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tv   Today  NBC  July 26, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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good morning. temporary truce. right now, israel and hamas in the middle of a 12-hour cease-fire that's holding, so far, after endless days of non-stop violence, assessing the damage, move to safety and bury the dead as world leaders try to broker a peace deal. we are live with the latest. clinging to hope. an emotional scene in ukraine. they visit the crash site. this is the first for any family to the war torn region since the crash. summer storms. a huge dust cloud creates panic for drivers. a tornado in florida and starting today, a potentially deadly storm system making its
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way across the country with 100 million people in its path. dylan is tracking it all. bionic boy. after living six years with only one arm, he now has two. we'll talk to the young man and the creative engineering students who made it possible. this is saturday, july 26, 2014. announcer: from nbc news, this is "today" with lester holt and erica hill. live from studio 1a in rockefeller plaza. >> good morning, everyone. welcome to "today" on a saturday morning. i'm lester holt. look who's here. >> who? >> you. >> erica hill has the weekend off. we are the pancake, we are french coast. >> i watch every weekend. >> erica took her goods with
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her. >> nice to have you. coming up this morning, the terrible stories of parents leaving their children in hot cars. the efforts made to make sure no other parents have to go through similar heart break. >> if you are going on vacation soon, would you like to stay in a stranger's home? >> if you put it that way, no. >> the huge rise in popularity of sites like air b & b. it's a home away from home. is it right for you? great advice on that. >> let's start with the temporary cease-fire in the middle east. secretary of state, john kerry is in paris where he continues talking to world leaders to make the cease-fire permanent. we are there this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, lester. days after they got under way, they failed to reach a
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comprehensive cease-fire agreement. what the sides did agree to is a 12-hour truce. dozens of bodies have been recovered pushing the death scale to over 1,000. today, many families went out for the first time in weeks and we went along with them. the attacks continued until the final hours, then a 12-hour cease-fire came into effect. today's short term truce a moment of reprieve for people devastated by weeks of war. a chance for them to return to their home and assess the damage in neighborhos. since the cease-fire began, they have been recovering bodies. just to keep up with the number of bodies they need to bury. in southern gaza, at least 18 people from a family were killed in an israeli shell attack on their home with them huddling for safety inside, neighbors
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say. entire families wiped out. israel's attack on gaza are aimed at southeast palestinian rocket fire, which is israeli military says they will continue to fight israel's overwhelming military force. the temporary cease-fire gave people a chance to go out, some for the first time in weeks, stocking up on food and supplies, not sure if they will have another chance if the war starts again. the destruction is fueling public outrage in the outbank of west jerusalem. eight palestinians killed by soldiers during a overnight demonstration raising fears violence could spread there. lester, this is literally a race against time. we are about five hours away now from the cease-fire expiring. if the u.s. diplomatic efforts don't put in place a truce, they are warning israel is expected to widen the operation.
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that means more days of bloodshed and war for the people of gaza. lester? >> thank you. elliott abrams is a deputy national survivor. he's now a senior fellow for middle eastern studies. elliott, good morning. >> good morning. >> as you heard in the report, the clock is ticking. israel signed on to the 12-hour cease-fire, rejecting the seven day cease-fire saying they need more time to target hamas tunnels. why are the tunnels such a game changer? >> they are because israel has a missile defense system that allows it to defeat the now, several thousand, 2,000 missiles coming out of gaza. the tunnels are new. they are not for smuggling. they are attack tunnels. the israelis found armed weaponry in them. they are cement reinforced and go into israel.
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they can be used to kidnap people and bring them back to gaza. until the tunnels are destroyed, they don't want a full and perm gnat cease-fire. >> hamas would like to see israel and egypt ease restrictions on gaza. how do you see them coming to a truce? >> my guess is there will be an agreement in principal that the passages will be opened up for people and commerce. i think implementing it is going to be really hard. the u.s. tried to do it in 2005 when the israelis pulled out of gaza. we had the system on paper, couldn't imp limit it. i think the fighting will stop. with hamas there trying to move weapons in and move terrorists around, how do you put a system in place that allows for the infections that are necessary? it's going to be tough. >> so many questions still
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there. thank you so much. >> you're welcome. now, the emotional scene where the malaysia airlines was shot down in ukraine. the parents of a passenger showed up, taking many people by surprise. keir simmons was there. good morning. >> good morning. ten days after flight mh17 went down and they are saying they are working to try to put together a police and military force to come here and secure this site. yet, even while they are talking about doing that, a single family found their way here to witness this horror themselves because their daughter was on board. >> bringing her rainbow flowers. >> reporter: they traveled from australia through a war zone to be here, to look for their 25-year-old daughter. >> we want to say, again and again and again, my daughter is
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not dead. she knows mom and dad. we promise we will come here. >> reporter: in this field, it burst into flames. >> we want to put it on a wing. >> the wing came down miles away. they laid the flowers on the wing. then a prayer. >> lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. >> reporter: parents clinging to a village their daughter may still be alive. >> we'll find more survivors. >> he was on her way to visit them. they spoke to her minutes before the plane took off. tell us about her. what kind of person? >> she wanted to be vibrant, beautiful, international scientist. >> reporter: as her parents spoke, in the netherlands, bodies continue to arrive.
