tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN August 29, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am PDT
11:01 pm
york. we continue our special coverage. of hurricane adalja preparing big ben coast, prepare for a hurricane, they've seen since the likes of the 18 hundreds. breaking, news just a few moments. go upgraded to a category three storm. maximum sustained winds of 120 miles an hour. forecast to reach a category four by landfall. winds of more than 130 miles an hour. storm is bringing coastal flooding in west florida. it's expected to make a hard turn east later wednesday. something more rain across georgia south carolina. but getting 12 to 16 foot storm surge in big bend area. panhandle turns to the pencil. enough to submerge most one
11:02 pm
story buildings. and warning in some of those areas, it may likely not be survivable. >> definitely going to hit the big ben. everywhere we get some storm surge. you'll see a major impact whether the i will hits you are not. so prepare for. that it'll be significant, significant impact. that region of florida. >> the national hurricane center issued a new advisory. let's bring in karen mcguinness at the cnn weather center with details. populists about the upgrade. and what it means for the potential future pattern of the hurricane. >> it is stunning omar. it's starting. in the past hour. we watched this go from category two, we had anticipated it would be three. now it's a category three. the winds had been 110 miles an hour. now it's 1:20 miles an hour. it is rapidly intensify.
11:03 pm
as the forecast suggests for the national hurricane center. it has done that. because of water temperatures here just fueling the system. it's huge. it's massive. look at this. all the way from just about the central panhandle down towards cape coral. fort myers, naples florida. you're looking at this broad system. it encompasses a huge sloth of central, western sections of florida. the impact is gonna be tremendous. another problem is that it's moving north and 50 miles an hour. it had been 16. for that was 17, before that 18. slow down is not good for hurricane. if you are online. it suggests that it's really going to intensify. in this, case pretty rapidly. category three. hundreds of miles from cedar key.
11:04 pm
this could happen within the next 4 to 6 hours. we are anticipating this making landfall. but landfall is not the specific thing that we are most concerned about. it's the storm surge. storm surge kills more people than anything else you will see power outages. see trees down. you'll see structures damaged. this is a low-lying area this area, i've talked about this. the wildlife management areas, estuaries, beautiful springs there. it's gorgeous. not highly populated notley tampa like gainesville, i like tallahassee. but the impacts are still being felt. there is a tornado watch, recently just seeing a tornado warning. that was a little further up the floor peninsula. look at this. it's not just affecting florida. not just georgia where there are states or morgan city for florida. georgia, south carolina, north
11:05 pm
carolina and look at this almost 700 miles. and to traverse in the next several days. wreaking havoc in its wake. could see tremendous amounts of rainfall. but i mention the storm surge. and that's very vulnerable area here. around the big bend. the search is going to be well inland. a lot of folks moves to get away from this. that will be tremendous. this red shaded area. tornado watch goes until 6:00 in the morning. potential for traumatic activity. we're not be surprising. tropical air there. i will see it showing up. here's the category three. well over 100 miles from shore away for. it makes landfall maybe around 8:00. where? somewhere in the big bend area. cedar key, steinhatchee.
11:06 pm
might be some of these other coastal towns. certainly it's a possibility. here's another idea. right along the south carolina border. category one. going into wednesday evening with 80-mile-an-hour winds. all the rain be devastating and the south carolina coastal area could see heavy rainfall. 2 to 6 inches potential for flash flooding. certainly there as we go to the next 24 to 36 hours. lots to tell you about omar. >> we will stay close to throughout it all. these developments moving very quickly as the storm continues to make its way towards the florida coast. karen mcguinness, thank you want to bring in cnn's gloria pazmino not covering the storm next to float us can't tampa bay. as you heard gloria, it's now a category three. forecast category four at the
11:07 pm
time example. i can see the wind. it appears to be picking up the last time we spoke but what are you seeing on the ground? >> omar, i apologize because i think we are having connection issues. hopefully you can hear me. having a hard time hearing you. but we were just talking about the hurricane officially being a category four. you were talking in the winds here. we are in clearwater beach in the rain has stopped as you can see. but the wind significantly increasing the last few minutes. so the rain has let up. we are feeling the force of that wind just sweeping through the area now as you said, the hurricane now officially a category three. we are expecting that to be come a category four hurricane by the time that it makes landfall in the early hours of the wednesday morning.
