Skip to main content

tv   ABC7 News 600PM  ABC  May 22, 2023 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

6:00 pm
now people are learning that repairs are not going to be the -- be enough to keep their jobs. ama: so now they have a choice, take severance or make a commute. lena howland has more. lena: today, those warehouse workers got another piece of bad news, after the roof collapsed and killed a worker. peet's will not be able to return to previous capacity and will relocate to tracy, more than 50 miles away. >> i feel like they don't care about us, that's all. lena: a spokesperson for peet's released a statement saying although one tenant -- 110 employees at the facility will be impacted, all employees will be given the opportunity to work at the new distribution center in tracy. samuel: just like everyone else, i'm confused. lena: samuel howard is one of
6:01 pm
more than 100 workers now given the option to either take a severance package or commit to doing a super commute. samuel: i personally do not want to do the move to tracy. i wanted to stay local. i'm still indecisive, because i have a family to provide for. lena: another employee, who wants to remain anonymous, said 95% of the workers at the oakland warehouse live in oakland. >> and a lot of people, they do not have cars, so a lot of them literally walk to work, catch the bus, or bike, i mean a lot, i would say almost half. this move to tracy is something they cannot do. lena: he says up until last friday, workers were under the impression that the new work -- new warehouse would be in hayward. peet's said they saw the new location as a major transportation hub and would provide them with access to multiple facilities that would allow them to grow and meet
6:02 pm
future needs of the company. samuel: they do not need to worry about the operations right now, because the workers are the ones going through the most right now. lena: meanwhile, peet's will be hosting their first of four hiring events this thursday in tracy. lena howland, abc 7 news. ama: at most, we are talking cloudy skies. dan: meteorologist sandhya patel he is here with a look ahead. sandhya: yeah, dan and ama, let's take a live picture from our mount tam cam. the marine layer is going to continue to deepen, and the temperatures are going to drop, so today, san jose, you managed to get into the 70's and 80's at times, dropping to 73 degrees tomorrow, up a bit on wednesday and then sliding. notice the average high is 75 degrees, so you will be below average much of the week. temperatures ranging from the 50's to the 80's inland as we go, and look at the 24-hour
6:03 pm
temperature change. some parts of the bay area a couple degrees, all going down as we head for tomorrow. mild inland, cool at the the latter part of the night, the marine influence will spread across the region. tomorrow night starts off with gray skies. 50's, 60's in the early afternoon. we do not have to worry about any heat. you can see the numbers will primarily be in the 70's for the warmest spots. i will show you what else is ahead as we approach the holiday weekend coming up. ama: thank you. usually we are starting to worry about wildfires right about now, but this year could be different because of science we have two examples tonight, beginning with abc 7 news reporter cornell barnard and the new warning signals from artificial intelligence. cornell: indoor smoke alarms have been around for decades, but imagine having a smoke or fire detector for the outdoors. a bay area tech startup says that is their vision. >> we are incorporating other
6:04 pm
symptoms into that. cornell: co-founder vasya says it is a torch sensor that uses artificial intelligence and sensors to help detect a fight moments after it -- fire moments after it starts and backyards, vineyards, or ranches. >> we have a lot of different variables that come in here, so the sensors have infrared cameras that are filtered with special filters and the different gas sensors, so all this data is coming in real time. elrnconl: app, the ai technology takes -- sends an alert through your phone if a fire is started. michael: it is to alert you so it is actionable, soak you can extinguish the fire yourself, call 911. cornell: vasya is a bay area native who helped develop the concept for torch sensors at a
6:05 pm
science fair where he was a -- at a high school where he was a student in the wake of the firearms that have devastated the new -- the fires that have devastated the north bay. vasya: every single year we have wildfires that keep growing bigger and bigger. cornell: we asked marin county fire chief jason weber his thoughts on the concept of a high-tech fire detector. chief weber: if we had technology like this, it would help us, you know, either modify our response, enhance our response, change our response based on real-time information of fire spread. cornell: the device has performed well in testing during controlled burns across northern california. it is scheduled to rollout to the public in the fall. the price about $299. vasya: this can be a game changer, because fires are going to be stopped way earlier than ever before. cornell: in marin county, cornell barnard, abc 7 news. ama: that would be great. can science help map out
6:06 pm
