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tv   ABC7 News 600PM  ABC  June 1, 2022 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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this is smoke as seen from one of pg&e's nearby wildfire cameras. the highway burned near 47 and arnold drive. no word on how it started. >> and neighboring napa county. they were able to return home today. the so-called old fire is just over 20% contained and it broke out yesterday afternoon and grew to more than 570 acres, burning very close to the 2017 atlas fire area. >> whether it is a key part of this. >> as you take a look here, it is gusty near the old fire right now out of the southeast near 15 miles per hour. this is where that fire broke out.
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the gusty winds will remain in that area through the next couple of hours but they are coming out of the west which transports higher humidity. this is actually a good thing for the firefighters even though it is going to be gusty. air quality right now is good to moderate across the region. that does include areas in napa county. the air district did extend to the air-quality advisory. there is smoke and haze in the vicinity. tomorrow, it is right on through tomorrow for the napa valley, good for the rest of the bay area. i will be back to let you know about some big changes coming up. >> new at 6:00, a man has just died from a shooting that have been months ago. four people were shot in gilroy on halloween weekend of last year. 19-year-old jesse sanchez passed away just this friday.
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the shooting happened at a property owned by gilroy city councilmember rebecca armendariz. >> a mountain lion is being examined by veterans at the oklahoma zoo after being locked in a classroom at pescadero high school. it wandered onto campus earlier this morning. the zach fuentes has been there all day long, monitoring the situation. >> students were just about to start their second to last day of the school year wednesday morning. >> i walk into the hallway, everyone is frantic and i ask what is going on. they said get in the classroom. you can see it resting just below the desk. >> right when i got to the school with my dad, they said you have to get to a classroom and go to the gym. >> the superintendent tells us the mountain lion club wandered into the school as students were arriving for the day.
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>> it was when students were coming in and out. yes, the door had been left open. >> the san mateo's county sheriff's office quick thinking kept them outside the door. the district superintendent said it is not unheard of for a mountain lion to come close to campus. not just for the school but the different agencies that were out at the scene. >> having one in a classroom, i thought it was a senior prank at first because is the day before school is out but based on the source of the information, we learned that was not the case. >> they made signs of support for the cub to spend more time in the classroom than they did. fish and wildlife were able to go out. chrysler used the dark tranquilizer rifle to put a drop in here. quick the animal was skinny.
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it was taken to the oakland zoo for a full assessment. >> tomorrow was supposed to be the last day of school, they had final scheduled today and in eighth grade graduation as well. although that is being rescheduled. zach fuentes, abc7news. >> pfizer has made the formal request to authorize its vaccine for kids aged six months to five years. the only age group that cannot get vaccinated. california is closing in on 9 million diagnosed rotavirus cases. her test positivity rate is now 7.9%. it has not been this high since early february. san francisco researchers are noticing that during the omicron surge, people were testing positive for longer than five days. luz peña spoke to one of the lead researchers who was investigating why the infection keeps changing. >> people are still testing
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positive for more than 10 days. what is interesting is that scientists are now recommending your shoes and at home antigen test over a pcr tests. they say they will tell you if you have covered before symptoms appear. an antigen will let you know if you are still infectious. >> after a year of collecting data from more than 60,000 people getting tested in san francisco, scientists found compelling detail on how long, and are lasting. >> we had 80% of symptomatically people were still positive. >> even though the cdc recommends for people to go back to work after five days of infection, dr. joe teresa, one of the leading investigators of the study says you could still be infectious even if you don't have any symptoms. next to the best of our knowledge, as long as you are testing positive by antigen test, there is a high likelihood that you are still infectious
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even at 10 days. because they tested positive for 10 days even though he reported feeling normal after four days of infection. >> i woke up wednesday morning and i was like i feel better and i took a test and it showed positive. i took a test on friday, positive. on sunday, positive. my friend said stop taking them, those are expensive. it was frustrating but i was talking with other friends and several friends were saying it was day 10 for them as well. >> why is the infection. longer than five days? >> we don't understand the basics of the immunology that allows one person to clear the virus faster than another. >> the doctor recommends to follow the results of the at home antigen test. instead of a pcr. >> antigen test's test for the actual virus itself.
