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Voting begins in Alaska’s Fat Bear Week contest after one grizzly killed another on video

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Voting opened Wednesday for the super-sized grizzlies in the running to win the 2024 Fat Bear Week contest, after one animal’s graphic on-camera death delayed the event. 

Now in its 10th year, Fat Bear Week is an annual competition of sorts that allows viewers around the world to tune into a series of livestreams starring several brown bears that roam Katmai National Park and Preserve in southern Alaska. Stretched across the wilderness on the Alaskan peninsula, Katmai is home to some of the region’s largest grizzly bears, which come each year to the Brooks River for its seasonal salmon run. 

With the feeding season nearing its end, and months of hibernation on the horizon, the bulkiest creatures in the national park are celebrated during Fat Bear Week for their hunting successes. Fans can cast votes online for the grizzlies in contention to join the competition’s Hall of Champions this year, with the most favored bears progressing through multiple rounds until just one is crowned the victor.

Fat Bear Week kicked off Wednesday and will continue through Oct. 8, known as Fat Bear Tuesday, as organizers of the contest host digital chats about Katmai and the bears themselves. The National Park Service partners with the nonprofit Explore.org to put on the weeklong event, as the organization streams intimate footage of the contenders on its website. 

Two head to head beefy battles between bodacious bears is happening now!

Will the experienced exorbitant Fat Bear Jr…

Posted by Katmai National Park & Preserve on Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Bears are technically “pitted against each other” as Katmai park rangers place them in brackets typical of traditional sports tournaments, the park service writes in a description of Fat Bear Week on its site.

“People may vote using any criteria they see fit,” the description reads. “In the end, one bear with reign supreme.”

Organizers of the 2024 Fat Bear Week contest postponed their bracket reveal earlier this week after an on-camera fight between two bears at the mouth of the Brooks River led to the death of one of the animals. Known as Bear 402, a former Fat Bear Week contestant, the older female grizzly was killed by a male, known as Bear 469, Monday morning. Mike Fritz, the resident naturalist at Explore.org, and Sarah Bruce, a Katmai park ranger, suggested in an online discussion held instead of the reveal that the male appeared to drown the “beloved” female, although they were not sure why the brawl began.

“National parks like Katmai protect not only the wonders of nature, but also the harsh realities,” the National Park Service’s Matt Johnson said in a statement to CBS News after Bear 402 was killed. “Each bear seen on the webcams is competing with others to survive.”

This year’s bracket consists of 11 massive grizzly bears. The lineup was eventually unveiled Tuesday evening.





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Tim Walz says he had his dates wrong, admits he didn’t travel to China until August 1989

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At his first campaign stop since the vice presidential debate, Tim Walz sought to clarify comments he has made about his travel to China and Hong Kong in 1989 as bloody pro-democracy protests took place. 

Walz admitted during the debate that he had previously misspoken in 2014 when he said he was in mainland China between April and June 1989, during the Tiananmen Square protests, which took place between April 15 and June 4 of that year.  After that concession, however, Walz repeated the mistatement, saying, “So, I was in Hong Kong and China during the democracy protests, went in, and from that I learned a lot of what needed to be in governance.”

Butan Alliance Times-Herald news report from May 1989 shows then-Staff Sgt. Walz was in the U.S. and toured a Nebraska Army National Guard armory. A news radio station also reported in another Nebraska newspaper in August 1989 that Walz said he would “leave Sunday en route to China,” which was after the protests. 

Responding to a question about his remarks from CBS News in Middleville, Pennsylvania, Walz corrected himself and admitted he had his dates wrong, adding that he needs to be clearer when he speaks. 

“So, my clarity, to take away from the message, is something I want to be very clear — August of ’89 into Hong Kong, into China,” said the Minnesota governor, who often talks fast and in shorthand.

Walz also clarified a verbal misstatement from the debate, when he said he was friends with school shooters. The moment was quickly seized upon by Republicans and former President Donald Trump, who posted on Truth Social about it. 

Walz, a former teacher and football coach, said that although he misspoke, it is “pretty damn clear” that he has stood with school shooting victims and passed legislation in an effort to curb such violence. 

In the same conversation at the debate on Tuesday night, Walz mentioned that his teenage son, Gus, was a witness to a shooting. On the campaign trail, Walz often says that even though he supports the Second Amendment, he doesn’t think that should allow children to be shot dead in the hallways. 

Walz’s rally Wednesday in York, Pennsylvania, was filled with supporters who defended him. 

“Who can remember where they were 30 years ago?” Joan Nagy, of Lancaster, Pennsylvania asked. 

“Anybody can make a mistake,” Les Ford said, adding, “When’s the last time you heard Donald Trump or his running mate correct themselves?”

After rolling into the rally on the Harris-Walz campaign bus to address a crowd of around 2,000, Walz leaned in further on his debate performance.

“Anybody watch the debate last night? Not bad for a football coach, huh?,” he quipped. 

“Now, look, there is a reason Mike Pence was not on that stage with me,” he said. Walz added, “I served with Mike Pence in Congress. We disagreed on most issues, but in Congress and as a vice president, I never criticized Mike Pence’s ethics and commitment to this country, Walz said. “And he made the decision for the Constitution. Mike Pence did his duty. He honored his oath, and he chose the Constitution over Donald Trump,” Walz said. 

“Senator Vance made it clear he will always make a different choice than Mike Pence made,” Walz said, referring to Pence’s refusal to give in to pressure by Trump to not certify the 2020 presidential election. Vance has said that he wouldn’t have certified the election, as Pence had, which Walz said “should be absolutely disqualifying if you’re asking to be the vice president of the United States.”

During their debate, “CBS Evening News” anchor Norah O’Donnell noted that Vance has said he wouldn’t have certified the last presidential election and would have asked the states to submit alternative electors, and she asked, “Would you again seek to challenge this year’s election results, even if every governor certifies the results?”

Vance did not directly answer, saying only, “What President Trump has said is that there were problems in 2020 and my own belief is we should fight about those issues, debate those issues peacefully in the public square.”



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How presidential immunity ruling impacts Trump’s election interference case

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How presidential immunity ruling impacts Trump’s election interference case – CBS News


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Special counsel Jack Smith’s unsealed court filing revealed new evidence in the federal election interference case against former President Donald Trump. Over the summer, the Supreme Court ruled that Trump has immunity for official acts conducted as president. CBS News legal contributor Jessica Levinson breaks down the decision’s impact on Trump’s case.

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Israeli monument honors hostages as families celebrate Rosh Hashanah

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Israeli monument honors hostages as families celebrate Rosh Hashanah – CBS News


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Some families in Israel celebrated Rosh Hashanah Wednesday without their loved ones nearly a year after they were taken hostage by Hamas. CBS News senior foreign correspondent Elizabeth Palmer reports from the public plaza renamed Hostage Square in Tel Aviv. CBS News Digital international reporter Haley Ott reports on an Israeli family working to bring home their relative held hostage in Gaza.

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