right now at 5:00, to it s not a typical memorial day weekend. but they re open for business. a look at the new normal at wineries in the north bay. the news at 5:00 starts right now. thanks for joining us. i m terery mcsweeney. a day in wine country seems normal around here. some, it was the lux rick today. some wine rips are back open but not all are benefits just yet. here is nbc bay area with more. reporter: it s a far cry from a what would be a busy memorial day weekend but a lot of wineries are reopening to some capacity. kendall jackson reopened its doors to 50 by appoint guests. and they get the appointment to operate. visits by appointment, limbing parties to six people or fewer and requiring employees to maintain a six-foot distance from others. we had it through the day yesterday. we are fortunate enough to be prepared and ready to go for and it we are happy everyone is back. the biggest requirement is that wineries must serve food to have guests. for wine
majority of mps don t agree. and with the european union insisting it won t renegotiate, there s huge uncertainty about what could happen next. our political correspondent iain watson reports. is she seeking divine intervention? theresa may attended church in her constituency this morning. she s weathered many political storms but she s still having to fight for her deal and for herjob. some ministers think the outlook is so bleak she should postpone this week s crucial commons vote. but the brexit secretary said it won t be called off. the vote is going ahead. and that s because it is a good deal, it is the only deal. and it s important we don t let the perfect be the enemy of the good. we are in uncharted waters. yes, the prime minister is fighting for us and will continue in post. but the question is can she stay on as prime minister? absolutely, yes. the brexit secretary voted to leave the eu, but his better known colleague was a face of the campaign. borisjohnson was ask
hello there and welcome along to sportsday. england have a huge task ahead of them, if they re to have any chance of staying in this second ashes test against australia. optimism in the early session didn t last and they lost four wickets before the close of play on day four. australia with a great chance to move 2 0 up in the series. joe wilson reports. pkg you ll often see it on display at test matches. the craft that makes an expensive cricket bat deserves respect, doesn t it? osman khawaja uses his with discretion. he s deliberate. he s measured. england had to disrupt him. here we go. khawaja on 77 and caught at start but steve smith couldn t be tempted in the same way, could he? the tactic prevails, can you believe it? don t think he could. butjames anderson to alex carey? the broader context with australia s lead, soon extending the 300. england kept bowling like this like that wickets did fall, so behind the scenes someone was approaching. ben stokes bowled himself
public interest grating against privatise. the funeral marks the end of nahel s short life here in nanterre but the story of his death lives on. he s been adopted as a symbol by people across the country, as here at home, his mother buries her son. we met this woman in nanterre earlier this week. she didn t want to be identified. she told us she witnessed nahel s death and knew him a little. the violence his death has triggered isn t helpful , she says. translation: burning everything, schools, town halls - it s useless. i everything they re doing, the parents will pay the price. but if there are riots, it s because the police are looking for it. when they check young people s ids ten times a day, it s irritating. rioting continued last night. the southern cities of marseille and lyon lit up by burning vehicles, and fireworks aimed directly at police. the government said dozens of police stations were attacked across the country and over 1,000 people arrested. in nanterre, t
extending his championship lead. and a french winner on the second stage of the tour de france in spain but the british rider stays in yellow. hello again. unlike his career defining innings four years ago at headingley ben stokes heroics weren t enough at lord s. england s skipper unable to prevent australia taking a 2 0 lead in the ashes. their victory by 43 runs came after a day which had the lord s crowd rowdier almost than ever before. entertained by stokes and infuriated with a controversial stumping ofjonny bairstow. with the story of a dramatic final day. here s our correspondentjoe wilson. whenjonny bairstow came out to bought, it was still almost in normal test match. when he was out it wasn t. the australia wicketkeeper threw down the stumps, where wasjonny bairstow? he wasn t trying to make a run. assuming the over was over, the ball was dead, given out, laws applied. many england supporters thought it was unsporting. listen. crowd boos. ifjonny bairstow fumed, be