morning from 50 cent. good evening. matt: good evening. he has a previous criminal history himself and is making headlines over a rather simple comment about bally s new bail policy. he wrote on instagram, l.a. is finished. watch how bad it gets out of there. shaking my head. he posted that caption while sharing a clip from a fox 11 l.a. report about the new nobel policy. here in l.a. county, police are no longer detaining people for crimes like theft, shoplifting, drug use, vandalism and many other nonviolent crimes and it means many people who are arrested for these crimes will be immediately released without paying any bail before their arraignment. the california judge who made the ruling important law enforcement officials to tell them why he should have not made the ruling but no one appealed and including the chief of police or district attorney george. an organization that helps victims heal from crimes is actually thinking 50 cents speaking out against the no bail
with virtual with the vision pro virtual reality goggles coming out, i wonder how many more are going to do when you can strap your phone to your face. trace: you take something to put the covers up, and off you go. we will talk about contaminated water. we are talking about chemicals. washington post says pfa s, more than 12,000 chemicals that persist in the environment and can build up in the body. they are widely used in industry and consumer products ranging from clothing and cosmetics to fast food wrappers and microwave popcorn bags. i mean, when they can last in your body for 10 years or longer, it has to be one of those things concerning to a lot of people. dr. hemmati: it is very concerning. these are the chemicals that are used to waterproof things. that is why they are on microwave popcorn. they use it as part of the teflon manufacturing processes. and these are what your body does not have mechanisms built to secrete. and when you take something that
there are growing calls now to remove forever chemicals contaminating tap water pretty much everywhere. this is after a new study that found half of the tap water in the united states contains these chemicals that have now shown to be harmful and dangerous. they re manmade chemicals known as pfas. they re nearly indestructible and called forever chemicals and almost ubiquitous in everything from nonstick cookware to cleaning supplies to fast food wrappers, microwave popcorn containers, pizza boxes. now you get my drift. if they are everywhere how do we get rid of them now? joining us now is faye, a columnist for bloomberg news, host of follow the science podcast as well. faith, thanks for coming in. you took a look back to understand a little bit of how we got here, especially after
of noticing things, that s what you do. when you go back to your house and have a beer with your neighbors are they like i can t believe this? it drives me nutsay and no, everyone and california is in the business of tuning out everyone, but themselves.ra that s what attracts people to california. you come here to tune out everybody, but you, so they somehow have tuned it out, but to me, it s the first thing you see when you enter a city. when you drive around and you see that car with the bongo on the fenders and the fast food wrappers on top of the dashboar and you say oh, that person s crazy, that s what we look like freight we look like a crazy ol woman driving around in a beat up car. if you like moving back and saying to everyone else you re not from here get out, your rec to. living next to you in taking a stand. adam corolla, i will see you in texas or somewhere. thank you.
Alarming levels of dangerous chemicals known as PFAS were discovered in food packaging at a number of well-known fast-food and fast-casual restaurants.