The Deadliest Tornadoes Of All Time | Mega Disaster | Earth Stories
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- Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
- Tornadoes are unpredictable, volatile, and lethal, They obliterate towns and and bewilder scientists, as each tornado is unique. No one can truly be safe when a supercell hits the ground. In this episode of Mega Disaster, we travel the globe and learn about some of history’s worst tornadoes.
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Earth’s tectonic forces can rip apart the land, homes and people’s lives. This series exposes their killer characteristics and why they can be so devastating.
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#EarthStories #naturaldisaster #tornado
RIP Sugar :< Id be so upset over losing my animals
Same dude :c
I WOULD HAVE TAKEN MY DOG WITH ME! I agree poor Sugar, how sad 😂
Tornadoes have already hit large cities. Joplin and Tuscaloosa come to mind.
I was living in Shawnee Oklahoma when twin tornadoes came through.
Those twin tornadoes must have been a fascinating sight to see. 🌪🌪👀
Red Springs NC Tornado in the 1980s ..Fayetteville NC 2010 ! Indescribable Devastation
Problem with this "worst" scenario is people in Dallas can't really go underground. It's rare to have homes with basements here. Why? Because the ground is rock hard. It would cost a lot of money to build a house with a basement, so most developers don't. The other day I was planting some fake flowers in the dirt, just flowers on stakes. It felt like concrete. I just left them toppled over. LOL.
"Tornadoes are measured using the 'F' scale. 'F' for 'we fucked'."
That's bad and scary I would drive away and go to a different town so I don't get myself killed ugh scary😨😨😨😨😨😨😨😨😨💀
Salam,Filem Dan Videonya Terbaik Juga Bagus Banget,,,Terimakasih ,,,
When you see straw in cast iron, you know that's velocity....
When was this filmed with eye witnesses?
it just pulls buildings apart
Why do u think they built pyramids for And we just use clay or concrete tiles
Wait I’m having trouble understanding this…
Ok, so the place where tornadoes are most likely to occur…has little to no structures made to withstand them👨🏽💻? (10:50)
…why?
@@CudMcCuddles true, that makes sense
Hello America, paper mache is no building material
its a town you could easily miss... but on that day the tornado didnt....
this guy...lol
Hey how about a donation to our disabled veterans to help pay off and make there house safe for them?
i wanna be a storm chaser when i grow up does anyone think its a good or a bad idea?
Look up Tim Samaras, 30 years of storm chasing behind his back, killed by the el reno tornado of 2013.
do the measurements in miles an hour. we don't do kilometers here.
I want thai subtitle.
nam mo a di da phat😇🙏💥
What’s the reasoning with a narrator with a foreign accent using the metric system?
There was a Tornado in Bangladesh in 1989 that killed around 1300 people; making it the deadliest tornado in recorded history.
if it was in the US, it would have been included...
Also there was no recorded footage of the event unfortunately
Feel bad for Sugar the dog. R.I.P. Sugar
I'm not into hip-hop
@@josephno1347 pppppppppppppppp
Sugar will be fine. Remember All dogs go to Heaven 😇
Yeah, that was sad. I'd be devastated if I lost any of our pets in that manner. I'd feel as though it was my fault for not protecting them better.
@@josephno1347 j
You could tell how old this video is by the fact they mentioned we "use the F-scale" and not the EF-scale.
Twister
Melissa: Is there an F5?
[Everyone goes dead silent]
Melissa: What would that be like?
Jason 'Preacher' Rowe: The Finger of God.
Yep. That line pretty much summed it up.. be safe outside!
@@ranjapi693 Agree
Yes there IS F5(now EF), but yes there are f5, and they are killers.I've been my share even though I live in New England where they are rare.I watched an EF5 being Born in a paking lot, an EF3 forming in back of a store I just left,going into Worcester, Massachusetts July31st I saw an EF4, and an EF1 at the same time, few years ago,Webster Massachusetts we ad 4, one of those 4 was an EF3, and took down 3 buildings, later in the afternoon another one formed, but it was weak, so all it did was ri off some signs advertising businesses. For the last two years all of New England has been under a tornado warning. But like everything you get so many,and nothing happens you kind get Oh it won't happen here, until it does!
