tier. we are also going to watching this threat from flooding from this because we are going to get so much rain falling on some soil that s become pretty saturated the last few weeks. that s going to be a flooding threat across the parts of the south. point out an icing threat across areas of the southern appalachians and then by the time we get to saturday afternoon into sunday morning that s when we got the storm that going to be centered somewhere here off the northeast bringing a nor easter for us. we know we will get some areas, 6 to 12 inches of snow. the big question is along the i-59 corridor along the coast from d.c. through philadelphia into new york and boston and, bret, still too early to say is that rain or snow or snow and then rain? we know we are going to get a lot of it across interior sections, the big cities probably another day and a half before we can fully nail that down. bret? bret: sounds messy. either way. all right. rick, thanks. medical experts are issuing
storm. we will have a flood threat here. we started to see a lot of an active pattern across the south. we re getting water logged. there s an icing threat across the southern appalachians. this is saturday for us. so if you re traveling around johnson city, over towards greenville, northeastern parts of georgia, watch that closely. eventually the center of the storm pulls off to the northeast. does become a nor easter. what happens in the cities? the i-95 corridor is that break-off point oftentimes of who gets significant snow and who doesn t. we know we ll get some spots with significant snow. maybe 6 to 12 inches at least. that s how this is looking now, this is not for now. looking like those huge blockbuster storms. but it would be plowable. certainly once you get interior sections of the northeast, it s really along the i-95 corridor, what happens. to we get enough cold air that holds or do we get warmer and get more rain? this is what some of our models look like right now.
causing a 100-degree difference in temperatures across the country. had to go somewhere and in some parts of the state it s piling up in areas like this and on sidewalks. the next thing that will fall, the temperatures. the national weather service has issued a windchill advisory. some parts of minnesota will feel like 35 below. wolf. adrienne broaddus, thank you very much for that report. to our meteorologist jennifer gray over at the cnn weather center for us. how much longer will we see this extreme weather? well, this extreme weather is exiting the east coast as we speak which is good news. we still have an icing threat for portions of new england, some snow still for interior sections of new england but very frigid temperatures. we had incredible amounts of ice, almost three-quarters of an inch of ice across portions of michigan and really coincides with where we re seeing the
to all the kisses. .that led. .to this one. celebrate every kiss, with kay. welcome back. several east coast u.s. states are under states of emergency this weekend. as a mix of freezing rain and snow hit parts of virginia and the carolinas. officials say the greatest icing threat will be along the carolina coast.
story will soon be getting a sequel. it will star a member of the original cast, peter billingsley who played the iconic ralphy back in 1983. the sequel will take place in the 1970s as an adult ralphy returns to his house in cleveland street to deliver his kids a magical christmas like the one he had growing up. the movie will be going straight to hbo max, the streaming service owned by warnermedia, cnn s parent company. several east coast u.s. states are under states of emergency this weekend as a mix of freezing rain and snow hits parts of virginia and the carolinas. officials say the greatest icing threat will be along the carolina coasts, including myrtle beach and wilmington. the ice could have a significant impact on travel and bring down trees and power lines. joining me is meteorologist derek van dam. good to see you, derek. what can we expect? good morning, linda.