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tv   The Greg Gutfeld Show  FOX News  September 10, 2017 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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everything's pretty much done. it's so much easier so now, we're ready, bring on t. shipstation. the number one ch of online sellers. go to shipstation.com/tv and get two months free. >> one of the most powerful and dangerous drugs in u.s. history is approaching. it is today hit within hours. >> if you have been ordered to evacuate, you need to leave now. this is your last chance to make a good decision. >> hello, everyone. i am trying for her. kelly: and i am kelly wright. we have been warned about hurricane ermine appeared so far living up to all the dreaded expectations, leaving behind a trail of death and unprecedented destruction.
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and now irma is taking dead aim at florida. patti: irma is once again a category four storm with 131-mile per hour winds, torrential rains have life-threatening storms. more than 6 million floridians in the coastal area in the forecast is growing further. >> is not only a dangerous storm. we've already seen this time it's taken months already. it will take more if we are not prepared. please take it seriously. patti: now for the latest on the storm, adam klotz at the fox news extreme weather center. what is the latest? reporter: we are continuing to track this very large storm, beginning to get closer and closer to the florida keys. three hours from landfall, but the outer band really beginning to lift up on the keys and portions of south florida. the miami area has a couple of
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these bands packing some very powerful winds as well. you'll start to see the storm surge on the eastern side of the state. the southeastern side of the state became the pilot. this is the wind, the motion of the rain is going to start to cause a storm surge dared after we begin to see this get closer and closer to landfall within the next several hours. currently the category four storm will weaken as the reds over the florida keys tomorrow morning in the next couple of hours and then writing its way up the west coast of the state. it will maybe bump into the coastline a little bit come interact with the. this will still be a massive storm as it moves up the coastline slowly but surely come a likely going through that area the evening to overnight hours it will take the entire day. all of sunday to lift all the way up the coast into early monday until eventually as a category one hurricane moving into portions of georgia and
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weakening, turning into a tropical storm. you can see some tropical force winds as far as atlanta sec this move through sunday into monday. one of the big concerns is going to be the storm surge. we are looking at areas like naples, fort myers, 10 to 15 feet of water will be the baseline. this will be crashing on top of that. a huge population center and we are having an interview, five to 10 feet in the tampa area and waves crashing in on that. this would be a massive system. the storm surge is part of that. hurricane force winds will consistently make being narrower scope with the guys. it will cover the entire state. if you're on the good side of the bad side of the storm, it's not going to matter. i will be impact day. patti: adam klotz at the fox news extreme weather center. train to hurricane ermine is a slow moving storm.
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if i is not expected over the season until sunday morning. miami dodging a bullet right now so to speak but will still have severe weather. rain and ice is following all the details there. can you bring us up-to-date on what the conditions are right now? last we saw the wind picking up posting from hazardous conditions. reporter: that's right. what we've seen so far is the sustaining when a little bit higher than what was normally seen. i don't have a wind gauge than what we've seen in terms of what's been reported. 20, 30 miles per hour in a test that's been 40 to 50 miles per hour. those are extreme ones. we are hearing downtown miami and this gives you a microcosm of the damage we are seeing. flooding right, localized flooding all throughout south florida and all the way down
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there as well. that's gotten higher since we've been there all night. at the new york mets of events. that's the miami metro and we saw the panel last hour come down from that instant trees that are down over there to the back. the south side, i don't know if you can see it is started up right when we were here. slowly bending back as soon as the gauge in terms of how the wind has been. if you look over here it is an insult to injury. the sprinklers around. no idea why the building would leave the sprinklers on, but apparently they thought it was necessary. obviously not. not like we obviously need any more water. that is the situation in downtown miami. yes we did dodge a bullet. no doubt about it.