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the protein of the virus. in more closely correlates with being infectious. course the doctor says it will take years to truly understand why it takes longer for some people to clear the virus compared to others but he says these are all signs that the virus continues to evolve. in the newsroom, abc7news. >> i think it took me 11 or 12 days to fully test negative. we are on the eve of the nba finals exclusively on abc 7. chris alvarez is live at chase center with more from the nba finals media day today. >> they are still getting ready. 24 hours from now, the warriors and celtics will be playing on the floor at the chase center. i digressed to the building
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getting ready, hosting the first nba finals. it was meant for moments like this. you can see some of the pregame practice today. warriors and celtics on basketball's biggest stage. stephen curry, trey thompson, golden state playing in their sixth nba finals in the last eight seasons. is even more appreciative of being back here in this moment. >> everything we all went through with this, the ultimate goal of getting back on the stage, the chance to play for another championship. you look up at all of the work you put in through the last two years, it is pretty special. >> to be back for a sixth time, is incredible. incredible even saying that. never thought it would be a possibility in my rookie year. i will just enjoy every second
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of this and play as hard as i can and then you can walk away with no regrets. >> our coaching staff is incredibly competitive. joe is probably the most competitive guy around. i think that is a huge part of it. that will to win. >> andriy a gary payton the second and otto porter junior all listed as questionable. they tried to come back. we will wait to see when they can come back in this series. the games will be right here on air. quick so excited, thank you. abc 7 is the exclusive home of the nba finals. we will have pregame and postgame coverage throughout the series. it caps off tomorrow night at 5:00 p.m. with dubs on seven pregame show and then nba countdown. game one tips off at 6:00
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followed by after the game at 10:00. quick this was the warriors first finals appearance since the pandemic started. it has been a long road for all of us. especially health care workers. tonight, a look at will to make their lives easier. >> and we will be joined to live by michael finney talking mortgages and we mean plural because it is not just about getting a home loan one time. getting a home loan one time. ♪music playing♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ nothing brings the pack together like a trip to great wolf lodge. now open in northern california. for state controller, like a trip to great wolf lodge. only yiu will save taxpayers money. wait, who, me?
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me? no, not you. yvonne yiu. yvonne yiu. not me. good choice. for 25 years, yiu worked as an executive at top financial firms. managed hundreds of audits. as mayor, she saved taxpayers over $55 million. finding waste. saving money. because... yiu is for you. yiu is for you. exactly. yvonne yiu. democrat for controller. (music throughout)
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>> i would dearly work to build a better bay area includes a focus on racial and social justice and today, the first
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report on california reparations was released, giving an overview of the harm of slavery and discrimination against african-americans. the report also gives recommendations on how to make financial amends. lyanne melendez is here to highlight a very comprehensive report. >> this is the executive summary and it has 27 pages. the report is 2500 plus pages long. if i could summarize it in simple terms, i would say america would not be the economic superpower it is today if it did not have free labor through slavery. we all know that slavery was abolished in 1865 and yet the report says the systemic steps -- systemic discrimination has continued. it is time to make amends. >> you call it reparations. we call it justice. >> that justice can never be achieved without accountability.
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>> it barely reflects a history that most americans don't want to talk about. it has been so raised. correct this country has an unpaid debt. not just any black person living here. >> they should deal with the country where they were enslaved. that is how you deal with that. we must go to the scene of the crime. >> even though slavery did not exist, the report concluded that the state is just as complicit. >> the horrors of slavery may have begun in the past with the harms i felt every single day by black americans in the present. >> suburbs in california were essentially sun down communities where if black people were out and about after the sun went down, they would be subject to vigorously loss -- vigorously --
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vagrancy laws and arrest. >> to begin some kind of compensation, the report lists a series of recommendations, too many to list but we highlighted just a few. establish a fund to support the development of black-owned businesses, compensate individuals who were forced from their home due to urban renewal. create employment training opportunities, adopt mandatory culturally responsive curriculums for teacher credentials. provide university scholarships for all black high school graduates. no one is denying the implementation of some of these could be seen as financially prohibitive. >> they put the man on the moon. why can't we deal with matters of the earth? >> there is no question that the cost of it is expensive but if america does not look at this and acknowledge what happens, it can never -- how do we get better as a country?
