I was already 23 when Katrina happened but I had the same moment with Andrew in '92 when I was 10. That's what I got me really fascinated with weather. Well that and the blizzard of 93
Similar story here. I’m currently working my way into supporting the hurricane hunters program (ground based financial side) and hope to get in by 2025! Also, I’m working on a book series in which the one of the main villains is named Katrina and several aspects of her personality are based on the storm itself
I remember that local on the 8's music sounded really ominous while this was going on. When it starts playing at 0:23 it still kind of feels the same as it did.
Yea the signature Local on the 8's sent chills down my spine. In fact, we haven't had cable in over a decade - so hearing it again, brings back a lot of childhood memories.
NBC made the dumb decision to buy The Weather Channel. From a local station standpoint, they had to sell off WNCN, WVTM, WJAR, and WCMH to Media General. That dumb decision also led to the death of NBC's own Weather Plus which they launched on its New York flagship WNBC.
Im crying right now actually... I remember I was watching this with my mom, as she gave us the run down on what a Category 5 could do... I remember where I was.. I was in my Kitchen preparing my items...Jesus how long has it been...
I was between 11 or 12 years old sitting at home in South Florida watching this unfold the whole day. I had went to sleep night before when it was a cat 2. Then I woke up to a cat 5 a few hours later and I didin't know what to say.
austin G I was 14 living in South Florida as well. I just remember watching in horror the massiveness of the storm. I had asked my mom, if there was a cat 5 would we evacuate and she said yes. I couldn't imagine having gone through that.
austin G i was 11 in gulfport, we were in a GREAT place but holy crap that eyewall. Little 11 year old me was already fascinated with meteorology and Jim Cantore was pretty much my hero. This was the last thing i saw on tv before the power went out and basically when it clicked "She's here"
i lived in ellisville, mississippi when it hit. i was only 4 so i don’t remember the details all that well and we were lucky in the sense that our house stayed in one piece other than parts of the roof, but it took my papa three days to reach somewhere with a working phone so he could call my nana (she was in vermont visiting family) that we were okay. she would’ve come home but the interstate was closed all the way to meridian from downed trees and debris. we went to biloxi and it was just rubble for miles upon miles with american flags dotted throughout. had it not been for the relief trucks that brought food and water down here i might not be sitting here right now typing this. we didn’t have power or water for i don’t know how long, my aunt apparently mentioned needing underwear to nana, something most people wouldn’t think of but if you can’t bathe you need clean underwear especially if you’re biologically female. i have a lot of friends who were relocated from nola and the surrounding area. sometimes i forget that something like katrina wasn’t part of everyone’s childhood.
I was at band camp in Fort Worth during this. I remember we got a lot of new students from SE Louisiana that joined the band at this time. So nostalgic. I also remember watching this exact broadcast while I got ready to go to camp. Insane.
I'll never forget the day before. It was sunny beautiful Sunday, mom was cooking, I was doing chores and on TV was a massive cat 5 hurricane creeping up on Louisiana. My area wasn't affected very much as we were on the left side of the storm.
I remember getting the EAS alert. The most scary Hurricane I've ever experienced. The damage of the Hurricane didn't scare me, it was how quickly it grew in strength. When this Hurricane was first announced, it was only a category 3 Hurricane, which is still powerful. Then, in a single night, it strengthened into a category 5 Hurricane. The fact that it grew in strength so quickly scared me.
The EAS alert still sends chills down my spine. Anyone who heard that live in Louisiana and Mississippi was terrified. It probably saved thousands of lives by scaring people into evacuating before it was too late.
I was 15 years old when this occurred. I live in northern Alabama and we just got a lot of rain and some gusty wind. I felt so bad for the residents of coastal Louisiana and New Orleans. Watched a lot of Weather Channel and other news stations covering the situation as it was unfolding. Scary days those were.
The 2005 hurricane season and this music is the reason I am infatuated with weather now. Very nostalgic! I was 8 years old when Hurricane Katrina made landfall.
I was just shy of 13 years old when this happened. We lived in NY at the time and as a kid i felt anxiety for LA and New Orleans. Had NO idea that it would be as disastrous as it was (as im sure others couldn't fully comprehend what was about to take place and all the damage that came - much of that due to the inferior levee system.) I also remmeber CLEAR AS DAY, a little over a year after this, the Saints had their first game back in the Super Dome against the Falcs. I remember watching part of it before bedtime and then i remember sneaking up late and somehow listening to the game either on the radio or something else. But i remember tearing up a little when the Saints won that first game - sort of a welcome back to all the residents that had to deal with all the damage and disaster left in the wake of Katrina and especially those that took shelter in the Super Dome in the days that followed the landfall.
