PHUKET: The driver of a delivery pickup truck that slammed into the steel barricade protecting the Heroines Monument early this morning (July 14) has been charged with reckless driving causing damage
so, they are really the heroes and the heroines of this outbreak. [dr. smith] the reason we kept going to work every day was because if i didn t go to work, then someone else had to go to work. and so, we needed to be there for each other. [tim] what you saw in new york at seven o clock every night, many people would start making noise. they would either clap, or they would bang pots as a way of thanking the people that couldn t stay home. the people that were out there saving us. that s so nice. [dr. smith] people in this city went out of their way to be there for everyone else. we need to look at the fact that somehow, this plague brought out some of the best in all of us, and try to capture that and bring that forward as we approach the rest of our lives. [music]
i m gonna be fine, i haven t slept in a long time. i just wanted to call you to say goodbye. and then his son started talking and i pushed the mask back down on his face so he would get the pressure of that air, and his son said something to him like, i love you, dad. and then, and then i took the mask off and he said, i love you too, mijo. and then i put the mask back on, his son hung up, and i said, okay. and then he looked at me and he said, only one? i can only call one? and i told him, you can call as many people as you want. and i stood with him, he called five people i think, and i did that for five people. he said goodbye to his daughter and he said goodbye to his son, and i think that was his last goodbye. that was it. [dr. fauci] when the history of this outbreak is written, the real heroes and heroines of this are gonna be our healthcare providers. they hung in there, i mean, they got exhausted. many of them got infected, several of them died.
[dr. fauci] when the history of this outbreak is written, the real heroes and heroines of this are gonna be our healthcare providers. they hung in there, i mean, they got exhausted. many of them got infected, several of them died. so, they are really the heroes and the heroines of this outbreak. [dr. smith] the reason we kept going to work every day was because if i didn t go to work, then someone else had to go to work. and so, we needed to be there for each other. [tim] what you saw in new york at seven o clock every night, many people would start making noise. they would either clap, or they would bang pots as a way of thanking the people that couldn t stay home. the people that were out there saving us. that s so nice. [dr. smith] people in this city went out of their way to be there for everyone else. we need to look at the fact that somehow, this plague brought out some of the best in all of us, and try to capture that and bring that forward
good evening, and thank you for joining us on this busy wednesday night. we began with the death of music icon tina turner, one of the most dynamic and energetic performers ever to take the stage. turner was not only a vibrant, unstoppable force in music, she was a survivor, and an inspiration to generations of women. she died tuesday at her home in switzerland at the age of 83. after what is only being described as a long illness. turner was awarded 12 grammies,e rock n roll hall of famer, and sold more than 180 million albums. her stirring life story inspired and acclaimed movie and hit broadway musical. at the prestigious kennedy center honors in 2005, president george w. bush referred to turner s legs as the most famous in show business. oprah winfrey quoted one of her hit songs, saying we don t need another hero, we need more heroines like you.