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they were taken from the plane. each of them honored. while more terrible stories emerge of the dead disrespected, they say they believe possessions have been taken. incredibly, they say they feel no anger. it took courage to come here. >> thank you. >> reporter: as they left to visit more of this terrible crash site, they hugged the journalists who covered the events here and vowed to keep searching for their daughter. they say, as they make their way here through multiple check points run by the pro-russian militia, they were embraced and they embraced those soldiers standing on those check points, part of the group accused of shooting this plane down. lester, every day that goes by, you wonder, the question increases, how can western government not be getting here
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to get this stuff, to get people's belongings to even get the bodies of their own people? lester? >> that was a remarkable and touching scene. keir simmons, thank you. a group of vacationers finally at their destination after a huge delay because of this experience on their flight that was captured on video. the plane turneded around mid flight after a passenger made a bomb threat. when it landed, the police stormed the plane. we are tracking it all from washington. tom, good morning. >> tamron, good morning. at one point, air traffic control, law enforcement and defense authorities from the u.s. and canada were tracking the plane and coordinating their response. >> heads down, hands up! >> it was heart pounding for the
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passengers and crew members on board a canadian plane headed toward panama. they were back on the ground in toronto, a s.w.a.t. team on. for passengers, including children headed to a sunny vacation, terrifying. >> they stormed in. it was scary. they came in front and back of the plane. >> it left toronto at 7:00 a.m. once over u.s. air space, a 25-year-old canadian man began use zing foul language, complaining of canadian taxes and threatening to blow up the plane. the pilot turned around, heading back north as they communicated. the flight path from flight aware shows the 737 making a u-turn as it was over west virginia, then cutting north along the ohio/pennsylvania border where two u.s. f-16 fighter jets intercepted and escorted the plane back to
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canada. they warned other carriers of delays. >> an emergency going on with a bomb threat. fighter jets are overhead. there's confusion. >> once on the ground, the s.w.a.t. team commander decided to move fast. >> had to make a decision, do we move easy, swiftly or hard? in this case, he decided to move swiftly for the safety of all on board. >> the canadian citizen is under arrest. u.s. sources were surprised to see the robust s.w.a.t. team response in toronto. they stress canadian police had little to go on and had to take the threat seriously. >> thank you. is travel delay did not stop there. the flight was diverted to jamaica for an hour for a medical emergency before finally making it to canada. >> good grief. now the severe weather system set to hit a huge section
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of the country from the midwest to the northeast. residents from 21 states are in the path of the storm. dylan is tracking it for us. good morning. >> good morning. more flight delays over the weekend as severe weather is expected to break out. you can see the surface map here. the united states is looking more active. we have a cold front that is going to pull down the cool, dry air. when that bumps up against the warm, moist air from the southwest, that's when we see the storms fire up along the frontal boundary. that's something we'll keep an eye out through the weekend, the midwest and northeast by the time we get into tomorrow. today, from kansas city up to iowa through chicago and over to western virginia, that's where we are going to see the strong storms today. the strongest storms in illinois and indiana, isolated tornadoes are possible, large hail and damaging wind gusts. sunday, we are going to see this entire area expand from
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tennessee to new england with eastern kentucky into west virginia being the area where we see the strongest storms on sunday. we see a round of strong storms, a break midday and more storms fire up monday evening. it is going to be an active weekend. >> thank you. we'll check with you for a full forecast in a few minutes. now, the growing crisis at the borders. this morning, a look at what it takes for law enforcement to police the area. mark potter has a view from the front lines. mark, good morning. >> good morning, tamron. after spending weeks here, we can see the throw remains steady, the volume is down considerably. it's not just migrants being smuggled here. that's what worries the texas authorities as we found out in a ride along. >> the scouts in the trees. you can't see them but they are there. >> reporter: the search for the smuggling routes along the rio grande by air. the texas department of public
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safety. no let up in drug and gang related trafficking from mexico to the u.s. >> the transnational gangs are the biggest threat, in my opinion, to the united states. >> reporter: the next puts us on the river in a heavily armed gun boat. they use it to deter smugglers. doesn't take long of what appears to be the end of a smuggling run from mexico to a landing site on the u.s. side and back again. >> we observed a raft making its way back to the mexico side of the bank. as we got closer, y'all seen them paddling faster and climbing off the raft. they probably already delivered their load of passengers and/or contraband. >> reporter: as for the wave of unaccompanied children illegally entering south texas, the numbers have gone down in recent weeks from a daily average of 283 a month ago to 120 now.
