tv ABC7 News 400PM ABC March 16, 2022 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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larry:-- riding, but not many. larry: bart is is is i break -- a spike. luz: peoluz: peoluz: peoluz: p office, high gas prices. two years ago this is what bart looked like on a regular weekday. it's a flash forward today at 8:00 a.m. in oakland, a pack to train, the sign the tens of thousands are going back to the office and using public transit again. >> i have been commuting because work. >> for him it is nostalgic. >> a return to normal, i guess. >> high gas prices also play a role. >> six dollars a gallon is the average and it will get you
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anywhere on the system. >> a 31% increase from pre-pandemic ridership nobles -- numbers. during a press conference, art officials talked about safety measures there implement into welcome back writers. >> new filters to improve air filtration, the air filters out every 70 seconds. >> the chief of police to correct -- which -- mentioned a decline in crime, and crisis intervention specialists. >> our numbers in 2021 dropped 72% overall. having more specialists in the field is going to help us divert our officers away from those calls. >> be specialists carry our can and are paired with bart police we rode with them to see their work firsthand. >> what do you look for? >> we are patrolling, we pay attention to people who are not taking the train, someone
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sleeping in an area where mostly people would have foot traffic back and forth, signs of drug use. luz: local writers -- riders are not the only ones. tourists from getting the whole experience, even writing -- riding bart. >> we took the train to oakland yesterday and back. luz: they have intervention specialists with backgrounds in social services. they are working from 4:00 a.m. to noon. they are hoping to add people to that team and extend hours. larry: service has resumed at the dublin lecithin -- pleasenton station after the death on the tracks. a spokesperson said a major medical emergency was reported before 6:00 a.m.. the incident forced the agency to shut down the line for more
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than two hours. kristen: the mayor of san jose says efforts are underway to deal with the epidemic of pedestrian fatalities in his city. 33 pedestrians have been killed in san jose since the start of 2021. 10 deaths already this year. he says the city will focus its attention on 17 quarters in the city where most deaths of happened. one challenge will be to change behavior. since 75% of the deaths were people outside of crosswalks. >> focusing on changing ocusingg behavior, through signage, lights, median barriers to encourage pedestrians to use crosswalks, it will save lives. kristen: he says that city needs to hire more traffic enforcement officers, continue to improve street lighting and get people off their cell phones and slow down. he says it is time for california to allow automated speed enforcement. larry: the district attorney's
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office in alameda county have charged three people with the murder of kevin nishita the formal dutch former officer who was shot and killed last november. two are in custody and at third chief leronne armstrong will be. plans to get more information tomorrow. kristen: day five of the teachers strike in this school district. in is creating a major disruptions for students, most of whom are staying home from school. >> through honks, even dance, community members showed their support on wednesday for teachers in this unified school district now on day five of their strike in demand of better pay. >> day five. we have to stick to it. >> the district says roughly 10
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of dust all but 10 of their teachers have joined the strike. there ending school days early. 90% of students have opted to stay home. 1500 students go here. only a handful have been showing up for class. students tell us those that do come have been told to hang out in the gym and do catch-up work since there are not enough teachers to go to class. >> this shows how empty it is in the gym. pressure did students back to the board to reach a deal. >> i know -- i see no point continuing going to school of import is on the bleachers and do nothing. >> is a that option will help students in the long run. good teachers leave for better pay elsewhere. they're asking for a pay raise over the next three years. >> i feel like a total fool. all of my colleagues and friends feel foolish that we have to beg on the street for a livable wage.
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>> the district superintendent. >> are you willing to meet the teachers? >> we will do what we can to get as close as possible and also be able to remain fiscally solvent. >> but you don't expect you'll be able to give them 14%. >> i don't know if this point. >> the teachers will continue the strike for as long as it takes to reach a fair deal. >> our members are fired up. >> abc7news. kristen: we are expecting to learn any minute now if teachers in one district plan to go on strike. the contract between the teachers union and the mount diablo unified school district expired last june. teachers demand a 12.5% rage does raise. the district is offering 7%. larry: development in this project hit a significant speedbump. the advisory committee of the
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san francisco bay conservation and developing commission recommended against court used for our terminal. vote was 5-4 with one abstention. the commission is expected to take a final vote in june. this hurts the momentum that the project has built but does not derail it. the president talking with our sports producer right now. we will have reaction coming up at 5:00. kristen: new developments in the trial of the former ceo of theranos. opening arguments were set to start today but kobe got in the way. balwani is facing the same charges his ex-girlfriend elizabeth holmes faced. amy hollyfield has the latest. >> another delay. the judge is saying he wanted to go ahead and postpone opening arguments today because a juror was exposed to someone who was exposed to covid. he says the juror has tested negative but he wants to be very careful. so no opening arguments today.
