& friends. and what you re seeing there are some entrepreneur who just happen to have down syndrome because this is town syndrome awareness month, and we brought in some people who are very, very special and are showing us that special needs doesn t mean you can t be accomplished. there her, and we went wait to get out on fox square joey: i ve been following them on e social media. it s all about doing good, being good people. rachel: can i say one thing in remember colette9? she is now going bigtime next month, her cookies are going into shoprite, which is a big grocery store here on the east coast. listen, incredible. pete: dud can you invest? did you invest? rachel: should have. pete. pete: if nancy pelosi can get stock tips, we should be able to invest. if they re playing the game, we can play the game. aye never done that yet, but now i m thinking about it. joey, it s great to have you here. joey: pleasure to be here. pete: bug bulldogs played today. joey: that te
through the rest of this week. into the weekend, keeping the cooler and fresher ever scotland and northern ireland but not so for england and wales. that is why we have this extreme heat warning from the met office for sunday. it is likely to be extended into monday. it is just for england and wales but there are over 50 million people within that warning area and there will be some extreme temperatures on the way. darren, thank you very much again. darren, thank you very much again. darren with the weather for us and the weather warning for later in the week. that is bbc news at ten on monday the 11th ofjuly. of course there are more programmes giving you analysis and more details of the daily puzzle stories. newsnight standing by on bbc two with more analysis and on and on bbc one the news continues with my colleagues in the nations and regions for the news where you are. for now from all of us on the ten o clock team, it s good night. thank you, huw. coming up on bbc londo
around the clock to find families who still may be trapped, some residents losing everything. animals are without people. homes are destroyed. we need as much help, please, i m begging anyone who sees this, help my town, help my people. cnn s joe johns is live for us in hazard, kentucky. and the debris field is tremendous, joe, and we heard the governor there say they continue to look for people because so many remain unaccounted for. what are you finding? reporter: that s right, and they say it s possible this could go on for weeks, not days. so they say a picture is worth a thousand words, fred. and i just wanted to show you where we are. we are in hazard, kentucky. you look behind me here, there s the foundation of a house. believe it or not, before the flood there was a house there, a woman inside told us she started feeling the house moving around 1:00, 2:00 in the morning. she gets out, and then the rushing water essentially d demolishes the house and sends the de
share 20 transcripts from his witnesses with justice department investigators. the committee also seems to be zeroing in on former trump cabinet officials. of particular interest, conversations among those officials about possibly invoking the 25th amendment to remove trump from office. joining us now is johnwood, a former senior investigator for the january 6th select committee. he is running as an independent in missouri for the senate there. john, thank you so much for being with us. so, it was cnn s exclusive reporting, the department of justice is preparing to make a case to get around executive privilege, to basically force the testimony, to be prepared to force the testimony of key trump advisers. what does this tell you about where they are? where this federal investigation is? yeah, this is a really big step. up until a few days ago, there were very few public signs that the justice department was really focused on people in trump s immediate inner circle, as opp
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