11:08 pm
conditions here are changing really minute to minute. it was raining hard about an hour ago. when we last spoke to a stop now. it's very windy. storm surge is going to be the primary thing that we are watching for. expecting to see anywhere from 47 feet of storm surge. coming in. that's going to be catastrophic for the area. a large amount of water. dangerous levels of water. as a result the area has been put under a mandatory evacuation order. not everyone has heeded the waters. i've spoken people who are local, telling me they would ride this out. just writing it out. hoping for the best, but as we've heard from the governor, he believes most people in the path of a dangerous category
11:09 pm
three storm. so we standby here we wait through arrival of the historic catastrophic storm. omar? >> and we could hear the wind whistling around you different from the other times we've checked in at this point so please stay safe. as you continue to cover as well. we'll check in with you. >> you know, as west florence to feel the first effects of the hurricane. some authorities say it is not too late to safely evacuate. >> those who stayed behind or going have to ride out the storm. little to no help from first responders because they might -- some of the most dangerous parts might not be seen for hours. >> it's getting to the point where it's too late from whatever you ran. unfortunately it does not sound good. no matter how.
11:10 pm
the hurricane-force winds, comes after that. around noon tomorrow. a high with this 10 to 15. free to storm surge. that is deadly amount. coming together. >> officials warn that those who didn't leave that they need to be careful in the coming hours to not believe the worst is over. when they see the sunshine. >> it's the storm surge that ends up taking their lives. keep you and your family safe. >> we do not want anyone to wake up. seeing the blue skies and think that we are done. >> that's not the case, and probably will be the most critical element tomorrow. we'll be that storm surge. mother nature wins every time. >> to talk about this all joining us now by phone is a storm chaser from texas planes. perry florida which is right on
11:11 pm
the big bend of florida. for starters, trey what are you seeing where you are? what are you expecting to see where you are? >> as of now, we have a lot of rain coming in. seem pretty rough storm coming up. >> yeah. and where you are in particular we are seeing forecast from the national hurricane center storm surge. >> up to potentially 16 feet. you have been chasing this storm, have done this for a good bit of time. >> based on the forecast you've seen. how is it different in your mind of what you have done before? >> well, all pretty crazy. we got a pretty good plan in motion.
11:12 pm
completed spot where it's a straight shot north. >> in your experience, i've been down in florida. in recent memory. of course hurricane michael. obviously in that happened last year. new experience, being in those environments, how quickly do the conditions change? one thing i get from talking to people, they go to bed and it's sunny and a few hours there things are different. >> it's pretty quick. one second is a rude thing. next it's gone. >> yeah and then it's too late for people to leave at that point. >> yeah. that's when it gets dangerous. reached praying. keep pushing through. >> yeah, yeah. when you talk to people who don't end up leaving. i imagine if you are sticking around seen other people secure
11:13 pm
other reasons i tell you for writing it out? >> same thing. some people see it through. some people just can't afford to go or just our statement. >> yeah, yeah another thing i want to mention for letting you go. you deal with a storm surge when it comes in, from one of these potential hurricanes. as it gets further in the. you've got, likes other freshwater areas. it began to swell. grading the compounding effect. talk me through a little bit of a strategy. how do you plan to follow the storm. trying to be safe as you can. >> we are trying to stay towards the side of the storms. what we've all done. winning until storms over. are hoping we can help.
11:14 pm
>> well hey trey thank you for taking the time i know it's late. i know you've got a long day heavy. appreciate. stay safe. there's anything, feel free to reach out. >> now, the warnings about the dangers of the hurricane are not enough to convince some residents to evacuate. and, yet some are choosing to ride out the storm. ♪ chevy silverado has what it takes to do it all. with up to 13 camera views. and the z71 off-road package. ♪ you ok? yeah.
