tv ABC7 News 1100PM Repeat ABC November 2, 2024 1:06am-1:41am PDT
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dodger stadium. series mvp freddie freeman. freddie. freddie with his three year old son max, who was diagnosed with a rare autoimmune disease over the summer. thank you. >> from the bottom of my heart. let's go dodgers. >> and then the rarest moments from a player seldom heard from a shy shohei ohtani is so special for me. >> i'm so honored to be here and to be part of a team. >> thank you fans. >> and that's nightline. you can watch all of our full episodes on hulu. we'll see you right back here monday. thanks for staying up with us. good night america. >> liam payne, loved by millions of fans. >> it's literally so heartbreaking. sunday night on abc. >> how did we get here? how is
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announcer: hey, bay area. it's time to share some amazing stories and feel good. we could all use some inspiration right now, and you've come to the right place. this show is all about good food, good people, and good living. on today's show, a coffee bar by day and a wine bar by night. man: i think there are too few low barrier-to-entry public places where people can come and gather. and i think that's a really special element of kinfolx. announcer: friendship in basketball
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takes center court for this team. 2nd man: it has greater significance than just our little group. announcer: the boat of the future is here. woman: it is time to rebuild and reimagine the american waterways. this is a boat, and it flies. i mean, that's the best way to describe it. announcer: but first, oakland celebrates black history and culture. ♪ black history month, oakland comes alive. the town comes alive. it really celebrates our deep history and our heritage within the black community. it is where the black panther party started and so many social movements started here in the town. in oakland, we celebrate black culture year-round. it just so happens that, in february, it really comes alive. from our restaurants to our museums, all of our attractions, we all come together
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and celebrate everything that makes oakland so unique. there are so many ways we can celebrate black history month in oakland. you can support our black-owned shops, dine at our black-owned restaurants, and even travel the equity path on oakland's cannabis trail. ♪ there are so many events happening in oakland. one of my personal favorites is the black joy parade. there are 25,000 people descending onto downtown oakland celebrating a black culture. this parade was founded here in oakland. ♪ also, if you're a big wine aficionado, you got to try black vines. it's going to be a great celebration of black vintners. it will be located at the bridge yard, also here in oakland. one of the amazing restaurants is the cook and her farmer. we serve fresh, local oysters, and that is a reflection of our background
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and our oyster farming experience at tomales bay. fresh oysters, fresh salads, really coastal food. the sort of meshes of culture, southern culture and coastal california. ♪ jazz brunch is a celebration of black life, black history, black culture, old oakland, the history and the story of black life in america. - everyone is welcome. - i really do think it's important to actually put out there and share that it's an extension of our community. it welcomes all communities, all of those that have always supported african americans, wherever they are, in this country - and around the world. - we've been doing the jazz brunch for ten years, and it's on february 24th. it's usually the last saturday of february, and it'll be from 11:00 to 4:00. highlight is that we have jazz mafia performing. jazz mafia is known all around the bay. - they are incredible. - multiple groups are... incredible. ♪
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we also have a new event: for the love of the town. it's a tea and pop-up shop that celebrates black culture in oakland. so in 2022, i had the opportunity to do a collaboration with visit oakland. visit oakland chose ten neighborhoods that represented oakland or the town. and with each blend in each neighborhood, i took the time to talk to oakland natives and those in those communities to see what they thought tea time would represent, for their neighborhood. after taking the time to really do the work and talk to the people and talk to communities, with the support, help, and push of visit oakland, i created the town teas. i am honored to be the sponsor and the tea lady. we look forward to being in community with the marriott, pound business, and other black businesses on february 10th. kurtis hanson: we're going to have some traditional tea with sweet and savory items here at the hotel. it's gonna be an afternoon tea, from 11:30 till 1:00. and we're just so excited to be part of oakland. we partner with our children's miracle network hospital,
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which this event is also supporting as well as our community. are you excited for february 10th? yes, i know. it's just around the corner, - isn't it, camilla? - yes. we are very excited at the hotel. i mean, we're excited to showcase your tea. we're excited to showcase the hotel. so, it should be a great event. for the love of the town tea is going to be a great success. i look forward to being in community with you all. - cheers, thank you. - cheers, pleasure. ♪ we can't wait to welcome all of you to oakland during black history month. please go on to our website, visitoakland.com and you'll be able to see all the experiences and the activities going on during black history month. announcer: coming up, a coffee shop and wine bar is making a splash in the community. creighton davis: kinfolx was intended to be a platform. a platform for members of the community to share their gifts, their talents, their skills with others.
