tv The Late News With Sara Donchey CBS May 1, 2025 11:00pm-11:35pm PDT
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now. >>to the south >>bay. bibi and justice for all workers. >>thousands of people filled the streets, shouting, marching and coming together for a cause. then a california deputies quick thinking was the difference between life and death. for a man trapped in a burning car. plus, trading the court for the mound, one member of the bay area's newest pro sports team trying out a different game just for the night, and the futuristic new
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shop in union square that can help you prove you're really a person. >>hi, i'm sara donchey. it was not business as usual in the bay area today. there were rallies, there were vigils, there were marches all over the bay and all in honor of may day. they're historically focused on worker's rights. but this year, a lot of people focused their attention. east way east, all the way to the white house. rally at san francisco's civic center. earlier, people marched down market street, and their message was that workers rights and immigrants rights are one and the same, and that politics was connected to all of that. we talked to donald, who says he's taking a stand against the trump administration's mass deportations.
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>>these are the these are the first people taken off the streets with no due process. they won't be the last if we don't stop it. it's that simple. if this gets lost, then we are screwed. >>and in mountain view, hundreds of people gathered for a protest against the actions of the trump administration there, including potential social security cuts, mass deportations. andrea nakano talked with a retired judge who was there for the civil rights movement of the 1960s. she says now the stakes are even higher. >>due process to everyone. he violates the law. lock him up. >>retired superior court judge ladoris cordell spoke in front of hundreds of people. she had one message for her fellow americans. >>today was about not being indifferent and being an activist and an activist can mean all kinds of things. but in the bottom line, it means being an upstander, standing up, speaking up, luring up, anti up, protesting up for
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justice and for democracy. >>cordell lived through segregation and has been fighting for equal justice for people of color throughout her career. she was the first african-american woman judge in northern california. in some ways, she sees similarities between the current uprising and the protests across the country in the 60s, but says the stakes are even higher. >>what's happening in this country now? it's very different from when i was protesting in the 60s. why? because in the 60s there was really one issue, and it was about racism, segregation. this time it's about everything. >>many here had signs in hand, even draping signs on pets with dogs opposing the work of the department of government efficiency. >>it's what i can do. i can't go back to washington. i can't, i can't do this. it's just my little part to take my felt pins and to come out here and to protest. >>much of the crowd sounding off about how the first few months of the trump presidency has impacted them.
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>>my medicare. my 401 k. i worked as a nurse for over 37 years, and to see my 401 k drop over $60,000 in one week. it's just that's my savings. i want to stay in this country. i'm a naturalized u.s. citizen and this is my home and democracy is in peril. and i can't could not have imagined that this is what i did not even fathom, that this was a possibility in this country. trump and moscow got to go. >>the group then marched down castro street, chanting and waving their american flags. cordell says she was inspired as she looked out into the crowd. >>i always tell people i'm ever hopeful, so i'm hopeful because so many people are coming out and speaking out. >>so here is a view from around the bay area a multi view if you will. there were rallies that were happening over in oakland and san jose happening in berkeley to educators in
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berkeley stood outside their school before the day even started, demanding better wages and staffing. >>we need a support for our special education teachers. we need fully staffed schools. we need personnel in classrooms. we need the high cost of living. we have insurance that's going up every year and we need support. >>some of the people in berkeley said that teachers there have been stretched too thin for too long. no classes were disrupted as a result of that today. now, health care workers used may day to get their message out at uc campuses. there were demonstrations at ucsf medical center in mission bay and at uc berkeley. workers say the university is making their jobs a lot harder by refusing to hire anyone new while they are already understaffed. >>since ever since the pandemic, the working our working conditions have declined and we've just been understaffed. and the university knows that we're that we're understaffed. >>the university responded to the protests, telling us they
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have made efforts to collaborate with the union, saying in part, we are disappointed by the union's continued choice of striking as a negotiation tactic. these strikes cost union members a full day of pay, and they cost the university system millions of dollars. this is especially harmful considering the current economic and fiscal uncertainty in higher education and nationally on a san jose street corner, may day demonstrations got kind of heated, even if just for a little while. len ramirez was there as political tensions flared at story and king. >>we will fight until we win what we need, which is dignity and justice for all workers. >>there was already a sense of urgency in the air at this year's may day rally in san jose, with organizers saying working people feel under attack from city hall all the way to the white house. >>we are here to support all people's rights and support them and uplift these voices.