11:15 pm
11:16 pm
julian learned from noom weight. sign up now at noom.com. but blendjet■s back to school sale is in full swing! blendjet gives you ice-crushing, big blender power on the go so you can whip up a mouthwatering beverage wherever you are. enjoy 15 plus blends before rapidly recharging via usb-c. cleanup is a breeze! just blend water with a drop of soap. stand out even when you're accidentally twinning with our kaleidoscope of colors. don■t be tardy for this sale! head to blendjet.com and order yours now.
11:17 pm
just the three of us girls. i never thought twice about feeding her kibble. but about two years ago, i realized she was overweight. she was always out of breath. that's when i decided to introduce the farmer's dog to her diet. it's just so fresh that she literally gets bubbles in her mouth. now she's a lot more active, she's able to join us on our adventures. and we're all able to do things as a family. ♪ get started at betterforthem.com will you pause it real quick? (mumbles) just sold the car to carvana. what? all i had to do was answer a couple questions and got a real offer in seconds.
11:18 pm
then, they just picked up the car and paid me right on the spot. sell your car at carvana dot com today. you really have to go now, now is the time, if you do, not a fuse day, hunker down tonight, it is going to be too nasty tomorrow morning to be able to do it. now if you do choose this day, in one of the evacuation zones, first responders will not be able to get you until after the storm has passed. that is, right they will not be able to get their till after. >> florida governor ron desantis urging residents to evacuate, the state is bracing for a dahlia which is expected to make landfall as an extremely dangerous category for her this is the projected path of the storm, after lashing florida it will move through, georgia south carolina,
11:19 pm
and north carolina before heading out over the atlantic. u.s. national hurricane center 's work meaning of life-threatening storm surges of 12 to 16 feet above ground level. that is enough to inundate a bus. these storms out of bands are already causing flooding in some coastal areas of the state, earlier i spoke with the public information officer from dixon county emergency management, across city florida, which is rain the hurricane span, here is what they told me about the monster storm. >> for us, we are fixing the start, getting the first few bands of the winds coming at this slowly gone up with the what we look at of the road, such as ambulances and fire checks and even our law enforcement, and has 45 miles per hour sustained winds, that is not wind gusts, that is what minnesota getting to 45 sustained winds, it is slowly going to keep up from there to up to the 80s, 90s, and stay
11:20 pm
there for a good few hours. that is where we get really concerned, because that is what we can no longer start answering emergency calls ignoring on the roads. we will have to stay in, shelter in place, and we have to take emergency calls and triage from their our most critical, to the least critical, and once the storm moves out, and out of our path, it could eventually start getting our checks back on the road. we will have, we know in large influence of calls, so that is number one our main concern. followed then, the storm, surge it will follow as the storm is closer on the, land and heads our coastal community, so that is the two biggest things where we are really stressing right now, making sure we are just ready to get boots on the ground as soon as we can when the storm moves on. >> you can see it on the, screen but we are showing a bit of the map around the florida area, where the forecast is for a storm surges, and where you are, you guys are forecast
11:21 pm
according to national hurricane center to get some of the heaviest storm surge, and the range of potentially a 12 to 16 feet. just lay out for us, i know you experience in dealing with storms, but lay it out for our viewers and folks who may be, watching what is the difference in dealing with a storm surge, versus maybe just the heavy winds and rain we have course, and you will force going to see here. >> we just got new totals of the 16 feet of storm surge, for us that has been the highest they have predicted yet, the closest we have a came to storm surge like that on our coastal community was back with -- maybe four, five, and some places and we are low-lying and our communities down on the coast in the horseshoe, and four foot was devastating. we had a lot of major damage to residents and commercial structures. so for us with the storm surge and potential of 16-foot, it is
11:22 pm
