower takes the stand in the fraud trial of elizabeth holmes. hear testimony about how often the blood testing device failed and how those concerns were ignored. >> unemployment benefits just expired for 2 million californians, yet thousands are waiting for payments. we are going to talk about
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versus fulvestrant alone. kisqali can cause lung problems, or an abnormal heartbeat, which can lead to death. it can cause serious skin reactions, liver problems, and low white blood cell counts that may result in severe infections. tell your doctor right away if you have new or worsening symptoms, including breathing problems, cough, chest pain, a change in your heartbeat, dizziness, yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, tiredness, loss of appetite, abdomen pain, bleeding, bruising, fever, chills, or other symptoms of an infection, a severe or worsening rash, are or plan to become pregnant, or breastfeeding. avoid grapefruit during treatment. ask your doctor about living longer with kisqali. collects building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions. this is abc 7 news. >> a big issue that fueled fuele
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recall attempt of gavin newsom is the crisis at the edd. >> thousan>> thousan is and a backlog even as benefits expire for 2 million californians. >> michael finney has one man's really frustrating story. reporter: let's start with a little bit of good news. the edd is whittling down that backlog, but get this. 180,000 workers are still waiting for benefits. among them, a southbay man whose claim set for so long -- sat for so long it was overlooked by mistake. >> i got a phone call saying they did not need me anymore. reporter: he lost his housekeeping job when the pandemic hit. unemployment kept them going until edd cut him off in march. >> i'm already struggling as it is. reporter: without saying why, edd suddenly required him to verify his address. he upgraded his drivers license, rental agreement, even his voter registration.
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edd said that was plenty, but still no payments. >> they had me the whole time thinking i had to wait. it's just going to come. reporter: it did not. he had to find housekeeping jobs, but concern over the delta variant made it difficult. >> i had to sell my car, my computer, i had to borrow money from my grandma. she has her own bills to take care of. reporter: finally he emailed edd asking, where is my payment? edd admitted it waited too long to act. now it was too late. edd replied, we unfortunately did not respond on time to verify your california residency. because of that, edd said, jacob's claim was disqualified and sent to the appeals board. it now awaits a hearing which could take months. >> it is their mistake and their fault, so why am i having to go through all this? reporter: just to confirm his address, which has been the same for years. edd admitted, quote, the appeal
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process is tedious, which is why we ask you to be patient a little longer. >> i'm never going to depend on edd ever again. reporter: we asked edd why it let jacob's claim lapse even though he verify his address. edd said we apologize... >> now i own my grandma money. it's going to take me years to get myself out of this hole. reporter: the edd says it plans to roll out a new system to help ease all this frustration. it is going to be called claim tracker. it will allow you to file your case through the process -- follow your case through the process following a fedex package. i will keep track of that, see if it works, and report back. >> hopefully jacob can get his money soon. >> it is ridiculous. >> the fraud trial of elizabeth holmes is in its third day in
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san jose. a former lab worker provided insight details of how she tried to warn managers about a high rate of failed results for theranos'blood testing device. >> erica c>> erica c>> erica c>a work as a research lab associate at theranos out of cal. her job was to process blood samples and ensure devices were producing accurate results. because of her inside knowledge, she was in the crosshairs at day three of the elizabeth holmes fraud trial, under questioning by the government, she confirmed details in a series of documents that logged march of 2018, about one is an -- one in four tests failed. doctors were relying on blood test results to make critical diagnoses.
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she told the juror she discussed her concerns with a fellow lab employee who had access to elizabeth holmes because his grandfather was on that there and knows -- on the theranos board of directors. he told holmes, quote, a significant portion of our syphilis test data is just noise. chung herself had a meeting with the chief operating officer. he reacted with irritation when she explained the problems and said her job was to keep processing samples. this prompted her to quit. she shared her inside knowledge with a newspaper reporter and with regulators. she also received a cease and desist letter from an attorney accusing her of disclosing confidential information. courthouse, displayed no reaction to the test results or the whistleblower's testimony.
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>> there is a podcast about the trial hosted by rebecca jarvis. episodes come out every week. you can listen to the dropout wherever you stream podcasts. >> next you will hear from some of america's top gymnasts about the abuse they suffered and reports that went ignored for years. also ahead. >> i think in the latino community we are always looking for people who can relate to us. >> we honor hispanic heritage month with personal stories of the first local doctors to get vaccinated against coronavirus.
