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tv   The Ten O Clock News on KTVU FOX 2  FOX  May 12, 2024 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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and she said yes. - flute, i got a case for ya-- a case of soap, 'cause you stink, detective. [bright music] - so what do we do now? - we wait, summers. - for what? - a second season pickup. you know this is a tv show, right? - is that what those credits are for? - bento.
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box two, a neighborhood in the east bay on edge tonight after several shots are fired, including one into a family's home. >> we want to be safe around. live in oakland. >> no one was reportedly hurt, but now community members are calling for change. good evening. i'm julie julie haener and i'm joey hta. >> that shooting happened at 32nd and hamlin in oakland, just south of the 580. family members say they're grateful to be safe after a bullet went right through thr wiow. just one neighborhood where folks are on edge tonight. and one neighbor who saw people running from the crime scene is calling for an end to the violence. just behind this bullet pierced window. is where an oakland man tells ktvu he was lying on the couch sunday when a bullet shot right through
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the room, also home at the time, his wife and their three year old child are. >> we need more police around here. >> oakland police could be seen investigating the shooting at east 32nd street and hamlin avenue in the tuxedo neighborhood, one block south of 580 on sunday. joyce wong lives down the street. heard all the commotion at first not realizing what was going on. >> first of all, you think about fireworks. >> she would end up counting more than ten shots fired. >> very big noise. >> wong, who's lived in this community for 40 years, ran outside concerned about her neighbors. >> i see two people was running away. >> first, this man. and soon after this woman took off running as wong snapped photos of them. >> we don't want all the criminal coming here at the crime scene. >> a blue suv riddled with bullet holes appears to have collided with a white suv at the entrance to a dead end alley. this garage door also has bullet holes in it. >> it's no good. >> police would respond within ten minutes. here's what wong
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wants oakland's next police chief to know the police have more often run our streets like we want to be safe here. the man whose house was shot declined to speak on camera to us. although he's shaken up his family safe, it's unclear if anyone was actually shot today or if police have a suspect. we've reached out to oakland police and are still waiting to hear back. >> oakland's new police chief starts tomorrow. chief floyd mitchell official start date was yesterday, but tomorrow will be his first day in the office. chief mitchell has more than 30 years of experience in law enforcement, and was most recently the chief of the police department in lubbock, texas. he succeeds lauren armstrong, who was fired more than a year ago after an investigation found he mishandled two officer misconduct cases. but an appeal later cleared armstrong of any wrongdoing. >> four minors are now in custody after vallejo police caught them following an armed robbery. police found this unserialized and loaded handgun after locating the suspects. the
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theft happened on tennessee street near amador street. officers say four boys opened the cash register after threatening them and striking a worker there. they're accused of stealing money, including a tracker police used that to find the group and a fifth driver, who they say abandoned their car on marshall way. that's where k-9 units help to find those boys and their hiding spots. all five suspects were arrested. >> we have an update on today's hotel evacuation in san francisco's russian hill. that fire prompted evacuations at six this morning. and now. officials say the fire is completely out. one person experienced minor injuries but did not need to be hospitalized. authorities reopened surrounding streets around eight this morning. the cause of the fire, still under investigation tonight. this afternoon, a fire broke out at the port of oakland. the oakland fire department says it started at a lithium battery plant and was quickly contained. that fire sent large plumes of smoke, though, into the air. no
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injuries have been reported and still no word yet what caused this fire. >> it's been nearly 220 days now since the beginning of the war between israel and hamas, and right now, israeli forces say they're pushing deeper into gaza's third largest city of rafah. more than a million palestinians are currently sheltering there, and idf admiral says that his soldiers have had success eliminating their targets during the offensive. >> since the start of our precise operation against hamas in rafah, we have eliminated dozens of terrorists, exposed underground terror tunnels and vast amounts of weapons. >> with military action continuing inside the gaza strip, pressure is mounting on israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu to cut a deal for a cease fire and get the remaining hostages out of gaza, the biden administration is saying it's supporting israel's military, but that will depend on israel's plans. inside gaza, meanwhile, anti-war protesters gathered in palo alto on this mother's day
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to bring more attention to the moms and their babies suffering in gaza. the group also saying it's raising money now to support a neonatal department at a hospital in rafah. ktvu south bay reporter lamonica peters live now in palo alto with more on today's rally. lamonica >> joey, as this conflict continues, the protesters here told me that they want to focus on the human suffering, especially those women and children whose lives have been impacted the most. vigil for gaza held its weekly rally to call for an immediate ceasefire. some. women at this rally, held on mother's day, spoke about what they say mothers in gaza experience. >> they have no way to go. the hospitals are bombed. there's no anesthetic. if they need a c-section, there's no recovery time after birth. >> i feel extremely sad, extremely sad, and i wish them peace. and i wish them some form
