Hot, humid for Father's Day with few possible showers
Winds from the south will increase, bringing a hot and humid air mass.
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Meteorologist Mary Kay Kleist has been a fixture on CBS News Chicago since 2002.
Since joining the station, Kleist became a Certified Broadcast Meteorologist (2007), which is the industry's highest distinction. In addition to earning several local Emmy Awards at CBS News Chicago – including three Emmy Awards in 2015 for coverage of the April tornadoes, a severe weather special and best on-camera weather anchor – Kleist has been awarded an AMS Seal of Approval and an NWA Broadcasting Seal of Approval.
Kleist has been a meteorologist for print, radio and television broadcasts for more than 25 years. She first worked in Chicago from 1994-95 as a weather anchor for WGN-AM Radio and CLTV. However, she joined CBS2 Chicago from WXYZ-TV in Detroit, Michigan, where she had worked as a meteorologist since 1999, reporting weather for the station's weekend newscasts.
Prior to her work at WXYZ-TV, Kleist worked in Tampa, Florida (1995-99), as the meteorologist for WFLA-TV. There, she also reported the weather for The Tampa Tribune, the local edition of CNN Headline News and served as weather anchor at WFLA-AM Radio.
Kleist began her career at WJCL-TV in Savannah, Georgia (1992-94), where she worked as the weekend weather anchor, a health and general assignment reporter, news anchor, photographer, editor, as well as anchor of the local edition of CNN Headline News.
Kleist graduated Magna Cum Laude from the University of Central Florida in 1992 with a B.A. in Radio and Television, and later graduated from the Broadcast Meteorology Program at Mississippi State University.
Winds from the south will increase, bringing a hot and humid air mass.
Temperatures will soar for several days. On Sunday, the heat index could reach 100 degrees.
A stray sprinkle is possible overnight.
From 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., funnel clouds or a brief rotation are possible, mainly south of I-80.
A light lake breeze will keep temperatures in the 60s lakeside and 70s inland.
Low-level moisture will create patchy fog overnight.
The system's forward speed has slowed slightly, meaning dry weather early Saturday morning through daybreak, with rain increasing mid-morning and peaking in the afternoon.
After the sun sets on Thursday, clear skies will be the order of the evening, but it will be brisk, with lows in the lower 50s.
By 6 p.m., storm activity had died down. It was expected to diminish even more after sundown.
The first wave arrives in the 7 a.m. hour along Interstate 39 and drives eastward to the city by 11 a.m. and then to Northwest Indiana.
Heat and humidity will increase, and temperatures will rise into the upper 80s.
A few spotty showers are possible after midnight Saturday in the Chicago area as a weak cold front crosses the area.
Warm winds gusting up to 30 mph will warm temperatures in the Chicago area into the 80s for this Mother's Day.
Waves of thunderstorms could move into the area between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m.
Chances for isolated pop-up storms heading into this evening. The highest rain chance is tonight.