Yeah, I heard about people seeking refuge in the New Orleans Superdome during Katrina. There were a LOT of germs and bacteria, not to mention the smell of all that stuff on the inside was awful, especially in the aftermath.
Hurricane Katrina was the reason my grandma and I found and started watching the Weather Channel. We lived in the Great Lakes and got the remains of the storm it rained for a few days. I was like 7 I remember my grandma saying I hope they found Jesus cause if they didn’t get out of there. They might meet him let’s hope not.
I was living in Ocean Springs right on the MS coast at this time! Mom probably still has the video we shot while at home. We rode it out as we were quite a bit above sea level on our half of the neighborhood. An experience I will never forget! Actually still remember watching this exact footage live! Weird to so vividly remember seeing the projected path cones like it was yesterday!
We were in a hotel in Diamondhead MS, a half-mile from the water. Hotel set up on a bluff and waves crashed over the interstate...Mississippi coast lost 70,000 homes,, with 200,000 ppl homeless. Surge was 12 ft 15 miles inland..... by 6:30 no power, gusts and noise..
ALF Raydough a similar storm in the Tampa Bay Area would be just as devastating if not more. We anticipate when Tampa bay’s nightmare storm happens storm surge could be over 30 feet at the highest and have great distance with lower than peak surge values
Crazy how they totally downplayed the potential damage to come in Mississippi. They don’t even acknowledge how much worst the east side of a hurricane is.
He’s a dickhead though. I remember when he was out on Topsail island before Ophelia hit and we told him that the Camp LeJeune back gate was closed to civilians, he thought he could get through because “I’m Jim Cantore, they’ll let me through”. PMO stopped him and his crew at the back gate as he was trying to get up to Morehead City, and he threw one hell of a temper tantrum because they wouldn’t just let him mosey through the base.
Jim is to Weather Channel what Chris Berman is to ESPN or Al Roker to NBC, impervious to change and up for any assignment despite being there over 3 decades now
I was a baby when this happened. About 6 months old. We lived in Florida. Katrina just barely missed us (we lived in the Tampa area) We got a good amount of rain, but nothing too severe. Sad for those who were affected though.
Same here… people from New Orleans were coming to my hometown of Phoenix just to stay out of Katrina’s ominous wrath. I was 6 months and 17 days old when Katrina hit NOLA.
Me, too. I had no idea that was going to happen on August 15, 2005 (Which was shockingly exactly two weeks before Katrina made landfall). Plus, they even had that Local on The 8s bumper where it would show a man walking on a calm beach, and it would show a vertical blue rectangle (representing the logo) of a little dimension of bad weather. The man opens an umbrella as he walks through, then a woman off screen says: "Now from The Weather Channel, here's your Local on the 8s." The rectangle then disappears, and the words "Local on the 8s" appear, accompanied by a rather eerie version of the LOT8s jingle. I'd get scared when they'd go to commercials, because I knew that bumper was going to come on at any moment and catch me off guard! But then I eventually got used to it when it was brought back in 2007.
I evacuated to a relative's house with other friends and family. We had a lot of MREs after that. I emailed all my friends to see if they were ok. (They were!) And my cousin set up my Myspace account. Weird times.
I was 5 years old with my sisters and the babysitter, i remember quite a lot of how dangerous the storm was and how it was going to move north where I was in MN. Even though it died out once it moved north, I will always remember this storm. My babysitters name was Katrina too, so that name is always going to be special for me.
I was in myrtle beach for a vacation with my parents during katrina. I was only 2 years old at the time. We were not affected though. My mom said she remembers watching live coverage of katrina on TWC during the times when red flags were put on the lifeguard stands which meant the ocean is rough. The reason why she watched TWC coverage of katrina was that she wanted to see how bad the damage was going to be.
No doubt about that! Just received news today that Dorian, Laura, Eta and Iota have all been retired. Dorian and Laura have been replaced by "Dexter" and "Leah", respectively. The Greek Alphabet will no longer be used.
Jared Lawrence You from Biloxi? I was 17 and that’s where I am from. We rode it out in North Gulfport with family though. Lived too close to the beach in Biloxi for comfort. Still live on the coast, but not in Biloxi anymore. Wouldn’t wish that storm on my worst enemy. Still depressing all these years later.