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he and his team arrived an hour early this morning, looking ready to start today, get opening arguments going. this was after a very long jury selection. four full days, longer than expected to find a nonbiased jury. we were seated, they are ready to go another facing a delay. he faces the same crimes elizabeth holmes was convicted of. prosecutors say the pair lied to investors about the company's blood sampling technology. he was dating homes while they ran -- holmes while they arn theranos. she alleged abuse. he has denied claims. the judge is calling this exposure limited, but he wanted to postpone this out of an abundance of caution. in san jose, amy hollyfield, abc7news.
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larry: surveillance images of the violent shaking in japan following a 7.3 earthquake off the east coast today. a bullet train derailed but no other injuries. more than 2 million people lost power and there was a tsunami reaching about eight inches above normal. thankfully, no major damage. kristen: the alameda fire department dive rescue team gave a demonstration in front of the uss hornet. they are certified to help neighboring communities with subsurface water rescues. it was started after incidents with vehicles going into the water in 2018. the department says at that time it did not have the capability to facilitate quick water rescues. larry: a high price to pay. the solution to inflation, but it is going to cost you. gassing up may be only pennies, but there are ways to save. and right time, wrong place. the story of an airbnb gone wrong. >> meteorologist mike nicco.
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kristen: stocks closed after a wild day on wall street. the dow soared more than 500 points before going on to lose it all and markets stabilize after the federal reserve announced it is raising interest rates the first time since 2018. the dow, nasdaq and s&p closed with the significant gains. relief a b on the way as record high inflation keeps raising the cost of living. the fed signaled it is doing a series of rate increases, but a reporter found out there's a price to play. >> inflation is at 840 year high of seven point percent. they are trying to tame interest rates -- raise interest rates to tame this. it is pumping the brakes, not slamming to slow consumer spending and business spending. consumers have had prices increase in gas and the grocery
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store. businesses are trying to keep workers. >> when consumers demand less goods and services, businesses will hire less workers and this is going to slow wage growth. >> one reason the stock market gave a thumbs up. highest interest rates will hit consumers across the board. if they are buying a house, mortgage rates will rise. >> it will affect people in the lower end of the market where people are trying to get into a property. >> of the impact could be softened by the demand for homes by deep-pocketed buyers. we are seeing multiple offers, property selling over the list price because there is less inventory for sale. >> credit card and auto rates will rise. analysts believe inflation could fall to around 4% by the end of the year. the war in ukraine, gas and oil
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prices and ongoing supply chain problems will continue to push up inflation. the fed will be careful how to tap the rate hikes to avoid trigger --triggering a recession. larry: gas prices continue to sort across the state. a new average high, $5.77 per gallon. and now but it is most expensive and the bay area at five dollars 91 a gallon. san francisco are payin dollars 88 cents. people are trying to reduce gas consumption. there are ways to save money and maybe not part of them. mama linda's is helping us. --leanne melendez is helping. >> he received a discount for using his credit card. >> i used my card and the price went down. >> six cents per gallon.
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any discount is welcomed because prices are very high. >> it is killing me. >> some credit cards have a i now pay later option. but 7 on your side's michael finney says be careful with high interest rates and late fees. >> the most port thing you can do is don't buy more gas than you can afford to use. that is the bottom line. even though gas prices are going up, the price of bart isn't. i'' if you are hurting for money, use public transportation to get you over the humps. >> certain circumstances drive up the price of gasoline. there are things you can do. i'm sure you have heard them before. >> tried to plan better. just go one way and do everything that i need to and go back and said it back and forth. clubs i am a nerd and so i keep my tires inflated properly. >> drive less.
