and there s a dent in one of the cars. other than that, it s turned out better than i was, you know, better than it could have been. but then again, i hear the bad part is still coming, so i might eat those words in a few minutes. shepard: what s it like to be there after you ve all that you ve just been through, and then suddenly it s nothing? i went through the last hurricane in 2005 in miami in a high-rise where the building was swaying and the windows looked like they were going to cave in. that was terrifying. this hasn t been as bad. plus, the way the wind is coming, it s coming from the part of the street where it s getting blocked by the other houses, so it s not as bad as we were getting the full impact right into the side of it, you know what i mean? but it s weird how calm it is right now. it s just a slight drizzle. it s very hot, very humid. but, you know, we know it s coming, so it s going to start getting nasty in a few minutes, i would guess. shepard: i would think
number on your arm so that you can be identified. so there is that take on it tonight. i m martha maccallum. good evening, everybody. this is the story. hurricane harvey is where we begin tonight. the president is monitoring this from camp david with his team at the readies we watch this thing as it churns off the coast of corpus christi about 30 some miles latest estimate. this is where the toughest stuff begins to eat the coast line. we will go live to steve harrigan who is live in corpus christi being hit hard at the outer bands of this hurricane. steve, good evening. martha, good evening. the edge of the eye wall of that storm conditions to get worse over the next four to five hours. right now a category 3 hurricane with sustained winds more than 125 miles per hour. by the time the eye crosses over, it could be 30 with a