(22 Jun 2025)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rehoboth Beach, Delaware – 22 June 2025
1. People at Rehoboth Beach
2. Rehoboth Beach sign
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Vak Kobiashvili, Rehoboth Beach visitor from Maryland:
“The East Coast weather, at least from my perspective, is just very sweaty in the summer. It’s just like my dog doesn’t even want to be outside. My dog loves being outside. But it’s that — like walking through a swamp kind of feeling.”
4. Various of Kobiashvili
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Vak Kobiashvili, Rehoboth Beach visitor from Maryland:
“I think the beach would be busy today because it’s the nicest weather it’s going to be for a while. It’s only going to get worse. And at this point, living in this part of the East Coast, you know when it’s that kind of unfortunate humidity that it’s unpleasant to be outside. And now that it’s just starting to be hotter and hotter, people are trying to get out to the beach before it’s too hot to really even manage being outside.”
6. Various of beach waves
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Ivke Enwerem, Rehoboth Beach visitor from Delaware:
“It’s summertime. I wish it was a little more sunny. It doesn’t truly feel like summer. I kind of wish it did.”
8. Various of people playing at beach
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Ivke Enwerem, Rehoboth Beach visitor from Delaware:
“Summer on the East Coast can be a little inconsistent a lot of times. Like, it can be — like literally yesterday, not yesterday, the other day — it was like raining for like five minutes and then just stopped. It was like downpour. There was thunder storms everywhere and then it just stopped eventually.”
10. Beach recreational items
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Laura Macaluso, Rehoboth Beach visitor from Massachusetts:
“I know in Massachusetts it’s been horrible. Lots of rain for like 14 weeks. Rain every Saturday.
12. Crowds of beachgoers
13. Boat on water
++PARTIALLY COVERED++
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Laura Macaluso, Rehoboth Beach visitor from Massachusetts:
“My thoughts on the heat warnings are you know you got to be careful. You can’t… you got to stay hydrated and just don’t stand in the sun for too long if there’s any sun you had."
15. Crowds of beachgoers
STORYLINE:
Tens of millions of people across the Midwest and East endured dangerously hot temperatures again on Sunday as a rare June heat wave that gripped much of the U.S. was expected to last well into the coming week.
Most of the northeastern quadrant of the country from Minnesota to Maine was under some type of heat advisory. So were parts of Arkansas, Tennessee, Louisiana and Mississippi, the National Weather Service said.
Weather service offices throughout the region warned of sweltering and sometimes life-threatening conditions through Wednesday.
“Please plan ahead to take frequent breaks if you must be outside, stay hydrated and provide plenty of water and shade for any outdoor animals,” the service office in Wakefield, Virginia, said on X.
Meteorologists say a phenomenon known as a heat dome, a large area of high pressure in the upper atmosphere that traps heat and humidity, is responsible for the extreme temperatures.
AP Video shot by Mingson Lau
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