How did sugar die? Did they not bring the dog to the basement with them? If they didn’t, they don’t need to own any more animals
*_Title Cards for Each Major Tornado Event..._*
*Attica, Kansas - May 12, 2004:* 3:15
*Pampa, Texas - June 8, 1995:* 11:51
*Jarrell, Texas - May 27, 1997:* 22:16
*Tri-State, USA - March 18, 1925:* 31:15
*Moore, Oklahoma - May 3, 1999:* 33:07
*Mega Tornado - Unknown Date:* 43:52
*It's good I will copy*
I'm so terrified of natural disasters, they fascinate me at the same time, especially tornados. Idk why, I get all tingly from the mix of these feelings when I watch stuff like this.
awe & terror lol
I am with you on that. My stomach gets tight and queezy, heart races and throbs in my head. I've taken my blood pressure and noticed it elevates along with my pulse even for a short time after the video is finished.
I live in a place were we have 0 natural distasters. In the middle of a tectonic plate, no risk for huge storms bcs the geography. No big predators, we had like 3 wolves idk if they are left. The worst after that is fox & peoples housecats 😅
Peace, social sequrity, childcare, democracy & free world class education, even UNI is free.. so no huge student debts.
Homelessness is really low bcs we do housing first as a policy. And free healthcare no matter your income. Unions & labour laws are really strong..... i would never set my foot in the US
@@ingridakerblom7577 what country?
@@IamtheBalan Finland
As a long distance delivery driver I have been through many blizzards in North Dakota. And then I experienced my first encounter with a tornado and I can tell you this,I will go through a blizzard any day but I am terrified of tornadoes!
I live in New York. I also will take on a blizzard before a tornado. I find tornados beautiful. But I will never be comfortable enough to want to experience one.
That is amazing that you risk your life so people can have there stuff!
Yes, blizzard over tornado anyday! Although hurricanes...tornados and hurricanes I am pretty equally afraid of. I still think a tornado terrifies me more though, especially since we've had more here the last few years and we aren't supposed to get any (bucks County Pa, close to Philly and NJ and surrounding me about 8 tornadoes have come the last few years. I don't blame it on clate change though. I 💯% blame it on weather control and I've done the research to find the inconsistency's from natural weather to controlled weather. There is this man that has radars and yet also measures the metals in the air..he has about 6 or so maps that the radar measures different things.. the regular ones and ones following "controlled clouds/"contrails" (chemtrails) as well as the metals in the air and besides those other ways that we control the weather, and the more humans do the worse it gets. Weather isn't even the same as when I was a baby to around 19-20ish. That's when I started looking up and seeing changes. I noticed it before I even new a thing about it. Until one day I finay remembered my dad teaching me about con and chem trails and telling me the difference. He was born in 1945 Germany and worked as an air traffic controller, and he hubg out and drank with a lot of Russians and Germans and other foreigners that worked for military's and they along with his higher ups told him about a huge building where they were keeoigf all the chemicals for chemtrails and other biohazard is materials they were using on the population (including there own, everywhere). I was very young web my dad told me about this. Around 6-8 is my best guess. We were flying a kite and there were fighter pilots in the sky doif there dancibg in the sky thing (sorry I have brain fog and I'm terrible at remembering names and terms) but after one went away, the other made some contrails. That's when he told me to look out for strange clouds and told me the difference. These ones go away, chemtrails don't and rain would come shortly after then and for 3 days during and after the rain is web those metals are coming down. Nobody is safe from them except the wealthy or if you are lucky enough to live in an rich area, but een so they are effecting the earth and everything on it. They also effect something called black goo, that is connected to morgellons. I wish my dad was alive so I could have more conversations with him about it all. I did eventually look up what that building was and it does exist and it was near the airport my dad worked at. Even though it was IN Germany, it was mostly owned by the united states and I believe the united nations/NATO were involved. I wish I could share more info, but you all probably believe I'm crazy as is 😂 I don't talk about these things often because when I used to say things I knew were coming aroud 6yrs ago, I started being targeted and harrassed. It was really scary and I have kids, so I only talk randomly a few times a year in comment sections like this. I guess just to get it off my chest. I miss my dad and he would hate to see what's been happening in the world.
