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CNN This Morning Weekend

hours. 1:00 a.m. monday it's pretty close to where it is exactly at this moment. at that point then it begins to pick up forward momentum. it's going to slide into very warm ocean temperatures and that will allow this storm it intensify likely a category 1 before sliding into florida late tuesday or very early wednesday morning. and then it's going to continue over into the carolinas before exiting back out the atlantic. the biggest concern with this in the serm short term is going to the rainfall. you look basically stretching from tall haseley to the outer banks widespread totals 406 inches. there will be pockets of 8, 10, a foot of rain over the next few days. winds are also going to be very tightly packed but still impactful again especially on the panhandle and the northern peninsula of florida and then as the storm continues to push inward you could have some power outages as well. farther to the east we are also keeping an eye on hurricane

Storm , Ocean-temperatures , Momentum , 1 , 00 , Florida , Atlantic , Concern , Serm-short-term , Carolinas , Winds , Foot

CNN This Morning Weekend

looks close to the spot it's already in right now. but once we get to monday morning, that's what we start to see to take off. it's going to move to extremely warm ocean temperatures in the gulf of mexico and that's going to allow the storm to intensify to at least a category 1 storm before crossing into florida and then up into the carolinas as we get through the middle portion of the upcoming week. rainfall is likely the biggest concern with this storm, especially most widespread concern. you are talking areas from tallahassee to up to the outer banks widespread 4 to 6 inches of rain. but there will be spots that pick up 8, 10, as much as a foot of rain before that system finally pushes out of the area. the other storm that we are also keeping an eye on hurricane franklin currently east of the bahamas. now, this one is getting stronger, winds up to 90 miles per hour sustained gusting to 115. this one is moving to the northwest at just about 8 miles per hour. now, with this particular storm we actually anticipate it getting to a major hurricane likely in the next 24 hours or

Storm , Spot , Ocean-temperatures , Monday-morning , Gulf-of-mexico , 1 , Areas , Concern , Florida , Rainfall , Portion , Tallahassee

BBC News

not handle this much rainfall, let alone this much rain all over a short period of time. what happens when the rain falls on the ground rather than its soaking up runs horizontally in creates flash floods. live now to rob mayeda in who is an nbc bay area meteorologist in san jose california. he�*s been closely tracking storm hilary. from a meteorological perspective, why is this so unusual? it is unusual, a lot of times this storm is compared to the tropical storm which made landfall in salop —— southern california 1939, usually ocean temperatures prevent the storms as they approach as warm core low pressure systems, they weaken on approach or curve back out of sure but this is not the case with storm hilary,

Rain , Rainfall , Ground , Flash-floods , Southern-california , Rob-mayeda-in , Perspective , Meteorologist , Nbc-bay-area , Storm-hilary , San-jose , Storm

CNN Newsroom Live

august, all of september and even creeping in to october is when we see the bulk of activity. we've already had four named storms so far this season typically don't get to the fourth named storm until mid august. so we're already slightly ahead of pace. so the two main factors here is how strong el nino sets in and how warm do the ocean temperatures remain. but the key takeaway is remember that it only takes one land falling storm for it to be an impactful season. just ahead, a smash and grab caught in on video. details on what they stole, comiming up. shwasher is full, let finish quantum clean your disishes. ♪ try finish quantntum. unbeatable cleanan. unbeatable price.

All , Storms , Activity , Season , August , Storm-until-mid-august , Bulk , Four , It , Factors , Land , Ocean-temperatures

CNN Newsroom Live

four years old, telling her i love her. thinking that this is my last call. and all the propane tanks went. and it was intense. it was a very intense day. >> if you would like to help the victims of the wild fires in maui, you can go to cnn.com/impact. it has been a pretty quiet hurricane season in the atlantic so far. but experts warn the activity will pick up especially with ocean temperatures at record highs. allison chin chachar has the details. >> the numbers have increased for the remainder of the atlantic hurricane season compared to their first forecast that came out in may. when they originally called for 12 to 17 total named storms. now they are calling for 14 to 21. and in terms of hurricanes, previous forecast called for five to nine, and now we're up to six to 11. and an average year we'd typically have 14 total named