The damage from that hurricane was old testament biblical in Biloxi, MS. My military unit was one of the first to deploy down there for cleanup and setting up temporary comms - and I couldn't believe the destruction I saw from Katrina...
I remember the storm from Kentucky. It was enough of a stronghold that it knocked the power off in the Southern end of the county. We had to get lunch from the north end of town.
I remember Katrina and how the weather reporters were commenting on how odd it was that it was rotating in a clockwise direction this far north of the equator. They went on and on about that oddity and were very shocked. By the way, it was in the Gulf of Mexico at the time. Then after a break, they stopped talking about it and it was shown rotating counter-clockwise. I have been searching ever since for anyone that recorded it but have come up dry. I will never stop searching though since it was also very odd to me that it spun clockwise and then how they flipped the image. Did anyone else witness that as well and if so did you happen to record it. If you did, please share it with me so I can stop searching and lay it to rest.
I was in my former auto shop in Syracuse New York watching this storm unfold and we tuned our NOAA Weather Radio to the National Weather Service in New Orleans issuing a hurricane warning for the state of Louisiana and the Gulf Coast of Mississippi on September 11th 2005 we had a national response team callout to New Orleans Louisiana because not only that hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans but also a number of EF5 tornadoes hit New Orleans as well so we responded from Syracuse New York to New Orleans Louisiana and got there within a few days and we head into the French Quarter and we see numerous amounts of damage from the storm and we knew people’s lives were totaled and that the survivors were buried underneath the rubble with the lost lives from all the homes totaled and leveled by the storm so we immediately took action and got to work right away and we used our saws as well as our pry bars to cut and pry away the broken pieces of wood as well as broken pieces of plaster and concrete to find the dead bodies and the survivors and after 5 hours of digging we found the survivors and pulled them to safety but we had a long 10 months of finding everyone that was still alive when they were buried underneath the rubble on every block around New Orleans and then we found the other survivors but we couldn’t find the deceased bodies because of how deep they were buried under the pile after 10 months of digging and searching we identified these dead bodies and did some DNA testing and analysis and found out who these people were and where they were from we then saw a set of wings badge and an identification card that had a name but I’m not gonna leak out his name since this dead person didn’t want his name leaked out to anyone that’s younger and wasn’t around at the time and we found out he was a captain of American Airlines and so we identified him by the name on his identification card and then we did a background check on this deceased man but found nothing except his recent jobs he was at before aviation school we found multiple deceased cops from the New Orleans Police Department and we identified these officers and we went to FEMA and they found more information about these late individuals and they found out about their past such as medical and mental and even criminal since some of the individuals were in the penitentiary not far from the French Quarter and so we then spent a few days or even a few months trying to rebuild the city of New Orleans and we got somewhere so on December 23rd 2006 we left New Orleans and headed back to Syracuse New York same idea for when Sandy had slammed the East Coast and caused major damage
Oh, they should! Plus, The Weather Channel needs to bring back the 3-Day Forecasts on the Satellite Local Forecast, and make it 2 Minutes like it used to be!
This was, in reality, the peak and valley of western civilization put into one, the peak because the weather channel is so awesome, the valley because, well, Katrina was a horrible storm.
I remember leaving for Hurricane Katrina. We traveled almost every in Louisiana looking for a hotel. No luck. We had to sleep in the truck. It was so uncomfortable for weeks. When I came back to my house in Harvey, parts of the roof caved in. I lost so much of my clothes, my bed, and my dresser. That stuff can be replaced. The only thing that broke my heart into a billion pieces was that I had to leave my cats. I gave them one last hug and told I'm sorry. I still live with that regret to this day!
I watched this unfold on TV as a little kid and couldn’t believe what I was seeing. Big part of the reason why I am a meteorologist today.
I was already 23 when Katrina happened but I had the same moment with Andrew in '92 when I was 10. That's what I got me really fascinated with weather. Well that and the blizzard of 93
Same. This is so nostalgic for me, the music anyway and even the logos and font for weather icons
I wanted to be one, but I like computers more, but I still learned about the weather, so I know what is happening.
Similar story here. I’m currently working my way into supporting the hurricane hunters program (ground based financial side) and hope to get in by 2025!
Also, I’m working on a book series in which the one of the main villains is named Katrina and several aspects of her personality are based on the storm itself
I was watching this live in Oregon and was 20 at the time, in awe of how big it was
Classic local on the 8s, the storm theme, jim cantore... this is peak weather channel.
0:24 15 years later, and this is still the music I think of when I think of major hurricanes hitting.