evacuation routes? that is part of the city of berkeley's aggressive new wildfire strategy, especially the notorious twisty roads in the hills. abc 7 news reporter leslie brinkley has more. leslie: steep slopes, dense vegetation, and houses close together, in the highest risk category it is, so the city is launching its community wildfire protection plan with a budget of $8.5 million a year. chief sprague: long overdue. we have a passion -- a passage in 2020 that empowered us with the vision to actually focus on this work, we are firing on all cylinders. we had fires in 1925, those are getting worse as we have climate change. leslie: they start with clearing brush around homes. susan: this is a new plan in berkeley never had a robust inspection plan before and we
6:07 pm
are expressing -- inspecting homes per year. people are told what they have to do to mitigate the risks, and they are given a certain amount of time to do that. leslie: brush removal and wood shipping services have been rightly expanded to include everyone in berkeley, not just up here in the hills, available any time of year by appointment. another part of this will be improving evacuation routes. chief sprague: we are contracting with a company to come out and do an evacuation time study, so they will provide us real-time traffic data. leslie: there's a new water tanker truck coming into service, and fire sirens are up at fire station seven to blast out to a wide area. more on the way. susan: the city and the community are on the same page, and we are working together. it is a whole new ballgame. leslie: in berkeley come on leslie brinkley, abc 7 news. ama: get yourself wildfire
6:08 pm
ready. go to abc7news.com/takeaction. dan: the dodgers have changed their mind and re-invited the sisters of perpetual indulgence to pride night. it has been an issue for the past week ever since the baseball team disinvited the group citing controversy, after catholic leaders claimed that the group mocks nuns. the nonprofit was founded in san francisco and has chapters in cities all over the world, including l.a. today, the team met with the los angeles group and offered an apology, which was accepted. the sisters will be at pride night on dodger stadium on june 16 after all, and the mayor of anaheim has also invited to be her personal guest at the pride night on june 7 or the sisters have not said whether they will attend the anaheim event yet. ama: a 10-year-old girl stabbed to death inside an apartment in east oakland.
6:09 pm
at bancroft and 45th avenue, this is not far from fremont high school. inside, they found the 10-year-old girl unconscious and bleeding with severe neck injuries to her she was pronounced dead moments later. officers did detain a possible suspect, someone they say did know the victim, but investigators did not elaborate on their relationship. officer allison: we are going through all the same investigative procedures, looking for witnesses, canvassing the area, looking for possible leads. ama: the person has self-inflicted wounds and is being investigated. dan: chp is closing down parts of highway 101 through sunnyvale for about nine hours. it happened on the stretch of 101 between the expressway and fairfax avenue -- fair oaks avenue. three people were killed. five others injured. a pickup truck traveling north lo conolhithen a
6:10 pm
she f lawree sway e l a thi several more crashes followed, at seven vehicles were involved. six of those on the northbound side. the chp says two people were thrown over the center divider after getting out of their cars. officer lee: they got out of their vehicles to assess the damage and check on the other drivers to make sure everyone was ok. dan: all the three people killed were men. both sections of 101 reopened but just a terrible scene, as you can sell. the ntsb is investigating a deadly plane crashed off the coast over the weekend. authorities say two men were headed from santa rosa to hawaii when the crash happened on saturday afternoon. you can see their route on the map from the website flight radar 24. the coast guard says the plane reported a fuel transfer problem and tried to turn around. they crashed about 35 miles west of pacifica. both men were killed and have not yet been identified. ama: coming up next, we wrap up
6:11 pm
what rot vice president harris to the bay area today. plus -- >> just like little kids, pets can get into all sorts of trouble, which could lead them to needing cpr. dan:
6:12 pm
6:13 pm
dan: vice president kamala harris is heading back to washington. during her short visit, she helped announce major news in the semiconductor chips so desperately needed and in short supply. abc 7 news reporter went as have
6:14 pm
the details. liz: -- zach: the vice president's plane touched down before 11:00 monday morning and she made her way to sunnyvale applied materials. prof. banafa: the company builds the machines used by intel and samsung so they can make chips. zach: and semiconductors was what she was in the area to talk about. levelvp harris: semi conductorsf the brain of modern technology. they are small chips of silicon, usually no larger than a fingernail and no thicker than a piece of paper. and they are essential to every electronic device we currently zach: zach: but chip shortage has been a critical issue around the globe. vehicles became more expensive and jobs that produced them were drastically cut. prof. banafa: it was a b
6:15 pm
