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tv   KTVU Mornings on 2 The Nine  FOX  May 14, 2024 9:00am-10:01am PDT

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abate for the bay to breakers this weekend, and bart is gearing up as well. the transit agency will run four trains with limited stops before regular bart service begins on sunday. the special trains will get race participants to the embarcadero just before 7 a.m. the 12 k race starts at eight sunday morning in downtown, and street closures will stretch all the way across the city. >> the niners will play week one of the nfl season at home for the first time in three years. the niners will host the new york jets at levi's stadium on september 9th. in the season opener. they'll face the jets and former cal quarterback aaron rodgers in a primetime matchup on monday night football. now, the full 2024 nfl schedule is expected to be released tomorrow . >> time running out for student protesters camping out at usf over the war in gaza. the warning from university officials if they don't clear out, then tensions rise as tech workers protest outside google's conference in the south bay. >> why employees are aiming to
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spotlight corporate responsibility over google's business ties with the israeli military. >> then a family's anguish as they search for their missing brother whenever the police do encounter him, they never called us even just to let him know that. >> let us know that dennis is okay and that he's seen their pleas for help to bring him home. >> live from jack london square. this is morning time two. >> the nine. >> it's a cool start to the day. it's tuesday, may 14th. san francisco. you need that puffy jacket today. maybe around 3:00. you can shed it. the day does tend to warm up as we go. chad gpt is upgrading its voice assistant with a new ai language model called gpt four zero. the changes make the voice assistant more expressive. doesn't sound like a robot anymore. it'll also allow you to look at what your phone's camera sees and it will respond in real time. >> so what's the first step i should take to try to solve
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this? >> the first step is to get all the terms with x on one side and the constants on the other side. so what do you think we should do with that plus one? okay i'm going to try to subtract one from both sides and then i'll see what i get. great idea. perfect. now what do you get when you subtract one from both sides? >> i mean, if they can help with my son's algebra homework, you will spare me some tearful hours at the dinner table. these latest capabilities are available for free for people who use chat. gpt what do you think? this morning we're asking how you feel about artificial intelligence and these latest chat bots that can talk to you in real time. so your options on our poll this morning, i love the new technology. it's interesting or it is creepy. and that is where most of you land right now. 68% can scan the qr code at the top right of your screen. head to ktvu.com/vote. we talked yesterday about the pluses and minuses of, you know, ai voice generation, can i tell you when i read that, it can see what your camera sees? exactly.
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i, i'm one of those paranoids who has a little post-it over the camera on my, on my computer. well, you should though, because they can break in and look through that, that i know now. so that's where things get a little dicey. >> yeah, i know it's i don't think it's creepy if it's used correctly. >> we talked about this yesterday. right. i can help in some situations. >> like with your algebra homework. >> right. thank you. >> camera on your phone. >> but i think where people are coming from is like really? can we is ai just going to take over every aspect of our lives? yeah. okay >> in short, yes. >> okay. yes. there is your answer. i solved it for you. no need to worry. >> no need for the poll, no need for the poll. >> we know it all, but keep voting still. yeah, we'd like to hear what you think about it. >> all right, we'll get back to that a little later today to see how people are voting. meantime, we're learning more about a meeting between pro-palestine protesters and university officials at the university of san francisco. the administration is now giving those in an encampment until 3 p.m. today to clear out. ktvu
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james torres live from the usf campus, with more details about what has happened between the two sides. james >> andre. well, university officials want to make sure that what's going on here behind me does not interrupt any of the final exams and the graduation ceremonies that are planned this week. and some of those commencement ceremonies happening just right next door from where we're standing. this encampment, of course, doesn't look too much different than what we've seen at other college campuses all throughout the country. the president also says he's receiving reports of harassment and discrimination against jewish students and faculty, and called that troubling. president paul fitzgerald says he met with student leaders monday morning for about three hours. they talked about what it would take to break the encampment down. and while they did agree to some terms, students here say the most they wanted out of the university was to publicly call the israeli action against palestine a genocide. president fitzgerald says that is up for academic experts to decide not he and his role. the university
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offered full amnesty for all students who have been part of this encampment since late april, something they deem a violation of student code. but that's only if they leave the area by 3:00 this afternoon. if not, the university says they can expect consequences. >> we're not really completely sure what that's going to look like, you know? so that is giving a lot of students here anxiety, especially students that are high risk because this school is a private university, students are paying $70,000 a year to go here. >> this morning, the university offered a statement to ktvu, reading in part, quote, the university is continuing to prioritize communication and de-escalation with the protesters. our conversations have been shaped by the expectation that protesters recognize the need to balance free expression with safety and respectful dialog. now, those protesters also tell me that they've gotten a great deal of support, including a number of jewish students who have joined their cause. they say they are planning a rally here at 3 p.m. around the same time that the
