Transcripts For KNTV NBC Bay Area News At 6 20141004

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>> so what did you do with the money? >> it's operating, it got sucked in a black hole. >> reporter: we also learned of more missing money. this time 19 investors gave him $1.3 million to invest in the south bay car dealership. he got their money and never explained where it went. >> get away, excuse me! >> what do you say to the people who want to know where their money is? >> reporter: in court, many of the investors asked the judge to issue the maximum sentence. while some of ron's friends asked for a lesser sentence. >> i do believe he knew and willfully and intentionally did deceive and defraud the various victims in the case. >> he's going to spend a significant amount of time in state prison. >> he was crying through most of the sentencing and i don't think he was crying for himself. it was honest and sincere remorse for what had happened. >> reporter: he did not speak during today's sentencing. the former sheriff's advisory board member has already spent eight months behind bars wide receiver with credit for time served his attorney estimates he will spent between 13 and 22 months in the state prison. the judge ordered him to pay restitution to victims if he comes into money after he gets out of prison. >> thank you for the update. from a car deal gone bad to today's sentencing we have a full-time line of the events leading up to this verdict today on our website, nbcbayarea.com. okay, you're feeling it no doubt. friday night across the bay area. it's still hot. even in san francisco, in the 90s. you know what the show goes on. thousands of people as you can see here cramming into golden gate park for the annual hardly strictly bluegrass festival. same across the region, a live look in san jose where it's in the upper 90s. michelle roberts joins us from morgan hill this evening which is close to 100 degrees. we'll start with our meteorologist rob mayeda with our weekend forecast. >> normally at 6:00 we should see temperatures in the 70s to low 80s inland. today's highs running 10 to 25 degrees above where they should be for this time of year. right now still 90s outside. dropping down to about 88 degrees in san francisco as you take a closer look here at our microclimate data network. you can see around downtown san francisco still 87. 80s follow you to the beaches thanks to offshore winds. clear skies right now on ocean beach. no sign of fog, no sign of that ocean air conditioning. temperatures around parts of the south bay too, michelle roberts is reporting live coming up in a moment. mid 90s down from 99 around morgan hill a little bit earlier. we've got this heat advisory for tonight through 9:00. overnight, hilltop locations seeing temperatures in the 70s. and this pattern repeats tomorrow for our inland valleys from 11:00 to 9:00 tomorrow, mid to upper 90s inland. some relief coming to the coast hinting a the cooler changes for the second half of the weekend. a full look at that in your microclimate forecast. michelle roberts got our hottest assignment of the evening. she joins from us live oak high school in morgan hill. a lot of sweat for those football players out there. >> and reporters. geez, i've been sweating all afternoon. it's all for the fun of the game. the varsity game will be a little bit better. it starts in about an hour. these jv players have been really burning in this heat. it's been a rough afternoon. it's not only the players who have been drinking water, it's fans. you can see them under umbrellas, anything to get away from the sun. midday temperatures in morgan hill soared into the 90s. road crews braving the heat for a paycheck tell us the october heat wave isn't so bad. students over at eltoroment tear say it feels like summer. >> it feels like there's some nice weather but it fees really, really hot out here. >> reporter: which is why morgan hill unified school district is operating under the so-called rainy day schedule. >> you can drink water if you have a water bottle. >> reporter: students crowded around the water fountain and play time in the direct sun was a little bit shorter. >> a fair amount of our teachers work with kids at lunchtime in the classroom. there's basically a huge array of air conditioned classes they can go into. >> reporter: the principal at live oaks high school says athletes will practice inside to avoid heat when possible but tonight coaches will be looking for signs of dehydration, even more closely than the scoreboard. >> we'd look for kids who appear tired, because sometimes they won't tell you. and then we'd pull them aside, give them water, let them rest. >> reporter: football players aren't the only ones anxious for a new weather pattern. >> we're really looking forward to getting some rain and having fire season unwind. >> reporter: cal fire battalion chief scott says one spark of a lawnmower can turn into a dangerous situation. >> the heat dries things out, makes it a lot tougher for our firefighters to get up and down the hillsides. so we increase our staffing to make it easier to put the fires out. >> reporter: there's a slight breeze out here tonight which feels good, although can be