brian: which is the name of the soccer team in the netherlands steve: it s a cleanser. ainsley: philly cream cheese, jillian is over there, you re from philly. brian: it s death by a thousand cuts right? ainsley: last year was $3.15 this year it s $3.40. my mom, every single sunday would go through the newspaper and clip coupons and steve: everybody did. ainsley: if we had a coupon we could get it. steve: you really wanted to go on double coupon day. usually it was tuesday in our town, but when you look at all those prices and you think why aren t we getting stuff? there seems to be a supply chain problem. part of that is right now, off the california coast there are half a million shipping containers that can not download those shipping containers are in such high demand a year ago, rather two years ago before the pandemic the shipping container would rent for $2,000. now, it s north of $20,000, and all that cost gets passed on to
reporter: the caldor fire has forced tens of thousands to evacuate. it is the 15th largest wildfire in california history. and out of the largest 20 california fires, 11 of them happened in the last five years. up the coast, the pacific northwest saw a record-breaking heatwave earlier in the summer. red cross traditionally doesn t support cooling centers but this is unfortunately our new normal, this is the first time it was 116 fdegrees. won t be the last time. reporter: in the south people are displaced from hurricane ida. and in the northeast we are in a whole new world now. let s be blunt about it. reporter: remnants of ida brought flash flooding and tornadoes to areas that rarely y saw these events in the past. record in central park, 3.15 inches in one hour, it broke a record set literally one week earlier. that says to me that there are
california fires in history. up the coast, the pacific northwest a record breaking heat wave earlier until the summer. the red cross does not support it, this is a first time of 116 degrees. won t be the last time. reporter: in the south, people are displaced with hurricane ida, arrived at the 16th anniversary of hurricane katrina. and in the northeast we are in a whole new world now. the records that were broken in central park, 3.15 inches in one hour. it broke a record one week earlier. that says to me there are unforeseeable events. reporter: the report confirms
california fires, 11 of them happened in the last five years. up the coast, the pacific northwest saw a record-breaking heat wave earlier in the summer. the red cross traditionally doesn t support cooling centers, but this is unfortunately our new normal. this is the first time it was 116 degrees. was it won t be the last time. in the south, people were displaced from hurricane ida, which arrived on the 16th anniversary of hurricane katrina. and in the northeast we are in a whole new world now. let s be blunt about it. reporter: the remnants of ida brought flash flooding and tornados to areas that rarely saw these events in the past. the records that were broken in central park, for example, 3.15 inches in one hour. it broke a record literally set one week earlier. that says to me that there are no more cataclysmic unforeseeable events. reporter: in august, the united nations intergovernmental panel on climate change said it is, quote, unequivocal that humans have caused
flooding house has a consistent steady stream of water poors from two windows into this new jersey basement. and inside the baggage room at newark liberty international airport, more flooding and water bursting and bubbling from drains. in new york city, a gushing wall of water at this #th avenue subway stop flooding the tracks below, an historic high 3.15 inches of rain fell in one hour last night in new york city shattering a record made just weeks ago and more shocking video show streets that look like rivers, dozens of cars flooded, some flooding, by knickerbocker avenue in brooklyn east of lower manhattan. and in bridgeport pennsylvania this aerial video shows engulfed an entire neighborhood with water levels in the upper of row homes. 45 deaths now blamed on hurricane ida. tucker: man thin, thank you