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>> aaa makes another good suggestion. don't leave heavy stuff in your car. >> an extra 100 pounds of weight attitude vehicle reduces your fuel economy -- added to your vehicle reduces your fuel economy. >> a dollar here and there adds up. volatile oil market has left people wondering if now is the time to go electric. that in mind. the wait for certain models could be up to 10 months. in san francisco, leanne melendez, abc7news. kristen: a large boulder came crashing down on highway 50. no cars were hit. the boulder blocked both lanes until crews arrived and were able to move the debris, and a larger boulder fell in the same area march 3, closing the highway for 24 hours until it was blown up by a demolition crew. larry: look at the size. kristen: the echo summit area.
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larry: are they trying to tell us something? don't drive there? don't drive anywhere with the cost of gas. but the weather is looking good. >> a nice day for a convertible or go for a bike ride and not use gas. one of the going to come out with a convertible electric vehicle? that's what i'm waiting for. emeryville, east bay, san jose, no matter where you look it is total sunshine. if you clouds lingering, but a gorgeous subject -- sunset. not as much fog as this morning. more in the way cloud cover as high clouds search in tonight. sprinkles for tomorrow morning. afternoon sunshine, a quick hitter, it is out of here. i the weekend we still have the chance of rain on saturday, looking more, sing. spring sunshine for sunday. the equinox is coming.
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8:33 sunday morning. temperatures are warmer than they were yesterday. we will go up to the north bay where the mid- to upper 60's, novato and semi-fail at 70. mill valley 626, warmest spot in ukiah at 72. elsewhere, a sea breeze. san francisco 70's in the rest of our neighborhoods. temperatures drop down to the 50's and 60's by 7:00. high clouds increasing as we head up to 11:00. 48 to 52 degrees. with the cloud cover tonight, mid to upper 40's. it will taper overnight but it will return tomorrow. as high clouds start to come in, it will keep temperatures this deck of clouds we are
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looking at, mainly middle and upper moisture and a layer of dry air will evaporate most of the rain you see on live doppler 7 during the morning hours. most of it falls apart before it gets here. by noon it is over. look at the increasing sunshine as we head into the afternoon. in fall amounts, nothing measures for tomorrow. saturday, hyatt resolution model up to 11:00 in the morning. green and yellow, light to moderate rain. i the time we had to the evening, this system is starting to full part. we will salvage saturday evening and sunday. nice times to be outside. rainfall from a 10th of an inch to a third of an edge, possibly higher elevations half an inch. as my seven-day forecast. temperatures rebound friday, warmer than tomorrow and saturday is our goal with a lot of 50's, a few areas reaching 60 andrew springer starts on sunday. you can see 70's, but let me show you the big story next week. a string of 80's that will reach the bay by tuesday and 70's at
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the coast. larry: 86. wow. thank you. national puppy days a week from today, celebrating the love and affection that puppies bring to our lives. some of you may be adopted a dog during the pandemic, what if you had been working at home and now you return to the office, your dog is going without attention for hours at a time. we talked to a trainer but how to help with the transition if your pet is in a great. >> we have to make sure we are doing our responsibility to make sure if we are going to be gone that we have somebody coming over to let them out and give them the attention they need. then maybe back in the great or the room and relaxing until you get home. larry: a survey from a dog walking cap found 41% of dog owners returning to work said they will miss their dogs more than their kids or spouses. wow. kristen: the countdown to the
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oscars has begun. we are less than two weeks away from the big night. ahead, will smith on his care coalition, where are we on alaska airlines? we found that people are raving about their customer care. i mean, take a look at this! wow! [dog barks] says here they have the most flights from the west coast. they fly to chicago, hawaii, cancun! wow! way up in the clouds where anything is possible? they have direct flights to vegas. close enough! ♪ ♪
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-- venus and serena williams. >> he has been called the best by his peers, been honored by the press at the critics choice awards and recognized by the naacp. will smith was honored by the british academy of film just last week and then came to new york city to be honored by the national board of review. do you feel the momentum is with you to win on the night? >> i'm not even thinking about it like that. >> do you believe him? he understands if you don't. >> it always sounds like after trying to be humble. i don't think about awards in that way. and i'm about the work and i stay focus on the work. it's not that. >> king richard tells the story of how one father overcame tremendous odds to train his daughters for greatness. this feels like a culmination for the star who last earned an
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oscar nomination 15 years ago. so says the director of king richard. >> he devoted himself to the role and from the moment i met him, he gave 110% to me. >> smith and says the power of the ensemble and the focus on the entire williams family is what makes the film so special. >> i'm finding myself attention being on the hearts and experience of the people around me, more than on whether or not my name gets called. kristen: you can see who takes home at the oscar gold only on abc seven. the show is sunday, march 27
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>> building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions. this is abc 7 news. >> we decided collectively that we needed to take swift action as soon as possible to prevent the further spread. >> we are asking everyone to remain at home for all but the most essential outings. larry: two years ago six area counties announced a shelter-in-place order, originally set to last for three weeks. at the time there were 472 covid cases and fewer than a dozen deaths in california. now more than 8.4 million cases and nearly 87,000 deaths have been reported in the last two years. two years ago today, governor newsom asked restaurants to serve take out only. two years later did a lot of restaurants closed permanently and others are still struggling.
