tv NBC Bay Area News NBC May 19, 2018 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT
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tragedy. the new right now on nbc bay area news, a texas community riddled with tragedy. the new details we are learning about the deadly school shooting as investigators struggle to find a motive. >> i'm surprised that the president continues to obsess with his vindictiveness. >> she was singed out by the president over immigration and now she's fighting back. the mayor of oakland's newest move to take a stand. >> flames break out at an apartment on the peninsula. we go live to the scene. good evening, thank you for
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joining us. >> we're on with a special edition of the nbc news because of playoff hockey. firefighters rush to an apartment complex after flames break out. >> nabc bay area's marianne favo on the scene. people were inside the building when the fire broke out. >> there were a lot of people inside the apartment complex and i can tell you fortunately no one was hurt. one woman was treated for smoke inhalation at the scene and released. if you take a look behind me you can see the fire started on the second floor unit and quickly spread to the third floor. jorge de la cruz somebody pounded on his door and told him to get out. he said he had only seconds to grab his keys. >> there was a fire in my
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building, the building where i live, so i was really scared. people were knocking on all the doors and i was inside. when i came out, i saw the smoke. >> reporter: with strong winds, the fire quickly grew to two alarms with crews from menlo park and thomas joining the fight. smoke poured from the apartments. a total of four units are burned. tenants in those units cannot return home tonight and more people may be displaced because of smoke damage in the other units. fire fooigt fighters are still looking into the cause. back here firefighters are assessing the damage. they're trying to determine just how many other units are destroyed and let those people know whether or not these people will able to spend the night
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here tonight. we are at the costco parking lot. middlefield road was closed for several hours but as since re-op re-opened. reporting live, marianne favro. nbc news. >> thank you for that report. now to the latest in texas where a community is in agony after it became the latest city to suffer a mass shooting. today, the names of the victims were released. eight students and two teachers were killed. their name listed here. it all began when a 17-year-old student opened fire inside a classroom at santa fe high school. >> reporter: students escorted by police return to santa fe high school today to gatter belongings abandoned when shots for fired. alyssa vole said one of her friends was killed.
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>> he tried to make me smile or happy do something or something like that. >> reporter: one hour later, police say dimitrios pagourtzis opened fire. armed with his father's something and handgun. he's now behind bars. the judge denied bond lt authorities say there's no motive. >> he was a quiet guy. >> reporter: this woman and her daughter drove to houston. >> our hearts go out to the families. and even the young man that committed the horrific crime. he's in our prayers too. >> as mourners offer prayers, survives say they need time. >> we don't want a shooting to be our legacy. >> reporter: a community that doesn't want to be defined by tragedy. dan schennman, abc news. >> the school district sent out
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this letter to parents, it says a crisis intervention program is set up. all campuses in the santa fe unified school district will be closed monday and tuesday. no timetable yet for when the high school will re-open. >> reporter: the family of the shooter released a statement today. we are saddened and dismayed. what we are reading from media reports seem incompatible with the son we love. the family go on to ask for privacy for the pagourtzis family. for more on gun violence, head to our website at. >> it's been unconditional in the bay area. strong winds there. you can see the american flag blowing in the wind.