Propane-tanks , Thinking , Last-call , Four , Cnn , Fires , Maui , Activity , Hurricane-season , Victims , Experts , Atlantic

CNN This Morning Weekend

the national oceanic and atmospheric administration, known as noaa, has boosted its atlantic hurricane season forecast saying it is more likely we'll see more hurricanes this year. >> the above-normal forecast comes because of record warming ocean temperatures. allison chinchar joins us. tell us more. >> going into the season, they first forecast in may and do an upgrade in august. it happens every year. but back in may, we knew ocean temperatures were warm but it was going to be an el nino year, and that suppresses hurricane activity. i think what they're noticing is those ocean temperatures are so far above normal that they're thinking that's likely going to be able to compensate for whatever el nino may try to suppress. they did increase their numbers. there were 12 to 17 named storms. now 14 to 21. the low end, 14, is what we

Hurricanes , Hurricane-season , National-oceanic-and-atmospheric-administration , Season , U-s- , May , Upgrade , Warming-ocean-temperatures , Allison-chinchar , Thinking , Ocean-temperatures , El-nino-year

CNN This Morning Weekend

bakersfield, california. he fills in as a substitute teacher to supplement his income kwhim pitching in the minors. he struck out nine batters in seven shutout innings as the braves win 21-3 over the mets. the team that drafted him in the 17th round back in 2018. teachers are amazing. it's proof you're underpaid if you have to side hustle as a pro baseball player. >> coolest teacher. thank you, coy. still ahead, how record-hot ocean temperatures could impact this year's hurricane season.

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

traditionally we could see the numbers go back down but because of warm ocean temperatures, noaa isc we think the numbers are going to tick up. and statistically speaking september 10th is the peak portion of the season but the back half of august, all of september and even creeping into october is when we really see the bulk of activity. we've already had four named storms so far this season. we typically don't get to that fourth named storm until mid august. so we're already slightly ahead of pace, even before we get into the peak season. so the two main factors here really going to be focused over the next few months is how strong el nino sets in and how warm do those ocean temperatures actually remain. remember, folks, it only takes one landfalling storm for it to be an impactful season. >> thank you so much. still to come, donald trump and ron desantis trading jabs as

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Way Too Early With Jonathan Lemire

thinner clouds means less precipitation, means you have a more likely chance for dryer conditions that we have seen in maui recently. and obviously hurricanes as well are sort of getting juiced a little bit by warmer ocean temperatures, so the hurricane that is actually hundreds of miles away but is probable fanning the flames is of course related to the changing climate. basically everything we're seeing is happening in a changed world, so the baselines are just sort of shifted, and that means you're much more likely to get these very dry, very dangerous conditions that we have seen to create these as you said absolutely horrific fires. >> and the speed of this fire is hard to even fathom and overtaking people in just minutes in their homes, their cars, some folks even jumping into the ocean to escape. dave warb we're not just seeing the effects of climate change in hawaii. we've seen it all summer long on the mainland. the south is dealing with record breaking heat, and of course there's study after study that

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Way Too Early With Jonathan Lemire

in particular in texas and arizona and in other parts of the south as well. >> and dave, real quick, last one. is there an expectation here on the eve of hurricane season that we could have the capacity for -- the potential for a series of really deadly yeah, j actually, noaa, the national oceanic and atmospheric association revised their projection for the atlantic hurricane the season started june 1st and runs through september, october, but they adjusted it upward because of the extreme temperatures we are seeing. people may have heard of hot water in the atlantic. hurricanes are fueled by warmer ocean temperatures, so these storms as they cross the atlantic, if they're going over, you know, very, very warm water, that can make storms, you know, much stronger and faster. there is a chance. obviously, it is difficult to

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