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of relief. >> the united nations says 70% of those killed in gaza have been women and children, and about a million women and girls have been displaced. women also now have severely reduced access to health care. >> as a mom, the stress of having a newborn baby in normal times, it's a lot for any mom, to do that during war and during what's happening now. like in rafah. i mean, no one has housing. >> the group says it started a mothers day campaign to raise $5,000. the money will help fund a new neonatal intensive care unit for premature babies at the kuwaiti hospital in rafah. this mother of four says she comes to this ceasefire rally each week because she cares about humanity. >> i'm here not only because i'm a mother, i'm here because i'm a i'm a person and i care about people. i'm from israel and i
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don't want anyone to suffer. i don't want my people to suffer, and i don't want my neighbors to suffer. my partners. right. the palestinians are my partners. we should find a way to live together for. >> the un also says that nearly all of gaza's population is facing severe hunger, and that the population there will face will face starvation and the humanitarian efforts will cripple if the conflict continues. >> joey, very different mother's day for many of them. monica thank you. in tel aviv, israel now, relatives of hostages and activists lit candles and stood in silence as israel marked its memorial day for fallen soldiers and victims of the attacks during the attack by hamas on israel back on october 7th, 1200 people were killed. another 250 were taken hostage. hamas still holds about 100 people captive now, along with the remains of
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more than 30. we are here every day to accompany the families in their plight, for the hostages, for asking from our government to release them as soon as possible. >> every day that passes is a matter of life or death for them. >> since the war began more than eight months ago, israel has killed more than 34,000 palestinians, most of them women and children, according to local health officials. you can find complete coverage of the war in gaza and reaction from here in the us online. just head to our website ktvu .com. >> in the east bay, the body of a five year old boy was pulled from the water on bethel island. ktvu alex schwartz has the details on what happened and a reminder about water safety as the summer season begins to heat up. >> saturday afternoon on bethel island, a five year old boy was pulled from the water behind a
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house that sits adjacent to the shoreline. contra costa fire responded. >> the child was rescued by one of our rescue swimmers and was then transported by ground to sutter delta hospital. >> the delta waterways are swift and the current runs fast. it's here. as the weather heats up, families are reminded to keep their kids close and keep everyone water safe, especially when the water looks so refreshing to little ones. >> this is the first really warm day so far this year, so parents and adults who are watching children need to keep in constant visual contact of their children and when the child is by the water, they need to be wearing a life vest and wear that life vest correctly. all people who are by the water should be wearing a life vest because if you fall in it, only takes one gulp of water to submerge and drown. >> children ages 1 to 4 are at the highest risk for drowning and many deaths can happen when children have unexpected access to water. elliot palmer is the recreation leader here at the
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james lemmo swim center in benicia. he says they serve a thousand swim lessons a year to adults and children alike. >> even if you have a life jacket on, a child absolutely arms reach at all times, and then the other thing get them in swim lessons, get them, get them comfortable in the water. make it enjoyable, do swim team, build your skills, those kind of things. but parental supervision , on top of lifeguards that are on site is huge to water safety. >> palmer says swimming is a life skill. anyone can learn to swim at any age. >> i think every age group, whether you're, you know, three years old or you're, you know, 65, if it's something you should all, have a chance to learn and should learn how to swim. and at our pool, we do have adult lessons that we do, that we keep smaller class sizes for that so we can focus on getting comfortable in the water. >> an estimated 1000 children every year in the us die from drowning. the american academy of pediatrics urges parents and
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families whenever you're near a body of water or a swimming pool, always keep children within an arm's reach. in benicia, alice wirtz ktvu, fox two news. >> and marine patrol deputies responded to that scene after the five year old boy was reported missing. authorities say one of their divers found the child submerged in the water inside a cove. they believe he was in the water for about 15 minutes. the boy was given cpr before being rushed to the hospital. neighbors say they also saw a helicopter respond to the scene. authorities say the child accessed the water through a backyard next to the shoreline . >> i haven't really noticed whether there could be better security measures. to tell you the truth, i think it's, you know, most of the most of the most of it is really up to the homeowners to sort of make sure their particular areas are secure. >> the boy was reportedly visiting his grandparents on the island at the time he disappeared. >> two leaders from the east bay killed in a crash. the appreciation community members