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i thought there would be five, six coming 10 storm surge inundating this entire area and luckily we have not seen that. what makes the storm tosses its really large and will have these conditions for 20, 24 hours, more flooding, more downed power lines, more trees. it's that catastrophic head hit forecasted 12, 24 hours ago in miami. we dodged a bullet in that is good news here for south florida. kelly: that is good news. still a menace. we will keep up-to-date on what is happening in miami. i guess the people are breathing a sigh is for the worst adam klotz has warned us, not just yet. it will still impact the entire state. reporter: it is coming out. patti: halfwit that coast eastern states and the news
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correspondent rick leventhal joined by son daytona beach. >> the rain has started to fall again. now when yet, but they are expecting tropical storm winds by tomorrow afternoon. they issued a mandatory evacuation for the low-lying area. many people do deserve most of the businesses here on atlantic avenue are boarded up. everything pretty much closed today. a couple bars in a hotel housing the electric workers in town. emergency management officials are concerned about the possibility of flooding. they could get anywhere between eight to 12 inches and because this is a flat low-lying area, that means there could be a lot of flooding and trees could start coming down because of the wind associated with the storm as well expect it to reach hurricane force by late tomorrow
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night. here's more from the county emergency management director. >> worst-case scenario as we understand it. the sustained tropical storm force winds could be in the neighborhood of 65 miles an hour for as long as 30 hours. that also includes the possibility of category one guys in significant rainfall. we are also concerned about the flooding. reporter: the worst-case scenario is much better in a few two days ago when the storm started heading this way. we thought to be a lot of people still love bagging sand out of concern that perhaps the floodwater may rise despite the fact is storm has viewed slightly to the west. we saw people back in the sand and asked them how they are feeling on this day. >> last minute, how? >> i was hoping they're still
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available. >> i just went home and neighbors there's a lot of elderly neighbor had. >> die for the bags are going? are you already for the storm? >> we will see. >> company sandbags to be taken so far today? >> i took time for myself, 10 in her car intend for her car. reporter: daytona beach will be still does sometimes tomorrow afternoon. they will close all of these bridges. anyone on the beach will have to stay on the beach until the storm passes unless it's a dire emergency. patti: rick leventhal lightning daytona beach. thank you. well, millions have been ordered to evacuate. some are writing up a storm either by necessity or by choice. one of those sticking it out as marvin lee winter, thank you for joining us. are you in a mandatory evacuation area?
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>> patty, no i'm not. patti: what is the situation? do you have power, heavy rain? >> very heavy rain, very windy but a pretty unsettling be honest with you. the wind was very strong. power was in and out. right now about 40 minutes ago. but the lightning lights at the sky in the howling of the wind. patti: pretty unsettling like you said. are you with family or neighbors? >> yeah, my wife and i in our house watching her in-laws dog for the weekend. they erected new york for a wedding. and we stayed here. we felt that the cars earlier in the week with gas, but there is a premium at one point. i waited in line for 40 minutes i think it was on wednesday.
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we looked into flying up to new york to getting away. jetblue is offering sub pretty good guy used to get out, but the flights went really quickly. it is hard in many airports shut down. at some point he was a decision we made to just stay here. we have some neighbors north towards orlando, drove elsewhere, someone all strove towards washington d.c. but there's some people in my neighborhood that are here. patti: have you been through this before? >> now, i am new to florida so this is my first major, major hurricane. i was down here last year but we had taken off. so it is interesting. we live in a new home, so it is hurricane, so we are just kind of writing it out, glad to go
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out until at least today so a little bit of time. yesterday went out for two hours in our neighborhood. they had sent someone out to fix it. our neighborhood was without power for two hours. that was early in the afternoon. we thought it was going to be a long, long time until about this morning. maybe 3:00 it went out. patti: florida power & light does warn people to anticipate power outages and also to understand that it might take days or weeks before they can get everybody back depending how many people to wind energy, 5000 now. do you have enough supplies? are you going to last a while if you have do? >> yeah, i have tons of
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supplies. i had ordered four of those portable stands, the battery-operated. they never got here in time because they were supposed to arrive by friday by 8:00 p.m., but once they started talking about irma getting stronger and stronger, they just halted all deliveries and close certain rows. yesterday was a curfew, mandatory curfew that started at 2:00 a.m. friday night leading into saturday morning. just have one of those fans, but we should be okay. patti: mentioned you are dog sitting. how is the pet doing? >> very good. he is well behaved. he said many golden doodle. he hasn't really been barking at all. i took him out before the storm got really, really bad. he's in good hands. patti: we are hearing some pets are basically out.
