tv ABC7 News 600PM ABC November 22, 2022 6:00pm-7:00pm PST
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ahead. our news acres here with the story. >> he is one of the youngest mayors -- mayors in oakland history and shows visibility for sometimes overlook communities. during the lunch rush in oakland, there is a sense of pride following shang tao's victory. the newly elected of a major u.s. city. >> growing up by nancy too much -- i did not seek too much asian representative. >> she is a daughter of robert -- immigrants from laos. in 20 she became the first to -- in 2018 to begin the first to be elected in southern california. >> younger kids have someone to look up to or something to aspire towards and help build them up more. >> the win comes after a drawn out ballot count.
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fellow councilmember lauren taylor led the race until this past weekend and conceded in his bid for mayor tuesday morning. tao's victory came down to less than 700 votes. >> seeing that the mere ballots out there, the possibilities of getting a few votes in our direction are not going to tip the scale. i can see that sheng thao will be certified as oaklands next mayor. >> at the city's 31st annual thanksgiving dinner giveaway feeding more than 3000 community members, we caught up with this councilwoman. she made her own bed for mayor forming a coalition with taylor and coming in fifth. >> we can unify as leaders and have a collaboration from the mayors office, the city council out into the community. and we dig our heels deeper in the community. >> a community looking for
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answers as oakland suffers with a variety of issues. >> grandparents or older, you don't want anything to happen to them. maybe you will see things from a different point of view and bring something new to the table. ama: speaking of what that will be sheng thao will have a press conference tomorrow. that is when we hurt -- hope to learn more about oaklands future. ama: what more do we know about sheng thao, she has overcome a lot. >> her background is remarkable. as i mentioned in her stories, she is a domestic violence survivor. she is also single mother who overcame homelessness with her son. when she and i spoke for a story i was doing about crime in little saigon, she stressed the importance of being heard for people who feel marginalized. she takes that perspective and we will probably see the what -- what she will support going forward. dan: we wish her luck in this new job. ama: sheng thao is the third
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woman ever elected mayor of oakland. all of those wins have come one after the other, after the other. she has served as oaklands mayor for eight years, coming in, after oaklands first female mayor. she was the first asian american mayor and a major city. before her, jerry brown was oaklands mayor. dan: new developments, a person is in custody accused after firing shots where he used to work in palo alto. 32-year-old zachary ginsberg of san jose fired two rounds from his car, yesterday afternoon. no one was hit. one bullet shattered the window of flemings a steakhouse and another hit a parked car. investigators feel that ginsberg sent threatening text messages to his former supervisor at the restaurant. ginsberg faces charges of attempted murder and shooting and occupied building. ama: dr. fauci, the nations top disease expert gave his last
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briefly -- briefing. >> may be the final message i give you from this podium is that, please, for your own safety for that of your family, get your updated covid-19 shot as soon as you are eligible. ama: dr. fauci says boosters will likely be a yearly occurrence because of new covid variance. vouch is retiring at the end of the year -- of dr. fauci is retiring, after nearly decades of government service. a new study is giving people experiencing long-term covid symptoms hope. doctors are using the antiviral drug paxlovid to see if it will work for them. luz pena is live in the newsroom. luz: yes, paxlovid is an antiviral drug that has been used to treat covid. this is the first time it has been used as part of a study to treat long covid. stanford researchers are looking to answer two questions, can it improve along covid symptoms and for how long?