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running me is lori thomas with the golden gate restaurant association. thanks for joining me. what are we seeing? our restaurants recovering? >> thanks for having me. i can believe it has been two years. feels like 10. but we are starting to see some hope. on friday the 11th, we were to drop the proof of requirement of asking for vaccination to dine inside. that was a huge move in the right direction and we are starting to see more interest in event bookings and people starting to dine out more often. larry: staffing has been an issue. it was an issue before. using improvements? >> that is a yes and no. we are seeing more people interested in coming back to
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work in the front of the house. not everybody has the deep skill set that a lot of our restaurants need, especially fine dining restaurants, and we are struggling to staff line cooks, chefs, sous chefs. larry: what has the pandemic taught bay area restaurant owners and are there permanent changes we might expect? and a lot of outdoor dining? >> outdoor dining in san francisco will hopefully be a permanent thing. the mayor was an early proponent. we were talking literally two years ago and by early june we had those shared spaces pandemic permits in place which were great. the current permits are now extended through march of 2023. that past the board of supervisors unanimously tuesday. new permits will be in place with
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some people will have to make changes, but we hope to see that going forward. that is critical to the survival of our restaurants. larry: i remember talking with the pandemic started and you said we might lose 50% of restaurants. don't know if you have the numbers. it takes a while for restaurants open. you have to get the space, staff and get the kitchen going. what is the situation? >> i hate to say this because everybody wants a hard answer. we are not out of the woods yet. the restaurant revitalization fund not get capped up in the budget package and with the pending war in ukraine and everything, there is concern it will not get capped backup. for every three restaurants, one got the independent restaurant relief and two did not. that will hurt the restaurants that did not get it. that is concerning.
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i saw the department of health permit numbers in 2021. there were twice as many closures as openings. there are still a lot of people temporarily closed or limping along waiting for more funding. we know we really have to get folks to come back into the offices and philip downtown again and union square. larry: feels like we are headed in the right direction. hopefully we can build momentum. thanks for your time. >> we have restaurant week coming up april 1 of the 10th, so we will share more information. come out and dine. larry: thank you. kristen: so ready for restaurants. as many return to normal, a group of california seniors and people with disabilities are calling on avenues of to reinstate the indoor mask mandate to protect the most vulnerable. abc 7 news race and social justice reporter julian glover spoke to people about their concerns. >> it is scary for many disabled
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and high-risk californians. >> californians across the state calling on the governor to reinstate the indoor mask mandate rollback last month. the main the plea on the two-year anniversary of the health officials announcing one of the first shelter-in-place orders of the country as many californians welcomed what they call a return to normal. >> who gets to return to normal? not me and not other disabled or immuno compromise people. >> she was on the call and is a public health researcher who has increased risk of severe dope duchess severe illness due to a medical condition affecting her heart and lungs. >> is seeing the restrictions lifted feels like my life is disposable. >> does disability activist has shelter-in-place since march 2020. they take immunosuppressive
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medications. they're pushing back necessary y surgeries. >> the removal of face coverings means my health care providers are more likely to take risks outside of work. they may be i met my most vulnerable state. >> she is living with long covid and is concerned the reversal of the strategies means disabled people like her may never be able to enjoy things she loves like dancing or traveling again. >> it makes me want to scream. just go outside and scream. but i can't do that because it would be too tiring. >> with the 14 day average just below 3000 hospitalizations, this message from our correspondent. >> i don't think the message
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about taking care of yourself should only fall upon those who have chronic illnesses or weakened immune systems. it is on all of us to protect our community. you could get somebody sick who might have a medical issue. kristen: hate crimes a against the aapi during the pandemic. tonight, a special program stop the hate featuring dion them. you can watch it tonight at 5:30 wherever you stream. larry: from daylight saving time into netflix passwords to emojis, we have a conference --
