What A Day - Hurricane Ian Makes Landfall In Florida
Episode Date: September 29, 2022Hurricane Ian reached Florida Wednesday afternoon as one of the strongest storms to hit the U.S. mainland in decades. Some 2.5 million residents of Tampa and Fort Myers were ordered to evacuate, but t...housands stayed behind – even in areas expected to be inundated by extreme storm surge flooding.And in headlines: a human rights organization said at least 76 Iranian protesters have been killed in clashes with police since the death of Mahsa Amini, Russian-occupied territories in Ukraine “voted” in favor of annexation, and Megan Thee Stallion launched a mental health resource website for her fans and followers.Show Notes:National Hurricane Center: Hurricane Ian Tracker – https://tinyurl.com/vesawdexBad Bitches Have Bad Days Too – https://www.badbitcheshavebaddaystoo.com/YouTube: Lizzo plays James Madison's flute at Library of Congress (Washington Post) – https://tinyurl.com/3dhf5ec6Vote Save America: Every Last Vote – https://votesaveamerica.com/every-last-vote/Crooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
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It's Thursday, September 29th.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Travelle Anderson, and this is What A Day, summing up the day's news so you have
more time to go research who exactly the Try Guys are.
Apparently they are a major cultural force, and like other major cultural forces, one
of them is unfaithful to his wife.
I don't know the details, but I'm hoping the listeners will fill me in later.
I'm hoping no one fills me in. I don't want to details, but I'm hoping the listeners will fill me in later. I'm hoping no one fills me in.
I don't want to know anything about this.
On today's show, Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine have voted to join Russia after staged referendums.
Plus, Megan Thee Stallion is helping hot girls get help.
Yes, she's always looking out for us.
We love her.
But first, an update on Hurricane Ian.
The storm made landfall near Cuyahoga, Florida Wednesday afternoon as one of the strongest
hurricanes to hit the U.S. mainland in decades. Before it reached Florida, Hurricane Ian killed
at least two people in Cuba late Tuesday night and knocked out power to the entire country of
11 million. Cuba, like in Puerto Rico, has a frail, aging power grid that had been
faltering for some time, and it just wasn't able to withstand the storm's fierce winds.
By Wednesday morning, as it approached southwest Florida, Ian had strengthened to a Category 4
storm and came close to reaching Category 5, which is the strongest on the hurricane intensity scale.
There was also a boat carrying migrants from Cuba to Florida that sank
before the storm actually made landfall. At the time of our recording, Coast Guard crews are
searching for 20 people who are still missing from it. Wow, that is awful. So we're talking about some
really fierce winds and potentially catastrophic flooding, especially along the coast. So
what do we know about the damage that Hurricane
Ian has caused so far? So when the storm hit Florida, it was clocking 150 mile per hour winds,
tying for the fifth strongest on record. But as y'all mentioned on yesterday's show, it's storm
surge or the rise in water levels that happens from a storm pushing water on land that accounts
for almost half of all deaths from tropical cyclones.
So that is where the most danger comes from.
Hurricane Ian brought with it a wall of water that it accumulated over the Gulf of Mexico
as it made its way from Cuba to Florida, prompting flash flood warnings in many cities along the coast.
Governor Ron DeSantis told folks to expect a, quote, nasty, nasty day, two days.
Now, because the storm is very much still in progress as we go to record, we don't know too
much about the damage it's caused or how long it'll take to restore things for that matter.
That said, as of 9.30 p.m. Eastern Time Wednesday, more than 1.5 million homes and businesses
were without electricity, and Florida Power and Light,
that's the biggest utility in the state, warned that anyone in the storm's path should brace for
days without power. Yeah, it is not looking good. Before Hurricane Ian made landfall in Florida on
Wednesday, around two and a half million residents of Tampa and Fort Myers and the surrounding areas
were ordered to evacuate. But thousands
stayed behind, even in areas that are expected to get as much as 18 feet of storm surge.