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still, a big number. the equivalent of 44,000 a year. this area along the river is known as the devil's corner. agents say right now, it's the busiest spot in the country for smuggling people into the united states. authorities say traffickers use the migrants to divert the attention of agents away from their drug loads. it's one more reason texas officials are beefing up their presence, hoping to seal the border and ease the pain. officers working day and night along the rio grande. one of the state officials we met wanted to make the point most of the migrants and drugs and gang members smuggled don't stay in this area, they go to other parts of the country making it not just a texas problem, but america's problem. tamron? >> thank you so much. jenna is back from va
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indication. nice to have you back. >> nice to be back. especially when the alarm went off. good morning, everyone. a psychiatric patient involved in a shootout remains hospitalized. he has a history of gun arrests and mental health issues. he shot his caseworker in the face, killing her and fired several shots at a psychiatrist. that's when the doctor fired back. he had dozens of bullets on him and planned to use them. he's expected to be charged with murders. we have an update to pass along on the story of a homeowner in southern california who gunned down an intruder after the intruder claimed she was pregnant. it turns out she was not pregnant. the los angeles coroners confirmed the information. the 80-year-old homeowner says he shot the woman twice in the back as she ran away with an accomplice. they are determining whether or
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not he'll face criminal charges. >> look at this wild, wild dust storm. it swept over the phoenix area on friday. officials warned residents to avoid driving and stay indoors. power lines touched and sparks cutting off power to 10,000 customers. finally, ask a 6-year-old what he or she wants for a birthday present and i bet it will be a toy. danny said all he wanted for his birthday was a birthday card, a few of them and boy did he get them. tens of thousands of them from all over the world. so many, he was climbing over piles at the local post office. he was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor. his mom asked for a card or two on facebook and the rest is history. they had to get a u haul to get the cards home. a great story. so great when people come
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together like that. that is the news. over to lester now. an unbelievable story. two years ago, this planet was on the brink of disaster, but none of us knew it. a solar storm almost hit earth. if it had hit, it would knock out power grids and satellites. if it occurred a week earlier, earth would have been in the line of fire. should we be worried about the future? we have an astrophysicist. doctor, good morning. great to have you on. >> good morning. >> explain to me, i have heard that if this had hit virtually everything that plugs into a wall would have been fried. is that overstating it? >> um, you know, we can't say it with certainty. i don't think it's overstating from the knowledge that we have about what happened in 1989 from
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a storm like this which was not as intense, which i would say in terms of the effect on earth, it was a factor of lower. so, what this storm could have done is something we can study scientifically and that's what the scientific community is doing right now. >> my understanding, this was picked up because of a solar observatory spacecraft that picked up these readings. would we get warning if another occurs? there's a 12% chance of it happening in the next ten years? >> we have dynamics looking at the sonar slides. yes, we expect, right now, that we would be warned about such impending events. remember, these are satellites that are large. they get old. they fadeaway. it has been absolutely vital in
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our understanding of these storms and how they propagate. we are learning new things. that's the beauty. >> what could we do about it, if there was a warning of another solar storm, is there anything that would shield the power grids or electronics to prevent them from being disabled? >> absolutely. electric circuitry, turn it off. they are the ones who give out warnings, alerts, et cetera, recognizing there is a storm coming our way. power grids, they can take it instead. recognizing something is coming, understanding the severity is very important and we need to give that information to people. >> i think we were all surprised to hear the news and what we just missed two years ago. thank you so much for talking to us. appreciate it. >> thank you. dylan is back now with a
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check of the rest of the forecast. dylan? >> thanks, lester. good morning, everyone. we are going to keep an eye out for the rest of the storms. the run of the mill thproduce heavier down pours. hail and lightning across iowa and ohio. but it's in orange here in central illinois and indiana where we could see our strongest storms. including some isolated tornadoes. the northeast looks nice and quiet. hot down south. we could see more of that blowing dust in the southwest. that's a look at the country, now here's a peek out your window. >> good morning, everybody. i'm meteorologist chuck bell. your weekend is off to a cloudy start. hit and miss sprinklehance this morning. another band of light rain coming onto i-81 right now. really nothing more than a passing sprinkle now. near 70. once we get the clouds out this morning, we'll break out in sunshine.