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larry: time for the 4i-4 clock. daylight saving change was a few days ago but is top of mind and the senate passed a bill to make it year-round. the move is controversial. some say it would make us more productive and others was a darker evenings and brighter mornings are better for your health. the u.s. adopted year-round daylight saving time in 1974. it did not last and even now we have arguments down here about whether it is affecting us. i don't want to name names. kristen. kristen: it takes me a few days. larry: it is one little hour. kristen: doctors have affirmed
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that your body only adjusts 10 or 15 minutes a day max. dan: it takes a few days. on our shift, in our hours, we don't see the sunrise so it does not matter what time it comes up because we are not up to see it. larry: if you travel somewhere to the east coast, your body has to change times. you adapt. dan: but they say it is a day for every hour when you travel. so if it's a three-hour time difference, >> so if we go to europe we need to stay for weeks. larry: facts. [laughter] dan: i like daylight saving time when it is in place because i love it getting darker little later. >> you know it is spring when we change the clocks, you know it's almost winter when we change them again. i put this together for you. if we go to pacific daylight
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time, all of the time, all year-round, our earliest sunrise will not change. 547 time june 6 through the 20th. our latest to sunrise will be 8:25 in the morning january 1, which is ok, through the 10th. our earliest sunrise will be -- sunset will be by 55 time -- 5:50. it is the sunrise that gets a lot of people. larry: kids might have to go to school later. kristen: try blackout shades. netflix is trying to crack down on password sharing. it is testing new features in chile, costa rica and peru. what is the ability for users to add subaccounts for up to two people they don't live with for a price. each account will have its own login and password. is this a big problem, do you do
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that? [laughter] dan: i have to remember my password in order to share it. i don't do that. larry: i would never do such a thing and try to cheat them out of money. >> 1399 time -- 1399 1399 1399 9 month. kristen: it is getting more expensive. larry: they have authentication so you have to send a text to your phone and they say is you. >> and a person has to call or text you. kristen: hypothetically. larry: i heard him talk about it with his family. are you a fan of emojis? you may want to rethink how to use them. using pictures and emojis at work could make you look less powerful. dan: is that possible? larry: [laughter] a new study finds it does not matter what position you are
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have, using images make you appear less authoritative. the study says employees who use words instead of images are more likely to get promoted. if you have seriouseriouserious interaction and silly emojis, maybe. dan: i like using them because they are a shortcut to words at times you do it when you are with friends or light office conversation. of course if you are having a serious conversation you would use words. i can't imagine using an emoji on the times my boss was angry at me. larry: maybe you should respond with a smiley face. everybody will be happy. kristen: steam coming out of your ears. larry: great ideas. >>'s lack is ok, not. kristen: use common sense.
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we've talked about weird foods here remember. the kraft mac & cheese ice cream? if you are a fan, get ready because walmart is offering unusual flavors. mac & cheese is one. this brooklyn based creamery created these ice creams at walmart. other flavors our planet earth, pizza, hot honey, wedding -- those don't sound as wild but pizza? larry: is it organic dirt? kristen: real frozen warm beds? -- bits? larry: wild blueberry shortcakee
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bourbon cherries to -- is it real bourbon? asking for a friend. dan: i like mint chocolate chip, he said great. some of those sound good. larry: occasionally something different. kristen: ice cream is always good. larry: not as much controversy and now most admired alum! get up there. this is so embarrassing. there's no way it's me. you know her.... you love her.... ruh roh. what are you doing here? it's anna gomez! who? our first gigillionaire! with at&t fiber, anna's got the fastest internet with hyper-gig speeds. i didn't know you went to this school. we have a lot in common. live like a gigillionaire with at&t fiber. now with speeds up to 5-gigs.