It’s good 👍
@@DoiInthanon1897 wait, I see you on Timeworks
@@ILoveQazaqstan Yes, I do comment on Timeworks’ channel! That’s cool you watch him
@@DoiInthanon1897 I can agree, he is a very cool UA-camr
Idk about yall but I’m heavily fucking with these typa instrumentals can’t even lie
Back when the weather channel wasn't clickbait and reality shows
And political.
Truer words could not have been spoken.
Weather Channel has gone to the craphouse ever since they got away from the weather 24/7 and started putting on these crap shows.
@Cameron McCarty What do you care!?
so your getting angry over that wow humanity has gotten doubley pathetic
I remember that local on the 8's music sounded really ominous while this was going on. When it starts playing at 0:23 it still kind of feels the same as it did.
I was just thinking the same thing.
I was like like ooOOOoOooo they put it on hurricane mode
Yea the signature Local on the 8's sent chills down my spine. In fact, we haven't had cable in over a decade - so hearing it again, brings back a lot of childhood memories.
The Weather Channel BEFORE NBC bought it.
Turned it into stormstories 24/7/365
NBC made the dumb decision to buy The Weather Channel. From a local station standpoint, they had to sell off WNCN, WVTM, WJAR, and WCMH to Media General. That dumb decision also led to the death of NBC's own Weather Plus which they launched on its New York flagship WNBC.
Now owned by Entertainment Studios.
I'm 29, started watching the weather Channel when I was 9 so around 2002, I miss this golden Era of this channel.
“And now for your local on the 8s” *boss music starts playing*
I was 14 years old when Katrina hit. Man, how I remember 2005, freshman year of high school.
Me too, same age
I was 18 on my senior year
I was 13 and was glued to the coverage! I still can’t believe it’s been as long as it has.
Same here. I was in Biloxi.
I was 12. First year of Jr. High.
Im crying right now actually... I remember I was watching this with my mom, as she gave us the run down on what a Category 5 could do... I remember where I was.. I was in my Kitchen preparing my items...Jesus how long has it been...
I was 2 when it happened, and I remember coming home, houses destroyed and trees down everywhere, it was horrible
Darren Barthelemy GET THE FUCK OUT THERE, AND KICK SOME IRMA ASS
Except that Katrina was only a Category 3 during landfall
To bad you lived to tell about it should have perished with the rest of the trash
blake you remember as a 2 year old
It doesn't feel like 12 years ago but man look how dated weather channel graphics are lol
Better than the trash they use today, so.
@Carter Gaming it's you're, who's the dumb one now?
And yet I remember this version so well.
Possible that Greek named storm in 2020 may be used. Possible to surpass 2005.
@Maxx P. But 2020 may surpass 2005 if it does continue like this.
I was between 11 or 12 years old sitting at home in South Florida watching this unfold the whole day. I had went to sleep night before when it was a cat 2. Then I woke up to a cat 5 a few hours later and I didin't know what to say.
austin G I was 14 living in South Florida as well. I just remember watching in horror the massiveness of the storm. I had asked my mom, if there was a cat 5 would we evacuate and she said yes. I couldn't imagine having gone through that.
austin G i was 11 in gulfport, we were in a GREAT place but holy crap that eyewall. Little 11 year old me was already fascinated with meteorology and Jim Cantore was pretty much my hero. This was the last thing i saw on tv before the power went out and basically when it clicked "She's here"
I was like 10 years old and in Daytona Beach remembering being at church the morning and seeing it at a category 5 that Sunday morning.
i lived in ellisville, mississippi when it hit. i was only 4 so i don’t remember the details all that well and we were lucky in the sense that our house stayed in one piece other than parts of the roof, but it took my papa three days to reach somewhere with a working phone so he could call my nana (she was in vermont visiting family) that we were okay. she would’ve come home but the interstate was closed all the way to meridian from downed trees and debris. we went to biloxi and it was just rubble for miles upon miles with american flags dotted throughout. had it not been for the relief trucks that brought food and water down here i might not be sitting here right now typing this. we didn’t have power or water for i don’t know how long, my aunt apparently mentioned needing underwear to nana, something most people wouldn’t think of but if you can’t bathe you need clean underwear especially if you’re biologically female. i have a lot of friends who were relocated from nola and the surrounding area. sometimes i forget that something like katrina wasn’t part of everyone’s childhood.
I was a kid in Miami at the time and barely heard anything about it cause we didnt have electricity til 2 weeks later lol
I live in Baton Rouge and I have family that stayed in the Superdome throughout the whole ordeal. They said the smell was horrible
Brian Parent Jr the smell was probably the least of there worries in the superdome.
