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tv   NBC Bay Area News at 11  NBC  April 14, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am PDT

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i would love to hear her laugh. >> i tell people i won the kid lottery. >> and she was such a part of our lives that, you know, i would talk to her at least every day. >> she was a genuine person. she was super fun. like, that's -- she lived to be with people and to just engage. and it was -- it was amazing. >> that's all for this edition of "dateline." we'll see you again friday at nine, eight central, and ofcourse, i'll see you each weeknight for nbc nightly news. i'm lester holt. for all of us at nbc news, goodnight. right now, at 11:00, two bay area jails locked down. the violence that sparked the move. what law enforcement wants the state to do about it. another chaotic night in
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oakland. illegal sideshows popping up across the city. and later, the growing tensions in the middle east being felt here in the bay area. the message from local faith leaders wanting to keep the peace here at home. good evening. locked up and locked down. this weekend, security was tighter than normal at two san francisco jails. no visitors. >> it comes after increase of attacks on jail staff. the union is demanding help from the national guard. here's alica gord. >> reporter: all visits, programs and services were canceled this weekend. the san francisco sheriff's office put both faciliies on lockdown, saying there has been an increase of attacks on deputies. >> these are aggressive, xative
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attacks. >> reporter: ken lawnbaugh shouldn't share specifics because of the ongoing investigation. the sheriff's office says since march 29th, inmates have injured seven staff members. injuries have attacked deputy sheriffs nine time. and inmates are attacking other inmates, too. they are investigating the assaults against deputies and the jail staff. they say it's imperative for them to understand the loot causes of the attacks. >> on april 12th, it was the worst day in my history of the department. it felt like the bottom just fell out of the department. all the attacks on deputies and the prisoner versus prisoner fights. >> reporter: he believes this spike of violence is related to a staffing shortage in the department. he sent a letter to the sheriff and city leaders, demanding they call in the california national
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guard, to fit in the staffing gaps. >> we can put them in positions at city hall. put them in positions in the court. put them in positions in the jail. >> reporter: these recent attacks and staffing issues are impacting deputy morale. the department says normal jail operations should resume next week but didn't specify exactly when. alyssa goard, nbc bay area news. the search is on for a shooter that killed two women on riverside drive. when officers got there, they found two women in the street who had been shot. one woman died at the scene. the paramedics rushed the second woman to the hospital where she later died. gun shots, fireworks and
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that is not all. productive sideshows taking over oakland streets overnight. crews spent hours this morning cleaning up cars that caught fire at one of the intersections. nbc bay area's chrissy smith spoke to one local leader, looking to put an end of these activities. >> reporter: overnight in oakland, illegal sideshows took over intersections of several locations in the city. it began before 2:00 a.m. cars spinning doughnuts and spectators watching. >> we have been complaining. the residents have been complaining that we need more assistance. >> reporter: some of the sideshow activity reached his district where crews were cleaning up today. >> they run into each other. police were all around. >> reporter: video shows cars on fire with people around it.
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at up with point, this happened. >> that was 200, 300 young people watching the show. cars spinning around. cars all over the place. i had never seen so many police come together. >> reporter: oakland police got reports of illegal sideshows. when officers arrived, cars and spectators dispersed. opd posted on social media, saying violent, disruptive and illegal behavior won't be tolerated. >> what impressed me was they not only came, they cited the middle of the sideshows. >> reporter: we asked about citations and arrests but haven't heard back yet. he says preventing them is a
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safety issue. at the same time, there's challenges in the city. >> oakland sees more officers, like we used to. i remember the day they had 780 officers. >> reporter: he sees obstacles this way. >> we can do a lot better but it will take all of us united. president biden is thanking the u.s. forces that helped intercept the drones and missiles that were launched from israel. iran launched more than 300 missiles and drones. nearly all of the weapons were shot down. no one was killed. one girl was badly injured by shrapnel. the president called the squadrons,commending them for their participation. >> you are incredible. thanks to extraordinary skill,
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the united states helped israel take down all those rockets. >> he urges israel not to retaliate. he says the u.s. will not be in a counterer offensive against iran. leaders are hoping this will not widen the conflict further. thom jensen joins us in the newsroom with more. >> reporter: expressions of relief from faith leaders and a global security expert we talked to today. they were happy that the drone attacks were thwarted. this won't last more than a few days and the trouble overseas may escalate and increase tensions here at home. a quiet night in israel tonight, after the country's iron dome missile defense system did its job, countering iran's drones and misses. >> there's quiet today. what most beam expressed was a dual feeling of hope or peace.