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that's your latest forecast. lester? >> dylan, thanks. still to come, look before you lock. the national campaign to help parents remember not to leave their children alone in hot cars. first, this is "today" on nbc.
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still to come on "today," feeling the bipartisan burn. coming together in a whole new way. plus, home away from home on vacation. is renting a stranger's
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big day today across the area. it's the first day of the silver line. good morning to you. it is 7:26 on this saturday, july 26th. i'm kristin wright. here's a look at today's top stories. metro's silver line opens today. the grand opening ceremony is this morning at the new wiehle-reston station. the inaugural ride will be at noon. adam tuss will be live from the line at 9:00. right now police are looking to figure out who killed a man just after midnight in the 200 block of savannah street in southeast. police say the victim was shot in the back. they have not released his name. right now police and other
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public safety employees are at an active shooter drill in prince george's county. the drill will help protect you in that kind of emergency. it's happening where rehan million of you go each year. we'll get a check of your we'll get a check of your forecast
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it makes me happy to go on the computer. we'll get a check of your foreci like feeling smart. internet essentials from comcast has brought low-cost internet access to over one million low-income people at home. internet essentials helped me progress in my schoolwork. it helped my grades move higher. together with time warner cable, we can bring the internet to millions more. it helped me a lot. comcast and time warner cable. together is better for more people.
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good morning. i'm storm team 4 meteorologist chuck bell. cloudy skies and a couple of light rain showers outside. this one ripple in the atmosphere will be crossing over the next hour to hour and a half. right now 73 in downtown washington. we're off to a mild but cloudy start. temperatures will be quickly rising up into the low 80s by 10:00, 11:00 this morning. we'll spend a lot of the time this afternoon in the upper 80s, 90 degrees. we might have a bubbled up thunderstorm this afternoon. but it will be generally dry for
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your saturday evening plans. tomorrow another hot, humid day with severe weather likely in the evening. > we are back on this saturday morning, july 26, 2014. a beautiful morning right now. thanks to the great crowd. they are spending time with us. coming up in this half hour, have you heard about the site air b & b? it's a place for vacationers or out of towners to stay without using a hotel. if you are considering it, what you need to know to make sure it is the best option for you. there are horror stories, but many successes. how do you navigate through that? >> we gave you a challenge. spend 30 days and really work toward a better you. 150,000 people joined up. now, we are checking back with all of them.
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no, just a few of them to see how the last few months have been and if they are working toward getting fit. >> i got scared for a second because usually that's my responsibility. all of them? i have to go. >> looking at how cold it was when it started. >> i know. >> inspiration. >> later, we'll tell you about a california couple on vacation in mexico who wound up with a $50,000 medical bill when the husband needed immediate surgery. coming up, why it's important to consider travel insurance before your next vacay. another tragic case of an infant who died being left in a car. friday, her faster dad was booked on child endangerment after leaving her in the car for two hours. it's an alarming trend with a new campaign to stop it. here is kerry sanders. >> reporter: it's beginning to
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look like an epidemic, a child trapped in a hot car. >> 911 emergency. >> reporter: a disaster unfolding. >> a baby in a locked car with windows closed. >> a real baby? >> yes. crying. >> reporter: this 911 call made in april in jupiter, florida. the call only now being revealed by police as statistics reveal 18 children died of heatstroke. >> no parents are around? >> no parents. the cars not on, the windows barely cracked. it's almost 100 degrees outside. >> reporter: the child is a little boy in a car seat like this one, sweating and crying. >> ma'am, do you have a tire iron or something to break out the window in the vehicle? >> i can look. >> reporter: as the good samaritan prepares to break the window, a police officer arrives. you can hear the officer break the window. >> okay, they just broke the
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window. >> reporter: the child's mother, 29-year-old told officers, according to the police report, i was texting and my son was sleeping. i must have forgot. it was a simple mistake. the jupiter police chief was among the first on the scene. >> when i removed the child, it was sweating profusely, very wet. >> reporter: her lawyer says she's terribly embarrassed and doesn't want more publicity. a judge ordered her to take parents classes. >> reporter: he didn't have a good samaritan to intervene. he left his 17-month-old daughter in a parked car. she died. >> there's a piece of me that died the day peyton did. i have to deal with that. >> reporter: now, he's working to spread the message to other parents. >> it can, does and continues to happen to good parents.