William 5629 yes your right. They said they had no water no food and the only thing they wanted to do was leave and they couldn't
I'd imagine so. No working toilets, crowded, and extremely hot and humid conditions.
We lived in a small town nearby Baton Rouge and I remember my mom telling me we had to temporarily move to Mississippi
Bro got hit by Francine
I was at band camp in Fort Worth during this. I remember we got a lot of new students from SE Louisiana that joined the band at this time. So nostalgic. I also remember watching this exact broadcast while I got ready to go to camp. Insane.
Those Hurricane Katrina is Luisiana Misspspi Alabama Winds 86 mph. Why should Hurricane Katrina could those damage buildings?
I'll never forget the day before. It was sunny beautiful Sunday, mom was cooking, I was doing chores and on TV was a massive cat 5 hurricane creeping up on Louisiana. My area wasn't affected very much as we were on the left side of the storm.
I remember getting the EAS alert. The most scary Hurricane I've ever experienced. The damage of the Hurricane didn't scare me, it was how quickly it grew in strength. When this Hurricane was first announced, it was only a category 3 Hurricane, which is still powerful. Then, in a single night, it strengthened into a category 5 Hurricane. The fact that it grew in strength so quickly scared me.
The EAS alert still sends chills down my spine. Anyone who heard that live in Louisiana and Mississippi was terrified. It probably saved thousands of lives by scaring people into evacuating before it was too late.
It would be nice if TWC went back to this style or used the old storm alert music for modern day storms.
Does Tropical Storms
I was 15 years old when this occurred. I live in northern Alabama and we just got a lot of rain and some gusty wind. I felt so bad for the residents of coastal Louisiana and New Orleans. Watched a lot of Weather Channel and other news stations covering the situation as it was unfolding. Scary days those were.
Doesn’t feel like 15 years ago.. I still remember it ..
Same.
The season was pretty devastating that year.
easalert88 And this year could be a repeat.
Unfortunately this could be the case...
I'm A Office Boy here we are with Laura
yo 05’ watch out homie 2020 tryna take away that record of names
Guess what? 2020 actually surpassed 2005 with named storms! The name "Laura" has been retired, and the Greek names have been withdrawn from use.
This was the last thing I remember seeing on TV before the power went. For context I was in south Gulfport at landfall.
20-year anniversary next year. Crazy how fast time goes. Feels like yesterday
The 2005 hurricane season and this music is the reason I am infatuated with weather now. Very nostalgic! I was 8 years old when Hurricane Katrina made landfall.
I was just shy of 13 years old when this happened. We lived in NY at the time and as a kid i felt anxiety for LA and New Orleans. Had NO idea that it would be as disastrous as it was (as im sure others couldn't fully comprehend what was about to take place and all the damage that came - much of that due to the inferior levee system.)
I also remmeber CLEAR AS DAY, a little over a year after this, the Saints had their first game back in the Super Dome against the Falcs. I remember watching part of it before bedtime and then i remember sneaking up late and somehow listening to the game either on the radio or something else. But i remember tearing up a little when the Saints won that first game - sort of a welcome back to all the residents that had to deal with all the damage and disaster left in the wake of Katrina and especially those that took shelter in the Super Dome in the days that followed the landfall.
Yeah, I heard about people seeking refuge in the New Orleans Superdome during Katrina. There were a LOT of germs and bacteria, not to mention the smell of all that stuff on the inside was awful, especially in the aftermath.
If you saw Jim Cantore in your town during a storm you know you’re screwed.
Hurricane Katrina was the reason my grandma and I found and started watching the Weather Channel. We lived in the Great Lakes and got the remains of the storm it rained for a few days. I was like 7 I remember my grandma saying I hope they found Jesus cause if they didn’t get out of there. They might meet him let’s hope not.
the song is called, storm alert
The weather channel played it during the local forecast when a hurricane was going to or is hitting the US.
William Scott I became so used to hearing that music
It so surreal seeing them say stuff like “its approaching” and what not
Before anybody know that it was gonna be the most costly storm in us history
Wish TWC would bring back this great music to the Local on the 8s. If I ever hit the lottery big I'd buy TWC and fix it up to the way it used to be.
if they dont change it to the old look what would u do sue them (I know that sounds very dumb so dont hate on me)
robloxlover101 iloveroblox If it sounds very dumb then don’t comment it.
@@DavidRSAT idk I dont have a life
@@BlueYT1107 Go get one, they're like a dollar at the Dollar Tree
@@somedude5422 Overused joke that's 99.98 percent stolen but ok.
