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tv   ABC7 News 400PM  ABC  June 6, 2022 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT

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a gun and shot the worker. he died at the store and the gunman left before officers arrived. >> we want to make sure we can pull any and all video footage. the human component were much more important. people who were present should come forward. >> the officer outside works to turn people away. since it happened in the middle of the night, there were not many witnesses. >> only two people knew why this homicide happened. the other one is not in custody. >> anyone going to the safe way should be met with signs like this one, saying they are sorry safe way is closed people say they didn't learn about it until we told them. >> i figure pipes burst or something happened. some kind of shortage.
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>> shoppers who go to the safe way said they did not expect anything like this to happen. she read about the traffic accidents, but nothing about the homicide. >> others say recent shooting events combined with this one leave them concerned about the rising issue of gun violence. >> to hear someone had that em'e just trying to support their family. it's upsetting. >> police are asking anyone from the public to come forward. ryan curry, abc 7 news. larry: in the east bay, parents are vowing to continue their protest unless district officials meet a new list of demands. parents at parker elementary again a sit in two weeks ago on the last day of school. they are upset about a plan to close several schools in oakland unified. they want a meeting with the district board of governors and
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one immediate removalparker elementary and commuted a school from the closure list. >> parker elementary school is the only school in this area. community day school is the only service of its type. it's a last chance school. the gap between public education becomes even smaller. larry: the parents are to mending the district rescind its decision to eliminate grades six through eight at last goleta school. the district of the closures were necessary because of declining enrollment and trying to reduce a massive budget epithet. developments with elon musk's offer to buy charter. he is threatening to walk away from the dealer again. he says twitter refuses to give him data from its spam accounts. lawyers made the threats in a letter dated today. muska once the underlying data to verify twitter estimates that fewer than 5% of accounts or
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bots. he's disputing that, claiming in a beat back in may that it could beat me percent or more. some speculate this is a move to legally renegotiate the price of the $44 billion deal or maybe just back out of it altogether. karina: got a fresh reminder just last week that fire season is here and the aehed 600 acres. today marks the official beginning of fire season. cornell barnard is live in santa rosa where fire officials want to get residents ready for the summer. >> not a moment too soon. despite rain over the weekend, some of the grasses here are as tall as i am. firefighters are not required to declare the official start of fire season but the community welcomes it. she is preparing her property for summer and fire season. >> e start thinking about should i take my family photos and them
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in one place so if we have to bug out like we did with kincaid, we have everything we want. >> she lost her family home to the tubbs fire and 2017. she has since rebuilt her home in the same spot. the biggest lesson she and other homeowners learned -- >> that it can happen. >> the santa rosa division fire chief says his department declared june 6 as the official start of fire season, a signal to help residents get ready. >> it feels like our community appreciates knowing when the risk is at a higher degree. >> he says the time is now for residents to harden landscape and eliminate weeds and dry brush. even after decent rainfall over the weekend. >> we expect with the hot temperatures that those fuels will try right back out. >> this hillside will be the site of a prescribed burn to eliminate tallgrass. >> and trim your trees, and remove dead trees. >> she knows fire season is
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almost year-round and urges everyone to play it safe. >> don't have gender reveal parties that involve pyrotechnics. fourth of july, don't buy fireworks. >> good advice. firefighters urge families to have an emergency plan and go-bag ready in case they have to evacuate due to fire. karina: parts of the bay area's all rain over the weekend, which is always a good thing when we are talking about fire season but the heat is about to return. spencer christian joins us now. it's going to feel a lot like summer later this week. spencer: if you were outside yesterday, you felt that overbearing humidity. today, there's a lot less. we still have the onshore flow that brought us the beneficial rainfall yesterday. but today, much lower humidity.
