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October 13, 2025 6 mins
Two people are dead after a plane crash on I-195 in Dartmouth, a nor'easter wipes out the power for thousands, and the final round of Nobel winners are revealed. Stay in "The Loop" with WBZ NewsRadio.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
This is WBZ, Boston's news radio, redefining local news.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Rainy and windy in Boston right now. It is eleven
o'clock fifty five degrees on your Monday morning. Good morning.
I'm Nicole Davis, and here's what's happening. Rather blustery day
out there. Is the nor'easter creeps up the coast, lashing
us with wind and rain. We've got a bunch of
fog out there as well. That's not helping visibility, so
I'm churning up the waters. We've got some coastal flooding

(00:32):
possible at high tide, high surface. Well dealing with a
bit of beach erosion right on the water Block Island.
Ferry is canceled all service today. Steamship Authority canceling service
to and from Nantucket. As for power outages, about forty
nine hundred customers are in the dark. And this is
a scattered situation, not just one part of the state.

(00:53):
Many areas around the state dealing with power outages. We
have the latest on the forecast coming up in just
about two minutes, Traffic and weather together. Eleven oh one.
New details from the South coast, as State Police confirmed
two people were killed when a small fixed wing airplane
crashed on one ninety five in Dartmouth this morning. Video
from the scene shows parts of the small plane were

(01:14):
scattered all over the crash site and some of it
was on fire, this including in travel lanes. There was
a heavily damaged car in the median It is not
clear how that was involved, but again one ninety five
is shut down in both directions at the crash site.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
Investigators think the plane may have been trying to land
at New Bedford Regional Airport. It does not appear that
the pilots sent the airport a flight plan. But again
we have now learned, according to state police, that two
people were killed in that crash and at eleven oh two.
President Trump is now in Egypt for a summit on
the future of Gaza in the next phases of the

(01:50):
Israeli Hamas ceasefire. Earlier this morning, he addressed Israeli lawmakers
in the Kanesset, the Israeli parliament, as Israel welcomed home
the remaining living hostages.

Speaker 1 (02:00):
Phased the peace agreement has been accomplished. White House correspondent
Nancy Cortis says there's still much to do and orderly.

Speaker 4 (02:06):
Israeli withdrawal from Gaza must still be worked out, along
with a plan for Hamas fighters to hand over their weapons,
and then who exactly will govern Gaza, who will rebuild it,
and how many countries will fund that work.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
Phase one was the release of the hostages. CBS's Lindigrad ste.

Speaker 4 (02:24):
Amas released the hostages and two groups to the Red Cross.
They were then handed over to Israeli soldiers and met
their families at an army base before being flown to
the hospital.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
Israel also released hundreds of Palestinian prisoners. President Trump, speaking
to the Israeli Parliament. Generations from now, this will be
remembered as the moment that everything began to change, and
change very much for the better. CBS News special Report.
I'm Peter King.

Speaker 2 (02:50):
We have a lot of fog out there today. If
you're right along the coast. We have a nor'easter that
we're contending with, and it's just not a good time
to be outside blowing winds or knocking the rain around
all over the place, knocking you around a bit on
the roads. We have some winds gusting of to about
forty five to fifty miles an hour in southeastern Massachusetts. Now,

(03:11):
this nor'easter is sticking around for much of the day
into tonight. We could even see some coastal flooding, minor
coastal flooding and beach erosion at times of high tide.
We have temperatures holding pretty steady in the fifties. We
have a wind advisory for the Capean Islands up until
eight o'clock tonight, and it will stay windy this evening
with periods of rain and a low in the mid fifties.

(03:31):
Then for Tomorrow, the winds gradually start to die down
a bit. The storm will make its way out throughout
the morning and midday. Maybe, just maybe you could actually
see a peak of sun in the afternoon. We have
a high in the mid fifties. Then for your Wednesday,
partly sunny and freezy, a high in the sixties. Thursday
mix of sunning, clouds, cooler and a high in the
mid fifties. Right now in Lowell it is drizzling and

(03:54):
fifty one west of Boston, some light rain in Framingham
fifty two sow the Boston really coming down in Kingston
fifty five. In Boston at eleven oh five, it is
raining foggy and fifty four degrees. Well again, we were
at eighty degrees in sunshine was it one week ago today?
And then now we have in nor'easter, Plymouth could be

(04:15):
one of the hardest hit towns from this. That is
where we find wbz's Jim McKay.

Speaker 5 (04:20):
The howling winds ripped through the heart of the south
shore and Plymouth for those who know the coast, well,
there's a quiet confidence in the air, so Plymouth native
and just you're not worried about it, right, I am
not worried. Eric has lived at Plymouth, is entire life
it has seen at all.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
In the winter it gets just as windy, so I
mean fastcake so far.

Speaker 5 (04:38):
I think as the day moves along, however, the rain
side of this nor'easter will be inescapable.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
You add those high tides.

Speaker 5 (04:45):
In the mix and it can really be a cause
for concern. This may not be a hurricane level threat,
but this nor'easter is dumping plenty of rain and the
wind isn't exactly helping the cause.

Speaker 1 (04:56):
Despite what Eric thinks.

Speaker 5 (04:57):
Pretty tame, typical, typical windy Plymouth dank in Plymouth. Jim
MCKAWBZ Boston's news radio.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
With much of the state in a drought, we do
need this rain and it's not stopping. The final day.
By the way of the Topsfield Fair north of Boston,
you're going to notice today though, there is more of
a focus on indoor activities like the animals and the
art and stuff like that. However, yesterday, before the storm started,
the State Police bomb squad was called to the fair
after somebody threatened the event. State Police say somebody sitting

(05:25):
in a vehicle at the fairgrounds said they had a
bomb in their car. The bomb squad was called in
to respond. Sweeping the fairgrounds, they found nothing. The person
was taken into custody and the Nobel Prize closing out
the show with some new England flavor.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
A trio gets the honor the Nobel Prize in Economics
for their work in creative destruction, which is a key
concept in economics that refers to new innovations replacing older technologies.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has today decided to
award Juel Machil, Philippe Pagion, and Peter Howitt Brown University.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
You say, and as you heard there from the announcement
in Stockholm. Peter Howitt is from Brown in Rhode Island,
and Phelippe Baggion is a former Harvard professor. An amazing
honor the Nobel Prize in Economics, Druma holland WBZ Boston's
News Radio.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
You are now in MALUK For news updates throughout the day,
and listen to WBZ News Radio on the iHeartRadio app.
I'm Nicole Davis, w b Z and Boston's News Radio.
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