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one of the first patients is a mt. view resident. for the past year and a half, bill has been searching for answers. what started as a mild case of covid has now turned into a battle with long covid. >> does it taste funny? >> couldn't tell you. [laughter] luz: he lost his sense of smell and taste. that was just the beginning. he has been experiencing limiting brain fagg -- fog. >> i can exercise. cooking. eating, tasting. i've got to be the king of texture. that is all a go by, texture. and frustration of not being able to think straight. if i go to cosco to go shopping -- costco to go shopping that is it. the rest of the day have to relax. luz: what is your limit? >> i am still exploring it. luz: bill is not alone. they estimate that approximately
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7.7 million to 23 million people in this country have long covid. stanford is hoping to find answers for millions with first study targeting long covid. >> people get long covid but one of the leading hypotheses as may be there is residual virus in the body and that portion of the virus in the body is causing the ongoing symptoms and paxlovid is in antiviral. leo it works very well cash we know it works very well in acute covid. luz: this doctors one of the leads of the study. >> we have to enroll 200 participants into the new year for sure. each participant will be followed for an half months. luz: dr. michael has been tracking long covid patients he hopes the study will pinpoint what they have seen in some patients. >> some people who already have long covid god long covid again and took paxlovid, and felt
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better in terms of their symptoms. that made a lot of researchers wonder, is there something going on here. luz: covid may have sent -- taken his sense of smell and taste. but what he cannot take is the support and love of his family. >> totally cool. >> thank you, guys. luz: they are such a sweet couple. some patients will be given a paxlovid and a placebo. if you want to sign up you can send an email to treatcovid @stanford.edu. in the newsroom, luz pena abc7 news. ama: packs of it is normally used for about five days to treat covid patients. is treating patients for 15 days safe? luz: dr. said they have enough human data to know that 15 days will be safe. this had to be approved by the fda as well. they already looked into that.
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part of the study is screening several people to make sure they were not taking any other medications that could interact with paxlovid during the study. dan: a surge of flu and rsv cases in children is pushing bay area hospitals to their limits. we will show you that in a minute. it's an overflow tent set out of ucsf children's hospital to answer extra patients we saw. we will show you those pictures. suzanne fong talked with parents about their concerns. reporter: randy and chase are heading home with their son after a quick visit to the doctor. they went to the hospital for a different reason. they do very well about the surging number of rsv cases. >> it's going around our younger son's preschool class. >> as a parent it is scary to know even if your kid is sick you may not have someone to take them. reporter: hospital c cases of rsv every fall. they go through november and
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april of this year. they started in october. ucsf children's hospital in san francisco is operating at capacity. beds are full but they are still accepting patients. they set up this tent for room for seven beds. >> in the tent it is a space for lower acuity patients, those who would come in with like an ankle sprained, or simple ear ache. reporter: the children's hospital in oakland is making room for more patients. >> it is what we call in and asked space in oakland, or we also take care of patients when our emergency rooms are full with patients. reporter: lucille packard children's hospital in stanford is working to keep hospital beds open. stanford children's is deferring some elective clinical surgeries amid the respiratory illness surge. in ordered two ensure we have the capacity to care for most at
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risk patients. kaiser permanente says it is increasing staffing and expanding alternate space when needed. >> i think they are planning ahead for a surge. that is what we want. reporter: for this parent, any extra steps hospitals take off her peace of mind. >> i appreciate all of the precautions they are taking. reporter: in san francisco, suzanne fong abc7news. ama: you ready? i guess it doesn't matter. two days out from thanksgiving. this time tomorrow, we will be in the thick of holiday travel. >> i am sandhya patel, we have a warming trend coming that will leave you wondering, is it almost december? the thanksgiving forecast is coming up. >> i'm spencer christian at pier 39 for the annual christmas tree lighting. i will show until you more about this magical treat, coming
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dan: here's a live look outside, the calm before the storm , in terms of traffic. we will give you a check on the bridges, the bay bridge, the golden gate bridge and the san mateo bridge moving. san mateo is busier but it is moving. aaa says thanksgiving travel back to pre-pandemic levels. tomorrow the worst travel time is between 11 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. your best chances to leave early or late. wherever you are going, be safe. ama: be prepared for the weather. dan: meteorologist sandhya patel is keeping us prepared. sandhya: the weather looks fantastic. just in time for thanksgiving. we will warm things up.
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i want to show you the forecast for tonight. spencer is up here already nine for the annual tree lighting ceremony. it's cool but not cold. 56 tonight, right at this hour. if you're going to hang around there for a few hours to enjoy, the temperature will drop to the low 50's. bundle up. here's a look at your 12 hour planner for thanksgiving day. chile start, but the sun will be out in mid 30's up a 40's. new to 4:00 p.m., the temperatures rise, you will be a good five to 10 degrees above average. really a warm afternoon, mainly clear in the evening. upper 50's to low 60's at 7:00. we have some passing high clouds across the bay area right now. in advance of a system pushing across the pacific, bringing rain and snow. high-pressure coming in, as it builds in over the next couple of days we're in fort warmer weather. -- four warmer weather.