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along the coast yesterday, humidity readings between 85% and 100%. they are much lower now. they may raise concerns about wildfires. we may have a brisk onshore flow. we don't have immediate fire concerns but a spike in the heat is coming later in week. i will show you just how hard it is going to be -- how hot it is going to be. karina: activists in berkeley are getting ready for what they fear is a looming confrontation on the future of people's park. they held a rally on the uc berkeley campus announcing plans to build student housing at the site. activists say the university is moving out homeless people living at the park. they want the area to remain an open space for some the park was created in 1969 when activists took over what was an abandoned construction lot. it was put on the national register of historic places last month. larry: residents of a san francisco apartment building
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that flooded are wondering when they can go back home. the luxury apartment building on thomas street south of market flooded on friday when a water pipe atop the 35 story high-rise broke. amy hollyfield spoke with some frustrated residents. >> the water started gushing into apartment homes friday afternoon. some residents shared their video with us and told us about residents in the elevators when the water started invading. >> her and two other residents got out of the elevators into the stairwell and the water was rushing down the stairs. she described it like a waterfall. >> residents were told right then to evacuate. little did they know it would not be allowed back in. plenty of create -- plenty of cleanup crews are here but residents are stuck on the outside with very little of their belongings. >> when change of clothes, some dog food, we grabbed our dog and we had to walk down 20 flights holding what we could carry.
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we don't have much at all. >> residents said management moves them into paid for hotel rooms. today, they brought about a new set of problems -- the hotel told them the rooms are only paid for through 11 a.m. today. >> i have no place to go after 11:00. i don't know where i will be working from or be taking my belongings and we don't know where we are going to sleep tonight. >> we are waiting to hear where we are staying tonight. our hotel has instructed us that checkout is today and i've heard nothing otherwise. a lot of us don't know where we are sleeping tonight. >> he says this is the second time he's been displaced from this building because of water damage. >> both times the building has been unresponsive. >> management has not been communicating with us at all. send an update even if there is no update. what are they doing? >> the supervisor that represents this area says the fire department told him this is because a pipe on the roof
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ruptured and flooded all 35 floors of the building. he says he's working with residents to try to help them. we have reached out to building management but have not heard back. larry: the largest ever display of the aids memorial quilt in an francisco this weekend. a four panel preview was hung from the males -- the mayor balcony at city hall. bates memorial was created 35 years ago to protest the government in action against the disease and now it symbolizes love and hope. this made up of 50,000 panels that commemorate those who died of aids. >> for so many of the people who make panels, their loved one may have died someplace they were not. their loved one may have been cremated and this is a beautiful, colorful graveyard. larry: the panels will hang all week at city hall. 3000 panels will be on display text weekend at robin williams
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meadow in golden gate park. coming up, count down to recall -- a closer look at the effort to recall jason putin. how close are we to seeing real gun reform? plus more monkeypox cases. the northern california city did you know that renovating your kitchen and bathroom is one of the best ways to increase the value of your home? i'm mike holmes here with ivan from agm renovations america's kitchen and bathroom renovators thanks mike!
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larry: tomorrow is election day. he is facing a recall by opponents who have criticized his efforts to implement criminal justice reform. if proposition h passes, the mayor will appoint his or basement. the effort to recall the da is one of the biggest stories we are watching as we approach election day. karina: stephanie sierra's live in the newsroom with a preview. >> after two years of outrage at the direction of san francisco, political experts say this recall election of jason booting is a turning point for voters that could replace law and order. it is not looking good for him but it could be a closer race that initially thought. prop h, the recall of the san francisco district attorney is
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pegged as one of the most polarizing propositions on the ballot. >> we need people to feel safe in their homes and neighborhoods and everywhere in san francisco. >> the embattled da is criticized as being too soft on crime. according to a report from his own campaign, 48% of san franciscans plan to vote yes to remove him from office and 38% plan to vote no. 14% are undecided. the poll was conducted among 700 likely voters and has a margin of error of less than 5%. other polls show him losing by an even wider margin. -- >> i'm feeling confident. we are talking to voters and we knock on doors. >> and so are his critics. >> we are excited we will have this success in the recall. >> campaign finance records show nearly $7 million has been poured into support the recall. that's more than twice the
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amount spent by his supporters, around $3 million. the recall is the most expensive per signature cost in recent history at around $12 per signature. that is 70% more expensive than the school board recall. >> it is a tough road for him, but he did not win overwhelmingly in his first election. he only got 35% in the runoff race. part of the problem with recalls is there's nobody and he's seeing there is nobody to contrast himself against as this person will replace me. viral video showing brazen smash and grab robberies at louis vuitton and union square, people shoplifting without consequences at walgreens and brutal attacks against asian american seniors have fueled the recall debate. all of this as the city faces an increase in property crime.