Agreed. I live in hurricane country and will still take a hurricane over a tornado. At least with hurricanes there’s ample warning.
As a gig worker, I will say that I will drive through any tornado at any time, period.
I think the only issue I have with those tornado simulators (and honestly other similarly geared disaster simulators) is that they don't take into account the difference between just wind (or water, etc) hitting an object. The second a tornado touches down, it's now blowing dirt, rocks, twigs, branches, etc. When those tiny projectiles hit a surface, it can and will cause more damage than just the wind it hitting it. When a simulator takes dirt, rocks, and other debris into account, I feel they'll be far more accurate and realistic in simulating damage.
That's a big issue with programming and part of the reason it takes so much just to render these simulations. Each material has it's own hardness, elasticity, durability, mounting, abrasion resistance. All of that has to be taken into account for both objects the hitter and the object being hit, including sharpness as well as things like glass which are hard, but incredibly weak to any form of puncturing. Then do that not just for millions of particles, not even billion, but trillions and trillions. How do you code that, and make it actually process fast enough to be useful information?
@adam cooper true. I just feel that even a half hearted attempt to include some form of projectiles at all would be better than none. As Ron White said: its not -that- the wind is blowin'. It's -what- the wind is blowin'.
@@ArcherJadephoenix I’ll add onto this discussion, 3D tools such as Blender are becoming more and more capable over time. Blender for example, can currently handle a pretty incredible amount of 3D objects with physics (over a million at least, but with some constraints)… and for as long as computer hardware continues to improve so will the functional realism of such physics based simulation.
The next great game changer for 3D apps like Blender would be integrating AI-based object generation/creation tools so thatit can create the millions, billions, and trillions of unique objects it would take to accurately simulate a home with thousands of shingles, wood splinters, belongings, furniture, etc.
that and as the wind gets inside and rips larger debris the destructive power escalates provided it can keep it in the circulation which so far does not seem to be an issue
🙋🏼♀ my scooter can reach 400 kp/h (if a car pushes me that is)
but what more "smart" ppl do, they see.. ey a tornado lest waits and see, yea its now in oure front lawn.. so lets just stay and see..
Smart ppl from the self pronounced All Mighty US..
Any mention of the deadliest tornadoes would be incomplete without mentioning the Daulatpur-Saturia tornado in Bangladesh, which occurred on April 26, 1989. While most tornadoes occur in the USA, Bangladesh has a few tornadoes, but a greater percentage of Bangladeshi tornadoes become fatal (I believe) when compared with the USA. The Daulatpur-Saturia tornado claimed at least 1,300 lives, making it the deadliest tornado in recorded history. Bangladeshi tornadoes, as well as a few tornadoes in adjacent regions of India, are definitely over-represented on the list of the deadliest tornadoes.
Keep in mind that the quality of the average building in Bangladesh is nowhere near US standards, nor do there seem to be tornado warning systems in place. Note that Bangladesh also lays claim to the deadliest tropical cyclone, the Bhola cyclone of 1970 (although it also affected and killed people in India), which killed between 300,000 and 500,000 people. When excluding pandemics (as they persist for long periods of time), only two natural disasters of the 21st century can claim such massive death tolls, both of which were the result of earthquakes (or an earthquake-triggered tsunami); the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, as well as the 2010 Haiti earthquake.
Yeah, i wish there was a modern high quality documentary on that one. I remember reading about it when i was in my sophomore or junior year of high school and the few damage pictures the newspaper had were massive.
I've never heard about this, that's both interesting and just horrifying
But, Tornadoes in Bangladesh are more frequent,, and more deadly, due to deforestation, whereas in the American midwest, it was prairie, with probably more trees planted since the pioneers came and homesteaded there..
cause when you live in a house made with mud and sticks and a tornado comes, you are going to die.
I suspect the higher population density and fewer underground storm shelters in flood prone areas have something to do with the higher casualty rate also.