adding did that fire danger. i've got to tell you, it does not feel like football weather here tonight. >> grab some shade, thanks. now to developing news on the ebola outbreak. the nbc freelance photographer diagnosed with the deadly virus will be flown back to the states this sunday. ashoka mukpo became ill while working with dr. nancy snyderman in liberia. she has shown no symptoms. mukpo's parents say his symptoms at this point are mild. >> there's the fear he becomes sicker before we have a transto transport him and that's the big concern we have right now. >> hazmat teams in dallas are decontaminating the apartment where thomas duncan was staying before he was diagnosed with ebola. the cdc is keeping an eye on three other possible cases in d.c., maryland, georgia. mark matthews is live in san francisco with a look at how prepared the bay area is for an ebola crisis. >> reporter: the confidence in this country's ability to contain the ebola virus is rooted in a couple of facts. one, in west africa where the disease is spreading they do not have a first-world health care system. two, ebola doesn't spread that easily. at san francisco international, up somes and border patrol agents are trained in how to handle passengers who are showing signs of being sick. with ebola it is not an infectious disease during incubation, only when a person is showing symptoms. >> the first real symptom is fever. if you screen for fever, you can catch people on the front end of disease. >> reporter: people boarding planes in west africa are being screened for fever. but as we have seen, it is possible to carry the disease for several weeks before the fevers begin. >> people coming back inside the incubation period need to engage in self-monitoring. >> reporter: san francisco general says it is ready. and the hospital's epidemiologist believes that's true for every medical center in the bay area. >> the key thing that we've been working on in terms of preparedness is identification of such a case. >> reporter: dr. lisa winston says the gowns and gloves and masks used routinely to prevent the spread of other infectious diseases would also serve for ebola. >> we have rooms that we can use for somebody with ebola, like we have rooms that are ready for patients with other infectious diseases. >> reporter: there isn't a particular isolation room in san francisco general hospital because any room could be converted to be an isolation room. it just happens that all of the rooms this afternoon are full. paramedics and ambulances are ready. according to the office of emergency management. >> so whether it's something scary like ebola or something much more infectious like the flu, they're trained to handle it. they're trained to deal with it. >> reporter: what we are hearing from san francisco general and from the office of emergency management and from the experts in infectious diseases is that ebola will not be the same kind of problem here as it is in west africa, and the attention really needs to be on the countries where the disease is spreading. enterovirus has hit another bay area county, san francisco county health leaders say their case involves a child who was admitted to a hospital for two days in september. the child has since been discharged and is in good health. the announcement comes a day after alameda and solano counties reported their first cases. we'll have a live report on local enterovirus cases coming up in about 20 minutes from now, 6:30, including reaction from local doctors. yeah! whoo! >> lots of cheers for the giants today. the playoff game was in washington, d.c., but the big party, here in the bay area. this afternoon, bars, restaurants in san francisco overflowing with joins fans. joints fans. >> the energy is wonderful, everyone gets together. big community. we're giants all together, i love it. >> the fans who left work early today to watch the game say it just might become a habit. >> a little hooky? >> the same habit we saw in 2010 and 2012 on the world series run. jim kozimor, there's just something about this team. something about them in the postseason. >> you're absolutely right. man, doesn't everyone love to celebrate. only once have the giants lost a ninth-inning postseason lead. that was back in 1911. 73-1 in those situations coming into today. clinging to a one-run lead in the ninth against the nationals. it was santiago casilla and his chance to nail it down adding a chapter to the orange and black's postseason dominance. let's relive. two outs, bottom of the ninth, casilla on the hill against danny espinosa. bounce tore joe pan example, don't panic. giants win 3-2, taking the 1-0 games series lead. >> people don't realize the hustle and heart of this team is going to make the fans so appreciative of the team they have. i don't think anybody gave us much of a chance in pittsburgh, in this series we're certainly not the favorites, but we're going to play hard, let the chips fall where they may. >> later more clubhouse reaction coming with ahmed fareed if sports as well as amy g. with coverage from the district. that's going to be a lot of fun. that will do it for sports for now, mini version, more coming later. >> jake peavy, very passionate player as we