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his critics blame the increase on his policies ike the illumination of cash bail and reduction of pretrial incarcerations. he was elected in 2019 on a platform aimed at reducing incarceration. his critics argue instead, he failed to hold defendants accountable, often siding with offenders, not victims. a former prosecutor and recall supporter resigned from the office because of it. she is one of 59 attorneys who left the da's office since he was elected. >> we have seen a pattern of repeat and chronic offenders, even violent offenders being given lenient plea. violent offenders not eligible for simple diversion programs. >> one known repeat offender arrested for killing two women in a hit-and-run on new year's eve is one of the cases critics argue spurred the recall. adding the tragedy could have been prevented if the suspect was not granted a plea deal.
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>> they increased the charging rate for sexual assault, our conviction rate for homicide cases. we filed more than 10,000 new criminal cases. >> but he has remained headstrong, defending his record, claiming the rise in property crime from the pandemic. he argues the san francisco police department is not making enough arrests and points out violent crime in the city goow looaty fencing operation, selling stolen goods, prosecuting drug sales, going after manufacturers of illegal ghost guns. >> the office filed charges at a higher rate overall than any of his predecessors since 2011. he says the average time it takes to solve a felony case in san francisco superior court is around two years. recall supporters argue the charging rate doesn't tell the whole story. >> charging has nothing to do
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with successful prosecution. charging can simply say we think there is evidence but if you don't follow through and hold the perpetrator accountable, charging is completely irrelevant. >> this debate evolving into the second da recall in san francisco history with television ads flooding airwaves. some even in mandarin. as the recall effort works to target and galvanize the asian american community. >> recalls, once they get on the ballot, they are likely to succeed. at least in california and throughout most of the country. >> as of today, the mayor declined to take a stance on the recall but notably, the supervisor, matt dorsey has just come out supporting it. if he is recalled, which will happen if more than 50% vote yes on prop h, breathe will appoint his replacement. karina: every registered voter
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in california is getting a mail-in ballot for this election. you can mail this back as late as election day. postage is free. you can return them in designated drop boxes were at a point place. early voting centers are open in most bay area counties and if you have not registered to vote, it is not too late. you can do a conditional voter registration up to and including election day and your vote will still count. larry: if you still like to do it the old-fashioned way and walk in and do the thing, it is going to be good voting weather tomorrow. karina: seems like it is going to be a gorgeous day. no excuse. you a look at occurrencean f vf surface wind speeds. breathe along the coastline and along the bay. not terribly gusty weather but
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in speeds up to 27 miles an hour in some locations. a mixed bag in terms of the temperature change. cooler by several degrees south of the golden gate and into the south bay and east bay and warmer by a lot. 90 degrees warmer -- nine degrees warmer than yesterday. 64 degrees in the city, 68 across the bay in oakland. 77 in santa clara. half moon bay, 59 degrees. the view from mount tam, a lovely day on the bay. petaluma, 74, 83 in napa. livermore, 80 degrees. blue skies over the golden gate. this picture might change as we get into the nighttime hours as we expect some fog to develop over the golden gate. less humid weather with us for the rest of the week. mostly sunny and mild to warm. intense summer like he will
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develop and continue through friday into saturday. overnight, a few locale -- a few low clouds develop. high clouds start passing over as well. tomorrow morning, pleasant for the start of your morning commute but may be lingering low clouds may obscure visibility just a little bit in locations close to the bay and coast. low temperatures in the low to mid 50's. a little cooler on the coast overnight. look for highs of 61 at half moon bay. low to mid 70's around the bay shoreline and upper 80's in the warmest inland spots tomorrow. let's take a look at our forecast ties -- thursday, mid to upper 90's in the warmest inland spots. this model is taking inland-many locations in the range of 102 to 106. i think we will see several locations hitting 100. i'm not sure about 106, but it
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is possible. the heat holds steady on saturday. two nice days tomorrow with mild to warm conditions then really heating up sharply on thursday. 102 or above in the hottest inland spots on friday. saturday, the heat holds up. then a sharp cooldown on sunday and the weather will be in the more seasonable range on monday. karina: no new gadgets, but lots of upgrades. a look at what apple is changing with its mobile devices plus the big changes discovered -- coming to its laptops. >> tired of getting spam in your emails customer it may be a fake email address is the ans
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hi, i'm pat and i'm 75 years old. we live in the mountains so i like to walk. i'm really busy in my life; i'm always doing something. i'm not a person that's going to sit too long. in the morning, i wake up and the first thing i do is go to my art studio. a couple came up and handed me a brochure on prevagen. i've been taking prevagen for about four years. i feel a little bit brighter and my mind just feels sharper. i would recommend it to anyone. it absolutely works.