I live in Oklahoma. I remember the Moore, OK, tornado. It was horrifying. I had family that lived through it. Back in the 1990s there was an F4 tornado that passed about 5 miles to the south of my home. It literally scoured homes off their concrete slabs. There was absolutely nothing left but the slab, not even debris. I remember that a school bus was found 6 miles from where it had been and was crushed into a ball. About 3 years ago a small, probably F0 tornado actually hit my home. Thankfully it did not damage the home, but it did break some limbs off some trees. Tornadoes are not my cup of tea.
Why don't they build all the homes underground?
@@ImagineGTAVI I don't think most people want to live underground, and it's a lot more expensive. I've lived here 32 years. I've never heard of an underground home. They may be here, but I have never heard of them.
Aye okieee
Why live in Tornado Valley then?
@@charliebone8335 I have nowhere else to go. It's better than living in one of the decadent, crime-ridden cities.
You'd honestly think that if one was going to live in tornado alley, they'd make sure their home was closer to and partially in the ground with a rounded/angled roof to deal with strong winds.
Most people have underground storm shelters.. atleast those that can afford them. But many of the mobile home communities have community shelters underground. But yeah I agree if you live there you need to be prepared.
Not everyone can afford to build a concrete home or a mostly in ground home... even then if your house is solid concrete, you have no guarantee. Tornados rip right through that material as well. Yes ideally, you would want a "underground house"... BUT, there are practically zero hills to build one into out there. So just imagine the amount of excavation you'd have to do in order to build even a simple 3 bed 2 bath home in ground that wasn't even that big...
@Anibus Pup: I've thought about exactly what you're thinking. A steel re-enforced concrete dome, partially underground, would by far be the safest structure in tornado/hurricane prone areas.
@@nerblebun yeah that would cost you no less than $500K if you went with a very small one. If you wanted a decent 3 bed/2 bath home you'd be looking at anywhere from $1.5-2 million!
We can’t afford it
Dad: '' Hey honey, a tornado just touched down.''
Daughter: '' Can we go look at it.'' ( and no the daughter isnt 6 years old lol )
Dad: '' Why did we keep you, lets go to safety.''
Thats the most american thing Ive heard this year.
Y'all realize that Missouri, Arkansas, & Louisiana are part of tornado alley too right? Born & raised in Arkansas & saw & heard stories of several in my 19yrs there.
Absolutely. My mom is grew up in little rock, she use to tell me horror stories
The wind speed numbers would mean a lot more if I didn't have to convert them to standard speeds every 2 or 3 sentences. So a 7.6 mph tornado did what?!! Holy cowshit Batman!!
No!!!!!! Not sugar! Damn YOU TORNADO’s!!!!!!
I have lived in Tornado prone states all of my life and have had at least two pass directly over my head, and several more close enough to have my ears pop. In most cases the tornadoes were leap frogging their way to where they were going. The amount of power a tornado has is difficult for someone who has not experienced it to appreciate. The first was when I was a child, and I remember hearing huge trees in my yard breaking like matchsticks as it jumped our house. We had twenty tall trees broken in half, all slightly above rooftop level , in about 2 seconds and then the tornado moved on. The second time was even quicker and sounded like a train or truck drove over us. It jumped my place and totally destroyed the adjacent apartment, which literally looked like a washing machine after the spin cycle was used.
In most cases you hear the tornado getting close. You feel it in your ears and the barometer. Windows pop and break. However, once it is upon you, it happens so fast that you really have no time to react once it is on you. You are TOTALLY helpless, so the best thing you can do is just wait for it to pass, which is incredibly quick in most instances.
I live in tornado ally also I had more then 10 tornados I think but let then 20 so in the middle but we are moving out of tornado ally...
Me when I saw the very first tornado: *that’s only an F2???*
Fucking YIKES. Never would I everrr live anywhere near tornado valley, my worst mf nightmare
I'm always amazed no one reports on the Atlanta Tornado that hit downtown. One of the tallest hotels in the US moved 6 feet on i'ts base when the tornado hit it. Downtown was closed for quite a bit as pieces of windows were falling on the streets and sidewalks. You would stand there and a piece of glass would hit your head. Part of the roof was pulled off during the final 4 basketball games.