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>>but when maga supporters showed up to counter-protest two groups of people with vastly different political views came face to face, and tolerance for each other's presence was stretched to the limit. >>there is a communist. >>the maga people brought megaphones and waved trump flags on the corner of story and king. >>the majority of americans want mass deportation. this is what americans voted for. >>but the broad coalition of people who came out to support international workers day had them vastly outnumbered. one of them was elizabeth, who works for an agency that provides housing for the homeless. >>i believe in the importance of showing compassion and kindness and care for the people in our community, particularly those who are most marginalized, most oppressed and vulnerable. >>the situation did not escalate beyond the war of words. there were no winners, and it's doubtful anyone's minds were changed. eventually, the maga supporters left the rally quietly, and the may day rally
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became a march to city hall. >>all right. more political news now. the trump administration's reciprocal tariffs could add about $900 million in costs to apple this quarter alone. that is, according to ceo tim cook. the majority of the company's iphones are made in china. like so many other things, the country currently faces a 145% tariff from the us. trump officials said last month that smartphones would be exempt from reciprocal tariffs on chinese imports, meaning the total tariff rate would be a minimum of 20%. cook said in the company's earnings call today that apple has been able to optimize its supply chain, and they expect the majority of iphones sold this quarter will actually come from india and ports in southern california say they're seeing a big drop off in shipments from asia, which could ultimately mean lost jobs, higher prices, maybe empty store shelves. ship cancellations are adding up at the ports of los angeles and long beach. one group of
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truckers says that supply chain disruptions are already starting. the trump administration insists they are working to finalize trade deals, but port officials say that would need to happen fast to avoid serious problems. >>i think we now have 34 canceled sailings at least through june. so the concern here is obviously that's the number that actually exceeds the the numbers that we had during covid 19, which was a very critical period or a crisis to the supply chain. >>that isn't the end of it. the port of la expects more cancellations to come. the beauty industry is struggling. a lot of products that we use in salons and stores here in the us come from asia. one store down in southern california that is already trying to recover from the eaton fire, worries they're going to be hit again by all of this. they say they are still working to keep prices from going up. >>our vendors and we are talking and in partnership with this, we've been never been more on the same page and
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communicating about how are we going to navigate this together. >>store owners say thankfully they've got a lot of stock in their inventory, but if the trade war drags on, that could change. china specifically makes the vast majority of toys sold in the us to president trump's already acknowledged that toy shelves could be emptier and prices could go up. one peninsula toy shop owner says all this could have a ripple effect that stretches into the holidays. even >>we are going to wait and see what happens because we have still 4 to 5 months worth of inventory. the uncertainty is the biggest thing. we can't go out and quote our customers, especially the larger guys. we can't plan for fourth quarter yet, which we would normally be doing right now. >>for now, the toy store has not raised their prices. a california deputy kept his cool while running straight to a burning car, and the person trapped inside it.
