the st. john s river is at the end of this street, and that is where all that water has been pouring in and will soon be pouring out. as i walk through the streets, you can tell all of the houses are pretty much evacuate and dark. but interesting enough, i see small fish swimming in the streets. and that is just a sign of the fact that all of this is water that came from somewhere else, and hopefully will go back to somewhere else in the near future, as you heard the mayor saying there. it could be several weeks before all of this is cleaned up, before all of the tide has been pushed out and these streets returned to normal. chris? all right, catie beck, thanks. msnbc weather contributor sam champion joins us live from miami. and sam, it s interesting talking to catie up there in jacksonville and you down in miami, which are two areas when you look at the path of the storm you don t think are going to get it the worst. but when you look at flooding implications. yeah. it does see
champion joins us live from miami. and sam, it s interesting talking to catie up there in jacksonville and you down in miami, which are two areas when you look at the path of the storm you don t think are going to get it the worst. but when you look at flooding implications. yeah. it does seem like those are the two spots that did get it the worst. yeah. and chris, the one thing, even though this storm certainly did wobble from one side to other, the thing that was true, that was forecast to be true is that this is an all florida storm. every bit of florida was impacted by this storm. from the tip of miami with the very strong winds and the tough wind damage here and the heavy rain and the flooding, right off our shoulder here in base skein boulevard, to the actual hit on the southwestern tip to that flooding that goes on in north florida. we wanted to give you a shot of downtown miami tonight, the normally bright lights because about, well, the largest percentage of those, more