I stay at the Westin frequently and was horrified when that tornado hit. Thankfully it was not while I was staying there, but I was scared for the staff and the people who were there. That said, the westin provides glorious views of storms rolling in. I just hope none of them contain another tornado.
Tornado Alley has expanded well into Arkansas. When I moved from Calif. to Arkansas 16 years ago, I wouldn't even look at a house to buy unless it had a tornado shelter. In 2011 my rural town of 9,878 residence was hit by 2 tornadoes on the same night. We could clearly hear the F-3 funnel travel directly over the house (It DOES sound like a Freight Train), then touch down on the next street over (Complete Devastation) while my son, granddaughter, 3 dogs, 2 cats, and myself were safely underground in our steel re-enforced concrete bunker 5 ft. from the backdoor.
Last nights sever thunderstorm produced 5 tornadoes on the ground at the same time in NW Arkansas. One was 7 miles north of my location.🏴☠
I am so sorry you went through that. Did you lose your entire house? I lost mine to devastating floods about 6 years back.
@@Ena48145: I lost my home & all possessions to fire in 1986, but so far tornadoes have missed us by a block.
Don't know why but Arkansas is a tornado magnet. That's just the record.
I was born & raised the first 19yrs of my life in NW Arkansas. I grew up hearing about & being around tornadoes. The fact that people don't include Missouri & Arkansas in tornado alley always irritates me.
@@lulabelle5452: You're 100% correct Lisa. Arkansas isn't mentioned by anyone for any reason unless something truly extraordinary happens. Even then it's only reported on local news. Over a decade ago we had 62 tornadoes on the ground at the same time, including the two that hit my rural town of Clarksville on the same night, and one that zig-zagged hither & yon across the state, on the ground, for almost 400 miles....in January!
Approx 30 little podunk communities, populations 200 or less, were wiped off the face of the earth. Yet not a word reported by National News. It's mind boggling.
5:55 says canvas instead of Kansas
a canvas was destroyed
Don't actually know which city they actually considered it in but a tornado hit around Lancaster, TX in 2012. It literally picked up tractor trailers out of the Schnieder Yard and tossed those trucks & trailers in the air like they were cardboard. Scary stuff.
The USA 🇺🇸 has the most tornadoes by a long shot then 2nd place is Canada 🇨🇦, than the UK 🇬🇧, tornadoes can happen everywhere but they are most common in North America.
Why is that?
I was in mpls. Minn. And saw 1 not far away that leveled a town where the roofs were tore off the houses. Was very scaryThe 1 house that was lifted away reminded me of Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz.I was in 1 in Joliet IL also, sky turned green golf sized hail plus the sound of a freight train. Was very scary ,I was in a hotel luckily it turned the other way
The May 3rd 1999 tornado was on the ground for damn near 100 miles. Unfortunately, the same area the 99 tornado hit got leveled again in 2013.
It was also a mile wide.... at ground level
And in The next episode! Follow us to se the f5 sharknado disaster! Where sharks is sucked out of the ocean and hurled into People in 300mph winds
27:52 A dirty blanket~? oooooh....a mistake w wounds...and a sad predicament.
I really believe that Alabama should be added to Tornado 🌪 Alley
In addition to Tornado Alley, there is also Dixie Alley. The area for dangerous weather systems, that produce tornadoes, has grown and expanded eastward. It includes the southern states. Alabama, of course, is one of them. This expanded area is known as Dixie Alley. 🌪
All the others were good. Great video!
At 4:30, I really dislike how lazily a lot of tornado documentaries explain how they form. Yes, windshear is essential. However they didn't explain how the incredibly strong updraft suck in those spinning Columns of bear and tightened them and how the powerful downdraft behind the supercell stands the spinning column of air upright. At that point, the surrounding human and moist air feeds the tornado / upper cycle until conditions are no longer favorable. This is why the air masses must be extremely unstable for supercell thunderstorms to occur combined with the wind moving in different directions at different levels. This is why tornadoes are relatively rare.