As Mary Hegler from Hot Take mentioned earlier this week on the show, there are a lot of reasons
that people choose to stay. Some didn't have the means or the ability to leave. It's expensive to
pay for gas or hotels to stay in. There wasn't a lot of
advance notice to even prepare for this storm or to evacuate. Others were scared to leave their
homes and potentially come back to nothing. Or they weren't convinced that the warnings were
worth listening to based on years of experiencing other storms of the area that weren't so intense.
Yeah, that sounds like my granny. Anytime there was a storm in Charleston, South Carolina,
she'd be like, oh, it won't be as bad as the last one.
It'll be fine.
And we just stuck it out.
So you're right.
There are a lot of reasons, right,
that people make these choices.
And they're really not our choices to judge.
But I know some of the people who have stayed behind
have been documenting what's been happening on the ground
via social media. What have we heard from them? Yeah, earlier on Wednesday, a few of them were
saying it wasn't that bad where they were, but that started to change really quickly. We have
a few clips from people in the affected areas talking to national news outlets about what
they're experiencing. Here is one from Joe Orlandi. He's a longtime resident of Fort Myers who spoke to ABC News around 4 p.m. local time.
It has gotten horrible in the last half hour. We just looked and noticed that we're on the edge of the eyewall.
The wind picked up horrendously. These got to be 150 mile an hour winds solid.
There's boats floating by. Our car floated away. I mean, there's nothing left.
Yeah, you can hear in the background of that clip the sounds of the storm just raging outside.
Absolutely. It sounds very, very bad.
Yeah, cars floating by. That's truly next level. There are also people who don't really have the
ability to evacuate in the same way as perhaps you or I would. There are people in hospitals and nursing homes
who don't necessarily have the say
to kind of get up and leave if they want to,
when they want to.
NBC reporter Sam Brock in Sarasota
described this situation there in one of the hospitals.
There are a lot of people out there that need help.
I was speaking with the largest hospital provider
in Sarasota.
They had to move people on the fly today, earlier, right before the storm arrived,
to make sure that these vulnerable populations would be okay.
An entire ICU was moved around a hospital to safer ground,
as you have staff members right now that are prepping and preparing to camp out at the hospital
in order to care for these patients.
Yeah, and the storm has gotten so bad
that even some first responders
aren't able to help people who are in need.
Take a listen to this clip from Rob Hernandez.
He is Cape Coral's city manager speaking to NBC.
We've been experiencing individuals
that are trapped in their homes, trapped in vehicles.
And of course, because the winds at this moment
continue to be very, very heavy
and a danger to our first responders, we're not able to respond to provide assistance to those
that are trapped. I can't imagine what it's like to be stuck in your home and it's flooding. And
like we've seen the different photos and videos that come out of these cities when huge flooding happens.
Yeah.
And it's never good.
No, it's terrifying.
I mean, as we go to record this show, Ian was downgraded to a Category 3 storm, but that does not make it any less dangerous.
And a reminder that anything could still happen over the next day or so as it continues to track north.
But it's already believed that cleanup and recovery from the storm will be
long and expensive. I know Rhonda Santus said brace yourself for a nasty one or two days. It's
going to be a long, long time to recover from this. One ballpark estimate is that it could cost
around $260 billion. This will undoubtedly become even more complicated because Florida is also experiencing an insurance
crisis. So six insurers have left the state in the past year alone, several left before that.
That has caused home insurance rates to spike, resulted in several canceled policies for tens
of thousands of people across the state. This is largely because of roofing scams in Florida,
where contractors and attorneys would file false damage claims on behalf of homeowners and force the insurance companies to settle.
But it was also helped along by loopholes in the state's laws.
Florida lawmakers have tried to fix the issue.
They passed a property insurance reform bill into law earlier this year in an attempt to give people some relief.
But with powerful storms like Ian becoming more frequent due to climate
change, things could get very dicey. Obviously, we will continue to follow this story. We will
have more on all of this very soon, but that is the latest for now. Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
Today marks the 12th day of protests in Iran over the death of Masa Amini.