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deputy was able to get the man to safety all on his own. >>after some inland warmth for the last few days of april, the first day of may brought us back to near normal temperatures, a mix of upper 60s and low to mid 70s inland. but the drop in temperatures is just starting. tracking a chilly first weekend in may. coming up in first alert weather. >>and we are pretty sure you've never seen a store like this in union square, the high tech showroom that looks like it's from the future. >>tonight, colbert's got an all new late show with walton
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>>san francisco police hosted a memorial tonight honoring the 101 officers that have died in the line of duty that dates way back to 1877. the night of remembrance included family members and friends of fallen officers. one woman who spoke tonight shared a lesson her father, officer herman george, taught her about being brave. >>and if there is a legacy, you could leave your kids, would it be money? a house? college education. what? and my daddy. part of his legacy was for me not to be a coward. soldier. >>officer george died in december of 1967. he and other fallen officers nationwide will be honored during national police week later this month. dramatic video shows the moment an officer saved a man from a burning car. this happened in stanislaus county, where deputy brian cummings happened to be
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nearby when he heard a call about a crash. when he checked things out, he found a car on fire and a man inside of it. he was able to somehow drag the man out to safety, and it wasn't until then that his backup got there. >>we often respond to things with minimal information or sometimes wrong information, so you don't really know what you're going into all the time, and you just have to adapt to whatever is evolving. >>yeah, he moved fast. and thanks to that, the man only suffered minor burn injuries. chp is still looking into what caused the crash. >>first alert weather powered by kia. learn more at kia. kia movement that inspires. >>okay, so i was fighting through, soccer practice this afternoon. >>because it was so >>cold. >>you know, >>the. fog kind of settled >>in. >>and it. was a little bit windy. it was just like that biting cold. and i checked the calendar and i said, >>oh, yeah, >>what's going on? >>may gray and june gloom. it's
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going to be even windier the next couple of days. so if he's got a game this weekend. >>the ball is going to go flying >>off. yeah. you may want to layer up a little bit for that. or if you're heading to the giants game tomorrow night we're going to be into that kind of weather pattern. let's take a look at the big picture perspective. we've been talking all week about the potential for a couple of showers to pay us a visit as we head into the weekend. that potential is diminishing. this is the big picture radar simulation. as we go through the weekend, and our rain chances haven't diminished to exactly zero, the best chance is going to stay to our north or in the sierra. there's a little blip floating through quickly on saturday morning. if we are going to get anything more than a couple of sprinkles or a little bit of drizzle. i think the first half of the day saturday will be the window for that. but really our focus is shifting from the potential for rain. that's largely going to avoid us now to gusty winds. they're going to be kicking in beginning tomorrow, but really peaking for that first half of the weekend on saturday. while we're waiting on that to arrive, we've got plenty of fog out there right now as we look out for the mark hopkins hotel. and it's chilly out there. temperatures in the low 50s, hardly any variation. 50 degrees in santa rosa and
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livermore, 53 degrees. the least cool spots in concord will level off in the mid to upper 40s to around 50 degrees by early tomorrow morning. the fog is going to continue to spread out. take a look at futurecast and we see the fog maybe making its way into the inland valleys of the east bay by early tomorrow morning. doesn't last too long there. once the sun comes up, the fog should pretty quickly retreat to the coast. as we head through the morning. midday, i think at the latest is when we're going to see the last of that fog dissipating for inland parts of the bay area, but along the coast, you're not going to see much sunshine over the next couple of days, and you'll have a little bit of drizzle adding up every once in a while as well. the fog and the onshore breeze will have an impact on temperatures. we're going to be about 3 or 4 degrees below normal across the board, a mix of upper 60s and low 70s in the santa clara valley, mostly low to mid 70s east of the oakland hills, just short of 70 degrees around livermore, but temperatures around the bay only in the 60s, barely touching 60. in san francisco. at the coast, you're mostly going to be in the 50s and the north bay. it will be a mix of a lot of 60s, a few 70s as you go farther inland, 75 degrees in healdsburg will be
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one of the warm spots across the entire bay area by tomorrow afternoon. in terms of the winds, this is our wind chart tracking those winds every six hours beginning at 11 a.m. tomorrow, continuing through saturday. widespread gusts in the 20 to 30 mile an hour range tomorrow. some of the gusts over 30 miles an hour. but more of those on saturday. we're going to see even inland, gusts up to 30 to 40 mile an hour range and some gusts closer to the coast 40 to 50 miles an hour saturday afternoon. so any outdoor plans that are may be sensitive to some gusty winds push that back to sunday. significantly calmer second half of the weekend. it's possible we'll have a wind advisory posted by the national weather service for at least coastal parts of the bay area on saturday. it'll have an impact on temperatures even inland livermore. temperatures get pushed down into the low 60s for highs on saturday, but then we bounce back quickly, upper 70s and low to even mid 80s in the forecast. farther inland as we head into most of next week. so a little bit on the warm side for the first full week of may. that's still kind of the evolving part of the forecast. we'll keep you updated. seven day outlook for