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prevagen. healthier brain. better life. karina: time now for consumer news. did you ever use a fake made -- fake name when signing up for a new service to protect your privacy? larry: i usually go with michael finney. michael finney is actually here right now. do you have any of my emails? >> you are the guy? a fake name doesn't do much to protect your privacy when you are online, but a fake email address can really help stop here is your proof. these days, many big tech companies are sharing details about almost everything you do
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on the internet. this last thing i googled was a usps tracking number. >> that includes what you searched, the websites you visit . the people you connect with online. but how do they know who you are? >> one of the main ways they do it is tying your identity together using your email address. >> if you want to limit that, consumer reports says you might want to try an alternative or fake email service. >> there are a number of these tools and they all work differently. basically they give you an alternative email that is not tied to your real identity that you can plug-in when you sign up on a new website. >> may be you signing with apple on some sites and it generates a random, unique address for apple users. any emails can be forwarded to your regular inbox without them ever knowing your real address. the upside is you get the emails you need without being tracked. the firefox browser offers
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firefox relay, allowing users to create up to five fake email addresses for free or get unlimited ones for $.99 a month. >> there are a number of temporary email services that give you an inbox that you can use but it self-destructs after about 10 minutes. >> for most temporary services, you don't even have to create an account. 10 minute mail, minute inbox and email on deck are popular services. when would something like this come in handy? maybe when you are asked for an email address to get an instant online discount. the added bonus to using these addresses -- less spam in your real inbox. you may think creating an extreme email account would keep big tech from tracking you but if you are using the exact same devices, companies put two and two together and will be able to identify you. so just saying michael finney
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doesn't work. larry: i hope it will throw them off the trail. karina: unsubscribing from all of those -- have you ever tried to do that? it takes forever. larry: it's impossible. >> ect. larry: thank you. more to come on abc7news at 4:00. unfortunately, another violent weekend nationwide. multiple mass shootings. could we finally see some sort of gun legislation this week? karina: president biden is going to do something this week he hasn't done this since taking office -- here's a hint. you will be able to see it here on
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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.
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i earn 5% cash back on travel purchased through chase with chase freedom unlimited. i earn 5% on our cabin. hello cashback! hello, kevin hart! earn big time with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what's yours. announcer: building a better bay area -- moving forward, finding solutions. this is abc 7 news. now to the latest rash of mass shootings across the country. at least three over the weekend, including one in the busy philadelphia neighborhood. the pressure is mounting on lawmakers to act as negotiations on gun reform continue. reena roy tells us politicians are about to hear from some of the survivors of recent
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shootings. >> buffalo, uvalde, and tulsa. now chattanooga, phoenix and philadelphia. more and more american cities being rocked by mass shootings. >> it is enough. we've come to the pink where it is enough. >> three people dead and 11 others injured on this busy street in philadelphia. >> the district attorney's office has approved warrants for two individuals. one of those individuals is currently in custody. the other is not. >> exclusive video shows the moments before gunfire broke out. investigators say two men were fighting and then began shooting. in phoenix over the weekend, eight people shot and a 14-year-old girl killed. in chattanooga, tennessee, three people killed and 14 injured when multiple people opened fire at a nightclub saturday night. that cities second mass shooting in a week. >> help us, lord, help us.
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>> b more mass shootings than days in the year so far. there have been at least 246 mass shootings defined as four or more people shot or killed. a small group of bipartisan lawmakers are continuing to meet this week to discuss gun reform. postal's include red flag laws, expanded background checks and funding for mental health and school security. the house judiciary committee passed measures last week. the full house will vote this week before it goes to the senate where it is expected to fail. >> i am hoping and i am praying we can offer more this time than just thoughts and prayers. let's get off of our knees and pass this legislation to protect the people we represent. >> on wednesday, young student who survived the uvalde massacre by playing dead in her classroom will testify before the house oversight committee along with the mother of one of the victims in the buffalo mass shooting.