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the storm of the pacific will come until later on. the storm is generating some larger swells coming up, thursday through friday we have a beach hazard statement. if you're going to be spending any time on thanksgiving or friday on the coast, the risk of sneaker waves and rip currents will be high. lovely view from our golden gate bridge camera. 57 in san jose and 54 in half moon bay. from our santa cruz camera it is a quiet scene along the coastline, low to mid 50's from napa to santa rosa, 51 fairfield, 56 in livermore. it is starting to feel like the holidays. the exploratorium camera showing the embargo darrell lit up. patchy morning fog, sunny and warm he weather tomorrow and thanksgiving -- warm weather tomorrow and thanksgiving. for you traveling, this is good timing. temperatures will drop into the mid and upper 30's.
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there will be some patchy fog to start off the day, as we head into the afternoon, a nice recovery after winds will bring warm 70's. 68 in san jose on the peninsula where looking at 67 lay redwood city. downtown, occasional high clouds, north bay numbers, seven-day in napa. 72 in -- some comfortable weather in the east bay, 66 oakland. we will go with 70 degrees in livermore. 72 in fairfield. we will show you thanksgiving. high-pressure is the dominant feature which is why the storm track is north. watch what happens next week. rain and snow coming right into california. there's a possibility it will linger into tuesday. accuweather seven-day forecast, a warming trend will take us into thanksgiving. it will bring nice, warm weather, dry for shoppers, cooler weekend. we've got a level 1 system that
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will bring us rayna monday, possibly -- rain monday park, -- rain monday, possibly into tuesday. even though we need rain, spencer, it is not raining, it is perfect for the tree lighting ceremony. spencer: it really is. this is a very special tree. so special that i have two guests of to talk about it. i have tim whose company puts the magic in this year's tree, and sue, the vice president of marketing at pier 39. you have a cute story about the street. >> i have a very touching story about the tree. james from the carlton tree farm delivers archery and has for years. this year i said. tell me something about this tree. big burly guy, got all choked up. he said, this tree has been in our family for over 57 years. we understand that the tree -- her destiny is to be here at pier 39 to entertain guests
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throughout the holiday season. we are definitely going to miss her at home. spencer: an emotional moment. jimmy put the magic in this tree? >> we put the magic industry. great. you will see that it is not just a static christmas tree. this tree performs and dances. you saw all of those kids dancing and rocking out down there. that is what this tree does. t christmas. spencer: the music is great and you really get the feeling that the tree is dancing. >> there is an optical illusion at the end where the tree goes from its performance mode to the static christmas tree and your mind has been stimulated for a few minutes. it's like wow. it's fun to watch people watch the tree. spencer: the lighting takes place -- the performance takes place every half-hour? >> every half-hour from 5:00 until 10:00. now all the way until january 8. spencer: that will be awesome.
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happy holidays everyone. >> happy holidays. spencer: back to the studio. dan: thanks for, so much. that was awesome -- thanks, so much, that was awesome. ama: presentation high school in san jose hold its turkey day drive. dan: they collected eight to 12 pound turkeys for sacred heart community service. the school goal was 1000 turkeys, to beat last year's turkeys. sacred heart's director of service talked with us about why the drive is so important for the school. >> given that we are at a high school, trying to instill in our students the important -- importance of engaging in our community and being able to do what we can. dan: presentation already donated more than 18,000 hygiene items and more than 13,000 cans of food this past month. they also collected more than 9000 diapers and 120 canisters
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of baby formula. next up, is there penny drive. ama: sacred heart started its 58th annual holiday gift boxing event this morning. the food boxes included a whole turkey, produce, dairy bread and more. distribution will continue tomorrow from 9:00 a.m. until noon. presentation haskell plans to send their turkeys they collected to the center -- high school plans to send their turkeys they collected to the center. dan: carrabba for thanksgiving is a bay area tradition -- crab for thanksgiving is a bay area tradition. changing to crab for christmas bu
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ama: it is going to be harder to find crab thanksgiving and possibly for many thanksgiving to come. the crab season is delayed and is abc7news anchor reports a later crab season may now be the new normal. for fishermen on peer 45 in san francisco it is a crabby start for the holiday season. >> the crab season is delayed. >> california department of fish and wildlife has pushed back crab disease and to protect comeback whales from getting entangled in the crabbing deal -- year. the president of the boat owners association. >> the entire industry must deal
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with this. >> for decades in san francisco, it has been a thanksgiving staple, a tradition for many, but for four years in a row, the start of the crab season has not started until after the holiday. max with safeco seafoods, a wholesale fishery, says this is likely the new normal. >> the earliest we will start ever again will probably be around the 15th of december. more likely, it could be january 1. >> many of the restaurants here menubut if you want it, it will cost you. they now pay double what they used to to get crab from out-of-state. >> crab has gone insane in the last 18 months. and i don't know if those prices are ever going to come down. >> global warming has been cited as one factor contributing to why there may be so many whales off the coast of northern california.