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there is no demographic, rich, poor, it doesn't matter. >> reporter: what does matter, he says, that it doesn't happen again, to anyone. for "today," kerry sanders, nbc news, jupiter, florida. >> these stories are so hard to take. >> they are. at least there's advice out there and lessons learned. >> let's check in with dill lynn with a check of the weather. >> good morning, everyone. we are looking at the heatt's ts texas into oklahoma and into kansas too where we have heat advisories, even excessive heat warnings in tulsa. we are going to see those temperatures really warm up today. actually dallas hasn't hit 100 degrees all that many times this summer, and today you will. topping out at 100 degrees on the dot. and it will feel like 106. tulsa it will feel like 109 degrees. all of that warm, humid air setting up the stage of the possibility of a severe weather
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outbreak today. further east into illinois and indiana where we could see some scattered tornadoes. wind gusts and large hail. we will see other thunderstorms still from iowa over into ohio through especially this afternoon and into this evening. that's a look at the weather across the country. now here's a peek out your window. >> good morning once again. i'm storm team 4 meteorologist chuck bell. cloudy skies, light rain in the metro this morning. a few light showers on i-81. those are headed eastbound. i can't rule out another quick five-minute-long shower here during your saturday morning. then sunshine will break out this afternoon. that will allow for a storm today. about a 30% chance of a shower or thunderstorm coming on later this afternoon into this evenin i found some crowns on the plaza. miss north texas and miss ft. worth, texas. who's ♪
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still to come, the latest on the controversy over ray rice's two game suspension. what one espn person said about two game suspension. when folks think aboutaid about what they get from alaska, they think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology. shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america.
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it's out of a science fiction movie. he lived his life with one arm and now has two. itis thanks to science and creative students who wanted to help him have a better life. good morning. welcome to "today." tamron is in for erica this morning. are you having fun so far? >> i am. we have a great crowd. i could wake up every morning for this. >> saturday, sunday. >> you sleep in on saturday. don't start that. >> i watch every saturday and sunday on tivo. coming up, a vacation nightmare that could serve as a warning to you. how one couple who is on vacation in mexico almost got hit with a $50,000 medical bill, until their insurance company stepped in. scary. later, we are going to check in with "today" fans who completed the 30 days to a with people allenge.p
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outraged over the new comments, many of them claiming espn was suggesting that women might provoke these type of attacks. smith is trying to explain himself. started as a conversation about football star ray rice receiving only a two-game suspension for assaulting his fiance, now wife. tmz sports posting this video of a runningback dragging her out of the elevator after the fight. >> i love him. >> reporter: he was indicted on a charge of aggravated assault. friday, the host, stephen smith said this. >> we have to make sure we learn as much as we can about elements of provocation. not that there's real provocation, but the elements of provocation. you have to address it. we have to do what we can to try to prevent the situation from happening in any way. >> reporter: reaction to smith's happening in any way. >> reporter: reaction to smith's comment was sharp and almost
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you can make noise. >> miming hi this morning. anyway, still to come in this half hour, a man recovering from serious injuries zip lining in mexico. his family is dealing with an insurance nightmare. it can happen to anyone. what to do to make sure you are protected on your next vacation. >> the new movie, "and so it goes" is in the theaters. it's the "when harry met sally" for baby boomers. it's been months, hopefully you are going strong with the changes you made in the 30 days to a better you challenge. i'm going to check in with some of our participants on the strides they made since they decided to change their life. >> i cannot wait to see that. >> you were one of them. >> no. >> remember the nights i saw you at the gym pounding it. >> you have threatening mic behaviors. i am going to give up sugar.
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oh, oh. >> i'll have what she's having. >> yes, that was the big scene. now the film director is back with a new movie some are calling "when harry met sally" aarp. here is jill. >> reporter: if you walk past a movie theater you notice a pattern, another month, another big budget blockbuster with one target audience in mind. for decades hollywood depends on young males to buy movie tickets. they put all their eggs in one basket. low and behold, it decided to play video games. >> reporter: it's evident in the box office numbers. >> it's reported the box office for summer 2014 is down 20% from 2013. that is one of the biggest drops hollywood has seen. >> reporter: now, hollywood has hollywood has seen. >> reporter: now, hollywood has someone else in
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the victim was taken to the hospital but he did not make it. police have not said what the motive could be more this shooting. good morning. i'm kristin wright. >> and i'm molette green. >> we're going check in with storm team 4 meteorologist chuck bell. >> plenty of clouds outside first thing this morning. that's for sure. even a bit of light rain and passing sprinkles to be coping with. here's the view outside over reston town center. louden and montgomery counties this morning. not a whole lot of rain inside the capital beltway, but lingering showers out northern parts of frederick county move for towards the north side. a few sprinkles here. that's really all we're dealing with is a light rain and sprinkle chance first thing this morning. ou

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