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university says that deadline is looming. for those to clear this encampment. today. we're live this morning from san francisco. i'm james torres, ktvu fox two news. >> there is a protest planned today for google's flagship developers conference. the group organizing the action wants to call attention to google's business contracts with the israeli government, and the role of its technology in the war in gaza. ktvu sally rasmus joins us live from the google campus in mountain view. ali. >> well, google's flagship developers conference, scheduled to start just about an hour from now, but there's already some of the thousands of people expected to attend the event. >> driving up, walking up, taking busses there you see behind us a long line of cars waiting to turn in to the google campus for this event, and then across the street from them is this greenbelt open space area called charleston park, close to the shoreline amphitheater. and this is where you see several dozen people starting to gather here behind us. these are members of a group, several groups planning to stage a
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protest today. they are coinciding it with the start of google's developers conference that's happening today. one of the organizations involved in this protest calls itself no tech for genocide. the group says it is focused on a google program called project nimbus, which it says is being used to target innocent civilians in the war in gaza. since 2021, google and amazon have provided cloud computing service artificial intelligence and other tech services to the israeli government through project nimbus. we spoke with a former google employee taking part in the protest today on why he wanted to be here. >> what i wish is that google would serve as the leader in some ways, that it once was by, updating its policies and taking a stand about how their technologies can be used and how they cannot be used. >> and he said specifically in
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the context of google programs like google photos, which can be used to identify people and also project nimbus that we just mentioned. now, last month, there were nine google workers who staged a sit in protest in the office of one of the executives overseeing the program. it lasted several hours before those workers were arrested. another 40 or so google workers and contractors were also fired. after that. sit in again back out here live. you're looking at part of charleston park, the greenbelt, outside the shoreline amphitheater, which is right next to the google campus. right now, at this point, you see just people talking to one another, but we are told that later in about an hour or so, we should start seeing people with signs and banners, protesting google's technology services, its business contracts with the israeli government, and specifically the project nimbus program that we mentioned. but that's scheduled to start in the next hour or so. the conference itself gets started at 10:00, live in mountain view. ali rasmus, ktvu, fox two news.
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>> new this morning, a united airlines flight from singapore to sfo was forced to turn around. >> less than an hour into its trip. united flight 28 was scheduled to arrive in san francisco at nine tonight, but shortly after takeoff, the aircraft declared an emergency. the plane turned around and landed back at the singapore airport an hour ago. we've reached out to the airline for more details. no word yet on when the passengers of that flight will get back in the air. >> new this morning, federal highway safety regulators are opening another investigation into a self-driving car company. this time it's mountain view based waymo. the investigation involves 22 incidents of crashes and traffic violations reported by waymo. no one was hurt in the incidents since last month. federal regulators have opened at least four investigations into cars that have some type of self-driving capabilities. cruise announced it will start testing its self-driving taxis in arizona this week. for now, those rides will have safety drivers on board. it's seen as a major step for cruise to resume
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driverless rides. you'll remember the company suspended operations last fall after an incident involving one of its cars in san francisco, the state revoked cruise's license to operate its self-driving vehicles in california after cruise allegedly covered up information about that crash. >> new this morning, the bay area's newest pro sports team just announced its name when i hear the golden state valkyries, i think of power. >> i think of community. i think of achieving the impossible together and showing the world what is possible. >> that's jess smith, president of the bay area's new wnba team, which we now know will be the golden state valkyrie. as valkyries originate from the norse mythology and are a group of warrior women who are strong, bold and fierce. the team's logo includes the bay bridge to show the tie between oakland and san francisco. the valkyries will begin play in the wnba next season. >> all right. and now we know the name. all right, let's get a rosemary oroczo who is telling
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us about today's weather. should be nice a little later on, right? >> yes. we're looking at these clouds clearing out of the way, and we will have enjoyable weather for the afternoon once again, even a little bit warmer for our inland cities today. mostly cloudy skies from the coast around the bay, beginning to see a few peeks of sunshine out there. and as we roll through the midmorning late morning, we will again begin to see that peel back. mostly cloudy skies at the coast. this low will continue to work its way east, and this ridge behind me here is going to strengthen in the coming days. and our pattern is just going to be very persistent. i'll show you that in the extended forecast. here's a view of about noontime, mostly cloudy at the coast for today. mostly sunny for the rest of us into the evening hours. sun setting just after 8:00. those clouds are moving back into the bay. if you're going to the giants game later today, do expect the clouds to return when the game closer to when the game starts. closer to sunset 53 degrees right now in san francisco. upper 50s in
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livermore. brentwood enjoying some sunshine and 64 for you there. mid 80s for our inner east bay. that's going to be the warmer location for today. 65 in the city of san francisco in the north bay. low 70s in san rafael to low 80s santa rosa. here's a look at what you can expect for the giants game later today as they take on the dodgers. game time six 4556 degrees. partly cloudy, turning mostly cloudy into the evening hours and a west breeze to 15mph. so a cool brisk one there at the ballpark for the evening hours. your extended forecast? not much change moving forward. low 60s along the coast, low 70s around the bay to low to mid 80s inland. tomorrow, thursday into friday, temperatures dip ever so slightly, but not by much. low 60s remaining along the coast to low 80s inland. morning clouds and afternoon sunshine. back to you, rosemary. >> thank you. the man known as former president trump's fixer is taking the stand against him again today. next here on the nine, the latest on michael cohen's testimony in the former