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the meteorologist is tracking those conditions. hi rob. >> hi. the real headline i think is the air temperature outside. 57 degrees in fremont. hague in the low 60s. san jose, jacket weather. winds at 20 and only 60 degrees. we should see mid-70s for this time of year. san francisco, 57 degrees. breakers tomorrow which will involve cold temperatures and very likely starting off the day with some drizzle. morning temperatures in the low 50s. lots of clouds around the chance of driz in a few spots. you're going to have to watch out for more thunder showers. busy day. we'll let you know if any of the showers may come closer to the bay area in our seven-day forecast in ten minutes. >> you can track the forecast with our free nbc bay area app. you can get free personalized
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updates for the wetter in your neighborhood. >> if fairy tale has come true. meghan markle married her presence. it was a royal wedding unlike any other as the bride and groom put their mark on the ceremony. witnessed by 600 guests and a crowd of about 100,000 outside. jay gray takes us through the day's events. >> reporter: the pilgrimage to windsor began early, including a parade of dignitaries and celebrities. as the wedding bells chimed, thousands poured into every open space around the castle, including astrid who's from around the area. looks different. >> certainly does. but it's amazing. everyone is having a good time. >> reporter: the description of a service normally like this
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starts once upon a time. the prince with his bride entering a 7th senchry church. beginning with her walk down the aisle, alone at first, a show of strength before being joined by prince charles. american bishop michael bruce curry -- >> the love changes lives. >> reporter: delivered a fiery address followed by a motown singer. ♪ is the only light we see >> take you meghan, to be my wife. >> reporter: the service was simple and straight forward, lasting about an hour. >> i therefore proclaim that they are husband and wife. [ cheers ] >> reporter: interrupted by a huge roar outside when the b
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couple said i do and an even bigger cheer when they left the church. [ cheers ] with their first royal kiss. the duke and duchess of sussex, introduced to the world with a carriage ride. more than 100,000 cheering them on. jay gray, nbc news, windsor england. >> a beautiful ceremony. some very loyal royal watchers got up in the we hours of the morning to watch the wedding from a british pub in san jose. >> reporter: they roll out the red carpet for a real-time wedding watch party. as soon as they opened the doors it was packed. packed at 3:30 in the morning, with folks all over the bay area dressed in their finest head to toe, including fascinators and top hats even at this hour of the morning.
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>> my first royal wedding was princess diana and charles. i love the royal wedding. they're to fascinating. >> they sipped tea and watches it unfold on a dozen screens. as meghan markle stepped out of the rolls royce, they got their first glimpse of the gown. >> i loved her dress. >> i was surprised by the dress. i thought the train was really cool. simple. she looked beautifulful the flowers looked amazing. >> the pub's owner planned the party complete with a wedding cake. >> we tried to do it british as we can. >> reporter: party goers watched prince harry and his bride exchange vows. chairing shares it all like this was for some here very emotional and full circle. >> happy to see harry happy. happy he chose meghan. big fan of lady diana, princess
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diana, so i'm happy to see her boys happy. >> one of the many royal wedding watch parties was he would at the bride's old high school in los angeles. dozens of teenagers, the vast majority of them girls got up early to watch meghan tie the knot. some brought british inspired snacks. the others wore something special. held in the same awed tournament where markle starred in 7 high school productions. >> it's not only the royal wedding. it's somebody from america marrying into the royal family. >> it's amazing to watch it live. >> markle graduated from immaculate heart in 1999. >> the bells were ringing in san francisco in honor of the royal couple's wedding. [ bells tolling ] >> reporter: this cathedral
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played for harry and meghan markle. the presiding bishop delivered an address. he spoke movingly about the power of love. the nbc twitter feed was in the royal wedding fever. we were tweeting this morning as it was taking place. follow us @nbc bay area. still ahead, an unwanted peeping tom terrorizing a neighborhood for weeks now off the streets as a community on social media helped lead to his arrest. flames burning on an island in east bay. why firefighter say they don't plan to put this fire out. a wild
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someone's security camera. the owner says he peeped through shades in his daughter's bedroom. he walked up a driveway, pointed a flashlight at a security camera. someone recognized him, called police about it. police arrested him yesterday afternoon for trespassing prowling and an unrelated domesticic violence incident. >> a fire burning. firefighters first got the call this morning. the coast guard isn't planning to put out the fire because the island they say is all marsh. people can't even walk on it. the windy conditions mean the fire could continue for a while, but the firefighters say there's no threat of that going to other islands. tomorrow is the annual beta breakers race. if you're now to the
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170-year-old san francisco tradition. this video is about what you can expect. thousands of people take over the streets. they dress in costumes. sometimes they don't wear anything at all. the 12k has been made into a 15k. people join the course without the official i entered the race bibs. goes through the valley, the haight, golden gate park and then the ocean. >> you and i will join the race at the ocean. >> a block from the an education is when we might be in. rob might be running to win it. what kind of weather will you have? >> you're going want to run to stay warm. we have some low clouds. misty skies likely for tomorrow morning as we show you the temperatures typically during the warmest time of the day. temperatures in the 60s and low 70s. right now, how about 57 degrees
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in san francisco? winds at 22 miles per hour. chilly and blustery as low clouds approach. 66 degrees. typically, we should still see 70s at this hour just after 7:00. not the case this evening. fremont, 57 degrees. san jose, 60 for now, but the wind at 20, doesn't feel like 60 outside. already jacket weather. the good news, with the wind, the air quality is great. no issues. no spare the air days. pollen is a different story. tree and grass pollen still high. more than likely, drizzle and brief light rain for some of the areas around highway 17. around the day tomorrow we are just not going warm up much. we had 70s. i think 60s will be more the trend for the bay area tomorrow.