lesson for all the countries to understand. zach: in august, congress passed an act setting aside money for production. vp harris: we will invest in r&d and manufacturing, all with the intention of spurring innovation and creativity. zach: the goal is to create more production here in the united states. harris says the investments have led to the sunnyvale announcement overnight, but a new semi conductor research and development facility is set to be built by 2026. vp harris: it will be the largest such facility in the world. it will contain some of the most cutting-edge technology, including machines that can build semi conductor components as thin as a single atom. zach: research and development experts say will be critical to silicon valley maintaining its place as the hub of ever evolving technology. prof. banafa: if we want to be a
6:16 pm
leader in ai, in technology, you have to have the hardware that can run these. zach: in the south bay, zach fuentes, abc 7 news. ama: this is the year covid will become an endemic, no longer a pandemic. ucsf invested -- infectious disease expert dr. peter chin hong says covid is becoming predictable thanks to the amount of immunity as well as treatment and vaccines for he believes yearly vaccines may only be needed by the most vulnerable and people over 65. dr. chin-hong: we have to be prepared for 250 people year dying in the vulnerable groups, but, in general, for the average person, it will probably fizzle out. ama: dr. chin-hong says covid was likely a once in a century threat, but it does not rule out the risk of other pandemics in the future. dan: on the subject of the
6:17 pm
pandemic, students who were high school freshman at the start of the pandemic are now seniors and it is time for graduation paired this afternoon, seniors from the first of 15 schools in oakland graduated, and we want to acknowledge their efforts. abc 7 news reporter leanne melendez has the story. lyann of 2024 is best known for surviving high school during a pandemic that shape their lives. what makes this graduate in class so special? remember, they were freshman when covid shut down in person learning. they had to pivot and attend classes online. donye shared this photo of him as a high school freshman. donye: i did not let anything % going after what i wanted to achieve. i did it. lyanne: armon still carries his freshman id with him. for him, returning to in person
6:18 pm
learning his junior year was difficult after being isolated for nearly a year and a half. armon: everyone had to kind of bring themselves out to talk in front of the teacher or answer a question. at the start of it, everybody was really quiet. principal moy: just the ability to communicate was a challenge and this year with the strike this group is so resilient and , amazing. selina: it finally feels like my hard work has paid off and i can't wait to really get out there and exit this chapter of my life. lyanne: selina is going to major in psychology at san francisco state. others learn there are benefits to being grateful, especially during hard times. adil: a shout out to all the teachers who made me who i am, you know, and just god bless everyone, so thank you. yeah. lyanne: today as they filled the paramount theater, their lesson in perseverance ended with a
6:19 pm
well-deserved celebration. [applause] in oakland, leanne melendez, --lyanne melendez, abc 7 news. ama: so well-deserved. dan: absolutely. congratulations. let's move on and talk about the forecast. ama: let's get to meteorologist sandhya patel about what is coming for the week. sandhya: we are talking about a warm-up that you will definitely feel if you don't feel it yet. from our oakland airport camera, we are starting to see some high clouds. it is certainly nice out there for oakland che tech high schoo, the weather will be fantastic. congratulations to you. 5:00 as you arrive, before the graduation, 6:00 underway, as you head out the door and leave, it 57
6:20 pm
degrees and cloudy. as we look at air quality right now, it is a bit hazy, moderate air quality and yellow for parts of the bay area. gusting at 22 francisco, and as that breeze increases, you will notice the air quality will be better. a live look from our san jose camera. good air quality the next three days, so if you are going to be outside, you can breathe fresh air out there. all right, live doppler 7 showing you some thunder, very isolated, firing up in the sierra right now. as you look at the local view, we have fog near the coastline and that marine influence, the stronger marine influence is expected over the next couple of days, which means temperatures will drop. area of low pressure is starting to take over, and as it deepens over the west coast, that will trigger the cooling trend. as we check out your temperatures right now, in the low six these, 72 degrees san
6:21 pm
jose, 71 palo alto, 68 right now half moon bay. from our mount tam cam, a little hazy as we look back toward the city. 80 degrees santa rosa, fairfield p, napa is at 68. 80 in concord, 77 in livermore. a live look from our emeryville camera, you can see that marine layer as we look back toward sutro tower. combination of fog and high clouds overnight. much cooler tomorrow, especially england -- inland. cooling trend will continue to hour-by-hour, you see the clouds coming in tomorrow morning. down below, you have the marine layer, and it will be sticking around, even at 8:30 for parts of the bay area. the sea breeze will pick up into the evening, and that will help to stir things up and clear out some of the skies for parts of the bay area, as far as well. 40's, 50's out the door tomorrow morning. tomorrow afternoon is a cooler day. today's high temperatures came up into the upper 80's inland. tomorrow we are talking 78 in the warmest inland areas.
