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发布时间: 2025-06-03 00:19:38北京青年报社官方账号
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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A new social media trend is hoping to help local food places hit hard by this COVID-19 pandemic.Currently, restaurants in the county are only allowed to serve food through take-out, delivery, or drive-thru service. Some restaurants have had to close altogether, not able to afford to keep their doors open. For those businesses trying to stay open, the community is lending its support through #takeoutchallenge.Sports Director Ben Higgins called it the easiest challenge in history. “All you have to do is go order take out from one of your local restaurants,” he said in a video posted to Twitter. Ben ordered food from Buona Forchetta in Encinitas.Others also chimed in on social media.Jason tweeted that he ordered from Mama Kat’s in San Marcos for the first time. On Twitter, Ed gave a shout out to Firehouse Subs in Kearny Mesa and said he ordered twice there this past week. Another view told reporter Melissa Mecija she ordered three times from Stone Brewing.Jennifer posted that she knows how “important it is to help our neighborhood merchants” because she also owns a shuttered business. 1125

  武清龙济泌尿治疗中心   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — A Los Angeles-area mainstay could be making its San Diego debut by the end of the year.Plans for San Diego's first Roscoe's House of Chicken and Waffles are reportedly back on the table, 10News has learned.A contractor told 10News' Jon Horn the restaurant would be located on National Ave. in Barrio Logan. The city could approve the permit next month with the restaurant slated to open by the end of 2019.RELATED:San Diego speakeasy named among Food Network's Best Tiki Bars in AmericaShake Shack opens third San Diego County locationAccording to a notice from the city's Development Services Department, an application was filed on March 26, 2019, for the new restaurant to occupy a total of 8,100-square-feet on the corner of National Ave. and Sigsbee Street.In 2017, Roscoe's had to reportedly put plans to bring the chain to San Diego on hold, though the chain remained committed to bringing a storefront to town.Roscoe's Chicken and Waffles skyrocketed in popularity after debuting in Long Beach in 1975, the brain child of founder Herb Hudson. The soul-food chain is best known for serving up chicken and waffles, separate and together, but packs a variety of other dishes.RELATED: Cheers! Museum of Beer planned to open in San Diego's East Village next yearSycuan Casino gets ready to open 6M expansionThe beloved chain became popular after celebrities, such as Natalie Cole and Redd Foxx, spread the word of the Los Angeles institution. The Los Angeles Times has called the restaurant, "such an L.A. institution that people don't even question the strange combo anymore."And soon, it appears San Diego will get a taste. 1658

  武清龙济泌尿治疗中心   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A sailboat caught fire Sunday around 2:45 p.m. at Shelter Cove Marina, witnesses say a lithium battery in the navigation panel started the blaze."Saw the smoke, thought it was a barbecue then the kids started screaming on the dock and saw the black smoke and knew it was time to react," Boater and Witness Charlie Colson said. He said he grabbed a hose and was helping the father who was on the boat when the fire started. Getting a boat fire put out quickly is crucial, Witness and Boater Murad Abel said. "There's a lot of electrical equipment, you have batteries, you have fuel, propane, it's all probably within 10 feet of each other," he said.Colson said they had it under control by the time firefighters made it to the scene. "The nine minutes probably seemed like 27 to me, because I was putting the fire out, and I wanted some help, I wanted a professional there," He said chuckling.He said the family had just moved onto the boat last week. Both confirmed the family has a special needs son, adored by the community. "You could literally come back 2 hours later and he's still fishing trying to get fish off the back of the boat, so he's very diligent in that," Abel said.They're hoping insurance covers the damage. Colson believes it's a total loss. 1287

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A San Diego ER Nurse known as the "dancing nurse" returned home Saturday after working nearly a month straight in a Texas hospital.That was her second stint during the pandemic. She went to New York for six weeks from April to May to help out there.While in New York she danced to bring joy to her patients and that's how she got her nickname, the "dancing nurse.""They kinda just see me dance and they’re like wait a minute I know you!" Registered Nurse Ana Wilkinson said she is recognized sometimes at home in San Diego.When asked what it is like being known as the "dancing nurse," she replied, "They [my patients] probably think I’m weird right off the bat but it’s a good conversation from there on and I think it actually eases them because they’re so nervous and so scared."With nearly 300,000 Americans losing their lives due to the coronavirus, it's understandable why they're scared.Right now, cases and hospitalizations are sky high.When asked if Wilkinson keeps count of how many patients she's lost, she said, "I do not, I mean it wouldn’t. I prefer keeping count of people I save, I mean people we all save it’s not just me."Wilkinson said she remembers days they've lost as many as 10 people in one day on the floor. Some of her patients stay with her after they've passed. "My 23-year-olds, my 25, I say mine because I felt like they were my kids that I tried everything I could to save them. And to a lady who was 32-years-old who died from COVID. That’s what I try to tell people, COVID does not discriminate, age, race, color, anything. It just picks you."She squeezed their hands in reassurance. Sometimes she's the last smile they see.Now that a vaccine is coming, she's excited to have a weapon in the war."We just need everyone on board to do this, you can’t just one person, just maybe? It’s going to be yes. This is how we’re going to do it. We’re all going to get vaccinated. We all are going to stop this war," she said.A war that kept her from seeing her 7-year-old son Declan lose his first and second tooth.A war that kept her on the opposite coast for birthdays, Easter and Mother's Day.A war she's continuing to fight when she returns to work at UCSD Medical Center on Monday."We are definitely warriors and we'd do it again, and we'd do it again and we'd do it again because we love it. We love helping others. We love helping people and that's why we do this because we want to make a difference in the world," Wilkinson said.She said working in a rural Texas hospital was very different from her time in New York. In the month she was working 10+ hour shifts, she only had three days off.She said we've learned a lot about how to treat coronavirus patients since the beginning of the pandemic."I was in Midland and Odessa. We were a very small town but we saw everything," she said she learned even more critical thinking skills.The most stressful part of her work was how packed the hospital became, saying patients were sent from nearby hospitals that were at capacity.When asked if she regrets going to New York and Texas and if she would do it again, Wilkinson said, "I would do it in a heartbeat 100% I love these medical missions I call them, because yes we see a lot of things. Yes it’s emotional and some of us have PTSD because we do see a lot. But we do it because we love it. We love helping others, we love making a difference as much as we can." 3421

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A photographer who recorded a security guard's exchange in Lemon Grove with a woman about immigration is explaining the situation.Sonia Sorrano says she is still shaken by the heated confrontation she stopped to record while shopping with her 9-year-old daughter."How am I supposed to tell my daughter she can trust a person in a uniform and badge?" Sorrano said.RELATED: Video shows security guard questioning woman's immigration statusSorrano started recording the argument when she says she heard the guard using inappropriate language.  "I understand he was frustrated with her but he got very unprofessional about it and I told him not to talk to her that way.  I did call him a fat ass, then he turned on me and called me an ugly b****  in front of my daughter."Sorrano said she has attempted to report the guard's actions to his employer, Allied Universal."I get no answers I just get put on hold.  I think he should be fired.  If I employed someone like that I would want him gone.  He was just unprofessional."  1087

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