saw today. still ahead, flooded homes and a lot of cleanup after this water main break. why neighbors are concerned it will happen again. nearly two years after we went undercover inside silicon valley restaurants to expose major problems, changes here in the form of colorful placards. i'll have the details of the new system meant to protect diners coming up. a big change for silicon restaurants is here. scorecards are now on windows. it's a direct result of an nbc bay area investigation that began nearly two years ago. investigative reporter jenna sus ka went undercover and exposed this problem. she's here with an update. >> santa clara county restaurants are now being scored just like other major counties in california. you'll now see plk cards in the windows. green for pass, yellow for conditional pass, red for fail. and you can see their numerical score on the county's new user-friendly website. we were there when inspectors hung up the first at pan that express. the county started looking at this issue after we went undercover in january 2013, exposing many restaurants not following a state law that says they must show their inspection report if a customer asks. we also found the county had a confusing and sometimes incorrect website. with these problems and no rating system it was almost impossible for customers to know if a restaurant was cited for health violations. now the new website gives everyone simple, cheer, and easy to understand information. county supervisor joe samitian. >> the old system was unfriendly as could be it didn't post a list of violations, didn't give you a simple score or letter grade. now if you go online, literally in a split second you can tell if somebody's doing a top-flight job of keeping their place safe and clean, you can tell if they're not. >> here's how the new website works. it's really simple to use. you type in the name of a restaurant, like panda express, and see its score and placard color. there's a link to details and violations that inspectors found. not all restaurants will have those color scorecards hanging up right away. it's going to take a few months to col out that program. if you want to check out our series of undercover reports or the county's new online system, we have a link to that on nbcbayarea.com. if you have a tip for our investigative unit give us a call. 888-996-tips. send us an e-mail to theunit@nbcbayarea.com. a 20-year-old cal student is accused of sexual assault at a frat house. berkeley police arrested the student last night at his house on fraternity row. he's accused of assaulting a woman last friday night. police aren't saying which fraternity was involved. police also say it was one of three attacks reported on the same night last week and that the other two are still under investigation. take a look at this. a water main break flooded seven homes in san francisco's bay view district overnight. it's cleaned up now but people who live there wonder if 12 happen again. last night's broken water main was the second such break in two months. the city's public works department says its maintenance staff is racing to stay ahead of this system. pipes are up to a century old. workers have accelerated their repair city from four miles to 15 miles of fixes this year. >> frustrating for people who live there and also to see that water being wasted. >> especially in a drought. let's get a check on our hot temps. >> last week we had early fall season rain. now it's nothing but heat from san jose to san francisco. if you look closely at the bottom of the screen, no ocean ac there if san francisco. still 88 degrees. we've been seeing dry conditions from the time lapse view of our microclimate data network. you see the setting sun. east bay temperatures toward livermore, 91 degrees. actually, 92 right now. by the way, livermore two mile off to your east, 2.9 earthquake at 5:14. you notice some shaking due to that, in the due to high temperatures. 680 corridor, well into the 90s. 80s oakland. we show you san francisco's area, you can see towards ocean beach, mostly clear skies. no sign of any fog. and our temperatures still plenty hot around downtown. upper 80s right now. winds offshore even out to the coast low 80s. half moon bay starting to see temperatures drop into the 70s. as the winds continue to stay offshore, temperatures soar this time of year. san francisco, warmest time of the year is right now. normally we do not hit 90. average high this time of year should be low 70s. tomorrow, tonight and tomorrow we'll see another warm night with heat advisory through 9:00 tonight. into saturday, 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., inland valleys, not so much the immediate coast. we'll have the heat advisory for tomorrow hour by hour, still very warm around the south bay. temperatures climbing into the mid 90s for areas around downtown san jose to morgan hill. the trend for san francisco tomorrow, we'll start off warm. warm quickly around noon into the mid 80s then level off and begin to cool down as we get towards 6:00 tomorrow evening. as the sea breeze picks up, that's going to break this heat wave around the bay area. we'll see one of those signs tomorrow in the form of low clouds showing