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of course there is room for changes in that report. the final version is expected in june of 2023 and you are probably asking yourself how some of those recommendations will be implemented. they would go to the state legislature and some assembly person member or state would propose a bill on one or several of the recommendations and those bills could become in california the law of the land and inspiration for other states. >> fascinating and important to watch. mayor london breed announced her proposal for the next two years. she unveiled her $14 billion plan at union square, flanked by about two dozen first responders and city workers. >> we need to focus on our economic recovery. we need to focus on the challenges that exist with public safety. we need to focus on helping our most vulnerable and are homeless
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populations and improve our transportation. so many things to do. >> specifically, her budget calls for 20 million additional dollars for cleaning city streets, about $50 million to provide grants and loans for small businesses as she wants to improve public safety by increasing the starting pay for police officers. and provide bonuses for those officers that she was to stay within the department. >> we know that more than two years of dealing with the pandemic has put stress on doctors and nurses. this indicates burnout among doctors is growing for other reasons. david louis looks at what other factors are making the situation worse. >> right now, i think it is to the point where it can no longer be ignored. >> this is a clinical one.
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she says physicians can also be in denial if they are facing burnout and need more than self-care such as yoga classes. they may need mental health care. >> if you make something shameful or an individual's fault, they are most likely to seek help. >> stanford has asked if a position is having a mental health issue. dr. rahman worked with the behavioral expert dr. jeffrey pfeffer to identify stressors. >> this is a solvable problem. you can redesign work to get rid of a necessary task. you can put in computer systems that are designed around the user, not around the software. >> the electronic health record system required doctors to do repetitive data entry and it takes 16 minutes to document each patient visit.
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>> this takes time away from patients. in their analysis, they found doctors spent over a port of their time with patients. a print out position can indicate patient care. david louis, abc 7 news. >> it is not just health-care workers who are burnt out, he can really happen to anyone. to find an ally, go to abc7news.com/take action. >> some real changes coming. maybe even a chance of some rain. >> it is june. we do get some rain. about 20%. san jose typically averages
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1800s. and then the weekend. live doppler 7 showing some high clouds here. it is gusty along the coastline. that camera is a little shaky. 66 in open, the warmer spots in land, getting up into the low 90's. san jose, 80 degrees. we are looking toward ocean beach and a little fog developing. first things first, higher clouds tonight and into tomorrow morning.
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temperatures will come down. 40's all the way to the 60's in land tomorrow morning to start the day. a little hazy right around napa county where the old fire is still burning. what we really need is some rain. saturday night, we could see a few showers in the north bay. it is a better likelihood of seeing some wet weather on sunday. the best chance will be in the north bay. keep in mind of the high-resolution model is not done yet. that gives you a rough idea of what could happen. the rainfall estimates look pretty impressive.
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we bring in a level 1. there could be some showers. >> thank you very much. a very special day. david was recognized by tom zebrowski. there he is on the left with disney executives also in attendance. david, ever the gentleman thanked us, his coworkers. >> i could not be standing here today without you as a team. what an incredible team i worked for the past 50 years. you are all the best in the business. >> david is the best in the business. 50 years. david is just a world-class phenomenal reporter and liz, just a terrific human being. >> so welcoming to all of us
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more newbie reporters. he was telling us today that he first realized that silicon valley was going to become something big when they started removing the peach trees. >> congratulations to david. 50 years of kgo. well done. >> the good old days, if we are talking gas prices, we are talking gas prices, we are really talking about i've lived in san francisco for 20 years. i'm raising my kids here. this city is now less safe for all of us. chesa boudin is failing to hold repeat offenders accountable. he prosecuted zero
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fentanyl drug dealing cases, even though nearly 500 people have died of overdoses. i'm voting yes on h to recall chesa boudin now. we can't wait one more day when people are dying on our streets. time. it's life's most precious commodity, especially when you have metastatic breast cancer. when your time is threatened, it's hard to invest in your future. until now. kisqali is helping women live longer than ever before when taken with an aromatase inhibitor or fulvestrant... in hr+, her2- metastatic breast cancer. kisqali is a pill that's proven to delay disease progression. 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,
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>> growing pessimism on wall street pushed stocks lower today. they lost 170 seven points, closing at 32,813. the nasdaq is down 87 points and the s&p 500 dropped 31 points. a labor department report out today shows job openings are near record levels and there are more indications the fed plans to keep raising interest rates. a new month for you to look at with gas prices. >> that is right, here we are again. san francisco gas, the most expensive in the bay area is teetering on the brink of 6.50 per gallon. a month ago, it was 5.89.