6:22 pm
73 san jose, 62 in the city, 69 san rafael, 57 in half moon bay and breezy. accuweather 7-day forecast shows you a general cooling trend through the rest of the work week. there will be some drizzle thursday morning, and as we head toward the holiday weekend, we are going to notice a little bit of a warm-up. we are not bringing any extreme heat for memorial weekend, which is the unofficial start of summer, ama and dan. dan: thanks, sandhya. ama: coming up next, taylor swift's tour
6:23 pm
6:24 pm
6:25 pm
[bellringing] ama: on wall street, it was a mixed day for stocks. investors are keeping an eye on talks to raise the debt ceiling. the dow lost, closing at 4192, -- closing at 33 to 86, the s&p 500 was essentially flat. wednesday is the final day for customers to return to bed, bath & beyond. it includes its sister store buy buy baby. items purchased during the closing sale are as is with no returns or exchanges. the stores are still open and all merchandise is discounted by up to 40%. dan: taylor swift is set to make money beyond her wildest dreams. her current eras tour could be
6:26 pm
the highest grossing tour of all time and is expected to boost her net worth by $500 million. that would make her a member of the elite billionaires club. swift's prior network was estimated around $600 million. the 33-year-old's tour will bring in even more money when it goes worldwide. two mom in the bay area thought they bought tickets ons stub hub to see swift's concert in l.a. with their 13-year-old daughters. they learned the seller had remove that listing. stubhub said it could not issue replacement tickets, so the contacted 7 on your side's michael finney. michael helped make it right here you can watch the full story on abc7news.com. ama: coming up next, restarting the search for a missing british toddler, madeleine mccann, who pe in 2007. dan: plus, foie gras, somet
6:27 pm
it's okay to feel stressed, anxious, worried or frustrated. calhope can help access, calhope free and secure mental health resources today. call our warm line at 833-317-4673 or livechat at calhope.org
6:28 pm
6:29 pm
- life is uncertain. with calhope's free and secure mental health resources, it's easy to get the help you and your loved ones need when you need it the most. call our warm line at (833) 317-4673 or live chat at calhope.org today. >> building a better bay area, moving fwa solutions, this is abc 7 news. dan: in 10 days, the united
6:30 pm
states will hit the debt limit. the country will be unable to borrow more money to pay its bills and will not be able to make its payments unless congress reaches a deal in time. ama: president biden and house speaker kevin mccarthy had a two hour discussion that they named productive, but there is still no deal. dan: and time is short. there are only days left to avoid a catastrophic default. abc news reporter ike ejiochi is in washington. ike: house speaker kevin mccarthy walking into the capital this morning, criticizing spending by democrats. speaker mccarthy: we will spend less than last year, which is why we go to crisis to crisis. ike: the president laid the blame for the debt ceiling crisis at the feet of republicans. pres. biden: it is time for the other side to move from their esteemed positions, because much of what they have already
6:31 pm
proposed is simply, quite frankly, on acceptable. ike: republicans say they will not raise the debt ceiling until the president agrees to deep spending cuts, reclaiming unspent covid funds, imposing stricter work requirements for certain federal aid programs, like food stamps and immigration provisions, as well as an increase in military spending. meanwhile, sources say the white house made an offer that will limit military and domestic spending, affecting programs that affect aid for housing research. negotiators for the white house and speaker mccarthy met for three hours early on monday but ended their talks without any deal. one of the republican negotiators expressing slight optimism. >> we have a deadline. we have a challenge. people are working. ike: treasury secretary janet yellen said the u.s. will run out of money to pay its bills by a hard deadline of june 1.