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but bracing for a storm. >> reporter: this rabbi and the oakland congregation gathered saturday, when the assault was under way. >> first concern is for our brothers and sisters in israel. secondly, anti-semitism here. we know it happens. >> reporter: the congregation received security upgrades to help protect the temple from hate crimes. it's $40 million the governor awarded to advance security at nonprofits across the state. several bay area groups, including the fremont islamic center, received grants, totalling millions of dollars. >> these grants are extremely small when you compare them to the cost of a weapon system. they can do a lot in strengthening morale and intelligence capabilities.
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>> reporter: the professor at san jose state university and expert in international security and nuclear weapons. she, too, is concerned things could escalate. but is hopeful they won't, after iron stopped its assault. >> the way which iran conducted the retaliation, was intended to bring tempers down a bit. it has succeeded in that objective. >> reporter: will the peace overseas and here in our communities last? >> we know that sympathy today, when israel attempts to fight back and defend itself, turns to hatred tomorrow. not just in israel, but jews here in the bay area. >> reporter: israeli officials said israel will respond to the attack. no final decisions have been made on the size or the timing of that response.
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iran doubled down on its right to self-defense. >> we'll continue to follow the evolving situation overseas and reaction here at home. our coverage continues online and tomorrow morning on "today in the bay" and "today." london breed is overseeing to boost tourism. the week-long trip to china started yesterday. she is joined by community leaders. the trip includes bringing more economic opportunities to the city and boosting tourism with china and, hopefully, securing an agreement to bring pandas to the san francisco zoo. she is looking to expand airline routes to bring more visitors to the city. tomorrow is tax day. if you haven't gotten around to filing a return, there's still some time. you have until 11:59 tomorrow night. you can file a six-month
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extension. if you don't know how much you owe, send in an approximate amount. the race for the california 16th congressional district is heating up again. >> recount set to begin tomorrow. sam liccardo won a portion. and the runoff is coming up in november. if field could be narrowed to two candidates. >> they both won 30,279 votes last month. a san jose man says there will be a difference of one vote after the recount. if the cost is the same, we have to pay the cost of the recount. jury selection get lgs under way tomorrow in the criminal
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case against donald trump. this is the first time a former u.s. president has ever undergone a criminal trial. the heart of the case, hush money payments to stormy daniels before the 2016 election. mr. trump says he has done nothing wrong. and his supporters say, even if he is found guilty, they will continue to support him. 6,000 new yorkers have been summoned as potential jurors. >> this is a case that's going to burn through a lot of potential jurors during jury selection. that's probably because a lot of jurors are going to have strong views one way or another about the defendant. >> yours will be asked 60 questions. whether they have attended a trump rally or followed him on social media. scott peterson is due back in court this week. the first of three hearings to determine whether peterson will be granted another trial.
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peterson will atepid virtually. he was convicted of murdering his pregnant wife, laci, and dumping her body years ago. they suspected this was tied to a robbery. in february, an innocence project ordered further testing in the case. it said the modesto police department excluded evidence. peterson has maintained his innocence. we're back in 60 seconds. an iconic paris cathedral, five years after it was nearly destroyed by a fire. update on the construction and the american carpenter, helping to remodel history. how much yu need to make it in the bay and how that compares to other states. the rain is moving out. a cool night with more sunshine for tomorrow. we'll gradually warm up from there.
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tomorrow marks five years since flames poured through one of france's iconic landmarks, notre dame. now, the restoration of the famed cathedral is nearing completion, as the world's eyes turn to paris for the olympic games. as keir simmons reports, it is an american carpenter doing his part to restore a piece of history. >> reporter: five years, since the fire ravaged notre dame cathedral. hank silver, a carpenter from new england, helped rebuild the roof made by medieval craftsman. >> it still doesn't feel real. it's a bit of a dream, really. >> reporter: hank belongs to carpenters without borders, who restore historical structures the world over.
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and last year, he watched overwhelmed, as the trusses he crafted were lifted into position. >> to see a truss of that scale, flying through space, that's an out-of-time kind of experience. >> reporter: a journey that took him to the top of the cathedral, following in the footsteps of carpenter, 800 years old. for five years, only a select group was allowed in notre dame, as nbc news was last december. this is the fire that went crashing down. we all watched it, all around the world. >> we first met hank last summer at a workshop in northern france. painstakingly crafting the roof beams. >> in the u.s., we have a build tradition that's much newer. that's derived from the european methods.