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glad to hear yours is doing well and we wish you the best of luck. >> thank you so much. hope everyone else is safe, too. kelly: good to know he is safe. i love rick leventhal's piece were you hurt people working together and good to see how they are blending, hoping for each other. of course mar-a-lago, the second home in florida. the u.s. coast guard fema and all federal people are ready. here comes irma. god bless everything. hurricane irma has yet to strike the homeland but officials aren't wasting any time preparing for the likely massive recovery operation. we talked about what the president was tweeting. he and his cabinet continue to follow developments of it. >> readiness term as part of then there's the recovery. we'll hear from one resident who
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decided to ride out the storm. >> quite a few stalwart people. because getting older is inevitable. but feeling older? that's something i control. get a free sample at depend.com. take the zantac it challenge! pill works fast? zantac works in as little as 30 minutes. nexium can take 24 hours. when heartburn strikes, take zantac for faster relief than nexium or your money back. take the zantac it challenge.
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>> if you're at this hour, you're watching us talking about hurricane irma.
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for days in the state and officials advised her against to respect the force of the hurricane and leave homes for safer havens has some 70,000 people have found refuge at emergency shelters this morning. but there are those that find the warnings in standing their ground. just engages among them. he joins us now by phone from his home in daytona beach. first of all, why have you and your wife chosen to ride out this monster storm? >> to be honest with you come a lot of what was learned we learned from watching news outlets and experts on your channel. they said it several times. you run away from water, but you hide from wind. you know, when the storm took a track that storm took the track that it did, we were ready to go. we had all her things ready to take off at a moments notice, cars, gas, et cetera. and the european model came to fruition, it became clear to us that it was better for us to
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stay than it was to try and braved the roads. a lot of people evacuated to lake city in tallahassee and places like that. that is where the storm is going now. unless you are planning to evacuate the chattanooga, will you go to the peninsula florida. >> you make a strong point. we've been watching rick leventhal with reports from the daytona area. he's been basically talking about how florida power & light position themselves they are. you were supposed to get anywhere from three to six inches of rain and instead you are just getting light rainfall at this hour. one of the things i want to point out as i saw something in rick leventhal story that warmed my heart and if anyone is paying attention at this hour, we saw people helping each other, helping the elderly. another gentleman feeling sandbag for not only himself, but also his neighbors.
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tell me what the spirit of cooperation is like in daytona. >> it's amazing. it is the kind of thing that warms your heart. there's people with dozens of stories. people buying water at publix and people getting four or five cases and when cases and when they run out, giving them a couple of cases. myself and my wife yesterday went to a friends house and helped her board up her windows. we didn't. we didn't even board up our own home. we didn't see the need. we didn't think it would get that bad blessed that it didn't. a lot of happy people on the east side of florida. a shame it has to go anyway. everyone has their own ax to chorus they jokingly say. you've got football teams from all over the country in central florida here in a couple months and they are looking at orlando and daytona, things like that. they are wondering if the savings going to be okay?
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i'm the east side of florida looks like we really caught a break. i mean really caught a break. you now have to wonder where is that going to crash through florida in the hope is in a place without a lot of population but it's going to be dangerous. if you are in the past year about our brave because i would have been so out of fear of picking up the east coast. train to the east coast is so much population not only your area, but all the way up thinking about savanna georgia in the hunter army airfield, even evacuating because the projections that were out there. i've got to ask you, what to do for a living if you don't mind me asking? >> we put on special events for military and other groups and make that easy for us to jump in the car and travel somewhere. one thing you can't stress enough face these things are going -- it is right now, and really hot water.
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this thing could really strengthened like andrew type really type strain thing. people sitting around in tampa saying we are just going to hang loose. you people have lost your mind. getting your car if you can safely do it and get out. kelly: i'm so glad you mention hot water, but warm water. i was in turks and caicos two weeks ago and they remarked to my friends how long the temperature was with the water. at the same time, hurricane harvey pitt of course the texas and louisiana area and their hearts and prayers to the people there in now we see the warm water fueled this hurricane, which looks like it is going to be hitting naples in tampa. what are concerns for your neighbors on the west coast? >> we joke about the fact we
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live in the east coast where we have the ocean. over the idea of bathwater. no waves, 90 degrees. it's not very refreshing. it's 90 degrees. in this case, the joke is over because that 90-degree water and the shallowness on the shelf over there, you can see the same reform and become a cat five. easily because it's overwater for at least another eight, 10 hours. how much we have seen this game changed when attached into cuba. your heart has to go out to these people, but the people staying over there, you can see where this thing is going. it's not a tornado. it's not an earthquake. you've got hours and hours to plan. if you stay, fema is coming at you. if you call 9-1-1, you are the most selfish individual to walk the planet.