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are showing down towards their lives and legacies. >> and it did cool down today. it was pretty noticeable. a good five and ten degrees that happens again tomorrow. not the five and ten degrees, but a little cooler. a lot of fog and this week will be interesting. a little different than we saw last week. i'll have that forecast coming up. >> if there is a problem and you run into some type of situation, find cecil williams, the late reverend cecil williams meant so much to the city of san francisco coming up, we'll hear from attendees at his celebration of life service held today at glide memorial
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in southern california this weekend. friends confirming peggy moore and her wife, hope wood died in a car crash in san diego county friday night. moore help work on former president obama's campaign in 2008, and was an adviser for former oakland mayor libby schaaf. in 2019, moore and her wife, hope, started the political consulting firm hope action change. congress woman barbara lee of oakland posted this message on social media saying, i'm heartbroken to hear of the tragic loss of peggy moore and hope wood. peggy was a friend and activist and one of the best organizers i knew. her passion and fight for justice and equality is what brought her and hope together. >> new at ten tonight, the california department of
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wildlife is reporting a concerning trend of sick brown pelicans stranded along the coast. the department has not released numbers yet, but they say the logged the. they usually high numbers of the stranded birds around late april this is happening along the coast from santa cruz county south to san diego county. the pelicans are showing signs of emaciation and often have secondary injuries. a similar trend appeared in 2022, when 800 pelicans were admitted to wildlife rehab centers. >> intense storms causing some heavy damage over the weekend across parts of the country. in central florida, downed trees, broken fences and debris covering roads and lawns there. the wind hit over 60mph. many communities spending the day cleaning up, and some community members showing kindness now and lending a helping hand. >> about six, seven, eight guys showed up to help and then some neighbors heard our chainsaws and came over and said, hey, can you help us? so it was pretty cool just seeing everybody jump together and help each other. >> some families in the town of
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barnsdall in northeast oklahoma are suffering from total devastation after an ef four tornado ripped through the area. many homes there were leveled. authorities in florida and oklahoma say tradespeople are desperately needed to work on the homes that are still standing. >> pretty nice day today. beautiful weekend overall temperatures did cool. a good 5 to 10 degrees today, so it was noticeably cooler but still really nice. what's happened is the fog is come back to the coast and it's acting like summer right now. it's a pretty significant marine layer. everything's going to the north. that's what those arrows represent. this is the long range model and i just want to show it to you so you can see that basically the blues and the greens, that would be the rain or the inclement weather. everything stays to the north of us throughout the next seven days. you see that high, that big donut spinning clockwise. so this is right through the week. there's a little activity up around lake tahoe. you see that up around kirkwood. but overall this pattern this spring like pattern a little bit of summer like is going to hang on. so that's how this looks this week.
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so what do you get ready for. you get ready for more highs like these. these are the highs from today. highs tomorrow will be back there again. probably maybe a degree or two cooler. and then it starts to warm up again. but we're going to hover in the warm spots all week. a low 80s to mid 80s maybe even upper 80s. so we'll keep an eye on that. but overall the fog is in san francisco airport. you can see the low clouds and fog. the marine layer does a move where it's going to get a little deeper, right thicker. each night as we go into the week. and that'll increase the inland intrusion of the fog and that'll decrease the temperatures. as you know, all too well. but overall, it's going to be an awesome week. except tree pollens, grasses and weeds are starting to be very noticeable. not so much. coast and bay, but inland. right? so if you were bothered today, you're going to be bothered tomorrow, especially inland. i'll see you back here. we'll do that. full forecast. we'll look at the model as well. >> all right. we'll see you in a bit bill. thank you. hundreds of people coming together today to remember a san francisco legend. crowds of people packed into
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glide memorial church in the tenderloin to honor the life and legacy of the late reverend cecil williams. ktvu bailey o'carroll was at the church where people lined up around the block to pay their respects. we used to sing this song every sunday morning and i'm grateful to be here today. >> it's impossible to measure exactly how many lives someone touches in their lifetime, but if sunday celebration of life was an indicator of anything, it would be that reverend cecil williams impacted more people than many hoped to. >> cecil williams was an amazing person who fought for social justice and equality. his wise leadership and incredible achievements had a huge impact on the world, inspiring people even today, his legacy serves as a reminder that one person can make a difference in the world. >> williams helped to build glide into a world renowned church known for social services and activism, especially in the city's tenderloin neighborhood. he dedicated his life to fighting for civil rights, racial equality, lgbtq rights, helping those who were homeless,
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hungry or battling drug addiction. there are so many stories to tell. >> there's so much that can be said. growing up in san francisco, what i knew no matter what was going on in this city, what my grandmother who raised me said, if you get in trouble, if there is a problem and you run into some type of situation, find. >> cecil williams glide was packed on sunday. wall to wall. there were no empty seats. folks lined up around the block two hours before the ceremony started, and san francisco police had to shut down streets. the celebration lasted nearly four hours, with video messages from california governor gavin newsom, nancy pelosi, even warren buffett. but those who showed up said that they were blown away by the outpouring of love. it's going to be off the charts. >> that's why they're blocking down the street. >> cheryl sinclair still remembers the first time she saw williams at glide, exactly 30 years ago, in what williams said has stuck with sinclair to this