6:32 pm
ike ejiochi, abc news, washington. ama: republican senator tim scott officially kicked off his campaign for resident today. sec president today. sen. scott: i'm announcing today that i'm running for president of the united states of america! [applause] ama: scott is south carolina's first black senator in the senate's lone black republican. he said he grew up in poverty and nearly flunked out of high school before becoming an entrepreneur. he said his christian faith, good mentors, and hard work led to his success. sen. scott: i will motivate, inspire, and require every able-bodied citizen to take responsibility and go to work. ama: he is one of the most conservative members of the senate, opposing abortion rights and pushing tax cuts to fight poverty, but he also developed good relationships with some
6:33 pm
democrats. he joins president trump and nikki haley in the race. florida governor ron desantis is excited to join this week. dan: declining to take up a challenge on california's ban of foie gras. "the most maligned and misunderstood food in the world." the court did not say why it would not take the case. the abc 7 news i-team exposed how docs are for spread -- forced fed for foie g passage that helped lead to the banning. if you have a question for the i-team, go to abc7news.com /iteam. ama: for the first time in months, the man accused of stabbing four idaho college students to death. before a judge. it is time for him to be arraigned before a grand jury indicted him last week. abc news reporter jennifer lee was in the courtroom.
6:34 pm
jennifer: bryan kohberger was silent when asked how he pleaded. that judge entering a not guilty plea on his behalf. >> how is he prepared to plead to these charges? i'm going to enter not guilty please on each charge. jennifer: he is accused of murdering university of idaho students. some of their family very emotional in court. >> this family does not agree with that. jennifer: a grand jury indicted bryan kohberger with four counts of first-degree murder. >> this is actually a blow to the defense, because the state would have had to present evidence, the defense would have had time to question the witness and get information about what the state actually has in their possession as far as evidence. jennifer: authorities have
6:35 pm
repeatedly called this a targeted attack. kohberger's former public defender tells abc that the grand jury indictment could work in kohberger's favor. jason: the less information that is given to the public and talked about in the media, it certainly protects bryan's right to a fair trial and his due process rights. the concern is they did not get the opportunity to cross-examine witnesses at the preliminary hearing. jaclyn: the prosecuti 60 days to file a notice if they pursue the death penalty. jaclyn lee, abc idaho. dan: 17 people died, 17 people were injured on the attack on marjory stoneman douglas high school. the former sheriff's deputy who worked as a school resource officer on the day was widely criticized for his action during the shooting including not going inside the school to confront the shooter. he is charged with seven counts
6:36 pm
of child neglect, three counts of culpable negligence, and one count of perjury. jury selection is scheduled to begin may 31. the shooter has already been convicted and is serving life without the possibility of parole. this wednesday will mark one year since the deadly school shooting at robb elementary in uvalde, texas, where 19 students and to teachers were killed. ama: the search for madeleine mccann is restarting. she is the three-year-old british girl who disappeared while with her parents in portugal. british and portuguese police are working together. they have identified a suspect who denied involvement in the case. german police got a new tip that is leading to a new search, about 30 miles from the resort where they camped for -- where the mccanns were vacationing. dan: coming up next, how to learn cpr for your pets. it could s
6:37 pm
6:38 pm
6:39 pm
ama: life-saving measures like cpr are not just for people, they can save your pet's life,
6:40 pm
too. joyce: i stuck my finger in his mouth, and there was a chunk of cat food lodged in his esophagus. and he bit me, because that was just instinct, and he died. quick she's talking about her cap named -- >> she's talking about her cat named jack's. if she had cpr training, that would have saved him. nowadays, more people are wanting pet parent education. >> just like little kids, pets can get all sorts of trouble, which can unfortunately lead to cpr. >> it is important that parents understand different emergencies, especially cpr. amanda: pets, just like humans, can grow old and have illness that can present with a heart failure or need a cpr device intervention. >> having this knowledge is
6:41 pm
essential for her profession. shannon: if i'm going to have the responsibility of being in people's homes and being with their pets, i wanted to make sure i know how to best handle an emergency situation. >> she says cpr for your pets starts out just like cpr for us. you will check specific areas on your pet's body to see if they are breathing or have a pulse, but administering cpr is slightly different. amanda: we do what we call mouth to snout in terms of respiration. if you are by yourself and your pet needs cpr, we do say focus more on the compressions. >> if we can empower our pet parents to understand the complications and different emergencies, they can help their pets a lot quicker. ama: good information to nokia the red cross explains the steps for pet cpr on his website, readcros -- red
6:42 pm
pet md.com has information about performing the heimlich. dan: a memorial is 24 hours away and is expected to draw a huge crowd. heklina was a popular drag performer who died suddenly during a trip to london last month. tomorrow's memorial will take place at castro and market streets. it is scheduled to start at 8:00 p.m. buses will be rerouted around the event. ama: coming up next, see sandhya's 7-day forecast, so you can plan ahead for the week. dan:dan: a reminder, a new documentary, "california dreaming: moving to texas," follows eight californians for eight year. it is streaming on-demand on the abc 7 bay area app. check that out when you ha
6:43 pm
6:44 pm
6:45 pm
disney and dan: pixar's "elemental" opens up, and you can get a sneak peek at an exhibit. a reporter from our sister station in newark the opening weekend of the experience in new york.