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president's criminal court proceedings. and how his account speaks to the crux of this trial. then san francisco election officials working to reassure voters that disinformation spread by i won't what they'rect on the outcome. ei ing righ now
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stakeholders in this, his first week on the job. chief floyd mitchell has 30 years of law enforcement experience, most recently was the police chief in lubbock, texas. he comes to oakland more than a year after the mayor fired the former police chief and added time. many oaklanders are concerned about public safety, while the mayor's office reports that assaults, homicides and burglaries are all trending down, the number of robberies is on the rise. >> we're looking forward to meeting with him and with many of the merchants and a lot of the a lot of the small businesses and folks that live and work in fruitvale to, you know, to support him. and hopefully he'll be able to be creative and energetic to because we need that right now. >> public safety is the number one priority is not about talking and feeling sorry for people. it's about taking action . >> still no date for a public swearing in ceremony for chief mitchell, and east bay family is asking for help in the search for a loved one who has been missing for several weeks now.
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>> they say dennis chow of hayward, is dealing with serious mental health problems. the 25 year old has no money or cell phone. family members say he has not been seen since april 23rd, just ten days after the first time he wandered away from a hospital from a home. they found him at a point at one point, but say he ran away from a hospital. >> we found him at dublin bart station and when we found him, his feet were heavily blistered. and the day after we drove him to the er here in hayward, where where he was able to get seen for all of those blisters he had on his feet. but to also get a psychiatric evaluation from the doctor. >> the family says they're frustrated that he was allowed to escape from the hospital. and with law enforcement, they think chow could now be in monterey county. more families arriving from vietnam to help with the search. >> a jury in alameda county has convicted a man of second degree murder for killing his girlfriend. investigators say joseph roberts killed 27 year old elizabeth buckner in their pleasanton apartment last
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summer. her body later washed up along the alameda shoreline. elizabeth buckner was a law school student two months away from earning her degree. her mother spoke outside the courthouse yesterday, shortly after the jury announced its decision. >> what today's verdict means for me is that i don't have to look over my shoulder for right now. i've lived in trauma, in terror. >> roberts will be back in court june 14th to be sentenced. he could face 15 years to life in prison. >> former president donald trump's criminal trial continues in new york today. his former lawyer michael cohen, returns to the witness stand for day 17 of the trial. fox's eric shawn is in manhattan to bring us the latest in a show of solidarity. >> house speaker mike johnson joining former president trump when they arrived at his criminal trial in new york city. >> this is the fifth week that president trump has been in court for this sham of a trial. they are doing this
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intentionally to keep him here and keep him off of the campaign trail. >> trump is facing felony charges related to his alleged 2016 hush money payments to star stormy daniels, so she would keep quiet about their alleged affair and not affect the 2016 presidential election. they paid a lawyer a certain amount of money. >> we marked it down as legal expenses. >> returning to the witness stand for a second day, michael cohen, trump's former lawyer and fixer. on monday, cohen testified for more than five hours, telling the jury that it was his former boss who directed him to make the payments to stormy daniels. >> i think that he has done a lot in terms of advancing the case, and i think if he maintains his cool and his the demeanor that we saw yesterday, i think he owns what he did. i think he's going to do just fine. >> next, trump lawyer todd blanche will also have his chance to cross-examine the prosecution's key witness. but cohen's credibility expected to be attacked given his past convictions for lying to
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congress, tax evasion and he served time in federal prison. >> he's all over the map. he's he's hard to pin down, but i don't think that's problematic for the defense because when he speaks, he usually, steps in it with the former president under a gag order. >> he's enlisted some republican allies, house speaker mike johnson and former presidential candidate vivek ramaswamy. among those attending the trial in new york. i'm eric shawn ktvu, fox two news. >> well, california is moving closer to requiring warning labels on new gas stoves sold in the state. the state assembly approved a proposal that would require a label on gas stoves or ranges, warning about pollutants that can release that have been linked to respiratory illnesses. supporters of the legislation say it's needed to make people aware of the risks of childhood asthma and other respiratory problems. the bill now heads to the state senate. >> us airlines are suing to block the biden administration from requiring greater
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transparency over fees. they charge passengers american, delta and united along with three other carriers, accused the transportation department of going beyond its authority by attempting to regulate private business operations. the lawsuit also argues that a new rule would confuse consumers by giving them too much information. during the ticket buying process, the white house says it will defend the rule as part of an ongoing crackdown on junk fees. >> well, changes could be coming to an east bay city over its outdoor dining policies, coming up on mornings on two the ninth. a proposed revisions aimed to strike a balance between a vibrant experience and accessibility. then housing prices are reportedly up nearly 50% since 2020. we'll break down the local numbers and explore how
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good morrow, family! i have prepared a thomas' breakfast for you to savor together. mom: thanks, thom. hey, are english muffins from england? heavens, no! they're from the pantry. are you from england? nay, i am also from the pantry. 'tis a magical place i do have to sleep standing up though. (crunching sounds) (door shuts) he's a nice guy but a little odd. thom: i can still hear you. huzzah! a toast to breakfast.