I was living in Ocean Springs right on the MS coast at this time! Mom probably still has the video we shot while at home. We rode it out as we were quite a bit above sea level on our half of the neighborhood. An experience I will never forget! Actually still remember watching this exact footage live! Weird to so vividly remember seeing the projected path cones like it was yesterday!
"Don't let your guard down"
_Thanks..._
We were in a hotel in Diamondhead MS, a half-mile from the water. Hotel set up on a bluff and waves crashed over the interstate...Mississippi coast lost 70,000 homes,, with 200,000 ppl homeless. Surge was 12 ft 15 miles inland.....
by 6:30 no power, gusts and noise..
ALF Raydough a similar storm in the Tampa Bay Area would be just as devastating if not more. We anticipate when Tampa bay’s nightmare storm happens storm surge could be over 30 feet at the highest and have great distance with lower than peak surge values
0:23 I like this theme local of the 8s
It's Stephen Arnold's "Eye Of The Storm".
Hurricane mode lol
you knew shit was about to go down whenever your heard the Storm Alert soundtrack.
This geniunely feels like a final boss or something. My parents are old enough to remember Katrina as it was plastered all over the news in 2005.
*Since I was a little kid back when Katrina arrived. I'm proud that I lived in Maryland when it happened.*
Crazy how they totally downplayed the potential damage to come in Mississippi. They don’t even acknowledge how much worst the east side of a hurricane is.
Man Jim Cantore has been at TWC forever. He was just in Naples, FL for Irma
lanceuppercut88 1986 Jim started there
He’s a dickhead though. I remember when he was out on Topsail island before Ophelia hit and we told him that the Camp LeJeune back gate was closed to civilians, he thought he could get through because “I’m Jim Cantore, they’ll let me through”. PMO stopped him and his crew at the back gate as he was trying to get up to Morehead City, and he threw one hell of a temper tantrum because they wouldn’t just let him mosey through the base.
Jim is to Weather Channel what Chris Berman is to ESPN or Al Roker to NBC, impervious to change and up for any assignment despite being there over 3 decades now
Ida is another one of the big storms.
Katrina, Andrew, and Ida. My top 3 hurricanes of the US
Hurricane Michael too
@@arianator4ever97 I said top 3, Micheal is maybe top 15 or top 10
I was a baby when this happened. About 6 months old. We lived in Florida. Katrina just barely missed us (we lived in the Tampa area)
We got a good amount of rain, but nothing too severe. Sad for those who were affected though.
Same here… people from New Orleans were coming to my hometown of Phoenix just to stay out of Katrina’s ominous wrath. I was 6 months and 17 days old when Katrina hit NOLA.
I was so sad as a kid when the weather channel changed their logo.
Me, too. I had no idea that was going to happen on August 15, 2005 (Which was shockingly exactly two weeks before Katrina made landfall). Plus, they even had that Local on The 8s bumper where it would show a man walking on a calm beach, and it would show a vertical blue rectangle (representing the logo) of a little dimension of bad weather. The man opens an umbrella as he walks through, then a woman off screen says:
"Now from The Weather Channel, here's your Local on the 8s."
The rectangle then disappears, and the words "Local on the 8s" appear, accompanied by a rather eerie version of the LOT8s jingle. I'd get scared when they'd go to commercials, because I knew that bumper was going to come on at any moment and catch me off guard! But then I eventually got used to it when it was brought back in 2007.
16 years later now I'm waiting on IDA
As of tomorrow, this will have been exactly 15 years ago.
And Laura came
and Ida came
13 years ago today.... Doesn’t even feel that long.
I remember walking outside and having to hold on to my mom’s hands just to not fly away
Wow, that’s scary! I’m glad you survived
This is nostalgic. Bad memories tho, very devastating ones. We lost everything including our house
Not only is Today the 16th Anniversary of Katrina, but guess what's also happening? Ida is gonna make landfall. Shocking, huh?
Similar intensity, similar track, and almost exact same spot Katrina made landfall at. The comparison is shockingly similar
In Tampa watching Ida, just like I was watching Katrina 16 years ago...
Wow, nostalgia
I evacuated to a relative's house with other friends and family. We had a lot of MREs after that. I emailed all my friends to see if they were ok. (They were!) And my cousin set up my Myspace account. Weird times.
This was the biggest hurricane eye i have ever seen!
I remember actually watching this. Nostalgia. Katrina was nasty. I didn't realize it was 15 years. I was 11 when that happened...
