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    Israeli airstrikes hitting areas in Gaza that IDF designated as 'safe zones'

    05:37
  • Man on deathbed confesses to murder of mother and daughter after 24 years

    02:07
  • Third American arrested in Turks and Caicos for allegedly having ammunition

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  • South Carolina residents calling police over noisy cicadas

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  • 9-year-old boy wins seagull screeching competition

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  • CDC: Three women likely infected with HIV while getting 'vampire facial' at unlicensed spa

    03:34
  • Police arrest owner of warehouse that exploded at airport with one-way ticket

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  • Tennessee governor signs bill allowing teachers to carry guns

    04:13
  • Biden talks to Howard Stern as campaign looks to reach voters

    04:45
  • Former Trump lawyer: Trump 'can't take the stand' in hush money case

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  • Soccer star María Sánchez's unconventional rise to fame

    04:19
  • Buckingham Palace says King Charles returning to public duties 'shortly'

    02:17
  • Campus protests threaten commencement ceremonies

    04:33
  • Trump lawyers cross-examine David Pecker in hush money trial

    02:14
  • Maryland educator accused of using AI to frame the school's principal

    03:49
  • Major cities in Mexico running out of water as extreme heat continues

    05:35
  • Venice introduces world's first tourist entrance fee

    02:30
  • Increased threat of Colorado wildfires sparks demand for new tech solutions

    04:12
  • New exhibit in New York re-creates Israeli music festival attacked on October 7

    05:43
  • Ohio police release video of suspect saying 'I can't breathe' before dying

    04:56

Making it rain: Why the controversial practice of cloud seeding is causing a flurry as drought ravages the West

04:45

States in the west are facing a water crisis and for the first time ever the federal government declared a water shortage on the Colorado river. A weather modification called cloud seeding blasts silver iodide into the sky to improve a cloud’s ability to make it rain or snow. The process can increase precipitation two to 12 percent more per storm. NBC News’ Cal Perry reports on the controversial technology.