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50% since 2020. a real estate firm analyzed home prices and found they increased more than 47. that surpassed the growth back in 1990 and 2010. realtors attribute the boom to supply and demand. year over year prices are mostly trending up around the bay area in san francisco. they're up 4.2. in san jose, they're up 8.3. but in oakland, they are down 8.5. credit card debt is on a pace to set a new record this year. >> total u.s. household debt rose by more than $180 billion in the first quarter of 2020 for
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the federal bank's quarterly report on household debt and credit shows, debt surpassed $17 trillion as borrowers struggle to keep up with high inflation and rising prices. if money is weighing down your mental health, you're not alone. according to a new study from bankrate, 47% of adults say financial worries have caused anxiety, loss of sleep, depression and other negative effects. the majority of surveyors say. or surveyors say inflation is their biggest concern right now. while nearly 60% say their stress comes from their daily expenses. this comes as more than a third of american consumers say they have more credit card debt than emergency savings, a new study finds. >> telehealth has become an increasingly common way for women to get access to abortion pills. since the supreme court decision revoking the federal right to abortion, according to a report by the society of family planning. in the last few months of last year, nearly 20% of abortions nationwide were medication abortions in which
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the pills were mailed to a patient. after a remote consultation with a clinician. several states have enacted shield laws that allow providers in those states to prescribe medication abortion drugs using telehealth to people living in states with bans or restrictions . as the american cancer society is launching, what could be the largest study ever on cancer risk among black women, researchers want 100,000 black women between the ages of 25 and 55 who have never been diagnosed with cancer to participate, data show. black women have the highest death rate and shortest survival rate of any racial or ethnic group in the u.s. for most cancers, researchers say they hope to understand the factors that influence those outcomes. >> a new analysis of the longest clinical trial of the weight loss drug, wegovy finds that in addition to helping people lose weight, the medication seems to protect the heart in ways beyond weight loss alone. the study showed that wegovy reduced the risk of a heart attack, stroke, or heart related death by 20. it
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included more than 17,000 people from 41 countries and followed them for several years. the study showed an average weight loss of just over 10, and that people on the medication typically lose weight for about a year and three months before reaching a plateau. >> coming up here on the nine, even before a big conference at google starts today, there's controversy and action in mountain view, what activists are calling on one of the biggest names in tech to stop doing. then a group that's working to support and protect women and girls in the aapi community. we'll talk with the co-founder of an organization dedicated to highlighting their leadership and helping hem overcome unique o
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had a ton of bright sun, which is great. remember at 930, like thursday morning, we were sweating already, but now it is comfortable wherever you are. even in brentwood, city leaders there, by the way, are considering making changes to how the city manages outdoor dining. brentwood city council will discuss whether restaurants can use sidewalk space for tables and outdoor dining. a staff report notes complaints about outdoor tables taking up too much space, making it hard for people walking by. the council is aiming to clarify the rules for downtown brentwood about how businesses can set up their dining and create some new enforcement rules. i love an outdoor table or a parklet, as we're supposed to call them, but
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i will say you spend one day with a wheelchair or a stroller and you will understand the need for space on that sidewalk as well. >> i certainly understand, but downtown brentwood is nice. you do want to get. yeah. you want to get outside? maybe. but i understand the balance between the two. you know what i'm ashamed to say? >> i don't think i've been to downtown and it's growing. >> i was there a few weeks ago. yeah, and it's getting near opening brand new places. it's getting really, really nice down there. >> and it's cherry season in brentwood. so you take your girls go cherries. >> we've been doing. we've been out there too. >> well, then head down to downtown. >> i've been to downtown. >> yeah. oh, yeah. >> it's like i had to put it on my list exactly. >> in brentwood, for sure. >> all right, here are the results from our poll so far that we mentioned earlier this hour. we're asking how you feel about artificial intelligence and these latest chat bots that can talk to you in real time. and also with a realistic sounding voice. you can still vote. look at the results here, 68% say it's creepy. just see that qr code at the top right of your screen? you can click that or vote, or you can just go to
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ktvu.com. only 17% say, i love the new technology. i'm in the 15% camp. it's interesting. i'm cautiously optimistic, but people do not agree with me. >> just like back in the late 90s when people didn't want to go do online banking because they thought it was unsafe, i've waited forever to use an atm. yeah, really? >> like even way back. yeah. oh, wow. yeah. >> and those are, like, pretty safe, right? i know, but back then it was new. >> like, it's just going to take my money. how does it know. >> yeah. yeah. look at us now. look at this. now that's crazy. thinking about that. but yeah we did think about these things back then even for an atm. yeah let's move on to this story now. there is a protest planned for today at google's flagship developers conference. the group organizing the action wants to call attention to google's business contracts with the israeli government, and the role of its technology in the war in gaza. ktvu ali rasmus joins us live from the google campus in mountain view, with much more on this story. haley. >> yeah, we're at the intersection of amphitheater parkway and joaquin road, and behind us you can see and hear