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getting to work on this building, the birth of this technique, is meaningful. >> reporter: using replicas of medieval tools, like these axes, hank and his team re-created each truss. >> we had to re-create, all of the inconsistencies, all of the deformations that have accrued over the centuries. >> reporter: hank, helping transform notre dame has changed his life. for the rest of your life, you can come here. >> yeah. >> and look at this. and now you had a part of it. >> i'll be dining out on this for a while. >> reporter: at five years on, clear signs the medieval landmark is now nearing the finish line. keir simmons, nbc news, paris. >> a lot of anticipation for the 2024 olympics. that's building.
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we're over 100 days away from the opening ceremony. nbc bay area is your home for all things olympics. jessica will be in paris. one of the finalists, will be brody malone. he will be at 30 rock talking to savanna and hoda. how they are preparing to hopefully secure their spot in paris. watch the big day here on nbc bay area, right after "today in the bay." we know many people are priced out of buying a home in northern california. new numbers put everything into sharp perspective. according to a new analysis, there's 14 states, where residents who earn less than $75 a year can afford a median-priced home. it's no shock that california is close to being on that list. that list is topped by mississippi. those in mississippi would have
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to earn an income of $63,000 to afford a meeting at home. ohio is next. $64,000 a year. you can own a median home. in contrast to all of that, you need to make $197,000 a year to afford a median priced home, worth $735,000 in northern california. that's the highest of all 50 states. another wet weekend on saturday. today was a little drier. what's the week hold? >> we're in it again. the pattern we've seen, where it rains and then get nice weather throughout the week. i think the extended forecast will continue this drying trend into next weekend. let's go outside. the current temperatures, in the 50s from san jose to walnut creek and san francisco. and the wind speeds are calming down. also calming down, satellite and radar, capturing the rain for
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us. some of the totals, no shocker. we did well along the coastline. santa cruz mountains, around mill valley. we go into solano county. a little less of a quarter of an inch in concord, towards vallejo and fairfield. we're going to wind down into our temperatures tonight, as we go on and take a look at our temperatures as we start our monday. it will be jacket weather. evaporation will cool things down into the 40s. noon, lunchtime, there will be peeks of that sunshine. and temperatures going into the 50s and 60s. by the afternoon, more of the widespread clearing. some temperatures reaching low 60s for the immediate bay. the trivalley and down through san jose. we're going to continue to warm up from there. into the middle parts of the
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week. gradually, these models are take on more of the cloud cover into wednesday. still, warm and dry. 70s on the map. by thursday, that's the warmest day of the week. and our extended outlook, as i said a moment ago, continues to not have rain in the next seven to ten days. that will be pleasant to make the weekend plans ahead of time. i want to show you what happens to the temperatures in brentwood. we start in the upper 60s, 70s, and then 80s. wednesday and thursday and thursday being the warmest day of the week. it will be hard to sit at the desk. the weekend should stay dry, with the temperatures in the 70s for inland valley. san francisco should get some of the warm weather. low 60s for the monday start. gradually warming up to upper 60s and nearing the 70-degree
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mark by tuesday. that fog is returning friday and saturday. it's a summer-like pattern that we see fog rolling in later in the day. the inland valley, 60s, 70s, and 80s. it's dry. finally. >> a dry weekend. people won't know what to do with themselves. >> if it's just to drive. playoff time, folks. warriors heading to sacramento to take on the kings. how you can cheer on the dubs without leaving the bay area.
