Media playback is unsupported on your device
Hurricane Sally has crashed into the southern US in slow motion, bringing torrential rain and storm surges, smashing boats and breaking bridges.
It made landfall as a Category 2 and although now a tropical storm, its glacial pace means there are still warnings of danger to life.
Pensacola, Florida, was badly hit, with a loose barge bringing down part of the Bay Bridge.
There are also storm surge warnings for Alabama as Sally heads north.
At 16:00 local time (21:00 GMT), Sally was 55 miles (88km) north of Pensacola and close to the Alabama border. Its 7mph speed in a north-easterly direction is almost a sprint – at one point it was 3mph.
Sally made landfall at Gulf Shores, Alabama, at 04:45 local time on Wednesday, with maximum wind speeds of 105mph.
The latest speeds are put at about 60mph, but it has been the torrents of rainfall and high storm surges that have been its most damaging factors.

Media playback is unsupported on your device
Hurricane Sally is one of several storms in the Atlantic Ocean, with officials running out of letters to name the hurricanes as they near the end of their annual alphabetic list.
What's the latest on damage?
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) reports that "catastrophic and life-threatening flooding continues over portions of the Florida Panhandle and southern Alabama".
Rainfall is being measured in feet rather than inches in some places, but 18in (45cm) has been recorded across many areas.
Flooding to a depth of 5ft hit central Pensacola. The storm surge was the third worst ever to hit the city. Police there told people not to go out to look at the damage, saying: "It's slowing our progress down. Please stay at home!"
Although the winds did not have the devastating power of the deadly Hurricane Laura, which struck last month, they still ripped boats from moorings and sent one barge careering into the under-construction Bay Bridge. They were certainly high enough to topple high-sided vehicles.
Another barge got loose and headed for the Escambia Bay Bridge but luckily ran ashore.
The sheriff of Escambia County said it had not been expecting the devastation wrought by Sally.
Cavin Hollyhand, 50, who lives in Mobile, Alabama, told Reuters: "The rain is what stands out with this one: It's unreal."
There remains "a danger of life-threatening inundation" on the Florida-Alabama border, the NHC said.
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey said many areas around Mobile were seeing historic flood levels and urged people to heed warnings.
The pier at Gulf State Park in Alabama suffered significant damage.
The latest on power cuts from the poweroutage.us website lists some 290,000 customers without electricity in Alabama and 253,000 more in Florida.
As well as pylons being brought down, many trees were uprooted.
Rain appeared to fall sideways in Alabama, which led to submerged roads as the storm inched ashore. Other areas along the coast were also affected, with beaRead More – Source