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the protesters that we showed you earlier in that field. they've now moved to this intersection. they have a banner set up calling out and showing the emblem of google there. and they also have some palestinian flags and some of the signs that they're holding in the back are supposed to represent cameras that are supposed to represent this program that they're concerned about, called project nimbus. we'll explain in just a second. but they're having this protest here at this intersection, just as people are driving in and preparing to head into the google developers conference that is happening today, thousands of people from around the world are expected to attend google's flagship i o conference in person and online, an organization that calls itself no tech for apartheid, wants to draw attention to google's business contracts with the israeli government, particularly that project nimbus program we mentioned. that program provides cloud computing service and artificial intelligence technologies to the israeli government. the group here says by extension, the israeli military also benefits
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from it, and that's what they are concerned about. here's what one former google employee who is taking part in the protest had to say about it. >> while these contracts are make giving the israeli government the opportunity to say that they're fighting a smart war, really, they're serving as additional cover for the killing of 35,000 people in palestine so far. >> now, last month, nine google workers staged a sit in protest in the office of one of the executives overseeing the program. it lasted for several hours that sit in protest. it finally ended with the arrest of those nine workers. another 40 or so google workers and contractors were also fired, because of that sit in protest, including some of the organizers of today's demonstration back out here live. you can see the group here of probably about 80 to 100 people taking part in this protest are now making their way down amphitheater
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parkway. that intersection is where they are likely headed. and again, that's where you see all these cars turning to turn into the google developers conference. there's a lot of security. once you get past that intersection. it's unclear whether the protesters will be able to go any farther beyond that intersection. but the conference is scheduled to start at 10:00 this morning. live in mountain view. ali rasmus ktvu, fox two news. >> san jose state has become the latest university where pro-palestinian protesters have set up an encampment against the war in gaza. a professor who is a faculty advisor for the protesters say they want the university to be more transparent about its financial investments and to fully divest from any investments connected to israel. >> the administration, though they send lots of emails about their concerns over wars or natural disasters like earthquakes and hurricanes, have yet to send one email out about the genocide that is happening against the palestinians. and we're in our seventh month now.
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>> the university says while it respects freedom of speech, its main priority is to keep the campus safe for learning. it also said the encampment violates school policy. >> san francisco leaders say work is underway to combat disinformation heading into the november election, but officials say more needs to be done. at a hearing yesterday, the city said it's working with the california secretary of state and the office of elections cybersecurity throughout the election cycle. now, the problem they're seeing right now deciding what messaging is allowed and what is not under the first amendment, many types of election messages are protected. >> and i think getting a memo from the city attorney's office about the constitutional landscape that we're operating here would be crucial. so we know what we can and can't do. and we don't waste our time, and we don't end up in court with the city attorney having to spend a lot of time figuring it out. then on the back end. >> the city says it has many safeguards at the ballot box as well. they say the voting system is not connected to the internet
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system. software is reinstalled and tested before every election, and manual tallies are taken after the election to compare against the results. >> on this giving day during may's aapi heritage month, we are highlighting the good work of an organization dedicated to amplifying the voices of those in the asian and pacific islander communities, not just here in the bay area, but nationwide. aapi women lead examines critical issues of race , society, success and so much more. we welcome doctor connie wan, the organization's co-founder. thanks for being with us. thank you. you grew up here in oakland. i did, and now you're doing this important work here in oakland. but it spreads. tell me what your main focus is all about. >> sure. so thanks for having me . of course. and then a couple of things is aapi women lead focuses on ending violence against asian and native hawaiian pacific islander communities led by women, girls, non-binary communities. and for us, we expand the definition of violence, right? so we've done research and education around how violence for our anh, which is native hawaiian pacific