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day. his line was, get on out that tomb like we're all in recovery from something. >> and, you know, he was minister of liberation. >> he was all about us being free. let's make some noise for the reverend in san francisco. >> i'm bailey o'carroll, ktvu, fox two news. cecil williams, your. >> a chp helicopter makes its 51st rescue of the year. we'll take a look at its latest efforts to help an injured hiker. >> also ahead tonight, artificial intelligence being used more and more in workplaces around the country. now a bay area based software business, is working to keep employees safe in their offices
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this weekend in napa county.
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officers say they received reports of an injured hiker along a trail yesterday afternoon. the chp flew its h-30 helicopter to the scene. officers then hoisted the injured woman to safety and took her to an awaiting ambulance. the chp says this was the helicopter's 51st rescue of 2024. >> a new analysis from the public policy institute of california is saying that the economy is leaving behind a significant number of young people in 2022, more than 1 in 10 californians between 16 and 24 were not in school, not working or looking for a job. the gender balance has also flipped. 20 years ago, it was mostly women disconnected from the economy. now it's young men. 20% of young black men are disconnected. that's the highest of all demographic groups studied. and since 2015, the state has invested over $3 billion on career education programs in high schools to address the number of disconnected young adults. the state also expanding its dual
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enrollment programs. this allows high school students to take community college classes. the author of the study says this could help serve a more diverse pool of young people and help higher education feel like something they can accomplish. >> tomorrow, uc berkeley is hosting its first emerging tech advocacy summit. organizers say they will train tech startup founders on how to effectively advocate for themselves to policymakers and the public. they say there will be six speakers who will each do a six minute lightning talk, followed by a panel that will guide a discussion on what made the speakers effective. the speakers come from a range of backgrounds. that free event will be held on the uc berkeley campus. >> artificial intelligence is being used in safety analytics to reduce accidents in the workplace and workers comp claims. fox news senior correspondent claudia cowan explains. artificial intelligence is now being used in factories and warehouses to help protect people who work around forklifts, conveyor belts
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and other heavy machinery. >> we checked out the system being used at gerlinger steel outside sacramento. software made by san francisco based comp science processes. video recorded on the company's existing security cameras and then highlights potential dangers. the colored boxes show where a worker almost tripped over steel beams or got too close to a moving forklift. >> it's given them something obvious to look at. a true example, rather than someone like me just going and saying, hey, you know you're not supposed to be standing next to that lift while it's moving, right? >> the software can also see if a worker risks hurting themselves for instance, from lifting heavy loads the wrong way. a set of tools that help companies understand the risks that their employees are exposed to and really engineer that risk out of the facility to prevent accidents from happening. the technology scans thousands of hours of visual data and then offers recommendations on ways to improve safety. there's no facial recognition involved. the
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idea here isn't to punish anyone, but rather to reduce accidents and lower worker's comp claims depending on the size of the area being monitored. the price tag ranges from a few thousand to a few hundred thousand dollars, but some workplace accidents, like a back injury, can cost more than that over time, and a workplace death can run into the millions. employees we spoke to say they appreciate this added level of safety information. they say they can see where the hidden dangers are and learn how to avoid them to get home safe after work in los angeles, claudia cowan, fox news there's a lot of great options on the table. >> anticipation growing over who former president trump will pick as his running mate. we'll take a look at some of the top candidates. >> and trump's former attorney is expected to testify in the former president's hush money trial tomorrow. how the former ally of trump could be crucial to the prosecution's case. >> plus, san francisco has some
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of the highest rent prices in the country. and now a new report indicates it could be even more expensive than previously thought. >> and the giants mother's day win comes at a cost. jason appelbaum will be here with the details l er. sport
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over the weekend, and north dakota governor doug burgum joined him. >> as fox's madeline rivera explains, now it's fueling rumors that burgum could be one of trump's top choices for the vp spot. >> former president trump is bullish about his prospects in new jersey, even though it's not considered a battleground state. his team is pointing to the crowd of people who gathered in wildwood saturday as a sign of his momentum in the garden state . wildwood's proximity to philadelphia, only about 90 minutes away, also allowed the