I lived in Wisconsin for 15 years and I lived in Madison, Wisconsin and we get 28 tornados per year, I rember a ef1 to an ef2 very close to my house like 3 to 4 years ago, you forgot the Mayfield tornado that was an ef4 to an ef5
As a South African, I have Never Seen This Kind of Shit, Hell !!!
FYI, the updraft in the storm pulls the horizontally rotating column of air UP from the ground....making it vertical and creating the tornado. Also...tornadoes are rated using the EF scale, or Enhanced Fujita scale. The F scale stopped being used in 2007.
Yes, but these tornados happened before 2007, so they still carry their original F-scale ranking.
This seems like an old video. They didn’t at all mention any of the horrible tornadoes that have happened in the 2010s and later.
It didn't tear the roof off that house...it sucked the entire structure right up inside it!!!
Be research with your Skills for my this inputs , please ... . Tornado-es were damgerouses , weren't tornado-es ? . I listed n read that it made by Alexamdre The Great God . Because in Tornadoes Areas many peoples didn't believe that no gods Except Alexandre The Great God . Thank you .
Errr...... "decimation" is 10% destruction. That's why it's called "DEC (latin 10) imation".
Know your 'facts' before spouting bullhonky......
Could've left the wierdo trying to predict tornadoes in Dallas in who knows when out of the video.
Why is there so much recap? This is supposed to be a video, not a TV show.
Why is the guy running tornado simulation using a 4:3 screen on an old computer?
The main focus of the video is American tornadoes, why is the narrator using KMPH? Most Americans don't speak metric and 150kph has no context besides "devide this roughly in half to convert to mph".
This video could have been done way better with less recap, less reuse of animations, less promoting of a CGI storm and appropriately using imperial measurements.
These magnetic vortex's could be cause of tornado' /vortex'ss on the pla net's surfess, atmosphere, and ocea n's, also most importantley knowing there are two Black Holes in every planet in the YING/YANG position's ge nerating very l powerfull magnetic fields and vortex volocity's mov ing planetary matierials including the atmosphere!!!
37:54 What exactly are we seeing here~? ... and that "thing" looks heavy as hell. How is he holding his head upright~?
Trebuie construite instalații de infrasunete de mare potere1Mw și f1-25 hz pt a fi atacarea pe frecventa proprie în faza incipienta de pe platforme mobile și sau din 2-3 părți pt cuplu de rotatie invers.
I lived in Key West for awhile and one day a friend took me out in his boat and a storm popped up and there were two enormous water spouts on either side of us. We were fine but I think it was a more serious situation than my friend let on
Definitely was
10:46 He's at eye-level with that debris field...he should have goggles on....plus...maybe not even be in that area~?
Jehovah's Creation ❤
No kidding 😮😮😮😮
21:30 My freaking ears aren't safe~ before, during or after this event~!!
Joplin Tornado from 2011. I lived 45 miles away when it happen and I went through the city a week after while traveling to Oklahoma. It looked like a battlefield after a war has passed through with unyielding destruction in every direction you look.
Joplin tornado broke my heart. It was devestating. I’m surprised it wasn’t mentioned.
@@kibblesmcknob617 The reason the Joplin and Greensburg Tornadoes were not listed is that this is a program from the mid 2000s. Those tornadoes came after this was originally made. The giveaway is that the video still references the F Scale for tornadoes. Now we go by the EF Scale (or Enhanced Fujita Scale).
@@kennethsnyder6849that clears that up. This did seem like an older video.
why didnt they bring sugar down with them in the basement
the craziest thing was thinking a tornado could smash through the middle of Dallas and cause only $5 billion in damages. was this estimate made in 1980?
The video was copyrighted 2006. Not adjusted for inflation in our time. (Jan Griffiths).
@@douglasgriffiths3534 i'm still gonna say that's way too low based on what we know from hurricanes hitting TX, FL, and NY and not hitting a city dead center.
Moore 2013 was around 2 billion; Joplin was around 2.8 billion, so yeah Dallas would be significantly higher. . .
Tornados and storms are terrifying but they're not an "act of violence".
Ummm 22,000lbs is not 3 ton. Try a little more like 10! I've even seen video of them lifting fully loaded semi's that can weigh over 30 TONS!