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and, you know, just the-- you know, walking up to people, dapping, you know, showing that love, and showing that-- just, you know, that openness that i think is very much emblematic of the bay. ♪ creighton: as the characteristics and demographic of the bay has changed to, you know, more tech, more in your home, we've lost some of that feeling of community. ♪ been watching them on instagram and, like, and, like, how they, like, partner with a lot of different events and create, like, a really good vibe and community. adam bentley: i come in here, and i see so many black and brown folks, and a lot of them
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look like they're, you know, doing all kinds of interesting, important work, and it's a great place to meet people. ♪ i think there are too few low barrier-to-entry public places where people could come and gather. and i think that's a really special element of kinfolx. so, when you think about the divestment in community centers, in parks, and the departure from churches... ♪ kinfolx was intended to be a platform, a platform for members of the community to share
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their gifts, their talents, their skills with others. ♪ but i really want to also dive deeper into the civic discussions and the community discussions that are so central to the activist character of oakland. ♪ people are afraid to come to downtown. people are afraid to park their cars. we're really opening up to the community. and asking the community to be thought partners in how we address and solve these problems, knowing that these problems aren't just... situations that we're dealing with, but situations that are existing throughout oakland. ♪
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♪ ♪ announcer: welcome back to the show. the monday night warriors has played basketball every monday night for almost 50 years and is not stopping anytime soon. man: we play every monday night 6:00 to 7:30. ♪ ♪ the monday night warriors. that's what i-- i'm the commissioner. that's what i write on the permit application. "monday night warriors." ♪ ♪ four original members are still playing. yeah, we have one guy about to turn 80.
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and i'm 73 and... 75 and all, yeah. ♪ ♪ every monday night for the last 48 years i've been playing basketball with a group of berkeley and oakland guys. the group has changed over the years. we play at a junior high school gym, full court basketball. we... have a reversible shirt to tell who's who, blue and white and we play from about 6:00 to 7:30 every monday night. we are an interesting group of artists and... professors and therapists and teachers and truck drivers. great bunch of people. the friendship group has carried it through. our average age is 76. we're pretty desperate for new players. it's about friendship.
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it's about the importance of a connection. it's just so important, so-- so wonderful. one of the og is a graphic designer and made one for our 25th anniversary and one for the 40th. and it starts off with a list at the bottom here of the original guys in the game and then the hall of fame, the people who have come and gone and a couple sadly who have passed away. everybody wears their sweatshirts every week. i had grown up going to my dad's basketball game, this weekly game with a group of guys that had been friends for a long time and it was fun for me. i would see my friends there because it was the kids of all the guys who were playing. and then fast forward, however, 30 years later and i realized that this game has been going on for nearly 50 years and it's just so rare to have friendships last that long.
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and it's even more rare to have friendships kind of coalesce around this-- this amazing activity that most guys don't play past, you know, their 30s. ♪ ♪ man: a bunch of us had been-- nate: i thought it'd be a really cool subject for a film. i thought about it more as just kind of a tribute to the game when i started, but the deeper i got into it, i really saw that it connected to a lot of things that were, you know, happening, and covid, where people are feeling very isolated and our friendships are kind of, you know, a lot of them are feeling more distant. ♪ ♪ bob: one of the scenes in the documentary is where it-- gets the biggest laugh, where nate starts showing the balls hitting the side of the basket and eight in a row misses happen.
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[laughing] nate: i definitely learned how deeply they think about and care about the game and their friendship. for men especially, i think, it's difficult to just kind of open up and talk about feelings. and so guys need, like, an activity that's like the excuse so they can share with each other. so, um... it was just fun to kind of peel back the layers of the game and get them to talk about things in really, like, profound terms because it was connected to this game of basketball. man: monday night basketball, the highlight of all our week. bob: this was a wonderful gift of love from nate. i know, to me, but to all my friends, it has greater significance than just our little group.