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leaders, advocates and
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artists gathered for black women empowerment day. our own belinda jones was the moderator of this whole thing. >> there's a health crisis happening in our community. part of why i'm so glad that we're here today for this, this opportunity to celebrate and to educate ourselves. >> 2018 showed that while black women make up 12% of the population, they made up 58% of new hiv cases. the panelists discussed solutions how to help and empower those women. out of the ncaa and on to the draft. transcendent superstar, caitlin clark, is making an aparns on the "today" show tomorrow morning. clark is likely to join the
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indiana fever as the number one draft pick. during the interview, she talked about the women that inspired her first. >> that's who i wanted to be growing up. understanding how they have an impact on a young girl's life. if you can scream her name or have the jersey on, that never gets old. >> you can watch the full interview tomorrow morning on "today" on nbc bay area after "today in the bay." golden state warriors hitting the road this week. they will be home to a big celebration. hosting a road game watch party tuesday. the event is free. you are encouraged to rsvp to make sure you get in. let the games begin. the warriors will take on the kings in the play-in tournament. i'll tell you when and where the
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black maternal health week is here. the steps being taken to support expectant mothers. the deadline to file taxes is approaching. tips for welcome back. i'm anthony flores. the warriors will face the kings in the postseason for a second year in a row. this time, it's the one-game, winner-take-all showdown. the warriors closing out the nba season against the utah jazz. no steph curry. no draymond green. no problem. clay thompson, six three pointers and 25 points, leading the warriors to a 123-116 victory. the warriors end up with the tenth spot in the western
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conference. they will face the kings in sacramento on tuesday. head coach steve kerr feels confident his team can make a run in the postseason. >> we're happy to have a shot. it could have played out a number of different ways today. it played out as it did. we'll get ready for sacramento. to baseball, blake snell returning to tampa. he won his first cy young with the rays in 2016. the rays at the bottom of the first. rosario goes yard. that's a two-run home run. the rays beat the giants, 9-4. at the coliseum, the a's are starting to play pretty good baseball. they rally from five runs down to beat the nationals, 7-6. they win three-straight for the first time since 2021. oakland is 6-3, in the last nine games, following a 1-6 start to the season.
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>> his stardom confirmed. there's no doubt about it, scottly scheffler is dominating on the rinks. the world number one ranked player had a 4 under 68. he wins the masters by four shots at 11 under par. max homa and collin morikawa tied at third. the oldest running tournament is going to tee off in santa cruz. the 77th western intercollegiate. this tournament dates back to 1947. the three-day tournament tees off monday morning. today was all about practice. the field includes cal. stanford and the host, san jose state. >> not only some of the great teams in the country. but some of the individual players in the world, competing this week. it's an exceptional field.
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to the pitch. bay f.c. taking on seattle. tied at 1-1 in the second half. the former bronco with the laser from 25 yards out. seattle deflects it into their own goal. bay f.c. wins it, 3-2. it's the first home win in franchise history. that's a look at sports. back to you. >> thank you. back in 60 seconds. did an accused criminal get off too easy? i kept looking. why didn't it matter to me? >> prosecutors offered a plea deal, despite a confession and apology. we investigate.
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a woman on the peninsula says her trust in the legal system is shattered. her alleged rapist taking a plea deal and serving no jail time. >> hilda gutierrez spoke with the victim and looked at how often defendants take plea deals. >> reporter: this was originally a rape case, that included a videotaped confession and apology note by the defendant. but the victor wonders why prosecutors offered him a deal, with no sex crime on his record and said he was not consulted. she grew up believing in the justice department. she comes from a law enforcement family. her father and uncle work for the police department. >> i grew up knowing, if you did
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wrong, you would get in trouble and the police would help you. >> reporter: she says the trust was shattered when she was raped. >> i knew the process would work. or at least i thought. >> reporter: it was the summer of 2021. she was at a local piano bar in san carlos. she talked to an acquaintance she met the year before. at some point, she had enough to drink and walked outside with a friend. he followed them. >> comes up to the bench we're waving on and starts kissing on me. my buddy is like, hey, hey. when he says that, the guy runs off. >> her friend helped her get home and snapped this photo of her in bed before leaving her apartment. >> had enough. i pass out from drinking. >> reporter: when she woke up, she said the acquaintance was standing by her bed. >> i said, what are you doing? get out of here. and i remember getting up to
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chase him out. and i really, truly believed i had saw him. i saw all of the missed calls. >> he tried to reach her in the middle of the night before entering her apartment. she reported incident to the san mateo sheriff's office. >> you don't have a right to be in my house. this is not okay. >> she says it was the sheriff that was questioning her and let her in on what happened that night. according to the sheriff's report, he wrote an apology note that said, i shouldn't have opened your door and gone into bed with you. in the narrative, he agreed that having sex with someone that is too intoxicated to consent is rape. he was charged of rape and sexual penetration with a foreign object. she was said that defending her
