and before we get to will, let's talk a little bit more about the meteorology with marisa torres.t do you see tonight? >> reporter: hey there, kennedy. we're going to give you a bird's eye view of fort myers, but this is our satellite look at hurricane each. the latest advisory hasn't changed a ton, but we are still seeing a very powerful storm and notice it might actually be undergoing that eye wall replacement which is very normal throughout the life cycle of a strong hurricane. what that will do though is really start to broaden this out. so this is massive in size. 120 mile-per-hour sustained winds. this is a category three hurricane, expected to become a category four, and it's moving north. and you mentioned there'll still some uncertainty with the cone, that's for sure. however, that northeastward steer, to the drifting further to the south. while there is some uncertainty, we can tell you with great certainty that areas along the gulf coast are going to be feeling life threatening impacts from storm surge to heavy rain, to dealing with very aggressive wind. and if as it ma