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campaign to reach voters in what is considered a key swing state, pennsylvania. trump hit president biden on issues like the economy, immigration and the protests on college campuses, a message his supporters think will resonate with voters in the area. here's trump promising tax cuts across the board if he wins in november. >> instead of a biden tax hike. i'll give you a trump middle class, upper class, lower class, business class, big tax cut. you're going to have the biggest tax cut. and we were set to do that. we were all set to do it. >> north dakota governor and former gop presidential candidate doug burgum spoke before trump took the stage, raising speculation that he could be on trump's vp shortlist . >> but he made his money in technology. but he probably knows more about energy than anybody i know. so get ready for something, okay? just get ready. >> it's unclear what trump is alluding to when he told the crowd to get ready. a campaign spokesperson telling fox and
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friends this when it comes to the former president's pick for our running mate, president trump has said that he will make his decision later this summer and in true president trump fashion, he will go directly to the american people to do that. >> there's a lot of great options on the table, trump claims nikki haley isn't among those options, though the former president dismissed the chances of a trump haley ticket on truth social over the weekend in washington. >> martha rivera, fox news. >> donald trump will have to consider who to pick as his running mate, while his hush money criminal trial continues. stormy daniels has wrapped up her testimony, but the prosecution's star witness is still to come. >> former trump attorney michael cohen set to testify tomorrow. fox news michelle ross has the details. >> 100 center street might be the site of the country's most hotly contested boxing match on monday, but there won't be a camera in sight to see it all go down. former president donald trump will square off against his one time fixer and lawyer, michael cohen. >> he has to convince the jury.
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i was in the room. i know what happened because i did it and he did it with me. the former president knew that the entries being made in the books and records of the trump organization were false. he knew they weren't payment of legal fees. he knew what i was doing. >> monday, cohen will take the stand in trump's hush money probe. the disgraced and disbarred attorney has already served time for perjury. now he's asking the jury in trump's trial to trust him. >> bad guys don't recruit good guys to do things for them. bad guys bring in bad guys to do bad things. that is how the prosecution should prepare. michael cohen. it's very simple. you don't have to like me. you don't even have to respect me. but you should believe me because i was there. and what i'm telling you makes sense. >> cohen's testimony is expected to be crucial to the da's case. they allege it was cohen who brokered the deal between stormy daniels and the national enquirer for a catch and kill story with the purpose of
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helping trump get elected. the money was paid to the paper via cohen and trump. his testimony follows stormy daniels, an attorney randy cohen, believes her time on the stand did not go well. >> stormy daniels was a disaster for the prosecution. to me, the message sent to the jury was we have a lousy case. we can't really prove our case. so we're just going to make you want to vomit at the sight of this man and convict him because he's disgusting. that could not have backfired. worse. >> the federal government is taking new action to reduce the spread of bird flu, the h5n1 virus, which causes avian flu, was first detected in dairy cattle in the texas panhandle. the virus can also spread through commercial flocks and among wild birds, the usda says it will be working to improve biosecurity at farms, and is providing farm workers with protective clothing to better protect them from the virus. the government has said that since
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milk is pasteurized, it does not pose a high threat to consumers. the first person to ever receive a kidney from a pig has died seven weeks after the surgery. however, doctors say there is no indication his death was related to the transplant. the surgery in march marked a medical milestone. 62 year old richard sleeman of massachusetts, received the kidney from a pig that had been genetically modified. nearly 90,000 people are on the national waiting list for a kidney. doctors say the main problem with using an animal kidney is the human immune system rejects animal tissue as foreign, often leading to some serious complications. >> the city of alameda has ordered the university of washington to stop its controversial climate change experiment. it's happening on the uss hornet, the city said last week it did not know the university was conducting their cloud brightening research on the decommissioned aircraft carrier. alameda was also concerned about potential health and safety risks. the first of
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its kind experiment in the u.s. reflects sunlight back into space. the goal is to slow down the effects of global warming, the university and the city have gone back and forth about whether alameda had a fair warning about the research. the city is also waiting on independent results to see if the experiment could be a respiratory hazard. a repair work is moving forward at oakland airport's main runway. officials say crews are repairing two patches about 28ft wide and 11ft long, on either side of the runway center line. the work began last sunday and started again tonight. it will continue until 4 p.m. tomorrow. the planes will be using the north field while the repair work is taking place. >> a new study from uc berkeley indicates san francisco rent is even less affordable than traditional measurement methods would suggest. the study reveals only 35% of california households could comfortably afford rent. in san francisco, housing is usually considered