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they seem to be migrating south later in the year. fishermen who depend on the busy holiday season for their livelihood hope to find a long-term solution that will start the crab season before christmas. any sooner, may not be possible, they say. >> longtime>> -- longtime san francisco's need to get used to the lack of crab. dan: four years now. ama: still to come, battle between the past and future in berkeley. meet the group fighting to preserve what made history thousands of years ago. dan: a milestone for community nationwide. many of them call bay area home. today is the anniversary of the assassination of president john f. kennedy. heit's been 59 years since he ws shot while riding through dallas in 1963. you can watch an abc seven original documentary about the assassination.
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>> building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions this is abc7 news. dan: people who live and work in san francisco's castro district are understandably struggling to process the saturday night attack in colorado springs were five people were killed at a gay nightclub. today the suspected shooter was moved from hospital to jail and is asked acted to make a court appearance tomorrow. ama: an army veteran tackled the shooter to stop the aack. morgan norwood shares the stories from inside the club. >> i am just amazed that i am able to walk and that i am alive. >> survivors of the shooting inside club q, reliving the horrific moments when police say a gunman spraying bullets into the bar. >> i got hit in the back. and i turned around to look at him.
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and he kept shooting. >> ed sanders a shot in the leg and thigh. during the chaos the only thing he could think about was helping others. >> i shielded another woman with my coat. because i didn't know how long they were going to shoot. >> we are hearing from richard, the military veteran who police are calling a hero, for taking the suspect down before officers arrived, saving thousands of lives. >> i grabbed the pistol from him. i'm on top of him. i'm a big dude. and the sky was bigger. i kept wailing on him. >> authorities holding the suspect on hate crimes and murder charges. the community of colorado springs really. but in the face of heartbreak, there is also resilience. >> this was a fear tactic. to make us think that we are going to stop being who we are or having the time living the best of our lives, is not going to. >> the lgbtq community has been
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at the center of threats with hate motivated attacks on the rise nationwide. advocates are calling on leaders to address the spike in violence. i'm morgan norwood, abc7news colorado springs. dan: newly released census bureau data shows there were 1.2 million same-sex couples household in the u.s., the highest recorded total. the district of columbia had the highest percentage of any state or equivalent with 2.5%. california ranked sixth with 1.2%. this is the second time estimates had been released since the survey was revised to accurately capture same-sex relationships. ama: november is native american heritage month, a time to honor the rich culture of indigenous people. dan: in berkeley a battle is underway to protect the 6000 year old historic site, that is sacred to bay area native americans. ama: a fight over the shell mount between hurst and
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university and second to 5th street. this photojournalist put together the story. >> i had no idea. most people in berkeley had no idea. ♪ >> the west berkeley shell mound is the oldest known archaeological site or historic structure of any kind here in the bay area. >> for the last, almost six years, we have been fighting to preserve the site. ♪ but a private developer wants to own this land and to build on top of it. as people, who have been here since the beginning of time we also need housing for our own people. but this is not the place for it.