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high temperatures around downtown san jose, 60, 70s possible. south of san joaquin. that sea breeze crosses through to the altamont pass. wean in the mid 60s. closer to 70 inland. that's probably one of the warmer at spos we'll see tomorrow. highs near 70. lows from oakland around the peninsula. downtown san francisco, highs near 60 tomorrow. here is the probably warmest spot around the bay tomorrow. santa rosa, highs in the low 70s. during the day tomorrow, looks like a repeat. maybe not as widespread around tahoe. watch napa county. could see an isolated shower popping up. for the bay area it's not
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convekti conveco convective showers. mountains would ring out drizzle. this is noon. still potentially clouded. the south face with that combination plus the strong sea breeze will keep the temperatures down for sunday. watching for the chance of showers north of napa. by 11:00, repeat, more cool clouds sweep in. more cool pattern, even cooler and there's more weather to come. look at that 7-day forecast. san francisco, you're moving by three degrees. that's not much. inland, mid 70s on monday. still warmer. below average. later in the week, temperatures try to dcome up, but not seeing at anything in the 7-day photographs that brings it up.
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spreng on hold for now. >> i was listening to the giants today and the announcers talk about the weather usually, but today they were talking about strong wind. it was playing a role. >> low to mid 60s in livermore when it should be mid 70s. >> the 90 day temperatures -- >> we thinker is what you get. climate is what you expect. sometimes doesn't work out. >> that's incredible. my closet is such a mess. i've got winter clothes, spring clothes. i don't know what to do. >> and i'm worried about the giants. >> we were fighting to talk to you about it, rob. still ahead, stuffed bearing for those that need them. way one woman is making a difference. the stories that will make you bay area proud. missiles in norte
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is a lot of tension around the from civil war in syria to nuclear missiles the north korea there's a lot of tension around the world. even if your thousands of miles away. >> one bay woman says it stress z her out, but she has a way to deal with it. the story that will make you bay area proud. >> reporter: if you ever want to see just what it looks like when someone cares for the world outside their world just give 80-year-old a ball of yarn and a lot of time. >> there are 5,000 stitches in one bear. >> reporter: and witness what she does with it. >> i make little slogans like they make war and i make teddy bears. >> reporter: it all started a decade ago when she first heard of the mother bear project. they asked people to nit teddy
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bears and send them to sick and impoverished children overseas. she was immediately hooked. >> the same day i went to my yarn and made my next bear probably in the next 24 hours. i didn't stop. this is my first bear. >> reporter: nor has she stopped since. that one bear was followed by another and another and another and so so many more. >> 670 bears! but what keeps her going night not be what you think. yes, she loves the pictures of children she gets holding her bears but she learned over the years all these bears do more for her than anyone else. sitting here in her home watching news from syria, north korea and other troubled places in the world, she needed a way to process it all.