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affordable if it costs less than 30% of someone's income. this new report from the terner center, used in inclusive affordability method to evaluate county's affordability, they took into account what percentage of households across the state could live in each county, opposed to the percentage of people already living there. >> nearly half of americans surveyed say they feel like their financial situation over the past five years has gotten worse. a new poll by cnbc found. about two thirds of those who took part believe inflation plays a big role in how they stress over money. but to get to the prices to get those down, consumers would have to spend less. and that hasn't been happening this year. retail sales have actually gone up by a little more than 2% from the same period last year. and consumer spending jumped in both february and march. this comes at a time when about two thirds of americans say they are living paycheck to paycheck. >> coming up tonight at 11, an oakland man facing several charges, including evading officers and possession of
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loaded guns. >> and we are tracking that forecast. it is cooling down a little bit, but then it warms up. i'll have that forecast coming up. >> but first, a hospital along california's central coast says a happy mom equals a happy baby. how the health care center is working to keep expectant mothers comfortable during this stressful time
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moms and expecting mothers with a holiday surprise. >> it was a mother's day celebration at branch hospital. expecting and new moms were pampered with wellness exercises
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and massages. it's great to have a community to be able to, be a part of it. >> as a new mom, we sometimes have no idea how to find these groups or how to join them. >> acosta merritt is a new mom and says she's found much needed support at bellies and babies. every thursday. >> they just bring so many resources about the library, learn about storytime. we're doing that now, and just immense around town for little ones and for moms as well. >> childbirth educator and registered nurse tamara winfield pace says happy babies stem from happy moms. >> it's just a wonderful place for parents to enjoy coming and getting some support. we always do highs, lows and goals. >> local nurses say the new generation of mothers are motivated to prioritize their mental health. >> the need for mental health is
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huge in our society nowadays, and we're just helping support those parents. and we do, you know, making sure that they're having an a good time with their postpartum period. >> and research from the national institute of health says new moms are at a higher risk of postpartum depression than in previous years, and a positive environment can help prevent pain. >> whether it's to be to cry with somebody or share their high and their happiness that their babies smiled at them, or they're upset because of their lack of sleep or whatever might be going on in their world. and we need to support each other as a community. >> new moms say much of what they've learned is from their own mothers. mom. >> i've learned so much from you, and i'm now doing those fun things we did together with the happy mother's day.
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>> i'm news channel reporter christina rodrigue says while mother's day is a time to celebrate mom, the holiday can bring some painful memories and emotions for people who've lost a loved one. >> tomorrow, bay area artists mistah fab and chef klees of pierre-pierre will host a special mother's day dinner for moms who have lost their children. earlier on mornings on two, they talked about what motivated them to plan this dinner. >> it's basically to let the women out there know that in these tough times, we want to we want to love on you. we want to be able to give you something and show you that you are appreciated because you know life, be life and it can get you down, man. >> he called me randomly like, hey, i got this crazy idea, let's do this for moms. and you know, i was all with that, you know, because my mom, she played a very important part of my life. >> word about the dinner spread through social media. and so far, 120 women have rsvp'd to the event. >> the golden state warriors
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released a mother's day video today, with players explaining how much they value their mom. >> my mom's like captain marvel. >> the best thing that could ever happen in my life. >> someone that was kind of always there for me. >> several players recognized how much their moms have sacrificed to support their journey as a basketball player. many teammates said they are grateful to get a hug and a kiss from their mom after a game, saying it always warms their heart. one player shared his mom brought a whole christmas feast on a plane when he had to spend the holidays away from home to play in games. >> it's breast cancer awareness day. the giants are doing their part to support people in the fight against this disease. at today's home game against the reds, several members of the giants administration threw out the ceremonial first pitch. the team says it's proud to stand with the incredible sisterhood of women in impacted by this disease, and we'll have all highlights from tonight's game coming up in sports and our coverage of aapi heritage month
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continues. >> coming up, how the owner of a clothing brand in southern california is selling popular streetwear while also showing pride in his community. >> and here is a live look outside tonight after the break, chief meteorologist bill martin will have the forecast to start your workweek
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if a islander. heritage month continues tonight. sandra endo introduces us to a band that's all about pride down in southern california's asian-american community. umany ica. >> hip streetwear, slick designs , all with a deeper meaning. >> this is our staple, we have nihon, which is these characters combined means japan and then la overlay in the heart of little tokyo.