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islander communities, includes the climate crisis includes poverty, includes health disparities, includes the wars against our communities overseas and here so our work is to end all of those forms of violence against our communities. let's back up a little bit. >> i think most of us, unfortunately, are familiar with the idea of intimate partner violence. we call that violence. we've seen a huge spike in the number of racist incidents against members of the aapi community in recent years. we know that's violence. how do you fold things like the climate and other issues into that very big topic? well there's two ways that we address it. >> one is that for our communities, we are asking for people to understand violence more expansively against us when they talk about racist acts. right. we think of things as health disparities, as also racial right. there are racial health disparities, right? we think about things like the climate crisis also disproportionately impacting our communities in the pacific islands, in hawaii. right. we see what happened recently
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exactly. so for us, that is also also a form of racial and gender violence, right? to the extent that most women girls are impacted by these forms of violence. and then on top of that, when these crises happen or when they are, constructed, we are the ones that are most vulnerable in those situations. so i think for us, we expand the definition of violence, and then we emphasize that in, interpersonal and intimate partner violence happens within those larger structures and experiences of violence. >> so if you're working with a community who is already extremely vulnerable, how do you get them to rise up, so there's two things. again, one is that we've already always risen up. right. so you had to. yeah, exactly. number one, you think about how did we actually get here to the united states, right. which for us we understand is indigenous land. so for us, when we were in our homelands, we had to rise in order to get here or rise against some of the violence that was happening there, including the war in vietnam.
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right the war in cambodia. some of us who are native hawaiian think about how we've had to rise in terms of the colonization, the occupations currently of hawaii, right? continuously rising. so it isn't that we were never risen. it's more that we have always been rising. and now we are asked and actually, we demand that others rise with us and acknowledge how long we've been rising, risen, fight ing, liberating ourselves and other community members. >> you have an incredible energy. i mean, you know, i, as a late 40s woman and feeling it, i imagine when you encounter those young girls, 12, 14, 17 year old girls, what do you hope to sort of infuse them with? >> so here's one. i'm also in my late 40s, so we're twins. okay good, and that and that makes a stunningly beautiful, and then i also want to say our young people are already leading. yeah. and i want us to continue to amplify their leadership and then also to be able to share with them our histories and our legacies of both knowledge and experience, so that we can build
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upon these generations. right? so we're not inspired, bring them, but to be inspired by them and then to share with them what it is that we know and the kind of experiences that we've had, both in terms of violence, but also in terms of resistance and power and leadership, so that we can build upon movements and then extend them and improve upon them and make them even more broadly, impactful. right. because our objective at, you know, aapi women lead, and i hope in all of our communities is to establish and create a different world when we're violence isn't possible where we're not victims or survivors of it, but we are the ones who are leading to create something entirely new. >> growing up in oakland, did you have what you are yourself? >> you know, i grew up in oakland and other parts of the bay area, union city, hayward, and we were working class, poor working class. i was born in highland hospital. i'd say what i was influenced by was not only my mother, who is a war of vietnam war refugee, my grandmother, who was also a vietnam war refugee. i think i
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built again on this legacy of my family's ability to survive a war in vietnam. right. i think i learned from them. great. me, i've learned from my sister, who's the other co-founder. she's younger than me. that's what i mean by learning from our generations. intergenic emotionally. and then i definitely, you know, i learned from a lot of black women, black feminists, latinas, as i learned from a lot of people from our communities. and then i'd also say i was privileged to learn from a freedom fighter by the name of yuri kochiyama. she was interned in japan, in or japan. she was a japanese internment survivor for. interned here. right. i can't believe i said that. and i think i learned from her because she was in close relationships with malcolm x, she was in close relationships to puerto rican movements. she was in close relationships with, indigenous movements. i learned from her directly. actually flew as a kid and found my way to her in harlem. so we didn't have too
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many that were popular, but we had strong and powerful icons both in our homes. and then in in this country, everywhere around you. >> yeah, in the minutes in the seconds we have left. how can people help? >> well, you all can of course, donate to our organization and then of course attend one of our events. we have a research brief and report that we just launched called naming our rage, building our power. this is a national report. it's the first report that was created and led by community members. we're actually going on tour to release our findings, join our tour, go on our social media to find out the dates of these tours and a conference in oakland coming up and a conference in oakland september 21st, but first, there's a heritage month event happening may 24th here, also in oakland. >> that's coming up. doctor wan, it's great to talk with you. >> great to talk with you. of course, it's our pleasure. >> it's our pleasure. if you'd