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>> people watching this in hearing you are having the same sentiment. daytona beach is a special events coordinator for a lot of military events. we thank you for that service. we also thank you for the wise counsel you get into some of our neighbors. >> stay safe, everyone. kelly: thank you, sir. good guys. patti: a lot of interesting insights. >> the good thing is he safe and sound. again, could receive some wind damage. we'll continue to watch developments as burma continues to build and set to make an example just a few hours from now. many southern cities seen strong winds and heavy rain. patti: next will check on the condition slide into major cities. 79 and rick leventhal standing by with the latest.
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patti: hurricane ermine moving more to the west. the miami area with a direct hit but the massive storm not moving the state. bryan llenas is there. what is it like now? >> hi, patty. we are getting some guys here. it kind of comes in spurts. sometimes more alarming than others. some of the high winds we've seen over the last our time here and give you an idea of the wins we are seeing. you said it. there's no way that we are out of date as a matter of fact, we won't do this for another day in to monday. just north of us in fort lauderdale, tornadoes just yesterday later saturday. this is frowned the outer bands
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of the storm that caused these types of tornadoes which emphasizes again we are in no way out of this because these are the types of things they continue to happen in south florida. over here we are still getting flooding is a little bit in downtown miami. this is just a microcosm of what we're about to see in miami beach in fort lauderdale all along the east coast. the flooding comment downed trees and gusts of wind over his face. a face. the time is what causes some of the damage we are seeing so far. we don't want floridians to be thinking just because they dodged a bullet they can go outside and take pictures because most people when they get hurt during the storm is after. the storm surge will kill you, where you come out and see the downed power line though you can't hit by a sharp object going 30 miles an hour in the air. we want people to stay on guard
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in south florida. you can see the guys coming through. that seems to be a good idea. all of a sudden just a bit of dust. that is a bit of what we are seeing down here right now, guys. patti: brian, one of those things because it makes to the eye, people can be into a sense of complacency. this thing is bigger than the entire state and really, miami resident should be careful. reporter: bright. as the storm continues to move up and further this way, and go past the keys into the west side of this state, the storm could potentially get a little bit closer to the coastline which
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could bring stronger winds to the east side of the state. california still needs to remain on guard into tomorrow night. like i said, it was upright when we first got here. sort of birdcage in terms of the win. we are by no way out of this. by morning we will see the damage we are getting more reports. people continue to stay indoors with their radios in deep warnings when it comes to tornado watches. some people have lost power it comes to tornadoes, in this type of environment, to stay indoors, no windows and take shelter, even in your bathtub and not kind of stuff. this is going to be 20 hours or so of this type of environment. we dodged a bullet, but we are still very much dealing with hurricane or tropical storm status weather.
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not safe to be out in. patti: you can definitely see it behind you in the side in your earlier hits especially. stay safe and thanks again for the report. reporter: of course, thank you. hurricane irma with the trail of destruction. at least 25 confirmed deaths. sad to make landfall in the florida keys between 7:00 and 8:00 this morning. >> as a category four storm with sustained winds of up to 30 miles per hour with gusts up to 150. according to florida light and power, 255,000 customers now without power. let's check in with meteorologist adam klotz in the fox news extreme weather center. as this continues to build, are we seeing more the direction where this is going to go?