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ready to enter a last-minute plea deal. for false imprisonment, a charge she had never heard of before and wasn't even a sex crime. >> i begged her. can you please not do this. i was ready. i said, i would wrather be on the stand than to let him get away. >> we were ready to go to trial. we decided to offer some charges that were felonious. >> reporter: she was not the prosecutor in the case. she was in the d.a.'s office. we asked why they would accept a plea deal when the sheriffs had a taped confession? >> they decided there were issues because of the tone of the conversation. >> reporter: she says the
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prosecutor never mentioned the tape or the tone. in hindsight, they wish they had consulted with her and give her time to process. i reached out to the attorney and never heard back. it turns out, the plea is not an isolated one. nbc bay area looked at sheriff's office. we obtained information on 60 cases and cross reference with the original outcome. 22% of cases were dismissed. 11% ongoing. and about half, only 57% were resolved. of the 31 cases where the d.a. charged with a sex crime, 19 resulted in a sex crime conviction. four for convicted by jury. but 26% of the time, the
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defendant was given a nonsex-related plea deal. >> sometimes the witness stories change. if it's bigger than first to be, we're going to take that. >> but the law enforcement source was pulled up. expected a harsher sentence, with a no-fail case. everything was put together with a legal confession, in a box and ribbon for them to prosecute accordingly. the sheriff's office has not released a confession to the investigative unit. as a charging entity, the district attorney's office determines the strength of the case, for the purposes of prosecution. >> they kept saying to me, wow. this stuff doesn't happen. and i kept thinking, what is going to happen to me? why didn't i matter? >> reporter: he spent five days in jail and was put on probation and told to abstain from alcohol
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and drugs. two months ago, he was caught under the influence and is serving six months for violating probation. that's more time than he served in connection with this case. she is working with a civil rights attorney who reached out to the department of justice, citing our findings and suggesting an investigation to the san mateo county's d.a. office. if you have a story for hilda or anyone in our investigative unit, call 888-996-tips. or go to the website, nbcbayarea.com/investigation. o.j. simpson's body will be cremated in the coming days. there's no plans in donating his brain to science. that's according to his long-time lawyer and executor of his state. some wondered if simpson's brain would be studied for cte. the brain disease is a risk to football players later in life. his entire body, including his
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brain, will be created. there's a small celebration of life, limited to close family and friends. the man accused of starting a massive fire at a home depot is scheduled to appear before the judge this week. he is charged with arson. the five-alarm fire in 2022. you see it right there. it destroyed a home depot. there was three counts of theft, as well. he stole from several stores and was in the process of stealing from the home depot when that fire started. the damage is estimated at $17 million. just ahead, fast food of the future. we'll take you to the california restaurant using new technology to serve up burgers. what it could mean for the future of industry. the showers are ending.
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we'll watch the fog in materially morning commute. and the buildup of temperatures in the work week. in the work week. the highs,
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migraine pain relief starts with you. ask about ubrelvy. learn how abbvie could help you save. ( ♪♪ ) you made a cow! actually it's a piggy bank. my inspiration to start saving. how about a more solid way to save? i'm listening. well, bmo helps get your savings habit into shape with a cash reward, every month you save. both: cash reward? and there's a cash bonus when you open a new checking account to get you started. wow. anything you can't do? ( ♪♪ ) mugs. ♪ bmo ♪ there's a new revolution in fast food. many chains are experimenting with machines taking over preparing part of the order. >> now, one restaurant is going all-in. having a robot do it all. here's elwyn lopez. >> reporter: the burgers at this
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los angeles fast food restaurants are classic. but the workers may be the future. cali express touts itself as the most wholly autonomous restaurant. you're going to get wally to make me a burger. from facial recognition. >> we'll do the burger with everything and some raw onion, of course. the chef, almost everything here is made by machine. the fries by a robot called flippy. >> he is using his arm to grab a basket. going to bring it here to this freezer. it will dispense fries into it. a robot arm is a rbot arm. but the secret sauce is the a.i. that powers it. >> there's the burger, the meat fresh and grilling to order. >> as it gets to the end, it
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scoops it up. >> reporter: major chains are buying into a.i. in automation. >> welcome to wendy's. what would you like? >> reporter: sweet green has salads rotating through automation. and chipotle has robots building its burrito bowl. what would you say to this taking jobs? >> restaurants put jobs to be thoughtful where you put the workers. working a fry station is an undesirable job. that may be inevitable. >> reporter: but brian, who researches labor practices at ucla, warns an all-robot kitchen may not be on the menu anytime soon. there's a smoke and mirrors, because you are full aud nation.
