knows about it. the good word is out and about, about umbc. good morning. happy friday and thanks for joining us. i m megan pringle. i m jamie costello. susan shrack is our meteorologist this morning. reporter: good morning. that s quite a pounding going on. they ve had 15 1/2 inches of rain so far. it s just a beach right now. take a look at what s happening in our neck of the woods. so far what we have had as far as rain amounts. this is from yesterday and today.. we are seeing temperatures in the upper 50s out there. this is what you can expect as you head into the rest of the day. let s take a look at the rods. here s kim. reporter: 83 is looking great. 695 is checking in nicely, too. no problems, also, at the tunnels. wind will be an issue today. at the bay bridge, we have a wind restriction. no empty tractor-trailers, house trailers or box trucks. here at northern parkway, no problems to let you know about in either direction. jamie, megan, back to you. why wa
it s the top of the hour and it is not over yet. the winds continue to whip up the water on maryland s atlantic shore. and the tied will be at its highest this hour and that could be when most of the damage is done. jessica kartalja is reporting live from there. she is watching over your sharon is watching your traffic and marty at the weather center. we ll watch this together and jessica is live in ocean city for the next hour. here s your first warning doppler radar. i m using the atlantic city doppler radar site. this gives us the best view of the storm. take a look at the satellite photo. i want you to know what you just saw on the radar. that is that the storm is starting to press up the coast and on the southern end starting to bust up a little bit. go back to the first warning doppler radar. i don t want to paint a real rosie picture here. but instead of an entire screen of green, what we re seeing is a regional pocket of steady if not heavy rain. that will be th
concerns along the coast. the powerful storm continues to blast the eastern sea board. tonight, the impact on maryland, and when the storm will finally move on. hello, everybody. i m denise koch. and i m vic carter. here s what people are talking about tonight. it is the storm that just won t go away. ocean city continues to feel the aftereffects of what s left of after-effects of what s left of tropical storm ida. this is what is left. you can see there is still a powerful surf and even some flooding. wjz is live with first warning weather coverage. bob turk and meteorologist tim williams are tracking this storm. but we begin with jessica kartalija, live in ocean city with the latest. reporter: just within the past two minutes, it has picked up significantly here. all of that rain, all of that wind. i m not sure how much of this you can actually see at home. it is absolutely freezing out here. we re seeing wind gusts up to 60 miles per hour. we saw waves today up
good morning, america, on this friday, november 13th. a deadly nor easter floods the east, from north carolina, to new jersey. and it s not over yet. we re live in the places hardest hit. sarah palin goes rogue. she lets loose on everything, from that $150,000 makeover, to the interview that she couldn t shake the entire campaign. because i knew it wasn t a good interview. photo flap. a man is charged with trying to blackmail supermodel cindy crawford. at dispute, a photo of her young daughter, tied to a chair. guilty plea. the parents of the infamous balloon boy, set to make a plea deal. will they see jail time? and the end is near? we travel deep into the mexican jungle to find out if the 2012 legend is real. or just a lot of hollywood magic. and good morning, everyone. i m robin roberts, here with chris cuomo, as diane sawyer has the morning off. and this nor easter, it s the remains of hurricane ida. it s now stronger than it was when the storm first landed in
spend hours pushing sand back toward the water s edge, as wind gusts, up to 60 miles per hour, send sand racing toward the boardwalk. basically, right now, standing on the boardwalk. imagine wind being blown in your face. reporter: water levels up to 7 feet at high tide. flooding streets and making them extremely difficult to navigate. safety officials urge drivers to avoid parking in areas prone to flooding. it s what we expected. the forecast said that we d have moderate to severe flooding downtown in low-lying areas. reporter: the boardwalk, completely empty today. save for a couple of public works crews and the occasional police officer who will cruise by to ensure that everyone is safe. we just spoke with mayor rick meehan who says ocean city residents steer clear. they know the drill. we ll probably have some wind damage as we get gusts up to 60 miles an hour. piece of loose siding, things of that nature. higher than last storm in october. it could create issu