up later on in the day. eventually as low clouds approach the coast and that sea breeze begins to turn on, that's going to leave us cooling on sunday and more widespread cooling, we think, as we get into monday and tuesday. we'll show you how hot it will get for your plans for tomorrow and sunday in your weekend forecast coming up. still ahead, turning your instagram account into cash. netflix has a dream job if you're interested. in san francisco, jahai macmath's family is making a new push to prove she is not brain dead. coming up, we'll show you how they lan to convince a judge to revoke her death certificate. a south bay elementary schoolteacher is accused of sexually assaulting one of his students. john lloyd was arrested yesterday. police say he assaulted a female student several times in a classroom. he worked as a fifth grade teacher at paradise elementary school in morgan hill. you see the map here, not far off 101. the school is working with police to notify parents. police are also looking for other possible victims. a new chapter tonight on the story of a bay area teen getting national attention. the family of jahai macmath wants a judge to declare her not dead. if you remember, doctors declared jahai brain dead last year following routine surgery for sleep apnea. jodi hernandez is live in san francisco. she talked to the family about why they're making this move. >> reporter: jahai macmath's family says they have compelling new evidence that proves the girl is not brain dead, but very much alive. they hope it will be enough to convince a judge. >> she is not the brain dead girl from california, she is not a corpse, she is not deceased. >> reporter: winkfield says she has proof her 13-year-old daughter jahai macmath, not brain dead. her attorney chris dolan presented when he says are the findings of independent brain research experts. he performed brain imaging and other tests on jahai at rutgers university medical school. >> people have been very critical about this family and myself, saying that somehow we're trying to pull a hoax or something. we're not. we have mri evidence, eeg evidence. >> reporter: weekfield shared photos of the girl appearing nourished and full of color, videos sha show her responding to commands to move her feet and commands. however, we are not able to independently verify the videos. >> she's not deteriorating. her skin looks flawless. she looks better to me. she has no organ failure. >> reporter: the family filed a court petition asking a judge to reverse the girl's death certificate. doctors declared her brain dead last december after she underwent tonsil surgery at ucsf children's hospital oakland. her mother wants to bring her home from new jersey where she and her parents have been staying. >> as long as i'm living and i have a heartbeat and as long as as long as she has one, i will never, ever let anybody disconnect her. and she responds. >> reporter: children's hospital oakland as released a statement saying that their hearts go out to the family. "no one at ucsf benni off children's hospital oakland has had any contact with the family after she was released to the alameda county coroner." a court hearing on this matter is expected to take place next week. reporting live in san francisco, i'm jodi hernandez, nbc bay area news. another confirmed case of enterovirus d-68 here in the bay area. this time a child from san francisco. i'm christie smith. coming up in a live report, hear what public health officials have to say to parents. what happened on the cal campus 50 years ago changed this country. the breakthrough that brought free speech to cal and every other college campus in america. ♪(themstan! ! !om cheers) hey guys! stan the man! hey, how's it goin stan? can i get $55 on pump three? you got it, stan! gas stations. just that. where nobody knows your name. the chevrolet cruze eco. with an epa estimated 42 miles per gallon highway. it's the new efficient. a positive test confirmed today, a test that shows san francisco now has a case of enterovirus. they're stacking up. san francisco now joins other bay area counties dealing with this dangerous virus. this comes after alameda and solano counties reported their first cases yesterday. nbc bay area's christie submit is in san francisco this evening with the new details. >> reporter: good evening to you, raj. this positive test was just confirmed today. and that's why the department of public health here in san francisco is releasing the information to the public. what they're telling us is this is a child described as someone under 18 years old who spent two days in the hospital last month. a san francisco resident but hospitalized outside of san francisco. but we're told that person has been discharged in good condition. enterovirus d-68 is a viral infection that is now circulating across the u.s. with at least 14 confirmed cases in california, including others in alameda and shaolano county and santa cruz. all are recovering. it typically causes mild symptoms associated with a cold but can also cause serious illness, especially with those with respiratory conditions like asthma. even if hospitalized officials would expect patients to recover. >> the main concern with