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like to donate to aapi women lead and i hope you do, we've made it easy for you. scan the qr code on your screen or head to ktvu.com slash giving day. next here on the nine, we have the lineup for the third year of the portola music festival. what electronic music fans can expect and what's new this time around, then eating your way across sonoma county at the healdsburg wine and food experience, we'll give you a taste of what's being offered and y. ow my late father-in-law lit up a room, but his vision dimmed with age. he had amd. i didn't know it then, but it can progress to ga,
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an advanced form of the disease. his struggle with vision loss from amd made me want to help you see warning signs of ga, like: hazy or blurred vision, so it's hard to see fine details, colors that appear dull or washed out, or trouble with low light that makes driving at night a real challenge. if you think you have ga, don't wait. treatments are available. ask a retina specialist about fda-approved treatments for ga and go to gawontwait.com
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voters to overturn the public funding deal for a new ballpark along the strip. lawmakers have approved $380 million for the billion dollar project. the group schools over stadiums, has been gathering signatures for a referendum that would allow the measure to be decided by voters. >> think the public is tired of their politicians, is spending time on these kind of endeavors while essential things like schools, housing go either unfixed or unnoticed, all we are trying to do was ask nevadans, do you want to pay for a billionaires stadium with public money? and that's it. >> the nevada supreme court upheld a lower court decision that found the language of the proposed ballot measure
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confusing schools over stadium says it will try again to put a measure on the ballot. san francisco's portola music festival lineup has been released. >> the annual electronic music event will return to pier 80 for its third year in september. headliners include rufus du sol, disclosure, justice jamie xx, fisher, mia and others. festival organizer danny bell came on ktvu yesterday to talk more about what the event and what to expect this year. we have a couple new focuses on the actual experience. >> we're going to take the crane stage, which was, an outdoor stage last year, right on the water, and we're going to focus on expanding that footprint and making it a much more, immersive, production experience over there. >> bell says they also plan to expand food and beverage options and add more vip areas. >> it's an unforgettable journey through the flavors of sonoma county. the healdsburg wine and food experience is returning this weekend. nestled in the heart of california's renowned
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wine country, the weekend long celebration highlights the region's finest makers from farmers and growers to talented chefs and winemakers. with us now is domenica catelli, who is the owner of cartelli's restaurant. and part of that whole experience. welcome. this looks beautiful. >> thank you. so happy to be here. nice. >> you know, i think that healdsburg had really become a foodie destination, but you grew up in the area. it wasn't always that way, right? >> no, i am, in fact, we called it hicks burg when i was growing up, which is far from that now. it's like more like bougie burg. but we i love the growth that it's had because we've always had such incredible agriculture, which is part of what this food festival and wine festival is focusing on. so we have the wine, we have the food and we have, yeah, we've had it all. and now it's become more and more known and more people are coming and it's so exciting. >> i remember the first time i heard farm to table years ago, and now it's just standard operating procedure for a lot of folks. like your restaurant. >> right? and that's also,
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again, for us in sonoma county, we've had we're blessed with that bounty. so it's just how we grew up and having these incredible farms and farmers like this is this is from one of our farms, front porch farms that we use all the time that this is just picked from them yesterday morning. wow. so it's just incredible. >> yeah. and there's wine too. >> and there's all the wine. >> yes. some of the pairings you've designed for us here. >> so we have this beautiful sauvignon blanc from copeland. i was able to the meet the winemaker. she's amazing. she's going to be also at the events. okay. so it's great with our kale salad, which is one of our staples at kelly's. and people who think they don't like kale actually get and just fall in love with this dish. i also have my handmade ten layer lasagna, so it's all hand rolled, very thin pasta that melts in your mouth, and then that we're pairing with the pinot noir with the pinot noir, but also we have to sneak in there, this amazing tequila. so we're having a spicy, a little bit of a spicy margarita. i usually do it with cilantro, but i had basil. so
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we're going to shake a little basil. >> can we do that? can you see the excitement in my face? yes oh, it's only what, 950 margarita 5:00 somewhere. >> yeah. >> that's right. so how do you make this? you have the shakers here. >> so. yes. so we have the tequila in here. then we also have lime. basil. i've got some ice. if you want to start shaking. i have sure that all set up and we can pour our glasses and this is really fun. so one of my great, bar manager at cartelli's, rosy, came up with this. and we do our own housemade chili oil on top, which adds this whole other flavor. but one of our good chef friends, stephanie izard, who's also going to be in in town, i love her chili crunch. and so when i don't have my own homemade chili oil, i'll use a little bit of this on top. and i'm going to put a little ice in there. and this just gives it a whole extra level. do you like spicy? i do okay, good. me too. because that'll this will wake us up okay a little ice and.
