albany to boston to hartford. from new york city, southward, the heat wave continues. washington, d.c., just like yesterday, right near 100 degrees. pittsburgh, pretty humid at 95. the worst of the heat centered over the top of missouri, illinois, indiana. we are talking about 100 to 105. even chicago could be near 103 degrees. pretty rare for chicago to get all that hot. it is not like it has been cool in dallas or san antonio through the southeast. you are a little more accustomed to temperatures in the mid to upper 90s. relief in sight. the cooler air is beginning to arrive in canada, southern portions of canada, through the northern u.s. we will experience this cold, cooler air. minneapolis, 100 today to tomorrow right around 90 degrees. that s a little bit of relief for you. as far as st. louis to chicago, it doesn t look like we are going to see that happening. it looks like you are going to stay very hot. anyone on the west coast, a little bit of a warmup for you.
they have 200 men. they re doing wellness checks throughout the community. people who are elderly making sure they have enough supplies. red cross and fema are also on sight. jenna? jenna: elizabeth prann in west virginia, one of the areas affected by this storm. thank you. jon: millions without power means no air-conditioning and no refrigerators in brutally hot temperatures. at least 18 states under a heat advisory right now. meteorologist maria molina in the fox weather center. maria? good to see you. we re expecting more hot temperatures in the 90s and triple digits for some. it will be cooler than it was this weekend like in atlanta are with you saw high temperatures breaking an all-time record, record for that city, 106 degrees. today we ll be in the mid to upper 90s. it can get dangerous out there. otherwise severe weather will be possible across portions of upper midwest. in the overnight hours we saw strong storms rip through the midwest and
for you. good morning to you, welcome to early start on this monday morning. i m zoraida sambolin. and i m ashlee. it s the kind of heat that makes it hard to breathe and it is still threatening millions of americans all the way from the midwest to the northeast this morning. about 16 people have now died from this heat since thursday when triple-digit temperatures unleashed killer storms that have now left millions of people without power this morning. it s incredible, but look how many states are now dealing with miserable conditions in ohio, 425,000 people are now without power. that s as of 10:00 p.m. last night. it s the same story in virginia and maryland, where hundreds of thousands of people are just waiting for the power to come back on. just a whiff of ac in these extraordinary temperatures. the problem there doesn t seem to be much of a let-up in sight. 20 states are under heat advisory warnings. and now a state of emergency has been declared by the gove
jason williams on his rise, his fall, and why he says prison saved his life. good evening, everyone. i m don lemon. thanks for joining us. i m going to get you up to speed now. hundreds of thousands of people are in darkness because of oppressive heat and widespread blackouts. more on the record-breaking heat in a moment on cnn. in colorado, families are getting their first look at what remains of their home, after a deadly wildfire tore through the neighborhoods of colorado springs. on cnn state of the union, the colorado governor described what he saw as he flew over the pike national forest. take a listen. it was like the apocalypse or what armageddon would look like. we flew a helicopter over top. and this is when the fire was going on. i thought it was trees burning. it was home. a mississippi federal court judge has issued temporary restraining order which will keep a clinic open until july 11th. the clinic was facing closure under a new state low. in a few minu
very candid discussion with a man who once had it all. i m sweating up in here. jason williams on his rise, his fall, and why he says prison saved his life. good evening, everyone. i m don lemon. thank you so much for joining us. i m going to get you up to speed now. hundreds of thousands of people are spending tonight in oppressive darkness caused bay brutal heatwave and widespread power outages. crews are working overtime and they could be at it for days. trying to restore electricity in ohio, virginia, and several other states. more on the record breaking heat in a moment here on cnn. in colorado, families are getting their first look at what remains of their homes after a deadly wildfire tore through the neighborhoods of colorado springs. on cnn s state of the union, the colorado governor described what he saw as he flew over the pike national forest. take a listen. it was like your worst nightmare of a movie set, trying to show what the apocalypse or armageddon