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>> these are all good luck symbols. yeah. good luck. yeah. japan is a clothing brand. keeping the pulse of the community for more than 14 years. it all started from a sense of pride for japanese american roy kuroyanagi. >> i've always wanted to come up with something that expressed my culture and my identity, and also represent, you know, the city i was from, which is los angeles, where i was born. >> the original symbol was an overlay of the japanese. characters nihon or japan and la . but it took time for roy's idea to take off. >> we first started as a kiosk in the middle of japanese village plaza, and there were some days and nights, cold nights, rainy nights that we were just sitting out there, you know, with no sales. every day i would come to work and saying, i'm doing, i'm gonna do this for the community. i'm going to do this for the people. and, you know, i want to i want to show the world, japan. jealous? i barely graduated high school, and i literally was hustling and she was pregnant with her first
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daughter. i was sitting out there in the kiosk and then trying to sell shirts. there was some times where where i wanted to give up. yeah, absolutely. and then, you know, the community is, is, is what made me strong. >> and community is what kept him going. support from not only japanese americans, but anyone who could identify with two cultures and who loved hip streetwear. >> we took the traditional happi coat from japan, and then we wanted to make it kind of like more street style. so we actually cut a hoodie. >> i bet it looks good on everyone, right? it hits a chord with people who realize that they're not just an american, they are another ethnicity. >> and american. but never did we ever think that we would build a business this big. >> eventually, a single kiosk would become this brick and mortar store in the heart of little tokyo. then, at a time when everything is e-commerce, they shut down their online business just to make japan
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jealous. a destination in the community to bring out people to little tokyo to shop, eat and explore. >> we just wanted to keep adding to this thriving community and make it as vibrant as possible. >> and japan is thriving with big collaborations with major brands and legacy businesses in the community. >> japan gudetama collaboration. we've partnered with kirin ichiban beer from japan, sanrio, hello kitty. we are partners with la galaxy. >> they say they owe their success to their early cheerleaders and the ones who continue to support this dream. that's all about identity. >> the secret is just being true to yourself. and, just staying with your community and i honestly believe that, it was like the authenticity. >> like, we never try to do what other brands are doing. we just kind of like he was very always focused on doing our own thing
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and their message to the next generation, including their own daughters. >> do what you love. and try not to give up and do things that you're passionate about. >> and everywhere you go, try to make an impact in whatever community you are in. one person can be a huge difference. >> pope francis is speaking out once again against the russian invasion in ukraine this morning. he addressed a large crowd at saint peter's square, calling for a prisoner exchange between the two countries. he urged the crowd to pray for people caught in war torn regions around the world. the pope made a similar appeal during this year's easter sunday celebrations. >> all righty, hope you had a nice mother's day. >> it was beautiful. the weather was a little bit cooler. pretty noticeable actually, right? cooler. a good 1015 degrees cooler in some places. these are the highs. so yesterday we were up into the mid and upper 80s. today we were down into the low 80s and upper 70s. tomorrow
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probably upper 70s with a couple 80 degree readings. temperatures are going to be a little bit cooler tomorrow. and then they come back. the story is going to be pretty much the same each day as we go into the week. and what that is, is an expanding marine layer, which is so summerlike, even though it's not quite summer, but it's a deep marine layer or relatively deep marine layer. now so tomorrow morning this is sfo. fog is going to get further in. and then the next morning you get a little further in and it's going to stay. it's going to every nights. and mornings. we're going to have fog into concord, walnut creek, clayton, napa. in those areas of course you wake up and you're foggy to start with. so you're going to be mild during the day and especially on the coast, where it will be pretty much cool all day with temperatures in the upper 50s. the winds have died down after last week. to remember how windy it was. we had big wind gusts up to 50 miles an hour. fairfield which you would expect still blow into 22. that's sustained winds sfo sustained at 15. and it's taken that fog that's getting up over the coastal hills and it's sending it inland. and that's the story. and that is the story
