When Anderson Cooper was reporting on Hurricane Milton in Florida on a live broadcast, he was struck by flying particles.
The CNN outlet described the scene as harsh winds blew past him and heavy rain soaked him and his technology west of Tampa while reporting from the Manatee River in Bradenton, Florida.
As he trudged through the waters, which was flowing over the lender on which he was walking, Cooper said,” The water is really starting to pour over.”
” If you look at the floor, whoa…”, he said, stopping small as a bright object slammed into his neck. ” OK, that was n’t good”.
The” Anderson Cooper 360″ number resumed his monitoring, noting that he would probably get inside immediately. However, you can see the amount of liquid on the ground. The Manatee River’s ocean source is here.
The Source’s Kaitlan Collins reassured visitors about her partner as the film was then transferred to the CNN theater.
Anderson is okay, she said,” I do want to let everyone who is watching notice that all of our reporters and anchors are really concerned about us.” Just as evidently difficult to make a relationship when you’re seeing what’s happening with the rain and the weather. And of course, the situations are getting worse every minute.
Cooper, who first joined CNN in 2001, has frequently covered problems and has reportedly traveled to the Gulf Coast for much of September 2005 to provide emotionally charged information about the effects of Hurricane Katrina’s death.
Hurricane Milton made landfall near Siesta Key — a barrier area near Sarasota — around 8: 30 p. m. Eastern day Wednesday. It left a path of destruction in its wake, with surges up to 10 feet and 120-mph winds that blasted areas across the state, flooded houses, fallen trees and cut power to 3 million Citizens. More than 230 people have died in Florida’s Big Bend place after Hurricane Helene made landfall in the state’s north less than two weeks prior to the hurricane’s arrival.
Milton weakened to a Category 1 hurricane as it pulled abroad on Thursday night and moved onto the Atlantic Ocean, but state officials warned that a significant portion of the country’s west coast was still in danger. In St. Petersburg, the cyclone tore most of the material ceiling off Tropicana Field, the Tampa Bay Rays ‘ facility. A half constructed luxury high-rise was also pushed onto an business building that houses the Tampa Bay Times newspaper’s practices by a construction crane.
___
© 2024 Los Angeles Times
Distributed by , Tribune Content Agency, LLC.