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a year ago, drivers paid four dollars and $.34. less than today, about a $20 difference for a 10 gallon philip. >> it has been almost two years since this. i look into whether the officer who fired the fatal shots w ♪♪ from our sinkmat that perfectly protects under your sink.
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>> live, breaking news. >> a fire burning here. we were just on the scene. look at these flames and smoke there. it is a second alarm fire. burning their lake herman miller and industrial way. -- burning near lake hermann road and industrial way. firefighters seem to be getting a handle on it.
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>> tomorrow will be about two years since police shot and killed sean much of russia. the police chief originally said he wanted to terminate the officer who fired the fatal shots but that may not happen. >> melanie woodrow has covered the story since the beginning and has the latest. >> coinciding with the two-year anniversary of geritol killing and shooting sean much of russia, johnny williams must decide whether to accept, reject or modify the findings of an outside hearing officer. migraines does not represent him but represents other police officers. he says his understanding comes from several officers with the knowledge of the latest development. >> it is reported by the outside hearing officer, it is essentially a recommendation made back to the police chief. because they are holding onto hope that chief williams will maintain his original intent to fire him.
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>> we are hopeful that he will push for his termination. >> he shot and killed him from the backseat of an unmarked police vehicle. firing through the windshield five times with one bullet hitting much arousal in the back of his head. they obtained a copy of intended discipline. he references this exchange between thanh and another officer where thanh asks -- you meant >> he pointed a gun at us. >> the chiefs as you did not even have a firm belief that he was armed. you even a dollars to two investigators afterwards that you were uncertain. they are looking for criminal charges to be filed. >> we see that the officer is held accountable or responsible for their actions. >> for other advocacy work, the sisters knew that their brother would be proud. >> it is emotional because it is like what he say?
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-- what would he say? >> chief williams wrote in part that i can only imagine the pain of losing a son, brother and family member. for the eye team, melanie woodrow, abc 7 news. >> more funerals in texas for victims of the uvalde school shooting. this 10-year-old was laid to rest as well as their teacher and there has been, joe who died days after the shooting of a heart attack. details surrounding the shooting seem to change day-to-day. the teacher's lawyer says she did close it but it did not lock as it was supposed to. the uvalde school district has announced that they will not go back to robb school campus. >> after three days of
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deliberations, the jury in the johnny depp amber heard defamation case returned its verdict. a jury awarded depp more than $10 million against his ex-wife, vindicating his stance that she made up claims of abuse. heard countersued. the jury awarded her $2 million in that counterclaim. we spoke with michelle dobb about the impact of the verdict. >> i think the verdict is extremely disappointing and worrisome for a number of reasons. first of all, i think there's verdict is very likely to discourage victims from coming forward. >> the nearly six week long trial stemmed from a 2018 washington post op-ed that amber heard wrote describing herself as a public figure representing domestic abuse. depp was not named in that article but is legal team maintained that it damaged his career. >> there is a trick to
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refinancing your loan that almost no one is talking about. it can save you a ton of money. for state controller, only yiu will save taxpayers money. wait, who, me? me? no, not you. yvonne yiu. yvonne yiu. not me. good choice. for 25 years, yiu worked as an executive at top financial firms. managed hundreds of audits. as mayor, she saved taxpayers over $55 million. finding waste. saving money. because... yiu is for you. yiu is for you. exactly. yvonne yiu. democrat for controller. wow, look at this selection! tile, wood, stone, laminate, vinyl... and this one is... perfect. at floor and decor, our everyday low pricing on high-quality products and on-trend styles,
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>> finding a good mortgage when buying a home is just the first step to buying your house. you need to keep finding good mortgages. the new way to finance your home next. >> by a home with a 40 year mortgage, make a payment each and every month and then after 30 years, you own your home but that is old-fashioned and that thinking will cost you. look at all of these homes. how long do you think the new buyers will live there? if they are average, figure on seven to 11 years and the loan that came with a home, it will likely not be half that time. >> the average duration of that loan has only been three to five years at max. >> this is the co-owner of solidified mortgage advisors. his company -- the first
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mortgage company failed to do that and rates kept rising. >> i was able to get approved and even though the interest rates when i started looking back in october where under 3%, i ended up right under 5% just last month. >> we are talking about a 5% rate. 5% is a good mortgage rate. >> 3% would have been better. >> hard to argue that. joanna is not forever stuck with her interest rate. if rates drive, she could get a new loan and pay less. most mortgages don't include a prepayment penalty any longer. >> if i came to you and said i could save you a quarter percent on your interest rate which would be $32,000, i could do it
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at no cost so it is free money. why wouldn't you do that. >> you should. join us you already well. she says knowing that made paying 5% easier to take. >> i think that gave me a lot more in the future. >> the key to making this work is to make every loan no fee loan. there are plenty of those out there so prepay nothing and you can just wait for the next lower rate to come along, take it and don't worry. i want to hear from you, send us your stories about buying a home, a car, anything that has to do with you and your money. we want to hear about both of your triumphs and frustrations. >> great information. a new way to think about the most expensive thing most of us will ever own.