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this place should be open up for everyone in the bay area to know about our people. this should be a place of prayer that has always been. ♪ my name is karina. i just spoke to you in the language of our ancestors, the first language that was ever here in the east bay. my great-grandfather was a guzman was one of the last -- josé guzman is one of the last speakers. we have been trying to protect this site. >> shellmounds are an astounding archaeological manifestation here in the greater san francisco bay area. there were more than 425 of these recorded. >> the mound itself is comprised -- comprised of shells, ash, pit houses. >> the west berkeley shellmound
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was known as the largest and earliest. it's about 6000 years. with our most recent radiocarbon dates. it goes until about 1000. it is used for at least 1000 years. >> it holds knowledge about how the people were living in this area. >> the west berkeley site was the first major fishing village on the san francisco bay. they had a fishing technique where they used nets in sophisticated way. if you think about it at night, some of the mounds were 20, 30 feet in height and they would've had fires on them. if you're out on the bay, in one of the boats, you would've seen fires all around the bay. it would've been like a beacon. this place was very much occupied and very, very much alive. >> there was a law passed called sp 35, that enables developers
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who were building affordable housing to circumvent the environmental review process. the developer sued the city. the city won in the trial court. the tribe also. then, the developer appealed. the developer won the appeal. >> there was an archaeologist that came and found the shellmound. then, a few years later the same archaeologist was hired by the developer and then found nothing. >> the law does include an exception for the west berkeley shellmound and other resources. unfortunately, that exception doesn't apply retroactively. there was a small window in which sites like the west berkeley shellmound were not protected. >> we have a different vision for the best use of this land.
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a green space and a cultural park. >> there is not one place in the bay area that talks about the history and the resiliency and that this could be that place. why not the city of berkeley. uc berkeley hasn't decimated our sacred site and holds 9000 of our ancestral remains. when i return them home? part of them belong at the west berkeley shellmound. children should have the ability to play in an open creek again like we did when we were kids, a place to have ceremonies the way we are supposed to, not an asphalt, but on a place that is green and has trees growing. that is not only good for us but for everyone that now lives in the bay area. >> we're trying to reconstruct what it was like to be here which would include a dome, that has poppies all over it, a welcoming center, community center for the people, as well
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as a digital theater to help visualize what this place look like 200 years ago. >> you can hear, smell, see and feel what it was like to be at a shellmound to talk about the history. it's a painful history but also to uplift the resiliency of language coming back in ceremony and dance and a place for culture to be shared. >> this gives us the opportunity to reteach the history of california. as someone his family came here 150 years ago, that it's our responsibility to make amends to the native people who were here before. >> in order to understand the sites properly, we need to protect them. >> archaeology has changed since the days when this was excavated back then, would it really work with tribes at all -- they didn't really work with tribes at all >> it preserves them in place and integrates that indigenous perspective that the old interpretations really lack. >> this is not a parking lot!
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it is the home of a sacred shaman! ♪ >> we are asking the general public to dream with us of what this could be. to put pressure on the city council in a loving way to do whatever they can to think outside of that box. i believe in miracles. my lifetime i have seen miracles. ama: you can learn more by going to the website shellmound.org. dan: what students are not learning in school. how some of them are scared. i am michael finney. why one recent college grad is doing
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we are grocery outlet and we are your bargain bliss market. what's bargain bliss? you know that feeling you get when you find the name brands you love, but for way, way less? that's bargain bliss. and with thanksgiving right around the corner, we want you to save big. that's why at grocery outlet, we are offering you $21 off your holiday turkey with in-store coupon. that's as low as .53 cents a pound. now, that's savings to be thankful for. so hurry in because this deal is only available while supplies last. ♪ grocery outlet bargain market ♪
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>> college student preparing for finals are unlikely to be quizzed on how to handle their money. ama: michael finney tells us the lack of preparation has many in their 20's nervous. >> to remember being in your 20's? dan: a long time ago. nobody teaches you. ama: they try to give you credit cards. >> oh yeah, they're giving you credit cards. that's a good point. a new survey out of people in their 20's highlights what worries this generation about their future. money is at the top of the list. like so many others, ryan depends on a bicycle to get around.