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it has helped me an awful lot. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. >> emotional testimony on capitol hill from four olympic gymnasts about how they were sexually abused by former usa gymnastics dr. larry nassar. senators are investigating the fda's -- fbi's mishandling of the case. >> during testimony, a remarkable display of strength and bravery by some of the world's top gymnasts. >> being here today is taking everything i have. my main concern is i hope i have
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the energy to walk out of here. reporter: aly raisman, simone biles, mckayla maroney, and maggie nichols, told senators in painful detail how they were sexually abused by former usa gymnastics dr. larry nassar. and they blasted the fbi for failing to stop the abuse. >> to be clear, i blame larry nasser and i also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetrated his abuse. reporter: the hearing comes in response to a july report by the justice department inspector general. have found fbi agent's failed to respond with the urgency required once they learned about the sexual abuse allegations against nasser in 2015. then agents tried to cover their mistakes. >> they chose to lie about what i said and protect a serial child molester. reporter: nas wassar --
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was sentenced to talk to 175 years in prison. >> i'm tired of waiting for people to do the right thing. because my abuse was enough and we deserve justice. reporter: fbi director christopher wray, who was not in charge of the organization during the investigation, says he is heartsick. >> i am sorry there were people at the fbi who had their own chance to stop this back in 2015. reporter: one of the agents critical to the investigation was fired, but simone biles says agents should be prosecuted. collects stories like these can be really upsetting to hear, even traumatic for some people. if they trigger old memories. if you need some support, you can find it on abc 7.com/takeaction. we have a list of local
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resources by phone and even by text. >> coming up next, an update on the weather. your eyes. beautiful on the outside, but if you have diabetes, there can be some not-so-pretty stuff going on, on the inside. it's true, if you have diabetes, you know high blood sugar is the root of the problem. but that excess sugar can cause the blood vessels to be seriously damaged. and when that happens, this could happen, vision loss or even blindness. that's right, diabetic retinopathy is a leading cause of blindness for adults in the u.s. but even though you can't see it, there is something you can do about it. remember this: now is the time to get your eyes checked. eye care is an incredibly important part of your long-term diabetes management. see a path forward with actions and treatments
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latino doctors made hisry lt■ december, become the first bay area doctors to get vaccinated and they are opening up about their upbringing and how it helped prepare them to help the latino community during this pandemic. reporter: it was 1962. the u.s. government help over 14,000 children flee from communist cuba to miami. among this group, antonio's mom. >> my mom arrived as part of a group of kids that left without their parents. a lot of those parents put their kids on an airplane not knowing if they would see them again. reporter: his dad also fled cuba and met his mom years later. >> my father was an episcopalian priest in cuba. around the time he wanted to leave was the time the government was doing away with organized religion. reporter: antonia was born los angeles. his parents sheltered him from
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the constant gunshots and neighborhood gangs, but he was not blind to his parents' financial struggles. >> there were times where, you know, do we have enough food on the table? there were times we had to face that. love, faith, and espanol. >> my grandmother would always say, [speaking reporter: another latino also finding his way, the son of nicaraguan immigrants. he was raised by a single mom, his grandmother, and his on, all under one roof. >> we did not have a lot. my family would scrape together to buy christmas presents and that was it. we were never hungry, but there certainly was not money all over the place. reporter: he became the men of
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the house. >> my mom spoke english well enough. she had a thick accent and relied on me to do negotiating with anyone who was american. that started when i was nine years old. it was me talking to people at the hardware store, calling the phone company, the cable company. reporter: different paths and struggles leading them to one place. here. on december 15, doctors made history together, becoming the first bay area doctors to get vaccinated. they agreed to only for them, but for all the latinos who died of covid-19 in their icus. >> it took a toll on me personally seeing latino after latino comes into my -- come in to my i see you. >> it is unnerving. reporter: along with the medical
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milestone came an opportunity to combat vexing hesitancy among latinos. >> my -- vaccine hesitancy among latinos. >> my cousin played the video from the interview we did back in december to her class. a lot of them attributed that conversation with deciding they were going to get it, deciding they were going to tell their parents they should get it. reporter: was that when you realize your calling of being a doctor went beyond this hospital? >> yes. reporter: after all, their parents sacrifice and push from their grandparents to always speak espanol at home paid off when spanish became a key tool to saving lives in the middle of the pandemic. >> usually we don't launch into talking about covid. we talked, where are you from? where is your family from? >> do you believe your latino last name as a badge of trust? >> i think in the community we are always looking for people
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who can relate to us. celebrating the diverse hispanic community called our america, todos unidos. that will air this saturday at 9:00 p.m. on abc 7, available on the bay area app for connected tv and streaming on hulu. cape canaveral. spacex's inspiration four lifted off taking the first ever all-tourist crew into orbit. billionaire derek isaacman picked up the bill for the others on board.