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beautifully, but... he gave a lot of time, a lot of effort. it was amazing to kind of chart my dad's course from the 1970s when he showed up in california and didn't really have a group um, and was kind of on his own, to now where he's woven into this fabric that really includes these guys. bob: this is amazing that we're still doing this. this is fun, running up and down the court and seeing my friends and i wish they would cut instead of just standing there and i wish that i could shoot more than six feet. there's sadness about that, but there's joy in the continuity and the friendships and still being able to run up and down. i want people to think about their own relationships and their own lives and how important it is to show up for each other,
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but also these settings and be intentional about building those communities 'cause they're what sustain us over the long term. announcer: coming up, one boat company is reimagining our waterways through innovation and sustainability. woman: if you can build cutting edge technologies that solve practical problems and can solve it today, that needs to be built. ♪ ♪ chase really knows how to put the hart in your local community. see what i did there? hey, jackie! (♪) evan, my guy! you're helping them with savings, right? (♪) i wish i had someone like evan when i started. somebody just got their first debit card! ice cream on you? ooo, tacos! i got you. wait hold on, don't you owe me money? what?! your money is a part of your community, so your bank should be too. like, chase!
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♪ ♪ announcer: welcome back to the show. navier has created the boat of the future by reimagining the power of movement through innovation and sustainability. sampriti: it is time to rebuild and reimagine the american waterways. this is a boat and it flies. i mean, that's the best way to describe it. of coastal cities are congested. in a year a person spends about over 100 hours in traffic. but the waterways are this infrastructure like already built out that's just underutilized because we haven't figured out how to move things on the water at a cost efficient way. and not only that, in a comfortable way. at navier we build a solution. the boat of the future, navier 30. it is america's first all-electric hydrofoil boat. the world is going zero emission. the world is going electric.
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boats are fundamentally inefficient. why are you pushing water when you can actually glide over water? and suddenly with hydrofoiling the range is near about compatible to a traditional gas boat. if you can build cutting-edge technologies that solve practical problem and can solve it today, that needs to be built. hydrofoil basically means that this boat is half a boat and half a plane. this boat essentially have wings underwater. rich: you are literally flying on a cushion of air. if you look at just where populations grow, it's often around waterways and those waterways separate people. they require bridges, traffic. so if you can have boats, you know, like here in san francisco cutting across the bay, that's great. the problem, the san francisco bay, it's often choppy. navier gets the boat up above all of that. you're cutting out all of that traffic. but you're doing it in a comfortable ride that's near silent and is energy efficient.
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sampriti: so you can reduce an hour and a half commute time to probably, in some cases, 15 minutes. and this certified boat, it runs on a battery. kenny: we're taking on electrifying boats. it's good for the environment. you aren't burning gasoline. you're also not putting oil into the water. melissa: we're in a climate emergency. 60% of our emissions come from transportation. transportation is the key to changing our carbon footprint. that's why boats like navier are so important. electrifying our ferries, using these smaller boats to get people to and from and across the bay hopefully will encourage other communities to do the same. seamus: you can feel how efficient it is. there's very little drag. that's one of the big reasons why it takes so much energy to propel a vessel through the water is you have all of that drag. when you lift the vessel hull up out of the water and have it operating on foils, you're gonna have less drag, it's going to utilize less energy to be able to complete a trip. and that's good news for us, because we're in the business of doing things the most efficient way possible. so we have this wing that you can see right in the front of the boat.
