shot and gabe s down in the downtown naples, because it looks like things have calmed down significantly in downtown naples. yeah, you can see there. this is all within naples. this is the difference between being in the eyewall still and clearing the eyewall and getting towards the calmer eye. this is the same city. these pictures are from naples. this shows you how quickly it can change. let s listen to mike bettes microphone. he s live. the circulation set at the lowest pressure it s about to come over us. as the center of that lowest pressure is the calm, but it s the fury just outside of that that is the beast. this is something to behold, and it s been a long time since a place like naples was hit like this. yes, we had irma. it was a big quick wind maker. i don t know if you heard
anywhere. here s a look at our future forecast. here s your forecast. i will let this play out for you. eventually early sunday morning, you see very little movement. maybe up to the north, getting up to san antonio. back down to the coast. very heavy rainfall over the way to houston. it continues to spin through sunday, eventually into monday. i can run you into tuesday, maybe even wednesday before we finally begin to see this fall apart. it weakens that entire time. it becomes less of a wind maker and more of a rainmaker. pummel some of these areas. that s when you get to see some of these crazy rainfall totals. where predictions are may be getting up into the 40s and 50s. from national weather service, we have heard areas getting 30-35 inches of rain. this is going to be a real, wet
they re scary, you re in bed and you hear the sirens. we woke up saturday morning in hattiesburg and had fatalities with that one. and then albany, georgia, adel, georgia, those areas were hit sunday morning. two mornings in a row devastating tornadoing. in all, 18 fatalities. we were petrified that the atmosphere was prime for more additional nasty tornadoes last night. thankfully, we only had five or six tornadoes, most of them were misses and no fatalities last night. it was good to make it through yesterday, but what a weekend in the south. that storm is still with us, but the severe part is over with. we had strong storms in miami to keep people up for two hours as we had tornado warnings for downtown miami. thankfully, no tornado reported. so now it s a big huge wind maker and rainmaker moving up the coast. this means more travel delays and wind damage on the coast from here on out. this is one to two inches of rain, so a good soaking rain late tonight and early tomorrow morning
kilometers per hour. it will only get worse from there. not only a wind maker, it s a rainmaker. over 300 mountains above 3,000 meters that will help squeeze out the available moisture and we could dump 250 millimeters of rain or more, by the way, george. that has the possibility of bringing landslides, mudslides, all kinds of problems associated with the strength of this type of a typhoon. something that residents in taiwan, the islands and southeast china need to hon. tore very closely and have final preparations under way. we talk about densely populated areas. especially on west side of taiwan. roughly 300 people per square kilometer. thank you very much. part of a campsite in queensland australia is underwater thanks to this massive sinkhole. it was opened off a busy beach
anticipate the storm to potentially strengthen right back into tropical storm category as it moves into the gulf of mexico, and that has the potential to impact well, there it is, the florida mainland in the united states, george, so this storm doesn t have the potential to be a major wind maker at this stage, all signs pointing towards them, but it could be a rain soaker for florida, and they ve already received a significant amount of rain this month, so it could lead to flooding in the area. more to come. it is another storm that is now infamous. hurricane katrina. it s been one decade since that storm brought mass devastation to the u.s. gulf coast. among the hardest hit areas was the city of new orleans which sits below sea level. levees failed. 1 million people were displaced by this big, monster storm, but it is unclear just how many people were killed. the official number, from several years ago, is close to