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>> to me, the nitting is meditation. when there's bad news, i just need something -- even if it's 3:00 in the morning. i get up and i knit. >> reporter: she just finished knitsing these 17 years, thinking all the while about the 17 killed in the parkland school shooting. >> meadow. i like that way. >> reporter: her goal will not end war, disease and poverty in the world, but if it gives one child a moment's happiness and her heart a moment's peace, then it's worth every single stitch. >> i feel this is my little spot where i can help. >> another sweet story. >> absolutely. >> still ahead on nbc bay area news, oakland mayor answering back to the president. how she's taking a new stand in
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response to the question she should be investigated for possible obstruction of justice. students' new plans at the podium in the wake of gun silence. >> this is inexcusable and there's no reason we should let it continue. >> but continue it does. more than 1,000 open lined ponds where wastewater is dumped every day in california and it's all legal. ♪
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it's time for the semi-annual sale with savings on the new sleep number 360 smart bed. it senses your every move and automatically adjusts on both sides to keep you effortlessly comfortable. and snoring.... does your bed do that? right now during our semi-annual sale save up to $700 on sleep number 360 smart beds. ends soon. backing down. her new move in response to the president )s right now, the mayor of oakland not backing down. her new move in response to the president's attack on her actions in regards to immigration. >> welcome back. >> i'm terry mcsweeney. we are on with a special edition of the nbc news because of
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playoff hockey. she fires back to president trump's comments that she should be investigated for on instruction of justice. we spoke to her today about her op ed in the washington post. >> reporter: she heard about their concerns, part of her mayoral program. >> a lot of times i get thanks, but sometimes people want to talk about the pothole on their street. >> reporter: she's talking about what drew ire from president trump. she says she wanted people to be prepared and know their rights. this week, president trump said this to attorney general jeff sessions. >> i would recommend that you look into obstruction of justice for the mayor of oakland,
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california, jeff. >> i'm surprised the president continues to obsess with his vindictiveness about trying to hold me up on charges. >> reporter: she's responding to her position in an op ed in the washington post. in it she says she's not obstructing justice, she's seeking it. >> the mayor says she hasn't heard directly from the administration about this. >> i have a pro bono that's offering me free representation that very prepared. we take the allegations seriously and are prepared to act against them. >> reporter: in the meantime, she's going on as mayor. the first lady is back at the white house tonight after being hospitalized for a kidney
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condition. melania trump was hospitalized at walter reed for five days. according to sources she's resting comfortably. her issue has not been released. it was for a benign condition. the president tweeted she was happy to be home, but in his haste he misstepped her name, melanie. today scrutinies escorted by police back to school in santa fe abandoned when the gunman opened fire. the memory of the terror that unfolded still very fresh. police say 17-year-old dimitrios pagourtzis killed ten people, post of them students and injured another 13 before surrendering. families have expressed shock and confusion about what happened and so have the students. >> he was a weird kid sometimes, but we all loved him he was just
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another one of the guys. we don't want a shooting to be on our legacy. we want to show we are stronger than that, better than that. >> the weapons used in the crime are said to belong to pagourtzis's father. investigators continue to search for a motive for the massacre. this shooting is bringing more attention to a student campaign called donate 60. crafted by a team of high school students across the country. a junior at bellerman college prep in san jose was part of the team that wrote that speech. goal so to get other val valedictorians and other high school speakers to read this statement. >> we want politicians in office to see this and recognize that if they don't push for change in these areas that clearly
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necessitate things, but they won't not necessarily be in office much longer. >> mcreynolds says the speech is not intended to divide but to unite. start of a much larger organization led by organization "z." jackie spearka continues to advocate for stronger restrictions on guns. >> as a survivor of gun violence, i know what it's like to live with this for the rest of your life. there have a time in our history when nra wasn't dictating what we are doing. we have to get back to that. >> she was shot in the jonestown massacre. she worked with law enforcement in san matteo county tofy victim that is needed support.