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yeah. cheers >> can i get this? if i come to your restaurant. >> you sure can. good. okay cheers. cheers. start. start there. and we're going to get on to our wine. wow yeah. okay. makes you feel like you're on the beach. yep >> so the wines, this one is, my wife does happen to, like, the, this have to see. okay, so when did sol blanc become such a big thing, when did sauv blanc? i mean, it seems as if, for a while, it was kind of a wine that not a lot of people drink. >> and now a lot of people love this one, i think. >> i think once people started learning the beauty of this wine, it's it is so crisp and light. it pairs with so many different foods. you can it's not just a first course. it's great with our salad, but you can take it into fish, you can take it into pastas, and i feel like it's especially spring summer. it just brings all those type of dishes together and so enjoyable. >> tell me something about the festival that people who don't
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know. is it a bunch of stages together? is it in the square? how does it okay, so it's a it's all over. >> so there's the big event on saturday which we still have tickets for. that's right off the hillsboro plaza, which is fantastic because you have winemakers from all over sonoma county. there's international winemakers, there's spirit makers, there's some of our best chefs in sonoma county are going to be there. people from pizza to chef christo lipsky from boone and road trip. there's just an immense amount. there's tickets left for that. we also have different experiences at wineries. there's a great meal with one of my dear friends, chef maneet chauhan. she's going to be with our other friend, tracy shabbos, doing a bollywood dinner on friday night, which is incredible. and then we have the, guys big after party bottle party at the matthiessen chef dustin and vlet, another dear friend, it's going to be at his restaurant. still tickets left for that. we have low and behold, which is one of the most incredible bars and restaurants
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anywhere, in my opinion. there's an event going on there, so it's peppered all over. there's a rodney strawn with a music concert, so there's something for everyone, really. and you can dive in, head on to every experience or handpick a la cartes. it's just a really amazing event that's evolved over the last three years. okay, unfortunately our time is out, so we're going to toast away and i'm going to thank you for coming here. >> it sounds like a great experience. domenica catelli. thank you. and cartelli's restaurant in healdsburg. if you want to go to the healdsburg wine and food experience, just head to our website. that's ktvu .com. click on the web link section for more information on. thank you again. still to come, a remarkable story of a teenager from chicago. next on the nine how the 17 year old is rewriting the rules of education and earning a phd as her journey is nothing shor
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ugh, when is my allergy spray going to kick in? -you need astepro. -astepro? it's faster, bro. 8x faster than flonase. it's faster, bro! it's faster, bro! it's faster, bro! it's mom to you. astepro starts working in 30 minutes. astepro and go!
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leaving the city, shreve and company announced it's moving its flagship store from post street in union square to palo alto. the company has been rooted in the city since its founding in 1852. shreve and company says the move is part of its retooling of the company's business plan. the san francisco location is hosting a public liquidation sale starting on may 17th. >> started rehiring some members of its supercharger team two weeks after the ceo gutted it. chief among the people who've returned is the team's north american director. it's unclear how many people so far have been rehired out of the nearly 500 who were laid off last week, musk pledged to spend more than $500 million on growing tesla's supercharger network this year. >> a 17 year old says she is not done learning after graduating with a phd this month. dorothy jean tillman walked across the stage last week after successfully defending her dissertation. she earned a
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bachelor's degree at 11 and a master's degree at 14. while being homeschooled, tillman completed her doctoral degree at arizona state. after being accepted into the behavioral health management program in 2021. >> learning more about the world around me, learning more about all of the different things and fields and spaces i can go into, all the different things i could possibly do with integrated behavioral health. just researching and learning and exploring. >> the team doctor says she credits her village of supporters. she also reminded people that she is still a teenager and is excited to go to prom. this week. we're like doogie howser. >> yeah, that's always my concern about these superstars, these kids who are so smart and so ahead of everybody else, all of their peers. i'm like, do they still go to the mall? you know, like, do they get to do because you're only 17 or 14 or whatever once? >> well, she wants to go to prom. i like it. so she is still living her life as a teenager, even though she's a doctor now. >> i love hearing that. well,
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peek one more time at that pole we've been watching all morning. people have been scanning the qr code at the top right of the screen, heading to ktvu.com/vote. you've been telling us how you feel about artificial intelligence, and those chatbots that can talk to you in real time. most of you 71% say it's creepy. the next largest group kind of split here between i love the new tech and it's interesting. so not a lot of super strong support. yes. >> all right. well thank you so much for joining us. a quick reminder you can stream ktvu news on your smart tv. you can watch live newscasts and stories on demand on your amazon fire tv, roku, apple tv or android tv. just search for the fox local app and then select ktvu. i'll take it away. ♪ we're gonna have a real good time ♪ ♪ feel good time ♪ ♪ spreading love and joy and laughter all over the place ♪ ♪ we're gonna have a good time ♪ ♪ we're gonna have a good time ♪ ♪ it will be so legendary ♪ ♪ sherri's got you feeling good ♪

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