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and so basically what happens is when you reach 16 knots, the wing in the front creates lift, and that lifts the whole boat four feet out of the water. and you notice the foil, it is up high right now, and that's because it's in its fully stowed position. and so you'll see, as we deploy, this front foil is gonna go down in addition to the rear two, and then we can lift the boat four feet out of the water. so we'll be above the chop, above the waves. it's perfectly smooth, perfectly quiet. it feels like you're floating on clouds. you can put your coffee, your tea right on the seat in front of you and it won't spill. as you're going through two, three foot chop at 30 miles an hour. we're able to rotate 360 degrees in place, as well as walk the boat perfectly side to side. so most people get very mad at each other when they're docking. it's a very stressful experience, typically, but in this boat, you can be completely off center with your dock and you can just walk sideways, you can spin, and then you can go right in. woman: driving this boat is super easy. you're playing with a joystick and you're rotating in place, treading in place, going sideways. so this is what you have a map. and, as i was saying,
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is this is a boat and it's a plane. so what you see here is actually what you will see in an aircraft flight control system. if every marina can be a transportation hub, more waterfront infrastructure developed, there is a whole new wave of economic activity, whole new wave of jobs, affordable housing. that is what is exciting. that is what inspires us to get up and work as fast as we can to build out this vision. seamus: when we see this sort of design combined with zero emission technology like the battery electric system, it really gets us excited about the future for ferry service. melissa: we've needed electric ferries and electric transportation on the waterfront for too long. it's amazing to see strong women pushing forward innovation. rich: her leadership painting a picture that is kind of hard to imagine, far off in the distance,
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and then getting a team to march towards that goal and actually delivering has been, for me, very inspirational. sampriti: sometimes it's crazy to say that i want to build a transportation network for 46% of the world. the thing about building transportation is it's just not about a startup. it's not just about a cool product. it's about a movement. it's about getting groups of people together who really care about building better cities. they care about humanity, they care about people living better lives, and they are biased to action. let's make things happen now, because if not now, then when? ♪ ♪ announcer: that's it for today's show, but tune in next week for an all-new episode. in the meantime, keep connected on social for more feel-good stories. ♪ ♪
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announcer: hey, bay area, it's time to share some amazing stories and feel good. we could all use some inspiration right now and you've come to the right place. this show is all about good food, good people, and good living. ♪ ♪ on today's show, a smashing good time. creating neapolitan-inspired pizza in sf, documenting neighborhoods with watercolors, elevating latino voices and recycling tips and tricks. but first, celebrating dia de los muertos with a look back at disney pixar's "coco." ♪ ♪ "let's do a story about death."
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that was the pitch more than a decade ago here at pixar animation studios in emeryville. of course, that that story would end up becoming the huge hit film "coco," starring beloved characters like miguel and dante. for one man here at pixar, it wasn't just a story. it was a reflection of his culture and family. dia de los muertos has begun. it's the one night of the year our ancestors can come visit us. miguel: i thought it might have been one of those made up things. - ah-da-da-dah-shh! - i was just-- it's almost coco time because it's almost dia de los muertos. - yes. - do you think about the movie every year when this time comes around? it's so funny because it's a film around a holiday and when you make a film, you think, "oh, maybe it'll go away or people will forget." but this is a film that keeps coming back because it's still relevant. and every year you get a reminder of like, "oh, yeah, that story about dia de muertos," like, we can watch it as a family. so it's pretty nice to have something that people go back to that often. reggie: people all over the world have seen your film and they've been introduced to a culture
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they may not have known about before, and to a holiday they may have had no idea existed. how does that make you feel? it feels good. you know, when we're telling these stories, we always want to make something that is accessible and universal. and with dia de muertos, it's such a specific holiday, but it touches on themes that anyone can relate to. it's about family, it's about remembering the place where you came from. miguel: grandkids, cousins... pretty much everyone gets together, even great grandma coco. and the winner is... luchadora coco! i tell her pretty much everything. reggie: i understand that you had your grandparents around you when you were growing up. - yeah. - what was that influence like? well, so my mother grew up in mexico and my grandparents lived in mexico, so we would go visit them during the summers. and when we went down to mexico to research the film, all of those memories were brought up and all of those good feelings were brought up, and it became inspiration for what we want this home to feel like, what we want this family to feel like.
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and i was able to draw upon, you know, just memories of my grandparents, memories of my mother and my father, just to give it that authenticity and give it that warm family feeling. what was it like getting involved in "coco" in the beginning? because you started one way and ended up in a very different way in this film. "coco" was a really fun artistic experience for me because i got to put on a lot of hats. i started as a story artist. i started writing script pages and transitions to the writer. i got to write lyrics for some of the songs. i got to co-direct. and at pixar, we're a creative studio where we solve problems creatively. - all right, who's in there? - i'm sorry. ghost: welcome to the land of your ancestors. when you think about the film now, what do you think is the most important message? i think what has been so meaningful, seeing people's reactions to this film, is the sense that when you remember the people who came before you, they're always close.
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