Welcome to our panel today. These authors all commit the question of justice in different ways. I am frank shyong a columnist with the l. A. Times and i will let everyone introduce themselves so i get it correctly. I am Nicholas David often and i come from new haven, connecticut. I am erica and i live in california. My name is ali winston and i come from new york. I feel like this is setting up a tender profile or something. I live in l. A. I will start with erica. You wrote the book somewhere sisters. I wanted to ask you, as an introduction to the book in case not everyone here has read it, why did you want to write a book and how did the idea come about . My book centers on a pair of identical trends twins born in vietnam separated at birth. About six years ago i became a mother to identical twins. I was studying twin science and epigenetics. I connected with a researcher in california that is a very wellknown twin researcher. She connected me with twins around the world. For a piece
Tonights look at something beautiful, coming to you from kqed headquarters in San Francisco, friday, april 28th, 2023. Hello, and weome to the show. I am priya david clemens. This winter saw waves of atmospheric rivers unleash narly unprecedented levels of rain on california. And while the storms left a multibilliondollar trail of damage in their wake, they also finally brought about the end of a years long drought that had clipped the golden ste. Now as we head toward the summer, the water from the same winter storms is gearing up for its next act, the big melt. Joining me now to discuss in the studio, our editor and reporter, and newsroom meteorologist, jeffrey diaz. Thank you for being with us. Thank you. We had an extremely wet and rainy winter. Now we had a beautiful week of warm weather. But that has exacerbated the big melt. So jerry, kick us off. Tell us about warmer weather and what we should expect in the weeks ahead. Unfortunately, the week , the heat wave we have experience
california. as the storm battered state endures another round of heavy rain and flooding. donald trump facing new legal woes, the former u.s. president weighing whether to testify before a grand jury about his alleged role in a hush money scheme. plus a major step for the mideast as iran and saudi arabia establish a deal to restore diplomatic ties, the surprise agreement helped along by beijing. i ll break down what it all means. we begin in california where at least two people have died in massive storms hitting the state. the result of yet another atmospheric river. nearly 10,000 residents are under evacuation orders shelters set up to help those forced out because of intense flooding. more than 40,000 homes and businesses are without power. the central coast has been the hardest hit with creeks turned into raging rivers and roads washing out, stranding thousands. the worst is now expected to impact the foothills of the central and southern see as. all of this led the weath
evacuation orders in california as excessive rainfall leads to raging flood waters. the fresno county sheriff joins me in a few minutes. new legal woes for donald trump, the former u.s. president is considering whether to testify before a grand jury about his alleged role in a hush money scheme. a look at what s behind the second largest bank collapse in u.s. history, and how it happened in just 48 hours. announcer: live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber. another atmospheric river has been pouring massive amounts of rain and snow on california, at least two people have died in powerful storms battering the state. and the weather prediction center put parts of california in the highest warning level possible for excessive rainfall with the worst of it out along the california central coast. officials issued warnings for 10,000 residents, including these folks, who say the rain is unprecedented. go up there check on the scene in case they need
responsible completely. welcome to fox fox news live, i m eric shawn. hey, arthel. arthel: hello, everyone, i m arthel neville. new questions today about what led to this e epic collapse. in 48 hours, the go-to bank for tech start-ups and small businesses went belly up. the fdic, which insures bank deposits up to $250,000, says customers will have access to their money by tomorrow morning. here s secretary yellen earlier today. what i do want to do is emphasize that the american banking system is really safe and well capitalized. it s resilient. during the financial crisis, there were investors and owners of systemic large banks that were bailed out. we re not going to do that again. eric: well, is this going to cause a meltdown the on wall street and elsewhere? nate foy is here following other breaking news. reporter: in her remarks this morning, secretary yellen kid the not say how regulators plan to help depositors, only that they will. and she assured that the u.s.