welcome to champions for change. i m dr. sanjay gupta. this hour we will spotlight people who are changing the way things are done. they re not celebrities. they re not politicians, but they are re-shaping the world with creativity, passion and heart. later in the show you re going to meet my champion for change, but first, cnn anchor and former track star ana cabrera catches up with a coach and mentor for some determined girls who are lacing up their running shoes and chasing down dreams. go get them! go get them! i wouldn t be the person i am today without her. excellent, baby girl. jean bell wears a lot of hat, she s a coach, a judge, a friend. to me, she s a dream maker. hat she s a coach, a judge, a friend. to me, she s a dream maker. i ve been coaching my own team jeuness for 37 years. what does jeuness mean? it s a french word for young ladies. i wanted to coach young girls as they became young women. i can let them know that education is the
pope francis slowing down? what he said after a pilgrimage of penance to canada. i m chris livesay in rome. pope francis apologized for what he called cultural genocide. mega-winner. mega ball number. a single ticket beat the odds. later, seeing is believing. we take you to a place where all children see themselves as heroes. we get a lot of gasps from children. really? we ve had parents and adults cry. announcer: this is the cbs weekend news from chicago with adriana diaz. good evening. a covid rebound for president biden. he s tested positive again. a phenomenon that happens in some cases after people take paxlovid. that s the antiviral therapy from pfizer taken as a pill. in a video released today, the president says he s feeling fine. but he is again isolating at the white house and canceled his weekend travel plans. cbs christina ruffini is at the white house tonight with more. christina, we know the president tested negative just yesterday. what s t
they announced they are launching a disinformation reporting team featuring journalists whose expertise apparently is fake news. that must ve been been hard to find. every journalist these days as an expert on fake news. like seeing a french bulldog is a expert on farting. that s all they do. something about their flat faces. good to see mpr realizing the necessity of policing fake news like a drug addict checking himself into rehab admitting you have a problem. npr is the first step, so good for you. the first investigation via themselves this tweet from npr it s self right before the 2020 election. here, mpr asks why you haven t seen stories from them about the new york post story on hunter biden which the paper broke a month or so before the 2020 election. as you know, the story was flushed on a toilet like an ounce of crack when cops kick in hunter s front door. [laughter] debating whether to reread that. they got it. greg: it s monday. i have a lot on my mind. yeah
digits fahrenheit. new york city could soon see its longest streak of 90-degree days since 2013. officials there have shortened their triathalon course for tomorrow. and in boston their triathalon has postponed altogether. one woman describes how the unbearable heat feels. what s it like in your apartment? hell. it s like hell? horrible. it s horrible. i sat outside here from ten to 4:00 this morning. as europe s heat wave moves eastward, wildfires have forced tens of thousands of people from their homes. you can see here parts of greece and slovenia are blanketed with flames and smoke. just terrifying scenes there. according to the w.h.o., the heat wave has caused more than 1,700 deaths in spain and in portugal. these heat waves are dangerous. we got a look at the impacts of this extreme heat here in the u.s. and of course overseas and how much longer it will last. let s begin now with polo sandoval in new york. hi there, polo. so we know new york is under a