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larry: new york's governor signed a batch of new bills today in response to last month's mass shooting in buffalo that killed 10 people. one bill requires a license to own an assault rifle and raises the age to buy one from 18 to t1. >> we are closing loopholes so the firearms that are being so cleverly manufactured or altered cannot evade our laws anymore. there is more to do. thoughts and prayers won't fix this. larry: other bills make eddie -- make it harder to sell body armor. another expands a list of people that can apply for an extreme risk protection order. the goal is to prevent someone from buying a firearm when there are a danger to themselves or others. they help cope with issues like school safety and mental health. you can get started by going to our website, abc7news.com/take action. karina: thousands gathered in
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france to mark the 78 anniversary of the d-day invasion in normandy. veterans, some in their 90's, made the program it to mark the event that helped shape the end of the war. mark milley hailed the international order created by the allied victory in world war ii and its significance to the war in ukraine. >> underlying that order is the principle that strong countries cannot just invade small countries. that might does not make right. that aggression should never be left to stand. karina: he says the fight in ukraine is about honoring the veterans of world war ii nearly 160 allied troops took part in the d-day invasion. more than 4400 were killed on the first day alone. british prime minister boris johnson is staying in power. today, the embattled leader survived a confidence vote by members of his own party even though his margin of victory was
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lower in supporters expected. conservatives voted 211 to 148 to keep him in place. the prime minister faced a tidal wave of recent criticism, most notably for holding a number of parties that flouted the covid-19 restrictions imposed on others. larry: sacramento is reporting its fourth probable case of monkeypox. the previous three cases were confirmed by the centers for disease control. all three were connected to a person who traveled to europe. as of friday, at least when he five cases had been confirmed and the united states. san francisco reported its first probable case friday. health department says it does anticipate more cases coming. karina: how does this sound -- a four-day workweek without taking a pay cut? yes, please. ready to sign on the dotted line? where they are trying out this
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i'm dan o'dowd and i approved this message. elon musk promised to pay a million customers $30,000 a year if they bought his car. they bought his car. so, where's their money? he promised customers if they bought his car,
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its value would increase to $200,000. they bought his car. so, where's their money? he promised investors if they bought his stock, they would get $50 billion a year in profits from robotaxis. they bought his stock. so, where's their money? and he told investors tesla was worth $1 trillion by claiming tesla was the leader in driverless robotaxi technology. but tesla doesn't have driverless robotaxi technology. tesla's full self-driving software requires a driver! many other companies have already deployed driverless robotaxis that are way ahead of tesla's. so where's the investors' money? in the last year, elon musk pulled $48 billion out of tesla, seven times the profits they've ever made. his ceo compensation was 1,000 times the average for a fortune 500 ceo.
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elon, is your full self-driving software just a trillion-dollar ponzi scheme? did you become the wealthiest man in history by swindling customers and investors? i'm dan o'dowd and i'm running for u.s. senate because congress needs to shut down elon musk's full self-driving fiasco. someone needs to stand up to him.