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>> the robot helps me. and i help the robot. >> reporter: putting the burgers in and the bun, something the robots haven't mastered yet. >> not bad. a bite into the future, whether we're ready or not. all our survival instigts are about to go out the door with this one. this is lola the tiger. the cutest apex predator you've ever seen. the oakland zoo has posted this to their twitter account. lola is battling that bean bag. still, so huggable. lola the tiger, at the oakland zoo.
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>> bring your own bean bag. we saw lola in the sun, as well. >> it will be good weather to do anything this week. on the growing list, after some wet weekends around the bay area. let's look at the totals. ben lomond, and mt. tam is not too far behind. we go to mount diablo and the bay. and we're wrapping things up and looking forward to our monday morning. it will be jacket weather, as the front heads past. things are calming down. we are evaporating the moisture. patchy fog tomorrow morning. grab a jacket. but in the afternoon, a slightly
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warmer day than what we had today. definitely what we had yesterday. yesterday was winter. we're moving into spring and summer by the middle parts. low 60s around the peninsula. upper 60s as we move into cocoa counties and north bay. maybe it's spring break for you. go up to the sierra. weather looks great. bring the sunscreen. the snins will be out there. temperatures in the 50s and 60s. chilly, overnight lows. looking ahead to the workweek, we'll continue to see no rain, more sunshine. even into next weekend for you to get the plans under way. and the temperatures will build. in we kick it in the middle part of the week, by tuesday, we feel the sunshine returning. here's where we put the cloud cover on the forecast by wednesday. but warm and try.
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temperatures nearing that 80-degree mark in the north bay, the east bay and the south bay. and the beaches should be pleasant to get out there. in will be a struggle to be working indoors when the temperatures and the sunshine is out there. the warmest of this week will be in those 80s. mostly sunny on thursday. the coast will be nice, for us to get all of the plans out there. gradually warming up in the workweek. a bit cooler with the return of the onshore breeze. the typical pattern we're used to. the weekend rolls around. it will be dry and pleasant for the cherry blossom parade. we will go from winter to spring. and then, a little more like summer as we trend towards the second half of it. 80s and 70s.
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>> spanning the seasons in one week. coming up, a surprise hit at the box office. the record civil war just set and how the bay area helped it succeed.
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it may have been a slow weekend for the box office. still, studio 824 had its biggest weekend for a film. >> there's something standing here. >> what? >> you're american, okay? >> what kind of american are you? >> "civil war" and the box office bringing in 25 million bucks this weekend. the movie follows journalists who document a violence america. it overperformed in a few cities, including in san francisco. second place this weekend. "godzilla and kong," that's $15
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million in sales its third weekend. and third place, "ghostbusters: frozen empire." we're over 100 days from the start of the paris 2024 lakes. festivities kicked off tuesday, with the lighting of the olympic torch. the first torchbearer will start an 11-day relay. the torch will head to france on three ships and will arrive march 8th to begin the french leg of the rely. the torch will travel to the biggest landmarks. it culminates with the lighting of the olympic flame on july 26th. you can watch it here on nbc bay area.
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the portland trail blazers made basketball history in the last home game of the season. and made the game more inclusive. >> normally, the visually impaired take in the game by listening. at the trail blazers game, the guests can try a new technology. it tracks game data in real-time and turns action into vbrations on the surface. >> i hope this becomes a thing. i could watch football and hockey with my husband. >> one is still in the testing phase. the trail blazers says once it's ready, they're all-in. we have great video to leave you with tonight. festus e ezeli. that's the warriors dance team.
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that's steph curry saying, i didn't know ezeli had those moves left. >> that's what his retirement plan looks like. ♪♪ ♪ you've got a friend in me ♪ ♪♪ ♪ you've got a friend in me ♪ ♪♪ ♪ you just remember what your old pal said ♪ ♪ boy, you've got a friend in me ♪ ♪♪ it's a celebration of friendship & beyond. from the new parade to together forever - a new nighttime spectacular fireworks show. pixar fest. at the disneyland resort for a limited time. starting april 26th.
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(resonant music) (playful music) - [narrator] this week we're in los angeles with actor cheryl hines. - oh, ya-yay. why did we do this? this is ridiculous. - [narrator] the two-time emmy nominee reflects on a rough start to her career.

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