6:46 pm
>> yay! >> the director of the new movie came home today for an "elemental" experience in the city where peter stone was raised, the sun of korean immigrants. pete: the idea of coming up in a diverse town is what inspired the film. >> you will find personality representing air, earth, water, and fire. >> we run a little hot. ♪ >> fire and water do not mix, except in the new pixar movie called "elemental." >> watch this! >> her when she falls in love with wade ripple, a go with the flow kind of guy. she is, well, fiery and working in her family's store, the
6:47 pm
fireplace, that resembles the place once run by sohn's parents in the bronx. pete: they started from nothing, and it serves primarily a west indian neighborhood. my brother and i grew up in that little grocery store. >> the idea behind this free exhibit is to fully immerse visitors in an "elemental" world, with and video opportunities that are truly interactive. you will have a chance to grab for a free ticket. there's even a chance to draw with pixar artists. >> today, i'm going to show you how to draw wade. >> it heads to other cities before the movie. i'm sandy kenyon, abc news. dan: the "elemental" experience will be at the shopping center june 16 to eight june 18. of course, disney's the parent company of abc 7. el is here with the forecast. sandhya: i hope you had a chance
6:48 pm
to get outside, enjoy the sunshine and warmer weather today, because it is all changing. the warmer weather up at yosemite is not good. here's a live picture. you will notice some clouds out there but plenty of sun. it will be 85 degrees in yosemite tomorrow. although the temperatures will drop toward the end of the workweek, still so warm that it is melting that snowpack. statewide, it is 325% of average. merced river is currently up above flood stage. a dead crest at around 12 feet earlier with minor flooding ongoing. flood watch for the sierra from tahoe, all the way to the reno side and other parts of the sierra. as we look at local live doppler 7, we have the fog at the coast. it is going to expand tomorrow night. tomorrow afternoon will be a greasy day. here's a look at a live picture. if you suffer from allergies, that wind is blowing that tree pollen around, which is running high. grass pollen is moderate, uv index will be very high
6:49 pm
tomorrow. much cooler than a several days, bottoming out on friday, below average, and then we turn things around us we had been for the holiday weekend, ama and dan. ama: chris alvarez is here. big news for the bay area. chris: super news. coming up in sports, are you ready for some football? stephen curry is fired up for super bowl 50 at levis, look at this great video. nfl showcases back to the
6:50 pm
6:51 pm
for likes or followers. their path isn't for the casually curious. and that's what makes it matter the most when they find it. the exact thing that can change the world. some say it's what they were born to do... it's what they live to do... trinet serves small and medium sized businesses... so they can do more of what matters. benefits. payroll. compliance. trinet. people matter.
6:52 pm
>> now abc 7 sports with chris alvarez. chris: the super bowl is returning to the bay. levi's stadium in santa clara will host super bowl lx in 2026. making the announcement, the nfl did, it marks 10 years after levi's stadium hosted super bowl l back in 2016. denver won that game here this will be the second super bowl in the city of's history since opening in 2014, third overall in the bay area. joe montana, the niners beat dan marino's dolphins. this year's super bowl will be in vegas, followed by the your lens, then it is the bay's turn. jed: it is an honor to be able to bring an event like this. -- like the super bowl to your town. these guys have worked so hard to i want to thank you to the ownership for believing in the bay area, and this is going to be a great place for us to showcase the best of northern california. chris: i cannot wait.