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larry: time for the four at four with dan and spencer joining us. the warriors probably feeling up that better tonight. they clobbered the celtics. the highlight of the night you will see in a moment here -- as he comes across midcourt and launches -- we will see seth curry. -- steph curry. that is pretty impressive. here's jordan -- and of the third, splash. karina: amazing. let's see the view from above. warriors about to land in boston as we speak and the fourth-quarter collapse in game one, hopefully a distant memory for all involved. i said warriors and stuff going into this. i'm still holding to that, but dan, it was a huge exhale last night. the game did not come down to the final few seconds. dan: the warriors were firing on
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all cylinders last night they weren't game one until the last quarter. they were as cold as the celtics got hot. i feel good about them going into game three, but the celtics accomplish what they needed to. a split. spencer: i agree with your pre-finals forecast. i think these teams are very well matched, very evenly matched. i did breathe a great sigh of relief the warriors did not have a fourth-quarter break down and stayed tight on defense. they did not take a bunch of reckless shots, i can't wait for game three. larry: i like the admission you are listening to my forecasts now. karina: you are not an expert. larry: nobody knows what's going to happen. dan: you need a sports impact scale. larry: i would stay -- i would
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say jordan poole's splashdown shot -- i would give that a five out of five. karina: did you see the fans dressed to go to the pool party? that was my favorite. we are going to talk about another basketball player -- lebron james. his trading card could set a record for sports cards this week. this triple logo trading card is one-of-a-kind. it has game patches from the three teams he's paid for. bidding starts at 500,000 dollars but some speculate it could break the record of six and $6 billion for the legendary baseball card. a lebron -- lebron james ricky card last year sold for more than $5 million. maybe one of you guys can explain it. i get it, these are collectibles but millions of dollars? spencer: they are still made of paper, aren't they, larry? larry: i wonder how much the nft
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version will go for. it's just like anything else. if it is rare and sought after. old coins, other -- dan: but this isn't even old yet. larry: there's people that have too much money and there's so much speculation that goes with this because if you buy it for five and lebron wins another championship, suddenly you can sell it for whatever. first you have to have the five. this is not going to help your cause because eight dollar gasoline could be right around the corner. we are almost there at one shell station in menlo park. the price for premium is 799 a gallon. it jumped nearly $.20 from yesterday. i have no idea what happened between yesterday and today. the national average is four dollars $.87.
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some analysts think that could soar to six dollars by labor day and who knows what that means for gas prices in the a area because with all the pollution regulation controls and processing, our guest costs more -- our gas costs more. there is no end in sight. dan: sometimes this time of year before the summer driving season, gas spikes a little bit. this is something different. all the experts i've heard and read said it's not going down quickly. it is going to stay relatively high for quite some time and it makes you feel for the folks that live on a tighter budget or people who have to drive around. if you are a contractor, you have to drive all over the place, filling a truckige out where you can cut expenjulsst sn afford the gas you need. karina: a lot of people are questioning what car do i bite next because of these gas prices
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stop -- do i buy. you can save here or do that but at the end of the day, it's expensive and that adds up. you can tell people to ride their bikes to work but some people commute 45 minutes. larry: this is a freeway state and it's hard. i may get a horse next time. hey has to be a lot cheaper than gasoline. karina: i would love to see you come to work on a horse. larry: let me know what day that's going to happen. i'm going to get a lot of clicks that they. karina: a bolo tie. this is a way people could actually save on gas -- if you could work just four days a week rather than five. starting today, more than 3300 workers in britain are trying it out. it's part of a six-month
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care. the workers will not get a pay cut for the reduced hours. the trial will monitor workers productivity as well as the effect on their quality of life stop many people i have talked to, including all of us, we pretty much work a 10 hour workday. larry: i don't know about spencer. [laughter] dan: i think a lot of careers and businesses eventually are going to try this for a variety of reasons. it's going to be more attractive to get new talent, it's going to have less impact on the environment. it certainly has an appeal. we all know when you take a three-day weekend, no matter how many hours you work, it is restful, a lot of quality of life. we would all be happy and my horses really going to love it. spencer: i was saving my retort -- some of us, it is paula tate
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of not potato. [laughter] larry: i surrender. you won this round. that's it for the four at four. that's it for the four at four. spencer. when big tobacco's products were found out to be killers, they promised smokers safety. they called it a filter. but this filter wasn't safe or useful, just small and made of microplastics that have endangered us all. for far too long, they have polluted the earth. they're literally everywhere. there's no need to search. big tobacco, you'll have to answer for your despicable ride, for your wake of destruction. your one little big lie. i joined the district attorney's office to pursue justice for everyone. but like so many of my colleagues, i resigned in protest because chesa boudin interfered in every single case and failed to do his job. the office is absolutely in disarray right now.
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chesa dissolved my unit prosecuting car break-ins. now criminals flock to san francisco because there are no consequences. we can't wait. recall chesa boudin now. meet three sisters. the drummer, the dribbler, and the day-dreamer... the dribbler's getting hands-on practice with her chase first banking debit card... the drummer's making savings simple with a tap... ...round of applause. and this dreamer, well, she's still learning how to budget, so mom keeps her alerts on full volume. hey! what? it's true! and that's all thanks to chase first banking. freedom for kids. control for parents. one bank with tools for both, all with no monthly service fee. chase. make more of what's yours.
