consecrated, i think. and i didn t go to mass. remember what i said about afghanistan? i said we get help froer whamd. the taliban. what s happening now? what s going to readi was your press? i wasright. right. less than 500 days untilthe the 2024 election and the left is finally to panic over biden s latest embarrassing stumbles. politico leading the way today with a new column. why should primary biden? the onus should be on bidensl to prove he s mentally and physically nimble enough to dallyo job for another termdo before he s allowed to run against the bestlicans h the republicans have to offer. besides putting him ine to fighting, trim or not. primary adversaries would prepare for the all too realreal possibility that he s incapacitated pos, by a stroke, seriously injured or even worseinjured . even wor the piece even addresses pre main reason biden neede eves a primary challenger, his vice president. is vicf kamala harris, hadnvince convinced the country that she
and staff issues continue to wreak havoc on the holiday weekend getaway. speak with the faa says today will be the highest level of scheduled flights for the holiday. pour air quality alerts are in effect for millions across the country as smoke from canadian wildfires continues to spread. look how it has expanded from the midwest to all the way down into the deep south. speak of the defendant is not guilty. norah: breaking news. the school resource officer is acquitted of child negligence after not confronting the gunman in the deadliest high school shooting in american history. the secret service arrested a man accused of threatening to blow up former president barack obama s home. his alleged connection to january 6th. georgia s fresh peaches are expensive and scarce. always a diva fruit, preaches generally need 850 hours under 45 degrees fahrenheit to blossom. what worries me is it is becoming a lot more difficult to make peaches. grounded
potential for instability in russia. norah: deadly storms and tornadoes hit the south and midwest, as 57 million americans brace for more dangerous weather. large hail, wind damage with power outages, and the flood threat. excessive heat watches and warnings have expanded. three san antonio police officers have been charged with murder. for the way they handled the call involving 46-year-old melissa perez. the shooting officer s actions were not consistent with sapd s policy and training. somebody came down and said we lost comm. for the first time, we are hearing from a family member who lost both her son and her husband on the titan submersible. both of them, they really, really wanted to do that for a very long time. the drugmakers behind ozempic are now racing to develop a daily pill for people who want to lose weight. norah: and how one tiktok creator helped a community. in peoria, illinois, many lgbtq and people of color statistically less likely
case also tonight we return to florida devastated by hurricane ian eight months ago florida insurance companies are accused of short changing homeowners were damage claims altered? families still in limbo in uninhabitable homes. we investigate plus florida s massive tourism industry, booming in some places but struggling in others we met them right after ian hit. some left, some stayed the steps forward big and small as ft. myers beach comes back announcer: this is nbc nightly news with lester holt reporting tonight live from ft. myers beach, florida. good evening and welcome, everyone. we ve taken nightly news on the road tonight to ft. myers beach, florida for a story of unfinished business tonight with the official start of hurricane season just over a week away, a followup to hurricane ian, which came ashore here last september as a destructive category 4 hurricane. in many spots here as you can see around me it looks like it just happened last week there ar
and if so, how might that happen? we ve already seen some service-based and manufacturing jobs turned to ai in a big way. but what about other industries? can ai replace journalists or news anchors? perhaps it already has. anderson cooper: because what you just saw and heard a moment ago was not actually me. this is me, anderson cooper. anderson cooper ai: and i am an ai-generated anderson cooper. anderson cooper: that wasn t my real voice. and i never spoke the words you just heard. we asked a young student in california to create a fully end-to-end ai version of me. looks like me sounds like me and it didn t take him very long to do it. anderson cooper ai: this ai version of me was created in just a few weeks actually, with open-source tools. anderson cooper: and remember, this technology is still in its infancy. it s only going to get better and faster and more accurate, which raises all sorts of questions, like how will we know what s real? anderson cooper ai: and what is