just total catastrophe, and devastation, and there is no way people that stay down their can survive that, unless they get too elevated ground above that, so we are really concerned what we will find, in the morning once it moves on for those that we have word that did not evacuate, we do have some we know are down there that were just adamant they did not want to evacuate, and when we talk about storm surge, we talk about a normal dry ground where tide is at its normal, you are standing there looking out on the, gulf you can add 15 or now 16 foot potentially to that of water. you have to think that is moving with the winds, pushing, and waves on top of that, so it is definitely going to be a game-changer for, you know, as we move forward, and change the lay out of our beautiful
11:23 pm
coastal communities, with a lot of destruction, so -- >> that was the cross city florida, that is an area forecast to see up to 16 feet of storm surge -- some people are choosing to ride out the storm, choosing to stay in areas that are very likely to be last but powerful winds and overwhelmed with floodwaters. he has one president rationalizing it. >> we have some elderly and people here on the island have refused to, leave and i just felt a responsibility as their neighbor and person that loves this island, to try and stave the tide and see what they can do to, help we have a school and church building hurt we will be holed up in a bill to withstand the winds, it is that the highest point on the island, so we believe even at the highest storm surge we will be okay. >> now the owners of a marina says they say they have done
11:24 pm
all they can to prepare for the hurricane by moving equipment to higher ground, but they are staying because the marina is the family's livelihood. >> with the insurance and stuff going on, i mean we are all worried, that is why we are staying here to see if there is anything that we can do to protect what we have. >> let's bring in cnn's gloria pazmino, she's covering the storm from clearwater, florida and gloria, i know we have come to multiple times over the past few hours, just for viewers who may just be tuning, in can you compare what it was like when people would have been going to bed now a few hours, ago to what you are seeing now? >> well, omar, you know, the wind here is really significant, as we, speak at the last hour that i spoke to, you it was raining, it was windy, now the rain has let up a bit and the wind is very, very strong.
11:25 pm
it really does put things in perspective to hear people from the area talking about why they are writing out the, storm they want to stay to protect their, livelihoods they want to stay to protect their property, but the reality and one thing we do have to keep in mind here, this is a very dangerous storm. they have slowed down, it is a category, three and the fact that has slowed down just means that the storm now has more time to gather more strength, as it hovers over those warm waters in the gulf of mexico. now we are in clearwater beach, this is part of the county which is also under mandatory evacuation order, but despite that order there are people here who have chosen to ride out the storm right here at home. i spoke to one of them earlier today, and they were walking along the beach, they told me they lived here for several, years they are used to seeing this kind of, whether they have written it out before, and it
11:26 pm
is exactly what they are planning to do. >> you don't want to lose any lives, but people have been through it one time in our lives, and used technology, it is what it is, mother nature always wins. >> mother nature always wins, that has been ringing in my head for the last several hours, omar, because conditions here have changed so significantly, hour by hour, and the question here as we await the landfall of hurricane, is whether the storm surge is going to come in as strongly as we have forecast that it might. for this area, we are expecting to see anywhere from 4 to 7 feet of water moving inland, where we are right now the ocean is in this direction, it is about a quarter of a mile or so to the water from where we are standing, so if that storm
11:27 pm
continues to gather strength, if it continues to get stronger over the warm waters of the gulf of mexico, it means that conditions here are prime for that surge to come in, and potentially flood much of where we are standing right now for the next two hours, it will be critical to see whether or not that take shape. again, very dangerous potentially catastrophic storm heading for the west coast of florida. omar? >> gloria, as those conditions, change i know you will do the best to stay safe, as well thank you for your, reporting stay close to you as this continues to move towards the coast. now from the sky, the hurricane looks extremely threatening, this is a life that light view of the hurricane as it churns through the gulf of mexico's warm waters towards florida's coast. coming up, we will take you back to florida live as landfall draws near.