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the coast. you're going to warm up as well. mid 60s for high temperatures on monday. it's not that warm but sunshine in may. you'll take that regardless of temperatures around the bay. we're going to see a warm up as well below normal temperatures for everybody over the next few days. but then we climb up into the mid 70s around the bay. on monday, we're leveling off to a pretty normal temperature pattern for most of next week, and we're not getting too carried away. despite what you saw, the livermore forecast in cautious with the inland seven day outlook. i think we're mostly going to settle into the 70s by tuesday and wednesday and then sneaking back up to around 80 degrees a week from today. >>i want to get carried away. by the 80s, >>you >>say, often meaning something >>else. yeah. it's going to require a bit of a drive. >>for you. oh, okay. all right. well i'm willing. >>okay. >>it's finally. may the golden state valkyries are getting ready to tip off their inaugural season. but before they hit the court, they took a trip to the diamond. our kelsey thorne was there for the special moment. >>well, it was a special night here at the giants game as valkyrie's rookie caitlyn chen got the honor of throwing out
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the first pitch. it was taiwanese heritage night at the game. chen was the first ever taiwanese american player drafted into the wnba. when the valkyries nabbed her in the third round, she was joined on the field by several of her valkyries teammates and got the chance to meet some fans beforehand and even signed some autographs. now out on the field, she threw a great pitch, one she says she thinks was a strike. we talked to her right after about what this honor means to her. >>it means a lot to me. i feel like i feel very lucky to be in this spot and just really grateful for how supportive everyone's been in the bay so far. >>and of course, you all can catch caitlin chen in her very first valkyrie's game next tuesday for their preseason home opener. of course, that will air on pix plus. >>all right, kelsey, thank you so much. we appreciate that. cbs news bay area is the home of the valkyries. more than 30 games will air right here on kpix and pix. plus, we'll also
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have a weekly show with behind the scenes access. vern. >>all right, straight ahead in sports. eve of the warriors 6 p.m. home game six against the rockets. you saw the bay area's other pro ballers, the golden state valkyries. boy, they were making some noise even away from oracle park. that opener is in five days and a get right opportunity for justin verlander and the giants. and a five win team was in the way at oracle park.
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it's not you, it's demodex mites. talk to your eye doctor today. >>baseball up top. the giants may look on paper hosting the hard luck rockies for four. come on. they had just five wins all season. but they play on a grassy diamond not paper. look you make a play in the stands, you get love. that's how it works. giants were feeling the love early. elliot ramos first inning batting. his hands swung on, gone batting leadoff, he found left field and opened the scoring. starter justin verlander got support there. and here in the fifth, patrick bailey snap throw got him. that helped get out of the
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inning. verlander gave up just two earned runs over six and a third, but his first win as a giant is going to have to wait because the rockies found holes off of reliever tyler rogers in the eighth. rockies tied the game and took the lead here when the throw was wide. colorado sent the giants to its first three game losing streak, four three. final verlander seven starts as a giant. no wins yet, and the rockies. they lost 12 straight at oracle park. let's go up tempo nba playoffs la clippers at home against denver. game six win or it's over. fourth quarter james harden not ready to start his off season. knocks down the deep ball. but the nuggets rallied. and the clippers play some defense on russell westbrook. swatted by nicolas batum. clippers wanted 111 to 105 and forced a game seven decider saturday in denver. not seen here but the knicks took out the pistons. new york on to the next round of the east bay
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area. the wnba is front and center. the golden state valkyries hit the hit the floor on tuesday for its first preseason game at chase center against the l.a. sparks. the players, they got the skill, they got the energy. but what about the coach, natalie nick bosa? >>i'm not going to lie, the media day really kicked my .... >>oh, come on, coach. media day wasn't that bad. >>i can look this way. yeah, okay. we're counting down to tip off to k p i x. >>nick bosa has been working around the clock to get her team ready, i joked. she's probably jotting down plays in the middle of the night. >>that's exactly what i've been doing. no sleep. ask my coaching staff instead of i write it down. i text them so they get texts. 12:00 1:00. >>nobody will outwork the valkyries this season. what's your approach, coach? >>i mean, i ain't going to tell you >>are. now, nick bosa. can put those promo reads.