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a lack of parking, not to mention the expenses associated with owning a car made it easy for him to go carless. >> i didn't want to deal with it. >> she graduated from duke university in 2020. the cincinnati native returned home, before accepting at a san francisco fin tech. her move to the bay area came right at the beginning of the pandemic. >> i was dealing with living in a city with higher prices and rent. at the same time having it feel very deserted. >> she found herself unprepared for making decisions about her money matters. that scared her. >> i think i was going to mismanage my money and my time by moving to a big city and not getting a lot of direction. >> like ryan, he also attended duke. they never met, but their lives would intersect years later. >> he sat there a financial seminar at duke and quickly realized how little they knew
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about money. >> if you look around the room everyone is on their phone, not paying attention. no one cared. >> he thought there had to be a better way to deliver financial information. thus he came up with an idea for this. ♪ an app that delivers bite-size information to a gen z audience in a way that they can understand and relate. today the app is programmed by 250 banks to use. >> they can redeem pineapples for rewards. they're getting paid to learn about money. >> survey of nearly 15,000 gen z's around the world, found the cost of housing, transportation and bills, is their number one concern. nearly half of them live paycheck-to-paycheck. brian uses the app and found it helpful. she is trying to gain a firm financial footing for the future. >> trying to find the right balance between what i can spend versus what i need to save, the
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economic situations can be so unpredictable. >> her biggest challenge is saving for grad school and figuring out how to pay off any future loans she will need to graduate. >> i have big concerns, the fact that i will be paying it off for many years after go to school. >> the scary part is getting started. once you actually get started and get into it, it's not that scary. >> he is totally right about that. the cost of living is followed by climate change and unemployment, as the top three concerns of gen z's. if you want to try this at home, jsut read one article a day about money. and you start doing that, all of a sudden, you start understanding you want to read two articles. dan: it starts to make sense. thank you. ama: we are grateful for good weather in the bay area for thanksgiving. sandhya has your holida
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this is gloria. she hasn't worked this hard to only get this far with her cholesterol. taken with a statin, leqvio can lower bad cholesterol by over 50% and keep it low with two doses a year. side effects were injection site reaction, joint pain, urinary tract infection, diarrhea, chest cold, pain in legs or arms, and shortness of breath. with leqvio, lowering cholesterol becomes just one more thing life throws your way. ask your doctor about leqvio. lower. longer. leqvio.
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i have been trying to tell myself it would be ok if i didn't do well in the tournament. deep down i wanted to prove that, i was that good and there was nothing flooky about my first run. it felt really good about validating everything. to end this imposter syndrome that was still a bit in my mind, i am like, no i am at plain jeopardy. ama: she had to be two other california contestants three times to win the title. it comes with equal $50,000 -- cool to $50,000 prize. she is the first transgender person to win. you can watch jeopardy at 7:00 p.m. on abc 7. dan: i want to correct amy. she's not good at plain jeopardy she is amazing. ama: incredible. dan: let's go back to the forecast. ama: sandy has here with the latest. sandhya: it looks good if you're
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traveling tomorrow. we have wind advisories and watches that will be going up late tomorrow into thursday and friday. a fire weather watch for parts of southern california. something to be careful. freeze warnings for the central valley tomorrow morning as they are expected to have freezing conditions. statewide you are looking at 75 in los angeles, 66 in yosemite, dry around the state, rockies, that is where the snow will be. you could encounter delays. national travel is looking good. some passing high clouds tonight on live doppler 7. it's a warmer sunny day tomorrow, low 60's to low 70's. here's your accuweather 7 day forecast. thanksgiving is looking fantastic. mid 60's to mid 70's. temperatures drop off as we hit the weekend. a level 1 storm comes in, trending what for monday. we will see snow in the mountains which means travel could be impacted. ama: latest in sports, larry.