I was two 😂 I feel like I remember this though
Hurricane Katrina had sustained winds of 125 miles per hour when it made landfall in southeast Louisiana on August 29, 2005.
Anyone else get this in their recommendations during Hurricane Laura?
Walter White sally
We didn't see much rain where I live at in KY, but we actually had enough wind from the down graded Depression Katrina to lose power for a day.
I was 5 years old with my sisters and the babysitter, i remember quite a lot of how dangerous the storm was and how it was going to move north where I was in MN. Even though it died out once it moved north, I will always remember this storm.
My babysitters name was Katrina too, so that name is always going to be special for me.
Gives me chills everytime I see this. I’m from the delta of Mississippi.. I remember Katrina like it was yesterday
I'm from central Mississippi.
Katrina's sister Ida is on the way. Prayers up!
I’ll never forget being in that Hurricane and Hurricane Rita. The scariest devastating hurricanes I’ve ever been in.
Hard to believe this was 17 years ago I was only 12 then
I used to watch the weather channel for fun when I was a kid.
Next year this will be 20 years ago
Crazy to think that bad of a storm almost 20 years ago is literally historical, and our parents saw it on the news.
@ I was old enough to see it on the news and live coverage
@ Same loll!! Would have been crazy seeing it unfold, especially how it is now
I was in myrtle beach for a vacation with my parents during katrina. I was only 2 years old at the time. We were not affected though. My mom said she remembers watching live coverage of katrina on TWC during the times when red flags were put on the lifeguard stands which meant the ocean is rough. The reason why she watched TWC coverage of katrina was that she wanted to see how bad the damage was going to be.
Hurricane Ida 2021 forecast looks identical on the anniversary of Katrina..
No kidding!
I feel old now
I remember watching this storm on TV
0:24 For a split second I seriously thought they were going to play the Killer Instinct theme.
"2020 is the new 2005"
No doubt about that! Just received news today that Dorian, Laura, Eta and Iota have all been retired. Dorian and Laura have been replaced by "Dexter" and "Leah", respectively. The Greek Alphabet will no longer be used.
@@mikeyg.thecnanddisneyfan9069 So if there are extra hurricanes, what will replace them?
Don't know yet.
@@mikeyg.thecnanddisneyfan9069 Turns out the Auxiliary list will just consist of more regular names. They will be given names (first names)
Incredible music.
I was 15 years old when this monsters hit biloxi and left nothing but slabs.
Jared Lawrence You from Biloxi? I was 17 and that’s where I am from. We rode it out in North Gulfport with family though. Lived too close to the beach in Biloxi for comfort. Still live on the coast, but not in Biloxi anymore. Wouldn’t wish that storm on my worst enemy. Still depressing all these years later.
Anybody here because of Milton?
Me! I'm watching from afar.
The beginning literally sounds like I'm playing a Mega Man game. I love it
And Ida crashes the 16th anniversary!🌀
Crazy how Ida made landfall in nearly the exact same location exactly 16 years after Katrina.
The damage from that hurricane was old testament biblical in Biloxi, MS. My military unit was one of the first to deploy down there for cleanup and setting up temporary comms - and I couldn't believe the destruction I saw from Katrina...
i remember i was 6 1/2 years old and my sister had been born just 2 months earlier when this happened. i remember watching this coverage on tv
I live in Florida I remember watching this on the news with my parents my cousins live in New Orleans and they there home got hit by the hurricane
I remember the storm from Kentucky. It was enough of a stronghold that it knocked the power off in the Southern end of the county. We had to get lunch from the north end of town.
I remember Katrina and how the weather reporters were commenting on how odd it was that it was rotating in a clockwise direction this far north of the equator. They went on and on about that oddity and were very shocked. By the way, it was in the Gulf of Mexico at the time. Then after a break, they stopped talking about it and it was shown rotating counter-clockwise. I have been searching ever since for anyone that recorded it but have come up dry. I will never stop searching though since it was also very odd to me that it spun clockwise and then how they flipped the image.
Did anyone else witness that as well and if so did you happen to record it. If you did, please share it with me so I can stop searching and lay it to rest.
1.618033 3.14 wow your delusional
It never was anticyclonic. Shut the fuck up
The forecast music sounds like GTA V loading screen music
Nick Hudson not by any means. Shut the fuck up kid
I lived in Florida when I was so young, Hurricane Wilma Destroyed our home there
Sorry to hear that.