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for more head to our website at nbc bay area.com. >> billions of gallons of drilling is seeping into groundwater from holding ponds across california. >> as senior investigator stephen sock found it's continuing here in california without regulation. >> reporter: experts telling us percolation ponds you like these threaten parts of california's future water supply. we found hundreds of these ponds from month ray to concern county. in some cases the toxins are already migrating and reaching once clean pond water. >> this is where the pond -- the pipe goes out to the pond. >> reporter: fred starrh showed us where the threat to his family's life, percolation ponds like these sat running 24 hours a day. all the way down? >> all the way down for a mile. >> reporter: it sits near his
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almond trees. they sued the pond's owner. the lawsuit claimed wastewater from the ponds migrated underground and got into the starrh's land. >> we are not able to irrigate our crop which we are desperately short of. >> reporter: larry is fred's son. >> it's like, this isn't right. it's an intentional polluting. they knew that. >> reporter: in california, oil is brought up by deep understood ground by injecting thousands of gallons of water underground. that brings up toxins poisonous to humans. new evidence from the local water quality control board shows not all the toxins are filters every time.
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>> it's increasingly likely that these pits can contaminate ground water. >> reporter: seth is a visiting scholar at university of berkeley's department of the environmental management. he believes they threaten water supplies california may depend on in the future during droughts. >> it sets us up for a future where we are not certain people aren't exposed to toxins in their water. >> california is the only oil producing state that allows this practice. >> reporter: he's not overstating that fact. we checked him out. no other oil producing state, not texas, not north dakota, not montana, allows open percolation ponds like these. those states get rid of their oil wastewater in different ways. >> it's very concerning that the
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contame nation is spreading understood ground to groundwater and we don't know the true extent of that contame nation. >> reporter: these are the mick kitric ponds. dumping 4 million gallons of wastewater here every day. a staff report shows the plume of toxic water beneath these ponds has already spread understood ground more than two miles away. >> the fact that the board hasn't taken action yet is inexcusable. there's no reason we should let it continue. >> to be totally honest, the regulatory agencies were a bit behind the curve. >> reporter: he's incoming officer of central quality water control board. is there a risk? >> i think we wouldn't be having this conversation if there wasn't a risk zblchlgts the water board oversees many of the active percolation ponds throughout the state.
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some scientists say where there was good quality water, it's too late. >> it's tough to remediate once it's been impacted. >> reporter: you see instance of that happening? >> absolutely. i don't think that's the majority of the cases out there. would i like to have seen more action on this earlier? certainly. >> reporter: because of that, he says his board is taking action. >> we are adopting a robust regulatory program now. >> reporter: he points out that in some cases the groundwater below the ponds is of such poor quality to begin with, it doesn't matter who goes down through the ground, but the starrh family says they used to have good water. >> i blame the water board. they had the pow tore shut it down and didn't do anything. >> reporter: era energy sent us a statement that read, quote, there was never a finding linking era's operations to
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damaged tree crops or water sources. the finding from the first trial contradicts that. finding they did pollute the ground water. after a 13-year appeal, the starrh ended upsetling. do you feel vindicated? >> not at all. >> no way. >> reporter: their water is unusable because of that, they feel as if they lost much more than they won. >> there's a pond out there not even a mile off our property that's still polluting as we sit here today. >> reporter: another oil company we spoke to says they reuse much of their wastewater and they inject some of that waste deep into the ground so it does not contaminate the water supply.