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of our summer, quite frankly. and it's going to be the story this week after pretty dynamic work. kinetic kind of a pattern we've had, you know, week after week. we've had other weather events in the five day forecast. snow in the mountains a couple of weeks ago, so on and so forth. this is going to be one of those weeks with just flat line, no storms in the forecast, no real wind in the forecast, temperatures a little cooler than there were last night at this time. here's that fog. so here is tomorrow morning. and see how far inland the fog footprint is. it's the model. and then it burns back. right. and then it pushes back in again tuesday morning does the same thing. and then it burns back and it does the same thing on wednesday morning. it's classic. and it's a it's a good pattern for us. it'll help you with the hay fever for sure especially around the bay. now inland the inland areas won't have as much of an impact. the fog, the moisture kind of helps knock the pollens out of the air. but further inland, that won't be the case. you're going to still be bothered. and it's been pretty nasty in the inland bay valleys, the pollens that are that is these are the forecast highs for tomorrow. like i said, a little bit cooler, a little bit cooler or close to the same,
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but maybe a degree or two cooler. and then the five day forecast. so we've got a good pattern, dry pattern. what else was i going to mention? oh, air quality will be pretty good, temperatures kind of waffle in the mid 80s and they warm up on the weekend next weekend. but fog is a player each day as we go into this week and into the next weekend, i'll see you back here at 11. >> all right. sounds good. thanks, bill. jamal murray back at it again. another buzzer beater. jason appelbaum has his story up next in sports. >> then on the 11:00 news alameda county district attorney pamela price going after automobile insurance companies. and the software developers they work with. coming up, the new lawsuit that was just filed
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fashion. but today's win did come at a cost. on a gorgeous
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mother's day at oracle park in san francisco, 36,000 plus includes lu and mama cele, giants down three one in the fifth. man on for lamonte wade jr. man this guy is red hot right now. skies one to right. if it stays fair it's gone. you can't really see it. but trust us, it's fair. wade second home run of the season ties the game at three. he's batting 340 this season. giants up a run in the eighth but ryan walker can't hold it. mike ford's first home run of the season. it's a solo shot to center and we're tied at five. we go to extras casey schmidt he's looking for his first hit of the season. he was just called up on friday and he picks the perfect time to get it done. drives one to the gap in left center over the wall. ground rule double. that brings home luis matos from second for the winning run. it is a walk-off winner for casey schmidt. the giants win 6 to 5.
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they take two out of three from the reds, as we said, and they are now 12 and zero when they score at least five runs. but here's what took the luster off today's win. top of the first inning jeimer candelario to center. joong ho. lee's going all out. leaps hard into the wall. can't make the catch. the base is clear, but more importantly, lee would have to leave the game and was later diagnosed with a dislocated shoulder. he's the sixth giants position player to go down with injury in the last week alone. all right, let's head to seattle, where mom was having some fun with her little one during the game today, a's and mariners rubber match this one though. all seattle mariners already up three nothing when julio rodriguez takes alex wood deep to straightaway center. and that one's gone. two run homer five nothing. mariners rodriguez he's all pumped up. there were six home runs in this game.
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three by the a's, including this two run blast by brant rooker, his team leading 10th of the season. but those three homers produced just four runs. seattle wins 8 to 4 to take two of three from oakland and a quarter of the way through the season, both the a's and giants are sitting at 19 and 23. nba playoffs anthony edwards he had 44 points tonight for minnesota. but was it enough to take down denver edwards and the t wolves. they won the first two games in denver. but the defending champs are not going quietly. the game flipped on this sequence just before the half edwards turns it over michael porter jr slams it at the other end. jamal murray intercepts the ensuing inbound pass and launches it from 55ft. amazing shot. it's good. longest shot in the nba this season and a potential seven point swing in the blink of an eye. nuggets up 15 at the break as murray and
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kevin harlan, the announcer enjoying each other's company. the nuggets win, 115, 107 series is tied at two games apiece. the pacers also winners tonight over the knicks ncaa softball tournament bracket, was announced this afternoon at the stanford regional smith stadium in palo alto. >> the eight seed is the stanford cardinal. a world series team last year led by nigeria kennedy. >> yeah, it's pretty cool. yeah. nigel kennedy, by the way, the pac 12 pitcher of the year for the eighth seeded cardinal. and that means they will host a regional in palo alto. and if they win that a super regional. first up the saint mary's gaels this friday cal by the way plays southern illinois friday in baton rouge. we'll have a whole lot more guys coming up at 1130 on sports. >> check in about 30 minutes. all right. 30 minutes citing stuff. jason thank you. julie. >> next at 11 we just we need to end it. that's why i hold thes

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