6:53 pm
brock purdy and? were injured, -- after brock purdy and johnson were injured, a roster change allowing for a third emergency quarterback to be available on game dated the emergency qb can only enter due to injuries. the niners could have used that rule last year. raiders owner mark davis tells espn he and tom brady have reached an agreement for the future hall of famer to become a minority owner of the team. the proposal would have ready become a limited partner of the franchise. the bay area native and seven-time super bowl champ als owns part of the wnba's las vegas tasers. and an mri in the lower back of webb came back clean pure and he is scheduled to make his next start thursday in milwaukee. espn, milwaukee bucks
6:54 pm
atkinson on the short list of vacant p adrian griffin to atkinson agreed to take the charlotte hornets jobless summer before changing his mind at the very last minute and remaining with the warriors. pga championship, club pro, michael block from mission viejo maybe only hole in one in attornment yesterday part 315. he did not believe it went in, then there's a scribble and make par at 18, which means he's automatically invited to next year's pga tournament. the magic driving is not done as he shared on sportscenter last night. michael: the tournament director of the colonial called me while i was sitting in my room, in the office with a couple of my friends and gave me the news that i got the last imitation into the colonial next week. so i'm headed to fort worth tomorrow my bosses. hey,oss, can i miss
6:55 pm
work for another golf tournament? did you see this? 49ers tight and george kittle returning to his roots, giving back to kids in iowa. he hosted the george kittle football camp, where he played college ball at the university of iowa. the sold-out camp features plenty of family time. george: first camp ever, doing it at the stadium with my dad and my wife here, too, pretty special stuff. thankful to the stadium the , football staff, letting us do this. being able to play football again is a good time. chris: 16 weeks or less from the season opener at about 2.5 years, but who's counting, for another super bowl. the ncaa golf tournament, stanford's rose won her second title. so many things going on, headliner obviously, but the super bowl, very excited about
6:56 pm
that. they don't know the date yet. dan: so we can't put the clock up? [laughter] chris: when i find outcome of that clock will be in my house. dan: thank you, chris. ama: tonight on abc 7 at 8:00, it is "jeopardy masters," at 9:00, "prisoners of the snow," than stay with us for abc 7 news . remember, abc 7 news is streaming 24/7. that is it for this edition of abc 7 news. thanks for joining us. i'm ama daetz. dan: i'm dan ashley. for ceja patel, chris alvarez, all of us here, we appreciate your time. hope you have a nice evening and that we see you here again for abc 7 news at 11:00.
6:57 pm
>> you are great. you are great students. i heard you did really great in school. kristen: how can the community move forward and make progress? what is a viable solution? reggie: we like to see that kind of support happening, in so many many of our communities. >> the home appraisal process appears to be broken, at least broken for black and brown families. ama: every day at abc 7, we are building toward something better. dan: a better bay area. ♪
6:58 pm
- i'm sherry - and i'm john. i'm a pharmacist. as we were starting to age, it's like, well how can we help our cognitive abilities? we saw prevagen. i did read the clinical study and went ahead and gave it a try. i feel that prevagen is helping me with overall clarity and as a pharmacist, i've recommended it to, not only just customers, but also to friends and family as a safe product to try. prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription.
6:59 pm
as a safe product to try. ♪♪ from the alex trebek stage at sony picture studios, this is "jeopardy!" here are today's contestants-- a marketing copywriter from stowe, vermont... an astronautical engineer originally from colfax, illinois... and our returning champion-- a philosophy professor from green bay, wisconsin... whose 8-day cash winnings total... [applause] and now here is the host of "jeopardy!"--mayim bialik.
7:00 pm
thank you, johnny gilbert. and welcome, everyone, to "jeopardy!" if you missed last week on the show, you missed the triumphant return of ben chan, who has now racked up runaway wins in all eight of his victories. as someone who once beat aaron rogers at trivia, has trained his dog to give hugs, and is also part of an elite ultimate frisbee team, this may not come as a surprise, but we'll have to see just how far his skills will take him here on the alex trebek stage. we welcome our new challengers-- joe and nancy. good luck to all three of you. here are the categories in play for the jeopardy! round... and... ben, where would you like to start? book, $800. - nancy. - what is "margaret"?
7:01 pm
no.

84 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on