enterovirus d-68, this is in very few patients that this occurs, is as severe respiratory illness with wheezing or other symptoms related to -- other asthma-like symptoms. >> we're advising people certainly prevention, wash your hands, make sure that in these periods of time you feed yourself well, table care of your body, do the right preventive things. >>they're suggesting that parents might approach it like a cold or flu. of course you want to seek medical attention with any breathing difficulty. outside the bay area a child suffered some paralysis but officials here caution that it's under investigation to see if there is a connection to this illness. there is no specific vaccine. one doctor is saying the increased interest may have to do with the fact that even though this has been around for years, it hasn't been circulating until recently. we're told this illness in most cases should last about the same time as a cold or flu. christie smith, nbc bay area news. >> people should take precautions, thanks. this week marks the 50th anniversary of a movement that changed this country. >> it all unfolded on the cal campus. a three-month standoff sparked the change. diane dwyer continues our series of the berkeley free speech movement. >> individual students must ask themselves whether they wish to be a part of such action. >> the image of speakers carefully removing their shoes so they could stand with their stocking feet, or bare feet, on the roof of a police car, that's striking. the contrast between the car, the arrested person, and the speaker free to speak was a very powerful image. >> jack weinberg was that arrested person inside the police car for 32 hours. until the university agreed to negotiate. >> and that was on a friday night. we knew we hadn't won. so now we're going into negotiations with the university over these issues, which they were never willing to do before. now we were a serious force to be reckoned with. >> i think at that point we began to realize this was -- this was way bigger than anything we had imagined. but i don't think we even yet understood that this was historic. >> what they also may not have imagined was that negotiations with the university would quickly fall apart. >> one of the failures i think of the administration in the 1964 free speech movement example was a reluctance on the part of people in this office and this position to talk with students about matters of principle, to attempt a dialogue and a real exchange about values, about views, about the purposes and role of the education that is offered here. >> they just didn't get it. i mean, they were willing -- they were living in a different era. i mean, they continued for weeks to think this was just a variation of a panty raid. >> we were committed and i think we sustained that commitment to nonviolence. so we did not use any form. we used classic forms of civil disobedience. >> reporter: during october and much of november, students, faculty, and university representatives did meet. but made little to no progress. and the campus was relatively quiet. no protests or rallies. that was part of the agreement. that is, until november 20th. >> i addressed about 10,000 people. we couldn't believe the size of the audience we got. they were hanging off the student union building. like burns of grapes. >> there's an iconic photograph that was taken november 20th, so it's just before thanksgiving, we're walking in a march and it's the satsder gate and we have a banner that says "free speech." >> the guy in the admit in his best suit, that's me. i knew, we're going to win, we just have numbers, we have too many people. >> reporter: a significantly smaller group headed up the counter protest. bruce roberts, freshman class president, was one of them. >> at berkeley in those days, the counting was eight of us and 10,000 of them. the so-called law and order group of which i was a member were very small in number. we i am told, i don't know it for a fact, that we got our funding from one of the regents. i don't know which one. i don't know if it's true. we met in the basement of eshelman hall. we'd do the same things, stay making posters and plans until 11:00 or 12:00 at night, then going out and occasionally manning booths and talking to people. so that was what we did to try to counter the free speech movement. >> then december 7th, we held a rally. that's the one where the estimate is there were 20,000. there's only 27,500 students on campus. >> reporter: the most famous speech -- >> you've got to make it stop, you've got to indicate to the people, that unless you're free, the machine will be prevented from working at all. >> the bodies on the machine, bodies on the gears speech, was completely atypical. almost all of the speeches until then had been more educational. >> reporter: police arrested more than 800 students that night. the largest mass arrest in california history at the time. >> i'll never forget the arrest. i was called at midnight by the head of the associated students. he called me up and he said, come down, you'll see you're not going to believe. midnight i went up to the student union office building and watched at midnight at probably 1,000 policemen came marching