She died while in custody of Iran's so-called morality police.
According to the organization Iran Human Rights, at least 76 protesters have been killed in clashes with police since the demonstrations began.
The violence has become so widespread that it's spilling across the country's border with Iraq.
Over the past week, Iranian security forces have reportedly attacked residents in the neighboring Kurdish region of northern Iraq,
accusing them of adding more fuel to the unrest.
Amini was an ethnic Kurd. Those clashes there have left nine people dead
and at least 32 others injured, including children.
A man pleaded guilty on Tuesday to committing a hate crime
after he was caught on tape assaulting a 67-year-old Asian woman
in Yonkers, New York, earlier this year.
Security camera footage of the attack shows Tamel Esco
punching the woman in the head 125 times and stomping on her until she lost consciousness.
Yeah, it's terrible.
The woman was hospitalized for several days and the brutal attack sent shockwaves through New York's Asian-American community.
Esco will be sentenced in November for first-degree assault as a hate crime. But according to his plea agreement, he'll serve more than 17 years in prison, along with five years of post-release
supervision. Russian-occupied territories in Ukraine voted, quote-unquote, in favor of joining
the Russian Federation, even though the referendums have been widely condemned as a sham. The results
were tallied yesterday after a five-day period,
and Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to formally annex these areas in a speech in the
coming days. As we've mentioned on the show before, this is all illegal under Ukrainian and
international law, and the West is obviously not happy. The White House has already said it would
not recognize the results, and earlier this week, Canada imposed new sanctions against Moscow.
Meanwhile, the U.S. and the European Union are also working on their own new set of sanctions.
President Biden yesterday outlined his administration's ambitious goal to end hunger in the U.S. by 2030.
It was part of the White House's first hunger conference held since 1969, very different than the Hunger Games, when President Nixon was in office.
That original forum led to the creation of food stamps and other child nutrition programs
that are still around today.
The Biden administration plans to tackle food insecurity by pushing Congress to permanently
extend the child tax credit, raise the federal minimum wage, and expand existing nutrition
assistance programs.
Unfortunately, though, one of the biggest takeaways from yesterday's event was a
major gaffe by President Biden. During his opening remarks, he thanked lawmakers for
their bipartisan effort in the fight against hunger. And then he asked where the late
Republican Congresswoman Jackie Walorski was, as if she were still alive. She tragically died in a car crash
last month. That's not good, Joe. That's not good. No, no. It was a little bit of a yikes moment.
White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was on cleanup duty after the president's remarks.
The president was naming the congressional champions on this issue and was acknowledging her incredible work.
There we go. Okay. I just wanted to see where she was. Jean-Pierre added that Wolorski's family is
heading to the White House tomorrow for a bill that will be signed in her honor. You know, this
is not in Joe Biden's favor with the whole age commentary that always happens with him.
Because this seems like something your granddad would do on accident, right?
Good intentions, but like, come on.
Counterpoint though, there are 500 plus people that this man has to like know and that's just like in the house in the Senate.
Like that's a lot of people to keep track of.
Who's alive and who's not?
I don't know.
Kind of tough.
It's not hot girl shit to go out of network.
So Megan Thee Stallion has launched a mental health resource website for all of the hot girls out there. The site is called Bad Bitches Have Bad Days Too.
And it offers a directory of free therapy organizations and support hotlines, many of which provide specialized care for Black women and LGBTQ plus folks.
And this isn't a random celebrity endeavor in case you were thinking it was. Queen Meg has been
very open about her struggles with mental health throughout her career. In fact, the website's
title is a reference to a track from her new album, Trauma Zine, hate the title, but the album's cute,
FYI, where she raps about her experience with anxiety.
If I could, you know, recite some bars for you, Priyanka.
Go for it.
She says, quote, they keep saying I should get help, but I don't even know what I need.
They keep saying speak your truth, and at the same time, they say don't believe I should be a rapper myself.