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proportions for one man staying at an in florida. kristen: abc news reporter has the story of an airbnb gone wrong. >> the end of a long travel day for paul drexler, journeying from ecuador to miami for a wedding. i the time he got through customs, caught a new bird and made it to his airbnb, it was 2:00 in the morning. he followed the instructions from the host. >> there is a gate and we have left it unlocked. open the gate, perfect. when you enter it they will be a dog. there is the dog. >> he climbs into bed and crashes, but that was not his bed. >> wear their red flags when he got inside? -- were there red flags? >> my first thought was this place looks messy. lived in. >> but for paul who has stayed
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in hundreds of airbnb's, it was not the worst. he woke up at 8:00 a.m. the next morning to knocking. >> i remember thinking it is strange that the host is entering the premises and bothering me this morning. it goes this is my house can i help you? i go...thsi is -- this airbnb i rented. and he goes calmly, no, this is my house. the homeowner help to find the right address. the house next door. >> he may have used the guesthouse as his office. the bedroom was maybe a guest bedroom set up for guests. >> that is for people who are invited. >> he wants to send the first homeowner a gift for being so calm and relaxed, and he does have his address. but what do you gift your unofficial host? maybe a lock would be a good
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one. larry: that is the perfect storm of things that could go wrong. that happened to tom brady when he moved to tampa. he was trying to find his offense of court nader, walked into the wrong house. he did not sleep there, but the owner of the house goes, tom brady, what are you doing here? they worked it out. kristen: being recognizable works in those situations. could have been worse. we have heat coming our way but we have a few days. >> we do. cooling coming in tomorrow with sprinkles and once spring starts on sunday, temperatures take off. if you are thinking about going outside during the evening, dinner outside on the coast, hazy and breezy, temperatures in the 50's. 60's and 70's to 5:00. back into the 50's for most of us by 8:00. good to moderate air quality which is healthy for all of us
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out there. as we head to the next couple of days it should stay good to possibly a few areas of moderate , but for the most part it will be good through saturday. let's talk about tomorrow. the green over the ocean fades away as clouds fade away little. mostly cloudy and dry with temperatures from 52 in eureka to 86 in palm springs. about 34 degrees spread. snow coming saturday afternoon and evening up to one to four inches possible of new outer to ski on center duster sunday morning. st. patrick's day tomorrow, temperatures in the 50's and 60's. in the morning and afternoon hours, saturday, better chance of outdoor plans not being interrupted on sunday. near record highs by tuesday. larry: thank you. hardest free apollo a -- freedom apollo -- frideda kahlo loves te
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exhibit. gloria rodriguez visited the space at sbn west in san francisco. >> family members of frida kahlo walked me through this exhibit before it opened to the public. her grandniece and her daughter both based in mexico traveled to san francisco for the opening. they say the city was special to her. >> she loved to be in san francisco. she used to come to the doctor. he married again for a second time with diego in san francisco. so i'm very glad to be here. >> it features animations of work of the iconic 20th-century accident artist. more than 70 projectors illuminating over 500,000 square feet.
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>> is a first step that you can really know her and her art, her life. this is great because you can feel and hear, see. >> she was known for self-portraits and was born in 1907, passed in 1954 and was married to hugo rivera, known -- diego rivera, known for murals. their love story as well as her political opinions. >> she represents a social questions that we all are as a society, that we are plowing through right now. and she she was also bisexualexualexuall
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a complex statement to make at the time. >> she is a representative of the equal gender and is ahead of her time. many, many young people can bond or reflect on herself. >> she was hurt in a bus accident when she was 18. the exhibit depicted her pain at the family says she was also joyful. crags she had 27 operations, but she was a happy woman. she liked to sing songs, play the guitar. he used to play guitar and sing songs and make jokes. he was very happy and showing said do it. you can do it. she would walk and she did it. kristen: the exhibit runs through june 11 and is worth
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>> building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions, this is abc 7 news. dan: reporter: pandemic we have been suffering from an epidemic of traffic fatalities in our city. ama: 20 feet -- traffic fatalities on the streets of san jose at so far this year. today, they discussed what is being done to save lives. good evening, i am ama daetz. dan: san jose city officials outlined plans to give the streets safe including aplenty is automated speed enforcement cameras. ama: zach fuentes has the details. reporter: center road was considered to be one of the most dangerous in the city. between were killed or seriously injured from traffic aid
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