11:29 pm
11:30 pm
11:32 pm
>> we are here to -- assistance to heed this warning, the storm is worse than we have ever seen -- >> and many have heeded that, warning of the ring from florida's west coast as a devastating hurricane bears down. hurricane adalja is now a category three storm, it is forecast to be a category four when it slams into the coast a few hours from now. it could bring sustained winds more than 130 miles per hour, that is enough to drive a catastrophic ocean storm surge up to 16 feet. let's bring in meteorologist
11:33 pm
karen mcinnis cnn weather center. karen, what is the latest that you are seeing? obviously we are bracing for impact on the florida west coast. >> you know, i was just looking at this, studying it a bit longer, and the symmetry on this is really caught my attention. when i see something like, that obviously we are seeing a system that has become more mature, it is stronger, it is more intense, it is capable of producing widespread damage. all of that applies to what hurricane is going to be doing over the coming hours. we have already received a report at the beaches right down here, the peninsula of tampa where they have reported some significant flooding. this is not finished. we are still in the throes of this. about 100 or so miles to the south of tallahassee, category three, national hurricane
11:34 pm
center said in their last update that it is going to strengthen rapidly before landfall is category three they are projecting still a category four, that has been projected to be about 8:00 local time somewhere in this area. but, the computer model shifted a, bit it shifted a bit more towards the west, so that means more people perhaps more populated areas, and it is a very recreational area, lots of fishing, recreational activities, and this is the forecast radar. i want to point out one, thing and that is what is happening with these a bands of showers. what, will as we go into the next several hours, heavy bands of rainfall, it is not the rainfall we are most concerned, about it is the surge. around this big bend area, that is where we are looking at the potential for 12 to maybe 16
11:35 pm
inches of rainfall. it is going to be on the storm surge of course rather. it is not going to be in florida, it is extending up into georgia, towards savannah, towards charleston, in the midlands, and southeast coast of georgia. states of emergency out, florida, georgia, south carolina, north carolina, you have a long way to go and another update coming up in about 25 minutes or so. i will let you know right then. >> karen mcguinness, staying on top of, adenosine and weather center in atlanta, thank you very much. coming up, next aaron thomas deputy director of emergency management in hernando county, she's in florida which is north of tampa, good to see, you thank you for taking the time. i want to start actually with something a bit unique to your area, obviously a lot of warnings are going out for people, further inland, but last year at least the temps
11:36 pm
area misdirected from -- and i'm curious, because of those same types of warnings that are going out, now how do you convince some residents to actually heed some of those warnings? >> that is a great question. thank you so much for having me. we have been pushing information on public education about the severity and intensity of the storm, since we first got the initial -- so for several days, we have been telling our residents particularly on the west side of the coastline, that this storm is serious, that the storm surge is life-threatening, it is 6 to 9 feet above ground level, it is absolutely nothing to sneeze at. so we are actively messaging that, we are encouraging orchestrations for special needs clients, so they can appropriately plan for, them and very pleased with the
11:37 pm
compliance rate with the law enforcement, national guard, and fire rescue partners and telling us that divestment already have people on the west side of the -- did comply with evacuation order and we are exceptionally -- for that. >> that is definitely good news, because as we see a lot of these preparations in, areas there are a number of -- along those lines for what you do and what your department does, what is the top of the priority list for a few hours from now when the hurricane actually makes landfall? what are you most concerned about that you want to make sure your tackle first? >> well, first and foremost, we need our residents to understand that at the wind threat is going to subside well before the storm surge threat does. our wind threat is anticipated to subside somewhere around lunchtime today, but that surge that is going to be with us for
11:38 pm
much longer. so if there is any shelter or safe place, it could be easy for someone to think that it would be safe to travel back to their home or business. we will be issuing the all clear on it is safe to do so, but we are not going to do that until we are absolutely positive that that surge threat has also subsided. we know we have a high tide cycle coming up this afternoon, so we are going to be watching that very closely, and make sure we are not letting -- people go home to cnn putting themselves in harm's way. >> as you are watching the overnight hours, people are going to be waking up to much different situations and then they saw and they went to sleep with, and so how do you deal with some of the folks who stayed which seems like -- there are people who have stayed, how do you best help them in those initial hours, or can you in those initial hours?
11:39 pm
>> we are going to provide as much support in assistance to our residents as we possibly can, regardless of where we are in the timeline, we have already started planning for our recovery efforts, and we are prepared to initiated damage assessment as soon as it is safe to put people on the road, and again, we are not going to issue the all clear until it is absolutely safe to do so. that is why the damage assessment teams, they are planning department, at the planning and building code and zoning are prepared to issue emergency permanence, as needed, that will also before that happens, will be very interested in clearing the roads for emergency responder access, so we can grow conduct search and rescue efforts and take care of the needs of people, also very concerned about long term power outages, and our electric dependent
11:40 pm
special needs clients. we want to make sure that they have a safe sanitary habitable power filled home to go back to, before we put them back in a scenario where their health deteriorates because they do not have power. >> yeah, that is why i have covered many of these types of hurricanes, that is one thing that i think people do not quite understand. after the storm comes, through the storm surge, it is not like every thing goes back to normal. you have to get the power, backup great infrastructure again, get people to actually go back to their lives before the run back to it and potentially get in the way. i know you are have a lot of work, to thank you for taking, time best of luck to you. >> thank you so, much take care. >> of course. >> well, figures are growing in florida as the hurricane strengthens, we will speak with the sheriff of the county when our storm coverage continues. ot your only treatment option.