in. it was a scary time. there were students in there, there were people who were standing up for their rights, were thrown around. i have to applaud them for standing up for what they believed. >> reporter: after the mass arrests december 2nd and the faculty revolted from the administration and passed in wheeler auditorium the -- they had a mass meeting of the faculty, passed december 8th resolutions which demanded the resignation of the chancellor, which was accomplished, and demanded from now on the university not control the content of speech on campus. only time, place, and manner. >> the faculty, in effect, said, the ideals articulated on the free speech movement platform were correct. there ought to be free speech on the campus. the university should have no restrictions on content of speech. it was one of the great moments of my life. >> i think it took awhile before we realized the impact that this was having. not only in the country. it had enormous impact in the country. but in other parts of the world. >> i don't like sitting on the sidelines and it's really not like me to do that. i just never have. i kind of sat on the sidelines there and i wish i hadn't. >> i think i've softened as i've gotten older. i think in many ways, in major ways, what the students were protesting over turns out to be something i think is very valuable in our society. so i think certainly the ends were good. and the ends were achieved. >> what i told mayo at the time was one of those rare moments in life where we're both right and successful. we're both on the right side, and we won. it's very hard to do both. you can be right or you can win. very rarely do you do both. on december 8th we did both. to this day, it was a hell of a time to have lived through. >> reporter: january 2nd, a little more than three months after the protests began, the chancellor was out and free speech was in. that was the beginning of student activism here at uc berkeley and across the country. but it also went beyond empowering students. it empowered a young actor and aspiring politician named ronald reagan. >> great to see all that old footage, thank you diane. tomorrow we'll present a 30-minute special featuring more rare footage and personal interviews from the turbulent times. tune in at 6:30 in the evening for the free speech movement special. coming up, this isn't your average treadmill. the lessons this walk is teaching us about mountain lions. throwing a party for almost 1 million people. the big music festival in san francisco as we speak and the special tribute to the festival's founder. a mountain lion sighting on the peninsula is prompting a warning. be careful if you're jogging or playing outside. the big cat was seen this morning near the green his golf course in millbrae just blocks from interstate 280. the uc santa cruz puma projects finds the drought is driving these lions closer to populated areas. researchers have actually trained captive cats to walk on treadmills for motion studies. special collars also track and measure how the animals move. the goal is to gather data on how and where local mountain lions will interact with humans. okay, so you have an instagram account. are you a gram master? if so your pictures could be worth thousands of dollars. from the dream job file. listen to this, netflix says it's looking for three people who travel the country taking instagram pictures of film and tv locations. three people travel the country, all you have to do is instagram some film and tv locations. here it is. you're going to be paid $2,000 a week. if you're interested you can apply by following the netflix instagram account and posting your three best pictures with #grammaster. $1,000 a week traveling the country. i've checked your contracts, you can't go. >> oh, man. >> you're locked in here at nbc. >> i was going to open my instagram account, get it going. >> it would be a lot of fun. they shoot a love of movies in the bay area. gorgeous view right now. looks like a movie set looking out the window from emeryville to the very golden gate bridge. still a heat advisory under way think 9:00. we'll let you know howl hot temperatures will stick around. insurance companies are spending millions of dollars trying to mislead you about the effects of proposition 46. well here's the truth: 46 will save lives. it will save money too. i'm bob pack, and i'm fighting for prop 46 because i lost my two children to preventable medical errors and i don't want anyone else to lose theirs. the three provisions in 46 will reduce medical errors and protect patients. save money and save lives. yes on 46. music lovers are filling up golden gate park for the start of this weekend's hardly strictly bluegrass festival. the free three-day festival features some of the biggest names in music from emmy lou harris to social distortion. the festival's founder died several years ago but the festival continues because of his generosity. how his family is paying a unique tribute to him this weekend. ♪ >> reporter: in a san francisco rehearsal studio -- >> amps have to work, you have to be in tune -- >> reporter: a band you've probably never heard of. made up of names you probably don't know. was running through its