Love that for me.
You should.
BadBitchesHaveBadDays2.com
is now live. Go there.
Then proceed to the reclining chair
in the WAP house for your talk therapy.
I love this. This is awesome.
Megan Thee Stallion is amazing
in so many ways. And just add
this to the list. Yes.
Republican Doug Mastriano faces dire
odds in the Pennsylvania
governor's race, but he's got a new strategy to win, becoming very, very hungry. Starting today,
the far right election denier is undertaking 40 days of fasting and prayer ending on election day
as his opponent, Josh Shapiro, outraises him eight to one and polls show him trailing Shapiro by 13
points. Pennsylvania is one of the most important gubernatorial races for Republicans, but they
absolutely blew it when they picked Mastriano, a Trump endorsee who refuses to speak with
mainstream media outlets, previously said women who get abortions should be prosecuted as murderers
and has recently made being taller than his opponent
one of his main talking points on the campaign trial.
Listen, sir, we are about short kings now,
so the moment's over.
Mastriano's focus on convincing
only the most magabrained conservatives to vote for him
means he has only been able to spend
about $6,000 on ads since the primary
compared to Shapiro's 21.6 million dollars.
So big obstacles, but maybe ones that can be overcome by only drinking water.
Only time will tell.
Only time will tell.
I would like to zero in on this 40 days moment, OK?
As a God fearing Christian woman, I know that he is pulling and referencing the 40 days and 40 nights from the Bible.
But I feel like he should let that go.
Yeah.
That does not seem like a wise decision.
Not sure it's going to help him out.
It seems like you're going to lose this race.
Feels like he might lose a few pounds, but that's really the only good thing I can see happening from this.
And those are the headlines.
We'll be back after some ads with some beautiful music from a very fragile flute.
It is Thursday, WOD Squad,
and today we are doing a twist
on our segment called Bad Sound.
Today, at long last,
we have good sound.
Check it out.
I can't, this crystal is like
playing out of a wine glass.
It's be patient.
Playing out of a wine glass?
I'm sold.
I love Lizzo.
I know it's her.
Love it.
Yeah, that was, of course, the singer Lizzo playing a 200-year-old flute owned by none other
than former President James Madison on Tuesday.
Not only that, it is a crystal flute
borrowed from the Library of Congress,
which Lizzo may be the first person ever to play.
Before the concert, she played the flute
in the library halls,
which will play now.
So Travelle, what are your thoughts on Lizzo's historic
and very cautious performance?
I mean, like, of course you wanted to know
what old school OG flutes sound like, right?
We all wanted to know this information.
And you know what? I just love the fact that Lizzo, who plays the flute every night during her concert.
Shout out to Sasha the flute that she's like, you know, embracing history in this way.
I love this. A very cool way to make history come alive.
Like this feels like if you were like an 11th grade teacher, you would be like eating this shit up. You'd be like, hell yeah, she's making history cool. Absolutely. We
love it. And like, maybe this can happen a little more often. Those artifacts take them out of the
Library of Congress for the right people, that is. But I mean, bring them out. That's awesome.
Like get the public interacting with them in this way, thinking they're cool. I don't know,
maybe people will learn a thing or two and our world won't be so crazy. Absolutely. But you got to make sure that
they are like Lizzo trained people to handle, you know, these precious artifacts. Oh, no, no,
no. I just meant like audiences, people like us would be like, oh, that's awesome and really cool.
Absolutely. Absolutely. That was good sound.
One more thing before we go.
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That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe,
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And if you're into reading and not just sheet music for flutes made of glass like me,
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Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Travelle Anderson.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And stay hungry, Doug Mastriano.
I mean, I was never good at the whole fasting thing
when I was going to church, okay?
I just wanted to say that.
Good luck to this man on his fast.
May his fast be successful.
May his election be not.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance, Jazzy Marine, and Raven Yamamoto
are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein
and our executive producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by
Colin Gillyard and Kashaka.