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NAME: MEX HURRICANE2 20060831I TAPE: EF06/0796 IN_TIME: 11:21:31:22 DURATION: 00:03:24:02 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION DATELINE: Various, 31 August 2006 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: Manzanillo 1. Wide of beach 2. Pull out of beach 3. Various of traffic in rain Los Cabos 4. Medium of people at petrol station 5. Wide of petrol station 6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Dan Deioboto, tourist: "We are going to the airport now to try and see if there is a flight available because our flight only leaves on Saturday. There is only one flight so we want to see if they will change the schedule." 7. Wide of airport 8. People arriving at airport 9. Tourists in airport 10. Girls laying on floor 11. Wide of people standing in line in airport 12. Close up of arrivals and departures monitor ++ AUDIO AS INCOMING++ 13. SOUNDBITE: (English) Linda Laport, tourist : "We knew we had to pack and go, we had this baby with us and we did not want to be here. You are afraid you know, once you have been through make it through (hurricane) Katrina, when they say 'hurricane', you want to get out." 14. Wide of Cabo San Lucas beachfront 15. Boy surfing 16. Boat in marina 17. People taking boat out of water 18. Tilt down from Hard Rock Cafe restaurant to people boarding up entrance 19. Medium of people at entrance Puerto Vallarta 20. Medium of family at beach 21. Medium of couple looking out to the ocean 22. SOUNDBITE: (English) Michael Watts, Puerto Vallarta resident: "We live down here, and because we live here we have been trying to take as much precautions as necessary with the hurricane. We have been keeping track with the weather channel and some of the storm network tell us to see how bad it could be here." 23. Wide of newsstand 24. Close up of headline reading (in Spanish) "Puerto Vallarta is prepared for Hurricane John" 25. Various of stores protected with tape 26. Wide of man jogging on beach 27. Various of people walking on the beach 28. Close up of seagull flying 29. Wide of Puerto Vallarta STORYLINE: Tourists fled hotels, desperately seeking flights home, and 15-thousand residents were ordered to higher ground on Thursday as Hurricane John roared toward the resort of Cabo San Lucas. The hurricane soaked beaches on the mainland's Pacific coast on Thursday before it began turning toward the Baja California, where it was scheduled to nick the peninsula's southern tip on Friday. Shop owners boarded up windows and 15 shelters were set up to house the evacuees. Many tourists were also leaving the city. "We are going to the airport now to try and see if there is a flight available," South African tourist Dan Deioboto told Associated Press Television as he stopped at a local gas station. At the airport, hundreds of tourists battled for seats on the few planes heading out of the isolated peninsula. New Orleans tourist Linda Laport, who experienced Hurricane Katrina, said she knew she had to "pack and go." A hurricane warning was still in effect for a 300-mile (480-kilometre) stretch of coast, from the port of Manzanillo to the fishing and shipping community of San Blas, including the resort of Puerto Vallarta. In Puerto Vallarta, skies were cloudy but no rain was falling as residents walked to work and a handful of tourists strolled along the waterfront promenade in front of a calm sea. Local authorities urged people to take precautions, but emergency shelters were mostly empty under cloudy but dry skies. One local resident said Michael Watts said, " we have been trying to take as much precautions as necessary with the hurricane. And keeping on track on what the weather channel and some of the storm networks tell us how bad it could be here." Most businesses along the waterfront were closed, and employees moved merchandise away from the windows, but only a few bothered to board up or tape over their storefronts. As a precaution, however, civil protection authorities urged people to leave the waterfront avenue by late morning. By midday (1700 GMT) Hurricane John was moving northwest at 14 miles per hour (22 kilometres per hour) and had maximum sustained winds of 125 miles per hour (205 kilometres per hour) Forecasters at the US National Weather Centre in Miami warned John could drop up to 18 inches of rain in some places and create up to a 5-foot storm surge. Forecasters also said John wasn't likely to affect the United States - cooler Pacific waters tend to diminish storms before they reach California. Meanwhile, a new hurricane formed farther west. Hurricane Kristy, with winds of nearly 75 miles per hour (120 kilometres per hour) was 690 miles (1,110 kilometres) away from John, but forecasters said some interaction was possible. If that happened, Kristy would likely be absorbed by the larger John, forecasters said.