repertoire. ♪ ♪ going to california >> reporter: this weekend this group of musicians -- ♪ >> reporter: -- will take the stage before tens of thousands in golden gate park and get a rousing reception. >> it's because we're his family and we know that. it helps us appreciate how much he loved music. >> reporter: the band is made up of the children, grandchildren, friends of the late warren hellman, the billionaire investment banker who founded and foot the bill for the hardly strictly bluegrass festival. >> this is sort of like the partridge fall hi of the hellmans, like our family band. ♪ >> reporter: before his death several years ago, hellman would often take the stage of hardly strictly. with his trusty banjo. sthoets ♪ ♪ ♪ >> reporter: this year his family, going by the name go to hellman clan, will pay tribute by carrying on that music. >> i like to think it's something that he would have embraced. you know, in particular seeing his grandchildren out there playing. >> reporter: the festival, now in its 14th year, draws hundreds of thousands of people to the park for three days of free music. hellman left behind an endowment to keep it all going. >> i think he really loves the music with his heart and soul and he really wanted to share that. >> reporter: like hellman, members of his family didn't grow up on the stage. >> haven't touched a drumstick in 30 years. >> it brings us choser to his father, even though ease not here it feels like he is. >> reporter: there are no illusions this band would have joined names like emmy lou harris or steve earl had it not been for hell man. it's more of a way to channel hellman's love of music through the people. >> it's to make him proud that he introduced this type of music into the family. >> way to get out there. we need to get there. >> it's going to be beautiful. let's get a check of the forecast. >> it will be nice. in fact, not as hot, thank goodness, as we go toward sunday especially. the sea breeze picks up. right now warm in san jose, approaching 7:00, still upper 80s around the south bay, 90 around parts of the peninsula. 85, no sign of ocean air conditioning now. let's take you through the time laps. pacifica from our weather underground weather site in pacifica. notice as we go towards lunchtime, temperatures climbing close to about 82 at noon. then watch this number as we head towards 2:00. 89 degrees in pacifica. offshore breezes, temperatures really throttling up. still warm. right around downtown san francisco, take you into the civic center area, it's 83. 78 down at ingleside. excelsior 78. winds offshore keeping temperatures up. gorgeous evening for a walk along the beach at ocean beach. clear skies, no sign of any low clouds just yet. still no sign of that ocean air conditioning in the south bay. you can see temperatures from downtown san jose into morgan hill hovering close to 90 degrees. what we need is that sea breeze to pick up. instead winds are pointing offshore. when that happens the air gets come pressed, it warms and drys out. what we sometimes refer to as the atmospheric hair dryer. if winds at times, a little breezy in the hilltops, fire danger also high until we see those winds begin to turn onshore, being cooler temperatures and higher humidity. heat advisory continuing through 9:00 tonight. tomorrow a bit of a change. it will be the inland areas tomorrow. mainly areas away from the coast and the inner bay that we'll see mid 90th in the forecast. 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. tomorrow. speaking about that coastal cooling high pressure will hold strong into tomorrow for inland spots. widespread 90s. as the ocean air conditioning begins to turn on on sunday, 70s around san francisco. by the time we get into monday, now we're starting to see that cooler air inland. livermore, tri-valley, you'll have to wait another day, highs in the 80s by tuesday. tomorrow low 90s around san jose. mid 80s around san francisco. out of low to mid 90s we saw in a few spots downtown. north bay temperatures low to mid 90s. tri-valley you're going to stay hot through sunday before cooler temperatures reach our inland valleys early next week. for hardly strictly bluegrass, 80s for saturday. 70s into sunday at golden gate park. san jose tomorrow, we've got the spartans hosting unlv, a 5:00 start. could be hot out there for saturday evening. as we head toward sunday in santa clara, chiefs in town with the 49ers out at levi's stadium, kickoff 1:25. like that preseason game we could be starting in the mid to upper 80s. so hydrate if you're going to the game. we'll see the sea breeze cooling us off toward the end of the game. if you want to see cooler temperatures, the five-day forecast as we head into monday and did around san jose dropping numbers into the lower 80s. san francisco dropping closer to 70. for the north bay and tri-valley, you can see how it may take a couple of extra days. by tuesday we think livermore will drop out of the 90s, back into the 80s early next week. up next, a healthy dose of torture for giants today. did you see it? it ended with a lot of smiles. amy joins us next from washington, d.c. hey john check it out. whoa! yeah i was testing to see if we really can turn any device