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although those methods are much more costly. if you have astory for our investigative unit, all 888-996-tips. or you can visit our website, that's nbc bay area.com/ area.com/weinvestigate. still ahead no sign of slowing down. the images we are seeing from hawaii. >> watching a breezy and cool evening around the bay area. 63 degrees the high. 57 right now. san jose, 68 for a high. shouldn't be happening this time of year. we'll let you know if they last through sunday. died when a plan
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the plane went down and exploded. remarkab remarkably, three people survived that crash. two are conscious. the third still in a coma. it's the worst plane crash in cube in nearly 30 years. >> take a look at this lye webcam on mt. kilauea in hawaii. a new eruption last night spewed ash up to 10,000 feet into the air. made for some bad air quality. earlier today a national guard helicopter had to be called in to rescue four people trapped by lava flow. so far, more than two dozen homes are destroyed. two dozen people have been evacuated. >> it's such an interesting phenomenon. >> it's changing minute by minute. at the beginning of the newscast we saw another large ash plumes come up. >> as you take a look at the
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weather camera, this is what you're looking at. steam and ash lifting away. that's how it hooks at 7:00. the groundwater is starting to mix in with the lava chambers. that creates steam and ash eruptions. that creates air quality issues and sulfur dioxide. the images in the last five minutes, steam and issue. the latest angle. plume, not that high. we'll continue to see the acts and phases with ash and steam away from kilauea very likely continuing until we see, again, very active volcanoic activity start to ramp down. showing no signs of shutting down right now. back to our weather. much calmer as you can see.
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temperatures around napa, 72 for a high. close to average. what's not typical, temperatures in san jose in the mid to upper 60s. should be mid to upper 70s. sea breeze ramped up. 30-mile-per-hour gusts. chilly, jacket weather in san jose. high after 60 after a high of 68 degrees. repeat performance heading into tomorrow along with locally blustery conditions. over 20-mile-per-hour wind speeds. not too often you see winds at 20-mile-per-hour in san jose. that's why it's only 60 degrees outside on a saturday evening in the may. tomorrow, beyond the chilly breezes we'll wake up to low clouds and likely drizzle at times. in the morning, maybe the low clouds hanging around in the afternoon. san jose, upper 60s.
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may see warmer down south as the cool ocean air races over the grade. we'll see temperatures again in the mid 60s. pleasantton and livermore, 50s to mid of 0s around the peninsula. beta breakers chilly. starting the day in the mid 50s. high temperatures close 60. you see the wind speed. warmer temperatures around the bay area tomorrow. santa rosa, chance of low 70s. not seeing any thunderstorms around the bay area, but north of wade county, the showers might clip napa county mid often, to 5:00 tomorrow. watch out for that tomorrow. taking a chance at thunder showers to finish the weekend. the story is all about the clouds. drizzle maybe around lunchtime
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tomorrow around the south bay. mostly cloudy skies, patchy clouds. to end the weekend, not showing any sign of going away. not changing much in san francisco. one trend we could see if the breezes back off a bit forened mo, but the temperatures rising only into the mid 70s, which seems to be the highest temperatures as we go into the week. no 80s on that board. good for air quality. not good for poolside. >> a little bit of an emotional roller coaster for me. >> just can't get the 80s to stick around. >> this has been going on for so many months. i don't know what else to expect. >> terry and i have had it up to here. >> all right, rob, thank. bay area baseball in action. the weather affected today's game. lawyer ra are sports.
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xfinity sports desk. the western conference finals have been a tale of two games. game one belonged to the warriors and game two was all houston. golden state is now feeling the pressure, which according to dre, klay and coach kerr may be a good thing. >> we do our best when they feel threatened. game one, we felt threatened game out with urgency. game two, didn't feel threatened. the urgency wasn't there.
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figure allow one of those a series. time to lock in for the remainder of the series. >> we are not satisfied with our last performance. we want to redeem ourselves in our fan's eyes our coaching staff's eyes. it's pride to be better than last time. >> they played way better. scored more. got their defense caught up more. they were angry because they lost game one and we were comfortable because we won game one and they kicked our [ bleep ]. simple enough. >> we have got you covered for game three on nbc sports bay area. join us on the plus channel. we'll start off with warriors, outsiders and then after the game we are back on nbc sports bay area with warriors playoff central and warriors outsiders. let's go tote baseball. giants and rockies. two outs. rockies trail.