11:41 pm
11:42 pm
how you think about food has such a... huge impact on your relationship with it. visit noom.com and start your trial today. meet the portable blender we can barely keep in stock. blendjet 2 gives you ice-crushing, big blender power on-the-go. so you can blend up a mouthwatering smoothie, protein shake, or latte wherever you are! recharge quickly with any usb port. best of all, it even cleans itself! just blend water
11:43 pm
11:44 pm
the power goes out and we still have wifi to do our homework. and that's a good thing? great in my book! who are you? no power? no problem. introducing storm-ready wifi. now you can stay reliably connected through power outages with unlimited cellular data and up to 4 hours of battery back-up to keep you online. only from xfinity. home of the xfinity 10g network.
11:45 pm
>> officials in florida are pleading with residents to take precautions as hurricane idalia it's expected to hit the state as an extremely dangerous category four storm in the coming hours. idalia it's currently a category three hurricane but continues to intensify as it slowly moves north in the gulf of mexico. officials warn that likely historic storm surge of destructive winds and flooding mean there is great potential for death and catastrophic devastation. the national weather service supports of -- could see powerful battering waves, and buildings could be washed away. joining us from florida's leading county sheriff -- sheriff, good to see, we thank you for taking the time. let's start out with what worries you most about this
11:46 pm
hurricane? >> well, obviously, it is intensity and it's continuance to intensify and that is the concern and probably as much so as the storm surge that we will expect later today, along with the high tides that we are seeing so that is what we are really worried about most now in our areas and we have a lot of low lying areas in our county where we are huge county geographically of around 300 square miles so we have a lot of land here and areas but our main concern is, evacuation, and encouraging -- residents in cedar key, and -- to take shelter, and family and
11:47 pm
stay safe areas and -- are in shelter, and we've had shelters open, continue to be open, and a difficult time and getting folks out of cedar key. i still have a number of residents to be -- who chose not to evacuate. so certainly, we are worried about them, and about the safety, and -- >> you may not be able to see, it but we have been showing as you have been, talking some of the graphics of the forecast, the storm, search and it is right in the area that is expecting to get up to 16 feet potentially of storm surge, nevertheless potentially one of the worst-hit areas for storm surge. what have you found have been the residents who, stayed what have you found have been their
11:48 pm
reasoning for doing so, why do you think it has been so difficult to get them to evacuate? >> you know, i think it is some of our citizens in the area, and their families have been there or for a few years, they have been very resilient in the past hurricanes, the past storms, and this feel like they are prepared to write it out. but you know, this again, you indicated, and certain factors that this hurricane seems to be, will be much different than anything we have faced and been around a good, while and a lot of hurricanes and storms here, and this one has the potential and i don't see much change at this point pretty late going into the game at this point. and i just, i don't see much
11:49 pm
good to come on this storm but we certainly hope and pray that all of our residents will be safe. that is to the point now where these bands have started coming in, it is getting pretty close to the town that we will not be able to travel the roads in our county, neither the wind, so that is the thing that you know, as much as i hate to say it, we have to -- our emergency medical rescue units have to come in, the sustained wind speeds, and 49 miles an hour, we have to prepare folks for their safety, otherwise coming to get some of these folks at the last minute, it is going to be impossible. >> no of course, there are a lot of considerations to make. sheriff, thank you for being with, us i know you have a busy day, ahead please stay safe and
11:50 pm
best of luck. >> all right, thank you very much. >> of course. >> coming up for, us we are watching as hurricane idalia makes its way to florida's coast. how this monster storm could compare to other devastating storms in u.s. history. that is next. ♪ chevy silverado hass what it takes to do it all. with up to 13 camera views.. and the z71 off-road package. ♪ you ok? yeah. any truck can help you make a living. this one helps you build a life. chevy silverado. my brain. so i choose new neuriva ultra. unlike some others, it supports 7 brain health indicators, including mental alertness from one serving. to help keep me sharp. try new neuriva ultra. think bigger. we, the moms who have lost our children
