attack speaking out. the first thing you notice is the fear in her eyes. the terror threat at home. the focus now on both presidential candidates. we cannot continue to allow thousands upon thousands of people to pour into our country. as the world unites in solidarity with orlando, tributes pouring in around the globe. announcer: live in times square and orlando, florida, this is a special edition of good morning america. and good morning, america. we have all the latest often the fallout from that orlando attack this morning. the world standing in solidarity with those victims and you re looking live at the growing memorial in orlando remembering those lost in the massacre. amy is there right now. good morning, amy. that s right, george. good morning to you and we are learning so much more now about the 49 victims who have now all been identified and they re from all walks of life ranking from age from 18 to 50. brother, sisters and friends and, yes, i am sp
he s not so lucky, though, it was all caught on camera. but the hottest ticket in town, game seven. the new record broken even before tip-off. good evening. thank you for joining us on this saturday. i m cecilia vega. it s brutally hot for millions of americans tonight. and those searing temperatures are pushing fire dangers in the west to extremes. take a look at this the sherpa fire near santa barbara, california, now in its third day, one of more than a dozen major wildfires burning in eight states. gusty winds and dry heat not making fighting those flames easy for crews on the lines. 7,000 acres burned so far in that fire. hundreds of evacuations under way. and while today may be hot, this heat wave is just getting started. temperatures in some southwest cities expected to climb to 120 degrees by monday. the forecast in a moment. but we begin with abc s neal karlinsky on the fire lines tonight. reporter: tonight, a weekend of record heat out west is fueling a frig
attack speaking out. the first thing you notice is the fear in her eyes. the terror threat at home. the focus now on both presidential candidates. we cannot continue to allow thousands upon thousands of people to pour into our country. as the world unites in solidarity with orlando, tributes pouring in around the globe. announcer: live in times square and orlando, florida, this is a special edition of good morning america. and good morning, america. we have all the latest often the fallout from that orlando attack this morning. the world standing in solidarity with those victims and you re looking live at the growing memorial in orlando remembering those lost in the massacre. amy is there right now. good morning, amy. that s right, george. good morning to you and we are learning so much more now about the 49 victims who have now all been identified and they re from all walks of life ranking from age from 18 to 50. leaving behind mother, fathers, brother, siste
was all caught on camera. but the hottest ticket in town, game seven. the new record broken even before tip-off. good evening. thank you for joining us on this saturday. i m cecilia vega. it s brutally hot for millions of americans tonight. and those searing temperatures are pushing fire dangers in the west to extremes. take a look at this the sherpa fire near santa barbara, california, now in its third day, one of more than a dozen major wildfires burning in eight states. gusty winds and dry heat not making fighting those flames easy for crews on the lines. 7,000 acres burned so far in that fire. hundreds of evacuations under way. and while today may be hot, this heat wave is just getting started. temperatures in some southwest cities expected to climb to 120 degrees by monday. the forecast in a moment. but we begin with abc s neal karlinsky on the fire lines tonight. reporter: tonight, a weekend of record heat out west is fueling a frighteningly early wildfire seaso
there s a lot of people that are dead. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the cbs evening news with scott pelley. reporting tonight from orlando. deejays. shane tomlinson brought music to this world with his band frequency. peter gonzalez-cruz loved to dance. he taught folks how to salsa. edward sotomayor, they called him top-hat eddie, worked for a gay travel agency helping people see the world. juan guerrero and drew lienan were planning to marry. their families are now planning a funeral. jason josaphat was just 19, the youngest to die. computer savvy, loved photography, his uncle said he was very excited about his journey, a journey that has ended all too soon. 49 lives, 49 futures, lost. of the 53 people who were wounded tonight, 34 are still in hospitals. but we spoke with surgeons today who tell us they are now optimistic that all survive. we also spoke today with the orlando police chief jon m ina who filled us in on what we didn t know about the assault on the c