I was watching this and all sudden a add pops up men are u struggling to get it hard down there. Right in middle of this tornado destroying things. What the heck ? Now im scared to get hard down there !!
You will grow out of it. I suppose you could be scarred for life, but I highly doubt it. Or, if you become woke enough, you could let your partner worry about getting hard down there.
You know here in America we use feet inches miles for measurements meters kilometers are Orient math it is fine you use them but also use our math so we can understand how big how wide and how fast after all this is a documentary
If you aren't underground for an ef5 give your heart to God if you havnt already
People even close to 🌪alley knows that
to the narrator, only like 6 people in the usa know the metric system ...FYI
Why would you live in a place called tornado alley 🤣 their home insurance cost must be huuge
Those weren't "three-ton trucks getting snatched in the air", Sonny Boy, those were 10-ton trucks getting snatched in the air....🌪️
I will watch this later. right now it is the midterm election
Listen it’s not about size
Will the mega tornado have megalodon sharks in it?!?
Thank you for sharing this video 🙂👍
You will never beat mother nature humans
Watched from the Philippines Jan 27 2023...😮😮
Why TF do I see a fundraiser for Ukraine on this video? Like the US sending billions over there isn't enough?
Because its not only the US who watches this video, its circulated worldwide. Its not just the US that donates to Ukraine either contrary to what you might think. 🇺🇦❤
The good stuff starts at 33:20.
My friend can make a tornado 🌪🌪🌪 with her water bottle
you gotta dig a tunnel and hide underground......we need some badgers
I was in sixth grade in 1989 when a tornado skipped and hopped through my neighborhood, sat down at the Redstone Arsenal, and took off as an F4 in the middle of Huntsville rush hour. A major tornado in a city like Dallas would be beyond devastating.
Wow, I'm glad you are okay
I’m from Huntsville, though I wasn’t quite alive for that tornado, but I was in 8th grade when April 27th tornados took place, it was an insane day.
Huntsville has had many close calls and direct hits. It’s rocket city and tornado town.
@@Holtyyy I’m just now seeing your comment…I watched that happen on the news while I was at work. It was very surreal to see places I’d lived in (I also once lived 30 mins South of Tuscaloosa) being pounded by that storm system. I can’t imagine what it was like on the ground.
please use U.S stander measurements also
This is why California real estate is so expensive--Midwestern sweltering summer heat and the bitter winter cold. That said, I grew up in Kansas from 1958-1965 and loved the violent weather, the summer fireflies, the chiggers, the crawdad fishing, and the snow and ice on the road that made great winter sledding. The Blue Coast will never understand the Red Heartland.
I got everyone into the basement just in time, when i realized everyones pets were still inside, ours too. I shoved the smallest ones in a singke kennel (sorry buddies) and carried my dog in the other arm. As i got out the door the tornado hit my neighborhood the entire sky was green and a straight up sheet of rain was comin down and i looked up the street, literally one block away, rip a huge tree out the ground and lay it in the street, almost hitting the house across the street.
I never ran so fast in my life.
It was strange though, i felt no wind.
I reside in Oklahoma. I vividly recall the Moore, OK, tornado - it was a nightmare. My family experienced it firsthand. In the 1990s, an F4 tornado passed just 5 miles south of my house. It stripped houses from their foundations, leaving only bare slabs. Even debris was nonexistent. A school bus was found 6 miles away, crushed into a ball. Around 3 years ago, a small, probably F0 tornado grazed my home. Thankfully, it spared the house but snapped some tree limbs. Tornadoes are not something I want to deal with
I can not imagine leaving there with fear of a tornado. And your houses are not safe. There are building with wood. I cant understant this........
And you wonder why people get killed instead of trying get into a shelter wanna record shit
My Dad told me that when he was a kid a tornado flattened their barn and as Dad was helping clean up he found a one inch board with a straw going right through it.
Can’t anyone report on story cohesively any longer…clips back and forth make it quite irritating…
I’ll take Blizzards any day…. No way do I want to live anywhere unpredictable tornadoes, fires or hurricanes are prevalent .. no thank you
Yvette can have my baby ❤️
The iPhone tornado has a low battery