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larry: president biden is going to appear on jimmy kimmel live. he will be in los angeles for the summit of the americas this weekend will record a segment with jimmy kimmel. this is his first in-person appearance on a late night talk show since he took office. he did do a virtual appearance in december of 2021 on the tonight show with jimmy fallon. you can catch jimmy kimmel's show right here on abc 7. karina: we are off to see the wizard -- the wizard of oz is back in select theaters. the classic is making a limited return to celebrate judy garland's birthday. she would have turned 100 this coming friday.
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garland plays dorothy in the 1939 film. you will need to go online to find a theater showing the classic film. es seen extended musical number. spencer: the wizard of oz is my all-time favorite. it sounds corny but i could watch ed over and over again. and i can relate to the scarecrow -- if i only had some rain. sunny skies right now. skies overnight will get partly cloudy. passing high clouds and low clouds developing at the coast line. overnight lows in the mid-50's and upper 40's on the coast. tomorrow, another mostly sunny day with sunshine and high clouds. upper 80's inland. the accuweather 7 day forecast, it is going to get much hotter on thursday. friday, we expect inland highs
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to reach or exceed 100 degrees in numerous locations. nearly 90 along the bay shoreline. upper 60's to low 70's on the coast. it will be less hot on saturday. a big cooldown comes saturday and going into monday. three pretty hot days coming our way especially in the inland areas thursday through saturday. larry: i think it was brain mr. qualitative content whatever. [laughter] it is that time again -- apple is rolling out new technology. karina: sending a text message with an iphone is going to change and get ready for more power under the
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larry: coming up tonight at 8:00, it is florida of disney, brave. followed by the chase at 10 and stay tuned were abc7news at thep
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mobile devices at laptops. last year, apple paid them $60 billion in fees and sales from the app store. david louis takes a look at what we might be seeing in the near future. >> apple is best known for its tablets, laptops and iphones, but it is the 34 million developers that create the apps. for thousands gathering at apple headquarters, they need to work quickly to exploit what apple unveiled, including updated systems and a new mac operating system called ventura. this paves the way for new features, such as the ability to customize the lock screen. >> i will add the temperature, activity rings, and let's dragon the calendar widget. >> it will enhance security to shield victims of domestic abuse from tracking. >> the result is safety tech.
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a section where you can review and reset access you have granted others. >> apple announced its newest and most powerful chip that will be used in an ultraslim macbook air and one of its macbook pro laptops. but apple appeared to be mindful of economic headwinds that could impact sales. >> i did not see anything today that would overcome some of the rising tides around inflation or energy prices or other things which is a significant deal. >> it did not mention plans for a mixed reality headset as other firms are developing them for the coming metaverse. >> there is concern with an apple about do we have enough of a value proposition to make that product category mainstream? >> apple usually targets fall to reveal its products for the holidays. larry: that is going to do it for this edition of abc7news at
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4:00. abc7news at 5:00 is coming up next. i'm mark and i live in vero beach, florida. my wife and i have three children. ruthann and i like to hike. we eat healthy. we exercise. i noticed i wasn't as sharp as i used to be. my wife introduced me to prevagen and so i said "yeah, i'll try it out." i noticed that i felt sharper, i felt like i was able to respond to things quicker. and i thought, yeah, it works f m prevagen. healthier brain. better life. for controller, yvonne yiu. 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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forward finding solutions. this is abc 7 news. it's the eve of election day in addition to the bay area district attorney's races and recall effort. we're hearing from before frontrunners vying to lead the bay area's. most populous city. good evening. thank you for joining us. i'm dan ashley and i'm karina nova voters in san jose are getting ready to select a new mayor. that's a big day and tonight abc 7 news reporter zach fuente spoke with the four top front runners about what they believe they can offer residents in the heart of silicon valley. san jose mayor sam licardo has termed out of office and waiting in the wings to replace him are seven candidates four of whom currently serve in local government and are considered top candidates. we got a chance to speak with them to ask what sets them apart from their opponents and what they say they can

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