before the low pressure starts to ease away. on saturday, we will see wet weather to the west. it is also going to impact wales and south west england. elsewhere, dry with sunshine. if you dodge the showers, you will get that once again. but we could see lines of showers through east anglia, stretching up towards newcastle and south west scotland. we are going to see the winds strengthen, particularly with this pulse of wet weather pushing up from the south west towards northern ireland during the beginning of sunday. that is then going to sit across northern ireland and south west scotland once again. that is where the worst of the weather is going to be. it is also going to be windy, but elsewhere, yet again, it is going to be blustery. you might see isolated showers, but you could also grab some late summer, early autumn, whichever way you prefer, sunshine and top temperatures on sunday of 25 degrees. thanks. and that s bbc news at six. you can keep up with all the latest
you should video of those rescues. we were told yesterday close to 300 rescues had been reported. that is not counting all the volunteers who are randomly showing up on their own, with their own boats, and for readers, and drones, trying to find loved ones, or neighbors, or people have just heard about who need saving and really remote parts of the area. specific to the death count that you just updated, coming from the governor today. tragic numbers again. 25, expected to keep rising. the governor also noted, in that 25, at least six children, and they re not counting kentucky corridor, set of the six children, four of them are siblings. so for kids from one family. here on the ground, gut-wrenching stories of loss frankly. unimaginable loss unfolding here on the ground in kentucky as we said the rescue keep on piling up and everybody who did survive, was able to make a, not coming home to see the damage and destruction. we wanted to show you a portion of an interview we sho
there you go. bob marley said it best. stolen from africa, gentrified in harlem. american black folks keep losing our connection to the places we come from. so i m headed to central appalachia, a place many folks don t realize black folks still live, to hunt, eat, farm, and harmonize on the harmonica with the folks that fight to keep this place known as one of the homes of black folks. this is black appalachia. again! yes! nice! when i say appalachia, you probably picture something like this, or this. harmful stereotypes of poor white folks. we ll have to take those on another day, because what you probably don t picture is this. but the history of black folks here runs as deep as any other nonindigenous people. they are a critical part of appalachia, and i m here to help tell their stories because it is in danger of disappearing forever. so i m actually walking the appalachian trail right now? you are. you are. those mountains there, those are some of the old
peace. should people be frightened? people should wake up. it s 1991. we have talked at each other and about each other a long time. it is high time we started talking with each other. no justice, no peace. can t we all get along? in about 20 minutes from now, david dinkins is scheduled to take a public oath of office and become new york city s next mayor and the first african american mayor. i intend to be the mayor of all the people of new york. david being inaugurated on new year s day 1990 is an auspicious start to the decade. and the culmination of some of the civil rights struggles of the 1960s . people are seeing tangible benefits of that struggle. a grandson of slaves was worn? as the nation s first elected black governor. i was born in the 30s so you know i didn t think nothing like that was going to happen. after we saw hundreds of black elected officials, the reality set in that we made a step, but we had not gotten all the way to where we wante
a major energy and health care bill that could breathe new life in his agenda. he urged congress to act quickly and pass it. the fact is that my message to congress is this. this is the strongest bill you can pass to low eriner inflatio tackle costs, and promote energy security, all the time while reducing the burdens facing working class and middle class families. manu raju is on capitol hill for us. manu, how did this come together? reporter: over the last few days, these negotiations between joe manchin and chuck schumer have picked up behind the scenes. in mid-july, the talks broke off for a little bit of time after manchin saw the june inflation numbers about 9%. he came out, he was concerned about it, he indicated he did not want to move forward on climate and energy provisions and tax provisions. at that point, schumer said they could agree on potentially a narrow health care bill. but things changed over the last several days. manchin told a group of reporters e