11:51 pm
to social media harms. we, we, we have had... enough. our politicians have failed. working for lobbyists, not us. we need your voice to pass the kids online safety act this fall. join us. join us. join us. join us. ♪ let's lead the way. every day, more dog people, and more vets are deciding it's time for a fresh approach to pet food. they're quitting the kibble. and kicking the cans. and feeding their dogs dog food that's actually well, food. developed with vets. made from real meat and veggies. portioned for your dog. and delivered right to your door. it's smarter, healthier pet food. get 50% off your first box at thefarmersdog.com/realfood
11:52 pm
11:53 pm
psoriasis really messes with you. try. hope. fail. no one should suffer like that. i started cosentyx®. five years clear. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infection, some serious and a lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reaction may occur. best move i've ever made. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx®. when i first learned about my dupuytren's contracture, my physician referred me to a hand specialist. and i'm glad he did, because when i took the tabletop test, i couldn't lay my hand flat anymore. the first hand specialist i saw only offered surgery. so, i went to a second hand specialist who also offered nonsurgical options — which felt more right for me.
11:54 pm
so, what i'd say to other people with dupuytren's contracture is this: don't wait — find a hand specialist trained in nonsurgical options, today. i found mine at findahandspecialist.com. icy hot. ice works fast. ♪ heat makes it last. feel the power of contrast therapy. ♪ so you can rise from pain. icy hot. >> florida's gulf coast is already feeling the effects of hurricane idalia and the storm has not made landfall. the national hurricane center is calling an extremely dangerous hurricane. right now it is packing wind speeds of 120 miles per hour, that is expected to rise. -- a category four storm by the
11:55 pm
time it is -- officials are warning of people still under direct path of the storm to drop everything, and evacuate before it is too late. telling residents, it will be impossible for majority workers to reach them when disaster strikes one storm chaser in florida describes what he is seeing so far. >> this is going to be a catastrophic wind event, similar to hurricane -- which was a -- chase that storm also, so you are going to have a 30 mile wide approximately 30 mile wide damage path of catastrophic damage here all the way back to northwestern jacksonville, it will be a hurricane, a strong hurricane on the way to southeast georgia, and northeast of this area. >> and that is it for me this, hour but not it for our coverage, i'm omar, jimenez i will be back much more on
11:56 pm
hurricane in just a bit. carvana has hundreds of thousands of five star reviews and counting. the whole process was really simple and easy, and this is my third time selling to carvana. you just enterer your license plate or your vin, answer a few q questions. boom, you get a realal offer. sell y your car to carvana toda. but blendjet■s back school sale is full swing! blendjet gives you ice-crushing, big blender power on the go so you can whip up a mouthwatering beverage wherever you are. enjoy 15 plus blends before rapidly recharging via usb-c. cleanup is a breeze! just blend water
11:57 pm
with a drop of soap. stand out even when you're accidentally twinning with our kaleidoscope of colors. don■t be tardy for this sale! head to blendjet.com and order yours now. here's how tommy lost 30 lbs on noom weight. i'm tom. noom helped him use psychology to lose weight. the mindful aspect made me feel more conscious about what i was eating and why i was eating it. it's actually working. lose weight and make it last with noom weight.
11:58 pm
11:59 pm
david: as we start a new school year, there's something new happening in california's public schools. they're called community schools. leslie: it really is shared leadership with families, students, educators, and communities. jessie: i feel like we're really valued as partners. david: it's a more innovative, holistic approach.
12:00 am
grant: in addition to academic services, we look at serving the whole family. narrator: wellness centers, food pantries, and parental education. jessie: they're already making a difference. david: california's community schools: reimagining public education. welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. i'm omar jimenez live in new york. we're following breaking news out of florida. hurricane idalia is barreling toward florida's big bend coast
84 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on