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have heart failure and still experience unresolved symptoms? heart failure and seemingly unrelated symptoms like carpal tunnel syndrome... ...shortness of breath... ...irregular heartbeat... ...and lower back pain could mean something more serious called attr-cm a rare, underdiagnosed disease that worsens over time, so it's important to recognize the signs. sound like you? >> now abc 7 sports with larry beil. alert: the 49ers -- larry: the
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49ers crushed the cardinals in monday night football 38-10, giving the nfl a glimpse of how dominant they can be. in mexico city with 49er fans packing the stadium, the acquisition of a christian gives them so many weapons. they're not overusing him. his presence allows people like brandon to get single coverage. two touchdowns last night and that was a breakout game for george kittle who matched his season total with two tds in the contest, if this offense can match the already dominating defense the 49ers will be a problem in the playoffs. the next three games are against the saints and dolphins at buccaneers at home. >> they have been gelling these next three weeks it has gotten better. >> we have a long way to go. we left points out there and it is a nice thing that guys are still hungry. >> we left a lot of yards it just shows what kind of team we have we are able to get a win like that. >> we are ready to go on a run,
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we wonhr not giving up points in the second half for multiple games in a row. our offense we scored and. got in the red zone. that was big for us. we made plays outside of the red zone and scored touchdowns. larry: he keeps drawing a sketch every day. harris picking up on the mexican wrestling thing. he is guapo libre, a reference to nacho libre. guapo is a spanish for handsome. the slugger arrived in san francisco if the social media world is in getting -- going crazy over this, he winked if he had big plans. like visiting with the giants will not hidden their desire to sign the free agent who grew up in the central valley. judge hit a record 62 homers and was meeting with the giants today. but he is also spending thanksgiving with his family. the bidding for judge is to
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start around $35 million a year. that is really talking turkey. on top of the cash, the owner of ike's sandwiches, is trying to sweeten the deal for judge. he tweeted i will throw in a free sandwiches for life in the naming rights to one sandwich, to whatever the san francisco giants are offering. that may put it over the top. lost in the shuffle of a 49ers primetime game and the warriors lost last night. james wiseman playing in a second g league game, two rebounds, warriors head coach hopes some individualized attention with santa cruz and their coaching staff could get wiseman going and get them minutes. he has struggled with the warriors. the undefeated taking on wichita state in kansas city. there up 10, first shot stuffed, second shot beats the buzzer. leads with eight points.
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he made only one basket in one game which is odd because he is a scorer. nice move. biggest bucket for the dungs. there up three, josh kunin for three. the lefty, splash. they won the tournament 67-63, they are now 6-0. world cup action, argentina taking on saudi arabia. that is the way you are supposed to say it. tied at 1-1 in the 53rd minute. with the game-winner, saudi arabia wins 2-1 and complete one of. . the biggest upsets in world cup history indiana pacers held a puppy race. they refuse to race, the cheerleaders did their best to get the dogs moving but they would not move. the event was put on with the humane society with curry's adoption. they had to carry him across the finish line. ama: if you are cute you don't have to run. dan: i wish i was that cute. [laughter]
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we are grocery outlet and we are your bargain bliss market. what's bargain bliss? you know that feeling you get when you find the name brands you love, but for way, way less? that's bargain bliss. and with thanksgiving right around the corner, we want you to save big. that's why at grocery outlet, we are offering you $21 off your holiday turkey with in-store coupon. that's as low as .53 cents a pound. now, that's savings to be thankful for. so hurry in because this deal is only available while supplies last. ♪ grocery outlet bargain market ♪
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♪♪♪ from the alex trebek stage at sony pictures studios, this is "jeopardy!" [cheers and applause] please welcome today's contestants-- a software engineer from lafayette, colorado... a pediatrician from highland park, illinois... and our returning champion-- a customer success operations manager from ocean city, new jersey... whose 11-day cash winnings total... and now here is the host of "jeopardy!"--ken jennings! [applause] thank you, johnny gilbert, and welcome, everyone.
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it's been such an exciting few weeks for us here on "jeopardy!" starting with our first-ever second chance competition, and then moving right into a thrilling tournament of champions, which ended with amy schneider defeating andrew he and sam buttrey in a 6-game knockout final. now as we head back into regular "jeopardy!" we find ourselves in the midst of an impressive run by 11-game champion cris pannullo. the last time cris was behind that podium, he had one of his most successful outings yet-- 36 correct responses-- that's a personal best for you, cris-- and his ninth runaway game. season 39 certainly not disappointing so far. welcome, david and etienne, to the alex trebek stage. here we go. your categories in the jeopardy! round are... then... we have... you might know where this is going...
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