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>> you heard that 50 is the new 40, how about 80 and even up? meet some seniors proving that li
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>> this story will make you smile. a celebration of getting older. san francisco seniors are sharing their wisdom with luz pena as part of the 80 over 80 projects. >> i am sure you heard of the 30 under 30 list. featuring movers and shakers of society. in case you did not make the list, don't worry, there is a more seasoned one. it requires decades of wisdom, some wrinkles and all of that. >> i can get on the floor and i can get up. >> dorothy is part of san francisco's 80 over 80 list. she has been giving back to the community for decades. she worked in the san francisco unified school district for 32
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years and retired as a principal. >> i am dorothy leighton, i am 89 years old and i am investing in the future of our young black students. >> we sailed down the amazon river. >> she visited every consonant with her husband. they are approaching a milestone, 70 years married. behind this closet, proof that our bodies change after 80. >> i used to be five feet tall but now i am four foot 10. i moved to the letters out of the way when you were coming here. just hear how this is sagging. you sag internally. >> her hearing has also changed.
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there is an advantage to it. when you call her cell phone, it goes straight to her hearing aid. this is my bluetooth. it would sound better if i said i was wearing my bluetooth. all of us wear hearing aids. young people where bluetooth. >> she wants people to know there is more to life after your 30's. >> a lot of our participants started new things. judy started as a writer at the san francisco senior b. margaret was a nurse and then a lawyer. by all accounts, very accomplished. now, in older age, started a group called senior power. >> are you hoping that this project will shed more life after 30? >> life is long. we are such an achievement oriented society that we don't
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have the vision even for ourselves of what being older is like. >> for charles george, is birth certificate says he has almost lived a century. >> i am charles george. i retired five years ago. i am 99 years old. >> his mind is still sharp. he does this through so duco and -- sudoku and a life of consistent exercise. he retired five years ago after working decades for the federal government. one of his last jobs was in a chemistry lab. >> you would have kept going if it wasn't for your knee? . >> i would have kept going. >> both charles and dorothy experienced the struggle for black americans to gain equal rights. >> i lived it. when i was a kid, everything a black person that was criminalized.
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that is why black people got the right but -- that is why black people got the reputation for being criminals. >> through it all, we both had a similar perspective. keep going. >> never give up. he said as long as you are in there, you have a chance. >> in case you were wondering, what would you say is the secret question mark >> i always say movement is my medicine. anybody who was dirty, look out. there is so much ahead of him. so much. >> in san francisco, luz pena, san francisco news. >> as long as you are in there, you have a chance and that is that there. what an inspiration. >> you see these 30 under 30 lists and it is like you can do great things as long as you want. no pressure. >> they are inspiring for sure.