Footage Information
Source | ABCNEWS VideoSource |
---|---|
Title: | Mexico Hurricane 2 - WRAP Preps for approach of Hurricane John, empty beaches, tourists |
Date: | 08/31/2006 |
Library: | APTN |
Tape Number: | VSAP494916 |
Content: | NAME: MEX HURRICANE2 20060831I TAPE: EF06/0796 IN_TIME: 11:21:31:22 DURATION: 00:03:24:02 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION DATELINE: Various, 31 August 2006 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: Manzanillo 1. Wide of beach 2. Pull out of beach 3. Various of traffic in rain Los Cabos 4. Medium of people at petrol station 5. Wide of petrol station 6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Dan Deioboto, tourist: "We are going to the airport now to try and see if there is a flight available because our flight only leaves on Saturday. There is only one flight so we want to see if they will change the schedule." 7. Wide of airport 8. People arriving at airport 9. Tourists in airport 10. Girls laying on floor 11. Wide of people standing in line in airport 12. Close up of arrivals and departures monitor ++ AUDIO AS INCOMING++ 13. SOUNDBITE: (English) Linda Laport, tourist : "We knew we had to pack and go, we had this baby with us and we did not want to be here. You are afraid you know, once you have been through make it through (hurricane) Katrina, when they say 'hurricane', you want to get out." 14. Wide of Cabo San Lucas beachfront 15. Boy surfing 16. Boat in marina 17. People taking boat out of water 18. Tilt down from Hard Rock Cafe restaurant to people boarding up entrance 19. Medium of people at entrance Puerto Vallarta 20. Medium of family at beach 21. Medium of couple looking out to the ocean 22. SOUNDBITE: (English) Michael Watts, Puerto Vallarta resident: "We live down here, and because we live here we have been trying to take as much precautions as necessary with the hurricane. We have been keeping track with the weather channel and some of the storm network tell us to see how bad it could be here." 23. Wide of newsstand 24. Close up of headline reading (in Spanish) "Puerto Vallarta is prepared for Hurricane John" 25. Various of stores protected with tape 26. Wide of man jogging on beach 27. Various of people walking on the beach 28. Close up of seagull flying 29. Wide of Puerto Vallarta STORYLINE: Tourists fled hotels, desperately seeking flights home, and 15-thousand residents were ordered to higher ground on Thursday as Hurricane John roared toward the resort of Cabo San Lucas. The hurricane soaked beaches on the mainland's Pacific coast on Thursday before it began turning toward the Baja California, where it was scheduled to nick the peninsula's southern tip on Friday. Shop owners boarded up windows and 15 shelters were set up to house the evacuees. Many tourists were also leaving the city. "We are going to the airport now to try and see if there is a flight available," South African tourist Dan Deioboto told Associated Press Television as he stopped at a local gas station. At the airport, hundreds of tourists battled for seats on the few planes heading out of the isolated peninsula. New Orleans tourist Linda Laport, who experienced Hurricane Katrina, said she knew she had to "pack and go." A hurricane warning was still in effect for a 300-mile (480-kilometre) stretch of coast, from the port of Manzanillo to the fishing and shipping community of San Blas, including the resort of Puerto Vallarta. In Puerto Vallarta, skies were cloudy but no rain was falling as residents walked to work and a handful of tourists strolled along the waterfront promenade in front of a calm sea. Local authorities urged people to take precautions, but emergency shelters were mostly empty under cloudy but dry skies. One local resident said Michael Watts said, " we have been trying to take as much precautions as necessary with the hurricane. And keeping on track on what the weather channel and some of the storm networks tell us how bad it could be here." Most businesses along the waterfront were closed, and employees moved merchandise away from the windows, but only a few bothered to board up or tape over their storefronts. As a precaution, however, civil protection authorities urged people to leave the waterfront avenue by late morning. By midday (1700 GMT) Hurricane John was moving northwest at 14 miles per hour (22 kilometres per hour) and had maximum sustained winds of 125 miles per hour (205 kilometres per hour) Forecasters at the US National Weather Centre in Miami warned John could drop up to 18 inches of rain in some places and create up to a 5-foot storm surge. Forecasters also said John wasn't likely to affect the United States - cooler Pacific waters tend to diminish storms before they reach California. Meanwhile, a new hurricane formed farther west. Hurricane Kristy, with winds of nearly 75 miles per hour (120 kilometres per hour) was 690 miles (1,110 kilometres) away from John, but forecasters said some interaction was possible. If that happened, Kristy would likely be absorbed by the larger John, forecasters said. |
Media Type: | Summary |