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behind >>her. i'm natalie nakase, head coach of the golden state valkyries. >>and make it all about basketball. >>let's go, let's go. okay. >>yeah. that's right. let's go. curtain raises 7 p.m. next tuesday again against the la sparks on our sister station pix plus. but friday it's all about the dubs sara at home special time 6 p.m. a second chance to take out the rockets and advance. >>i've taken a little period of mourning from the playoffs today. i will resume tomorrow. >>you got some stuff to process? >>yeah. we do. i need therapy after that. all right. would you get scanned by a mysterious orb? why? some people lined up to do just that in union square today. >>the bay area concert calendar, brought to you by live nation. >>brian adams returns to sap
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center at san jose on november 19th with special guest pat benatar and neil giraldo. tickets on sale tomorrow, 10 a.m. at ticketmaster.com. 177 the bone presents two nights of metallica live at levi's stadium with limp bizkit and ice nine kills on june 20th and pantera with suicidal tendencies on june 22nd. tickets on sale now at ticketmaster.com. the bay
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square next to macy's. our lauren toms was there to introduce us to the orb. >>it looks like an eye, and it scans your eye to the center attraction at a flagship store in union square is world netflix orb that scans your metrics to verify your humanness. clement jumped at the opportunity to do just that, something he says was spurred by curiosity and questions about the future of ai in our lives. >>i think at some point there's going to be an issue online to know if we are real or if you are talking to just a machine. and i think i wanted you to understand how it works. >>these are the first systems of their kind to be deployed to the u.s. they've already been in use in over 100 other countries by more than 12 million users, including clement. but it's not quite ready for his pup to see. >>for example, on dating apps or like when you work, but you really want to be sure that it's a human behind, and that's the real work of a real words
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from a human and its real value to be a human. at the end of the. >>day, the goal, the group says, is to have all humans verified in its system to seamlessly operate between platforms, from dating sites to gaming sites. so you know who and what you're interacting with online. it's something that's becoming more crucial, as recent data suggests, that in just about one year from now, 90% of online interactions will have some kind of ai component, chief architect adrian ludwig tells us they're hoping to get humans ahead of ai's power. >>it's kind of hard to tell who the people are online. and so the first thing you need to know is, is this a people? and if so, that's where the benefit should be going. >>a system like this comes with steep privacy concerns, and adrian was tasked with data protection. he says the platform is impossible to hack because once it takes your picture, it doesn't save personal information. >>the orb gives that picture to the person and then immediately deletes it. it doesn't need it. it's analyzed. it confirmed
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they're human, and once it knows that, it can just keep that proof around, that at one point in the past did the analysis, it doesn't need to store >>it. until now, i had never questioned my own humanness, but of course i had to find out. let me show you how it works. like most things, it starts by downloading the world app and scanning a qr code into one of these orbs. the orb then takes a scan of your iris, your face curvature, your pulse, and your temperature, all to verify that you are in fact a human. from there, the system says that it exchanges that personal information for a unique anonymous number based code, and then it says it deletes all that personal information that it just took. but we spoke with some people who say that privacy is still a greater concern than their humanness. it's the path we're going down and it's the unknown. and if it helps in some type of way, yes, i would say yes to everything. but that unknown path is scary. we also tested it on clement's
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pup, trixie, who is in fact not a human, but maybe the system's next target. as this technology grows its database to root out the fake from the real. >>i would still trust the beagle. >>i was going to say thank god we can tell the difference between the beagle and the >>person. it seems like the origin story for like a james bond villain. >>no. i was saying >>during the >>piece that there have been books written about >>this >>and they didn't. >>at first. i will gather all the biometric data. then. then underworld. >>i'm >> a new exclusive club that's popped up in washington, d.c. donald trump jr. and other mega-donors of the home. >> axios reports the membership causes have a million dollars and describes it as "a sumptuous retreat for rubbing shoulders with cabinet members andwe
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