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>> dan and liz, let's take a look at live doppler 7. we have high clouds moving in. you will see more of those as we go toward tomorrow and those temperatures are coming down. upper 50's, and land, a little hazy and smoky due to the old fire. as we go toward friday, those temperatures coming down, somewhere in that area is in the 70's and 80's barely. saturday we drop you down to the 70's and sunday, you will notice temperatures are in the 60's and 70's. as we look at the accuweather 7-day forecast, from kohler to win dear, late saturday night and into sunday, we have the possibility of wet weather. it is a level 1 storm, computer models want to bring it through but we will keep you posted and go back to warming and drying again next week. >> thank you so much. not a lot going on to talk in sports but we will see. >> who is ready for a pool party?
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>> yes. not that kind. will the nba finals be jordan poole's party? poole's party? we will visit nba finals what are you recommending for muscle pain? based on clinical data, i recommend salonpas. agreed... my patients like these patches because they work for up to 12 hours, even on moderate pain. salonpas. it's good medicine
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♪ agmrenovations.com ♪ ♪music playing♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ nothing brings the pack together like a trip to great wolf lodge. now open in northern california. for controller, yvonne yiu. like a trip to great wolf lodge. as an executive at top financial firms, yiu managed hundreds of audits. as mayor, yiu saved taxpayes over $55 millio. finding waste. saving money. yiu is for you.
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>> now, abc 7 sports with larry beil. >> the warriors and celtics tomorrow night on abc 7. go back to 2015, steph, clay, andre. most of them are kid trying to figure out how to win a title and now they are the old guys trying to teach the new kids on the block the road to a championship ring. jordan was 15 years old in 2015. chris alvarez has more with jordan poole from finals media day. >> we are here with jordan poole and i want to thank you for a lamenting me. i think -- i have to know about the game one threads. do we have an outfit
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coordination? basketball wise? is this everything you dreamed of? >> i feel pretty normal. as weird as that sounds. just to be on the stage, as weird as it is, it feels like we are supposed to be here. also being able to realize that we are supposed to be here advancing this moment and taking it all in. especially earlier in my career. it is really special to be a part of it. >> i saw you with that disposable camera. >> shout out to jordan. that is just a really good friend of mine who happens to be extremely elite behind the camera. he has some amazing shots all year. just being able to document the season that we had from game one all the way to the finals.
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it will be a really special project that we come out with. just being able to embrace her, we are doing something different. >> i want photobomb you but i am going to try to keep my for check up with you. -- my fit check up with you. >> our coverage will start life at the chase center. live interviews after the game on your exclusive home for the nba finals. that would be abc 7. the giants going for the sweep in philadelphia. gabe kapler is to manage the phillies. wilmer flores with his sixth of the year to make it 5-2. then the phillies come back and score 4 off of jarlin garcia. house weber, a big, strong,
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bomb. last chance, the giants tried to make it here. the giants lose 6-5 so they can't get this week. athletics and astros, mark kotsay tossed for arguing balls and strikes. frustrated, understandably. justin verlander had a nono going into the seventh. the bullpen could not hold on. jordan alvarez -- you're done alvarez -- yordan alvarez with the hit. the warriors are favored to win the series. i think it is going to be warriors in seven. agonizing games. we will see if i survive seven games.
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it is stressful. but it will be a great time. >> starting at 8:00 p.m., it is the connors followed by the goldbergs. then abbott elementary. followed by press your luck and don't miss abc7news at 11:00. that is it. i am curry.
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♪♪♪ from the alex trebek stage at sony pictures studios, this is "jeopardy!" let's me t coesnt a real estate manager from portland, oregon... an assistant dean from philadelphia, pennsylvania... and our returning champion, a ride share driver from philadelphia, pennsylvania... whose 13-day cash winnings total... and now, here is the host of "jeopardy!"-- yim bialik! [cheers and applause] thank you, johnny gilbert, and welcome, everyone. our champion ryan long has said that by accepting the opportunity to appear on "jeopardy!" he was investing in himself,
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and he laid it all on the line to be here. well, ryan long, our quarter-millionaire-- soak that in for a minute-- your investment has certainly paid off. we are loving watching your remarkable run we're also very excited to welcome two new players, vanessa and megan, to the alex trebek stage. let's see what happens as we reveal the categories in the jeopardy! round. ♪♪♪ notice s-y-n in quotation marks. and... [laughter] ryan, select first. oh, i gotta go with dr. mittens... [laughter] for $400, please. - ryan. - what is nesting?

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