I was in my former auto shop in Syracuse New York watching this storm unfold and we tuned our NOAA Weather Radio to the National Weather Service in New Orleans issuing a hurricane warning for the state of Louisiana and the Gulf Coast of Mississippi on September 11th 2005 we had a national response team callout to New Orleans Louisiana because not only that hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans but also a number of EF5 tornadoes hit New Orleans as well so we responded from Syracuse New York to New Orleans Louisiana and got there within a few days and we head into the French Quarter and we see numerous amounts of damage from the storm and we knew people’s lives were totaled and that the survivors were buried underneath the rubble with the lost lives from all the homes totaled and leveled by the storm so we immediately took action and got to work right away and we used our saws as well as our pry bars to cut and pry away the broken pieces of wood as well as broken pieces of plaster and concrete to find the dead bodies and the survivors and after 5 hours of digging we found the survivors and pulled them to safety but we had a long 10 months of finding everyone that was still alive when they were buried underneath the rubble on every block around New Orleans and then we found the other survivors but we couldn’t find the deceased bodies because of how deep they were buried under the pile after 10 months of digging and searching we identified these dead bodies and did some DNA testing and analysis and found out who these people were and where they were from we then saw a set of wings badge and an identification card that had a name but I’m not gonna leak out his name since this dead person didn’t want his name leaked out to anyone that’s younger and wasn’t around at the time and we found out he was a captain of American Airlines and so we identified him by the name on his identification card and then we did a background check on this deceased man but found nothing except his recent jobs he was at before aviation school we found multiple deceased cops from the New Orleans Police Department and we identified these officers and we went to FEMA and they found more information about these late individuals and they found out about their past such as medical and mental and even criminal since some of the individuals were in the penitentiary not far from the French Quarter and so we then spent a few days or even a few months trying to rebuild the city of New Orleans and we got somewhere so on December 23rd 2006 we left New Orleans and headed back to Syracuse New York same idea for when Sandy had slammed the East Coast and caused major damage
I was 26 years old when this happened and getting my wisdom teeth out that day.
That was in 2005
The music at the beginning was nice
Wow cool! Hard to wrap my head around this being FIFTEEN WHOLE YEARS OLD. :/ I'm gonna be 27 soon. It's like wow I'm ancient now.
Same. I'll be 29 next month!
@@goblinlibrary280 ain't it horrible? lol
These were the days
They should obviously bring that storm work music back
Oh, they should! Plus, The Weather Channel needs to bring back the 3-Day Forecasts on the Satellite Local Forecast, and make it 2 Minutes like it used to be!
that's when my mom and dad first met each other back in 2005
Cool
@@BlueYT1107 Did you forget to switch accounts or did you reply to someone?
@@friesareyummy I replied to someone but he deleted the reply
@@BlueYT1107 Oh.
This is from The Weather Channel's master feed.
This is landfall and 150 mph winds but witch is almost cat 5 but now a days they say made landfall mph winds were 125
I’m here because of delta
This was, in reality, the peak and valley of western civilization put into one, the peak because the weather channel is so awesome, the valley because, well, Katrina was a horrible storm.
I remember leaving for Hurricane Katrina. We traveled almost every in Louisiana looking for a hotel. No luck. We had to sleep in the truck. It was so uncomfortable for weeks. When I came back to my house in Harvey, parts of the roof caved in. I lost so much of my clothes, my bed, and my dresser. That stuff can be replaced. The only thing that broke my heart into a billion pieces was that I had to leave my cats. I gave them one last hug and told I'm sorry. I still live with that regret to this day!
Ben Mason The apartment in Baton Rouge had no pets allowed policy. I had no one to take them.
The cats’ life matter more than a policy!
504BoyLuisLopez why u have to leave u poor cats
504BoyLuisLopez its not about harvey ;-;
504BoyLuisLopez ...Callous. Cold.
its been 15 years
Nearly 15 years later Laura would come.
Damn thats a huge Tornado warning My god
1:50 That red box that you see over Alabama, Florida (The Western Panhandle), Louisiana, and Mississippi is a Tornado Watch box.
I know someone who said they had to stay on their roof during the hurricane bc the storm surge was so bad and flooding was high
my weather is almost the exact same as the forecast for my city
Hurricane Katrina was a awesome storm did a lot of damage along the Louisiana and Mississippi coast line prayers and prayers and prayers
Does anyone know this song? I remember this song!
It's the Storm Alert Theme. I believe it was used from Katrina to 2008.
Algol Oh
Ryan R. The title is "Eye of the Storm" by Stephen Arnold Music
Shit still hurts smh...