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trevor story. andrew mccutchen tries to limit the damage. throughs it to third and he's called safe. they would review that play and he is called out. to the fifty now. mccutchen at the plate. it's a double down the left-field line. miguel gomez and austin jackson extend the lead. mccutchen having himself a nice afternoon. as we take you to the bottom of the sixth, man on for brandon crawford. crawford just out here doing yard work. adding insurance. the giants go on to beat the rockies, 9-4 the final. that's a two run shot off of sean manea. we go to the eighth now. oakland down one. not looking good for them. bases loaded. chad pinder. that's not coming out.
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grand slam for him. first of his career. the as take the lead. we take you to the bottom of the ninth. blue jays with a run. oakland downs toronto 5-4 for their third straight win. on the racetrack as seen here on nbc bay area, the preakness stakes, the second jewel of horse racing's triple crown, muddy, foggy day, but that didn't bother justify. he'll go for the triple crown in three weeks at the belmont stakes in new york. that will do it for us here in sports. back to you at the studio. >> a lot of fog there. >> yeah. young readers got a treat here today. >> christy yamaguchi made an appearance at the zoo.
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she read one of three books she has written. ja nell wang was there. she read to the kids too. it's all part of christy yamaguchi's reading event to get parents involved and help contribute to literacy. >> you realize what an involvement reading has on their lives. the positive influence. they learn to love books. >> janelle doing the interview. >> yamaguchi's husband, hockey play. >> let's listen to janelle reed. or not. coming up, prince harry, meghan markle. the latest afterproduct of the wedding.
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we have one to two fires a day and when you respond together and you put your lives on the line, you do have to surround yourself with experts. and for us the expert in gas and electric is pg&e. we run about 2,500/2,800 fire calls a year and on almost every one of those calls pg&e is responding to that call as well. and so when we show up to a fire and pg&e shows up with us it makes a tremendous team during a moment of crisis. i rely on them, the firefighters in this department rely on them, and so we have to practice safety everyday. utilizing pg&e's talent and expertise in that area trains our firefighters on the gas or electric aspect of a fire and when we have an emergency situation we are going to be much more skilled and prepared to mitigate that emergency for all concerned. the things we do every single day that puts ourselves in harm's way, and to have a partner that is so skilled at what they do is indispensable, and i couldn't ask for a better partner.
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england... but at a doll-making shop near chicago. big excitement for today's royal wedding. not only in england, but around the world and also at a doll making shop in chicago. they waited to see meghan markle's dress and after seeing it created an exact replica of meghan markle on her big day. there's the big reveal. not a big replica. this is markle at a porcelain doll. they reproduced markle's hair, accessories, gown, tiara, and veil. i think that covers it. the front coat uniform that prince harry wore, the designers weren't ready for that. he had to be delayed. so she went first. that's appropriate. >> thanks god her dress was
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simple. old woman could you imagine if it had the sequins and such? >> they said they were ready for everything. >> it was manageable. >> 25 people still had to be called in. >> you're going want sleeves. >> not 3/4 sleeves. >> 3/4 sleeves are okay. >> 60s in the weekend. a little warmer for monday buck no signs of 80. >> maybe the frock coat instead of the dress? there we have it. >> get rid of the veil? >> back at 11:00. sleep number 360 smart bed.n thw it senses and automatically adjusts on both sides, for effortless comfort. right now during our semi-annual sale, save up to $700 on sleep number 360 smart beds. ends soon.
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♪ it's the royal wedding weekend. welcome to "access." harry and meghan have said their i dos. royal fans from all over the world camped out for days to catch a glimpse of the bloom and the bride. while everyone has seen the wedding, you might not have seen the rehearsal that made sure this global event was a success. already in white with her hair perfectly done, meghan looked calm, a slight smile on her face as she left kensington palace with harry by her side. william, the best man, and kate also seen departing the palace. in a pretty print top and sunglasses this is our first glimpse of kate since giving birth to louis last month. two men on motorcycles cleared the path as harry and meghan's car arrived in windsor. th
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