waves. i missed the initial waves. i looked out and saw the entire dance floor submerged. i saw all of our bud vases and everything knock aed over. and at first, it was oh, my goodness what a disaster but it turned out to be really good union. yeah, to kind of gauge what happened, we looked at it thinking okay, it s basically this little area that got taken out, we re going to continue, the ceremony is on the other side, our coordinator and the whole event sprung into action with a lot of our family and friends. and our amazing deejay, deejay tiger who was able to keep the party going. yes. he kept going. it was so fun. we re really lucky for all of our friends and family. look, experience weddings are the thing right now. so, you really have done it the right way. dillon and riley murphy, the most important thing, you re happy, you re smiling, you re well. it was an event you ll never forget. we wish you a lifetime of mostly dry happiness. thank you so much. th
hoards, millions of people on the move as the weather worsens. there is going to be interesting times to be in your business for the next and you know a little bit about our business, being married to jamie gangel, one of our personal favorites. superstar reporter covering the j-6 committee. it has been a privilege to watch her cover that story. you are breaking news in your house and turning out wonderful new books. david silva portrait of an unknown woman . it is wonderful. i loved it. thank you so much. thank you so much. we re talking about climate change, a record-shattering temperature just reported in the united kingdom moments ago. cnn is live in london with how they re dealing with this heat wave. and tensions running high, understandably, at a uvalde school board meeting, with parents, some of them, threatening to not send their kids back to school until the security situation has been fixed. we ll be joined live by the family of amerie jo garza, one of the you
he worked for a local authority which closely monitors the flow in the po delta. at the moment of real climate crisis, he says is 2022. to ensure adequate drinking water, one local authority has resorted to renting expensive mobile desallenization plants. climate change means we have to be ready for emergencies like this says the director mon ica manto, elsewhere the water is used to save at least a portion of the crops. to the climate special ist it s too late and too late. what we can do now it try to reduce losses.
betzi s family has generated rice. we ve never seen a drought like this, he says. climate change here isn t a myth. it s reality. in the last ten years, antonio says, the area planted with rice has gone down almost 50% as a result of drought. close to the sea, there is water everywhere. but not a drop to drink. in normal times, this is where the salt water reached in this river. about three miles from the adriatic. but now because of the drought, because of the low level of fresh water in the river poe, the salt water is reaching 18 miles inland and that is having a disastrous result for drought.
him. most of the books pass through the art world. this one actually stays in the art world for the most part. i have a feeling he s going to get drawn back in to israeli intelligence now and again in the future. for lovers of your work, they will know you more or less predicted vladimir putin turning in to the vladimir putin he turned into. you were ahead of isis being an awful phenomenon that overtook europe in different ways in the middle east. you were even ahead of mohammed bin salman, some of the things he was involved with. what is next? what do you see as something that is worth looking at going forward? how many different problems do we face right now? we have we face a rapidly changing economy that i think that the globe is going to splinter into regional powers. we re going to enter very unstable period of our history, and, by the way, we have gone from climate change to flat out climate emergency right now. we re going to have hoards and