150 miles per hour. now we're at 120 maximum sustained winds. category 3, so we still have a major hurricane seven hours after landfall. you can thank all the warm swamp water after that. even on radar, it's starting to finally look a little more ragged. the forecast overnight takes it just to the east of baton rouge. that's going to be on the back side of the storm. those winds will be weaker than you were expecting earlier, and the storm will go up into areas of mississippi and eventually the tennessee valley. as we go throughout the next two to three days, we'll focus on the aftermath of the storm surge and also the wind. but we're going to have a flood story all the way to new england by the time we get to wednesday and thursday. we're not even close to being done with this storm. the rainfall predictions are easily 5 to 10 inches all through mississippi, northern alabama, tennessee, and then look at this. even pennsylvania, northern new jersey, and outside new york city could see five more inches from the storm in the days ahead. we had a lot of damage done. and we have a lot more to come.