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>> would've a pretty good idea. it's turned in the last several hours across the coast of cuba, moving at about six miles an hour. it's getting close enough along the areas of south florida can you really beginning to see the outer bands across the florida keys, up towards miami with very stiff winds and pounding and 285, getting closer to 90 miles an hour. this will continue to lift that direction, likely around that timeframe before eventually meandering up the coast, wondering whether or not it will hit the coast again. it will be kind of perpendicular. not sure where the next landfall will be after you run over the florida keys, the likely getting up towards fort myers. as events in that direction, go watch it fall from a category four to a category three, running through the tampa area
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will be happening late on sunday into your overnight hours on monday. staying with category one method of into portions of southern florida before turning into a tropical storm. this could be felt as far north as atlanta. the surprise here the entire state is under the hurricane warning at this point. expecting a good reason for that. several things happening here. you see this red area right along the coast where the wind will be substantial for the longest saying that the hurricane. everything in the orange is a hurricane force gusts. whether you are in the west or the eastside, plenty of reasons to pay attention. kelly: adam, real quickly as they see the trajectory right there, cannot warm water they are the gold pick up some steam? >> that is going to be huge
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cheer, callie. if it is over the land of little bit more slowly. if we stay several miles off the coast, it will stay stronger longer and that is something that will still have to wait and see here in the next couple of hours. kelly: what you're reporting what the governor is reporting on this very essential for people in that area. thank you for that. florida's east coast will be spared the brunt of hurricane irma s. have been telling it for most of the night. storm tracking to the west@ninja showed us is making it a little bored difficult especially as it moved towards the florida keys. the east coast is not a danger. let's make it very clear. the storm will easily cover adams report from one coast to the other. rick leventhal about halfway up the east coast. i've just got to point out to
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you the story we saw from you where we saw people getting together and working together was really indicative of the parts of america's when times are troubled and they work together. reporter: am glad you brought that up because there was another story that we can share that we encountered earlier today visiting with the share of a volusia county. we were in their training center and he wanted to show me they had collected donations from a lot of businesses in town. good food, bread, stacks and stacks and cases of water. for the police officers and emergency first responders working around the clock in preparation for this storm. he said to me when they realized that they might not need all this stuff because it's not as bad in volusia county if they feared it might be. they are making plans to distribute the materials, water and food to other first responders and other people
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harder hit than they are. as soon as they are able to get out. while i was there, they were putting together a plan and a list together of volunteers who want to go out into teams to distribute goods and help out in any way they can. we've seen so many agencies pitching and when there has been trouble in texas and louisiana and now here in florida. agencies or other jurisdictions coming together to do what they can for their fellow first responders and others in need. i can show you right now a caravan of utility trucks. these are working with utility companies so in trees go down the tree guys hit the line, they go in first, clear the trees off the line in the utility guys can then repair the power lines. hundreds of those at the speedway just a few miles from where we are standing. they are on standby for when the
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storm is passing through to then go out to the guys who are working those trucks are in town, ready to roll in the storm finally comes. trade to a lot of people look to them when they are without pay power. reporter: from 30 states across the nation, 16,000 of them coming in to pitch in. kelly: wow, rick, thank you so much. stay safe. patti: amazing. millions evacuated and others bracing for the worst. kelly: indeed, irma hours for making landfall in florida and we've got more on how conditions have worsened mmi for coverage continues, we will show you that. stay with us. >> i've been here since 1958. i've never seen one this big or
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devastating.
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kelly: such a massive hurricane like irma, everything, i mean everything is at risk including to miami. so how were the animals protected during these times of weather events? we are on the phone now by the communications directors sue miami, ron mcgill. thanks for joining us at this hour. this is a pretty important deal because a lot of times when we see situations like this, we think about making sure that human life is taking care of. as you've learned through hurricane andrew, why life needs to be taking care of as well. tell me about that. >> absolutely. the animals at the zoo. i've been here for 38 years. we learned a lot back then.
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it came right through the zoo, leveled the suit. we learned first of all we don't evacuate animals for the zoo. people wonder why we do. they can't change direction at the last minute. the bottom line is this the animals, it's one thing to have your cat or dog, domestic animals to get used to these things. but these wild animals, the stress alone can kill the animal. it can be more dangerous than the hurricane itself. we are fortunate that could secure areas in the zoo for the dangerous animals. that's addicting people worried about lions, tigers, elephants. they were kept in areas built to maintain or sustain the strength of the animal itself. they have dirty been proven in the past experiences we've had good smaller animals removed from locations in the zoo to other locations within the large buildings we have.