in your house into a tv and the tablet worked just fine but i wanted to see if the phone will work as well. so i shrunk sharon. every channel's live just like on tv but it's my phone. it's genius. shh! i'm watching tv. tiny sharon is mean. i'm right here. watch any channel live on any device around your home. the x1 entertainment operating system only from xfinity. ahmed fareed from our comcast sports net news room. we knew joe panik was going to be a star. >> right, yeah. go back to spring training, many of us hadn't even heard of him, here he is now in the postseason doing unbelievable things. once the calendar hits october the orange and black unbeatable. ninth consecutive postseason win, the longest streak in national league here. d.c., the nation's capital, we go to the seventh. buster posy singles up the middle. this is after joe panik got a triple. 3-0 giants. bottom of the inning. things get a little dicey. hunter strickland in there had seven innings of major league experience coming into this outing. gives up the home run to bryce harper, that was long 450 feet or so, longest of his career. two batters later, here's that torture. it's starting to get dicey. cabrera, it's a one-run game. to the ninth, santiago casilla, seven pitches is all it took. he got the save. giants win on the road in d.c., 3-2. amy g. reporting from washington. >> nlds game one victory in the books for the san francisco giants. and in typical playoff fashion it did not come easy. the washington nationals clawed back into the game with two solo home runs. with a fierce fan base had the giants against the ropes several times. but there is a lot of power in the letter "b," brandon belt and a whole lot of power in the letter "p," as in panik, posy, peavy. >> we have such good friends at home in our place, you can deal with it. so it's pretty good. especially when they get loud. can't really hear well. it's one of those thins when you have to make a play behind a pitcher or up at bat, shifted back in our favor. >> it's still really early. it's good to get that first win. but tomorrow's game is equally as important. >> you kind of melt the momentum shift a little bit in the middle, late innings. but the team did a great job. we stayed in there, kept battling. it was a good effort. >> we've kind of always been looked at as the underdog, especially in the postseason, from my experience. but i mean, it helps us the fact that we've been here before in a sense. our rivalry during the season, we go to their places, it's not easy to play. all in all it's good we're able to stick together through all this. that's really what's going to get us through. >> i don't think the game plan is to just go back up the middle. that's just where they hit it. today they hit it where we weren't. just one of those days. i thought we fought hard as a team, especially getting back into it there. we've just got to keep that fire going. >> hunter strickland made he is postseason debut this evening. he was a game changer in more ways than one. he gave up those two solo home runs after he got the giants out of a bases-loaded jam in the sixth inning. jeremy affeldt told me that he and his teammates reminded strickland to conditions trait on the situation he got the giants out of and not the one that he got them in. game two tomorrow. tim hudson getting the nod against jordan zimmermann who on papered a the better season. a no hitter in the regular season finale. hudson, a rested arm, healed hip, looking to get past the did i guess series for the first time in his career, tomorrow 2:30 in the afternoon. you've got to like where the giants are. game three is monday at home. they get madison bumgarner on the hill. they also have a guy by the name of joe panik also. bursting onto the scene to help him. >> everybody knows his name. >> joe panik the rookie, thank you. they looked sharp today top to bottom, the giants looked good. >> we've got the weekend coming up. it's going to be warm. >> saturday, still 90s inland. heat advisory, turning cooler by sunday. ♪shining, shimmering, splendid ♪tell me, princess, now when did♪ ♪you last let your heart decide♪ ♪a whole new world welcome to aulani, travel and leisure winner for top family hotel in the u.s. for special offers, visit disneyaulani.com or call your travel agent. ♪(themstan! ! !om cheers) hey guys! stan the man! hey, how's it goin stan? can i get $55 on pump three? you got it, stan! gas stations. just that. where nobody knows your name. the chevrolet cruze eco. with an epa estimated 42 miles per gallon highway. it's the new efficient. breaking couples news. derek jeter and his super model girlfriend planning a secret weekend wedding? >> now on "extra." new video, derek jeter and hannah davis hours from tying the knot? his undercover party plans at this famous castle and the clues jeter just dropped right here. >> do you want kids? >> i do. three reality star scandals. >> joe and teresa giudice prison bound. is divorce court next? then kim k. laughing off reports she forgot baby north in a hotel. plus, kendra wilkinson today, why she's standing by hank baskett after his alleged affair. >> i'd be so dumb to divorce him

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