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the goal is to raise money for saint jude children's hospital. sometimes i pick up friends' uber fare. i don't know if that is the same thing. >> spencer has weather for earthlings. >> i hope. let's take a look at what we expect tonight. fog reaching across the bay and to inland areas. low to mid 50's. a drizzle tomorrow morning. in the afternoon tomorrow, bright skies with a bit of haze. low 60's at the coast to upper 60's along the bay shoreline to low 80's in the warmest inland spots. now we jump ahead to weekend rain. saturday morning, cold fronts from the pacific northwest. light rain. it may reach the bay area late saturday.
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overnight into sunday we expect more widespread rain, but still of the light variety. we will all be over by sunday evening. after a little bit of wet weather over the weekend, we get gusty wind and dry conditions on monday, raising the concerns about a wildfire monday and tuesday. as those concerns ease up a bit, we get a warming trend tuesday and wednesday going into the middle of next week. >> i'm wondering, are you going to sing this , by any chance? >> i thought you were going to sing it? take me home, country roads. west virginia. sign me up for american idol. the 49ers stay for the eagles. we will preview tonight's game we will preview tonight's game against the padres, try ahhh. beautiful day in baltimore where most people probably know that geico could save them money on car insurance, right?
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getting into position for a deep october run. >> the other night was special, nice to celebrate the postseason berth, but that is not our goal. it is to win the division. we cannot take our foot off the gas or anything like that. in a way it is kind of a good thing. >> it is very unusual you are in a position where you can just cruise through the middle of september. i feel like we are more like the other teams out there that are in position to be in the playoffs ofor a >> marti does it all. fake tagging himself at second. the a's down 1-0. base hit to left. the a's take the 2-1 lead. on the bag, throw to se bag, th alberto thought it was a force. it is not.
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olson gets the 30. he eventually scored. at last check, five more a's. two consecutive games on the east coast. san francisco prepares for the sunday game. the 49ers staying at the same resort as last year on the previous two east coast business trips. the injury bug already hit raheem mostert is out for the season with a knee injury, so elijah mitchell stepped up to the 104 yards and a score. it is going to be running back by committee and the young guys need to step up. >> it really sucks. it does. there is no way around it. it is one of those tough breaks for them, to just get started, off to a hot start like that, you lose him. >> he's one of the best players on our team. that hurts, but as you can see, the way elijah stepped up, he did a helluva job. we have depth.
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we have not used all four of our running backs. i hope to not have to do that. >> warriors training camp starts in less than two weeks. seeing a lot of steph curry play, but how about draymond green? hanging out a at his alma mater. a dunk on the college kids. no doubt he gave them some tough love. no doubt they are saying draymond yelled at me, that is so cool. hoping to see him in a warriors uniform sooner rather than later. everyone's goal, if i can get yelled at by draymond. >> i have been there plenty of times. just ask a question that is a little bit askew and he calls you out. he's actually very good at it. >> we love that about him. would you take yelling coming from me? does that mean anything? >> yeah, for sure.
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>> all right. >> you are our draymond. >> coming up tonight, at 8:00 it is press your luck, followed at 9:00 by the $100,000 pyramid. at 10:00, watch amanda gorman, brave enough, special addition of 2020. stay with us for the news at 11:00. >> that's going to do it for us. >> good night. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ from the alex trebek stage at sony pictures studios, this is "jeopardy!" let's meet today's contestants-- a social studies teacher from mission viejo, california... a research associate from baltimore, maryland... and our returning champion-- a phd student from new haven, connecticut... ...whose 20-day cash winnings total... [ applause ] and now here is the host of "jeopardy!"-- welcome to "jeopardy!" everyone. ay, matt amodio is now tied in third with julia collins
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for the most consecutive wins all time. that is incredibly impressive, and i appreciate the fact that you dressed up for the occasion. he's got a good-looking tie on today. maureen and nick, you're looking to start your own streak, i have a feeling, so let's get into the game. here are the categories in the "jeopardy!" round. we'll start with... look at... we'll explore... and... humpty dumpty is an example of that. matt, you know the drill. take it away. gas, $1,000. - maureen. - what is ammonia? that's right. numerical entertainment for $1,000. - matt. - what's five? - yes. - novels, $1,000.
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