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many since hurricane andrew. we built the zoo and we rebuilt it to maintain these incredible building code, the toughest building code in the country. we will catch up with smaller animals, small birds, small mammals that she might fly your dog or cat in it will put those in this large buildings. we did that kind of the last thing we do. even within the zoo is very stressful. these wild animals coming in though, they go through a lot. they sense the tension when the keepers are moving around, doing different things. so it is stressful not just for the people, but also animals. patti: ron, dr. hurricane andrew there is a lot of talk about the flamingos. since then you did though the special enclosure for them. tell us about that. >> it is true.
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to use the public bathrooms so in the zoo they were kind of a perfect hunker. even the clean afterwards and as gross as it sounds they had good clean water for birds were able to use. the photograph went around a lot at the flamingos in the bathroom again? how come we built these new facilities for the animals can use as bunkers where they have their own special pool in this facility, all enclosed in the animals are doing very well. yesterday as a matter of fact early in the morning we successfully moved those animals over there and they are doing well. we have some trees that have gone down. as of right now we seem to be holding out well. kelly: it seems like miami is doing quite well in spite of the fact that it is still a storm.
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it looks like miami is escaping the brunt of it and that is a good thing for miami's zoo. >> i'll tell you it really is. having been someone who went through andrew, there's no way to explain to you the kind of power the storm had. i said i hope that and then we reached irma. it was almost twice the size. is that this is going to be amazing. we are worried for her neighbors. kelly: that's a very good point. people forget about the theme parks that have animals like busch gardens. thanks again for sharing us how you protect the animals had to miami and not to say you are concerned about people at busch gardens in other places. thanks, ron. >> thank you. patti: delays from an that hurricane center and our own adam klotz at irma is making a move to the west and will be strengthening as it does.
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kelly: and some welcome news from the east coast and gulf coast that we will you about that. our coverage continues. so when i got my ancestry dna results it was a shocker. i'm everything. i'm from all nations. i would look at forms now and wonder what do i mark? because i'm everything. and i marked other. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com.
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patti: recapping the latest on
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hurricane irma. it is back to a category four after an early downgrade to three. to explain 5 million people in florida live in low-lying coastal areas and are under a mandatory evacuation. anyone who is 15 feet or less above sea level. 265,000 people without power at last count in landfall at six active in the florida keys between seven and eight this morning. kelly: something to keep in mind that this dramatic category for is the west coast of florida, naples which is already to .5 feet above sea level. any kind of storm surge there could be very devastating albeit we did speak with communications director of naples who said they are prepared for that. and then there is st. petersburg and tampa which could also face the same kind of storm surge
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should this day. we thank you for joining us. that does it for us. patti: i am patti ann browne. kelly: and i am kelly wright. "fox and friends" will be at the top of the hour reporting on what will happen with this storm. patti: thank you very much. my name is jeff sheldon, and i'm the founder of ugmonk. before shipstation it was crazy. it's great when you see a hundred orders come in, a hundred orders come in, but then you realize i've got a hundred orders i have to ship out. shipstation streamlined that wh the order data, the weights of , everything is seamlessly put into shipstation,
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>> this is a fox news alert. hurricane or a strengthening overnight, expecting to roar into florida has a catastrophic category four storm. >> one of the most powerful in american history, taking aim at the west coast overnight in taking a southern turn to the west. >> do not put yourself or your family's life at risk. now is the time to do the right thing for your family. >> a mandatory evacuation now from georgia and the carolinas. president trump says his team is ready to rest. >> my administration is monitoring the situation. we will do everything possible to restore, recover and rebuild. >> good morning, everybody. watching the sunday edition of "fox and friends." and todd pyro. jackie: i am jackie ibanez. hurricane force winds matter the sunshine state with landfall in just a couple hours.
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todd: live coverage for you. julian neely live in tampa. rick leventhal in daytona beach. jackie: trish regan -- chris jenkins. reporter: that's right. if you haven't gotten out of naples community simply can't save, get a high placed a high place, get covered because it's coming. governor scott reading just minutes ago life-threatening storm surge is now occurring in the keys and is expected later this morning in southwest florida here in naples, florida. certainly the winds are picking up a little bit. 25 to 30 as you may see behind the rain. of course we are expecting much harder hit. i want to simply point out that it found a few hours earlier. kelly wright the communications director in collier county for naples. he said the real concern here is going to

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