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14:58 That teacher really, really annoys me. She’s screaming like that…really keeping the children safe 🙄. She’s was clearly too busy taking a video for social media to actually keep the children calm. Her reaction to seeing the school is quite frankly ridiculous. She’s alive and there are SMALL CHILDREN…what does she do? Walks around filming and screaming hysterically. Sam Peña is a true hero
This is why I refuse to live near water. I am fortunate to live in a region where very few natural disasters can potentially happen. I would never go on holiday and stay in accommodation that close to the ocean or close to a volcano or anything like that. You just never know what's going to happen. My heart broke for all the people who died and for their loved ones who survived. If there's an earthquake, you need to evacuate, because you don't know what's going to happen next. Luckily there are now early detection systems and warnings of tsunamis after these horrible events.
Everyone underestimated him bc he had a severe neck injury that required surgery but there’s pic of him in the game with a full back&neck brace on n he still bettering himself
as a professional storm chaser, I always love watching non-weather people react to these and seem so interested. I can tell you’re really into this and I love it💪
Trevor Jackson actually says his number 1 passion by far is music. He said on the R&B money podcast that he just did acting to help fund his music career. And his favorite RB artist is Chris
I went to elementary school in Omaha Nebraska and we lived in like a lower middle class neighborhood and all of our houses had crawl spaces under the house so that’s where we had to go. It was a small area and even as kids we couldn’t stand up but it was the only place to go. The entrances were always outside just right out back but we had a long coat closet in the middle of the house and my dad cut a door out of the floor and put hinges on so we didn’t have to go outside to get into the crawl space. That was convenient because right before the tornados there was hail and torrential rain.
Little tidbit: the Moore '99 beast was originally stated as the most powerful ever recorded, with peak winds of 318 mph as seen by a Doppler radar truck.
This is absolutely terrifying. I lived in a town called Murray during this time, which is about 45 minutes from Mayfield to the Southeast. I was there in Murray when this was happening. What's terrifying is how close it came to us and how sure I was it wasn't going to hit us. But our house didn't have a basement. So if it did hit us, we'd only have the protection of our inner bathroom. We had a lot of Tornado warnings during my 24 years of living in Kentucky. We only had one or two small tornados hit us and they did like EF1 or EF2 damage. So, when the sirens went off and they said there was a tornado touching down in Mayfield I couldn't believe that it was doing the amount of damage they said. I still said OUT LOUD that it wasn't a big deal. And that it wasn't gonna hit us. The winds were crazy. Branches and stuff littered our streets when it was over. I think that multiple things contributed to the amount of deaths in Mayfield. One of which being that, at least in Murray, I noticed that it is extremely rare for jouse to be built with a basement. My entire street didn't have a basement. And it looked like a lot of the Mayfield houses that were flattened didn't either. We are very under prepared for tornados in that sense. Another thing that contributed to it ia the mentality I had at the time of, "Oh, that would never happen to me. Tornados never touch down here." Which is scary that people are still like that after countless warnings. Finally, the candle factory. At the first hint of a cold front colliding with a warm front, they shoukd have let the employees go home with no threat of termination. That candle factory had no proper tornado shelter. People would've been better off leaving that warehouse, and finding a better place to ride out the tornado. The people who died, or got injured in that candle factory would be ok if they had let the employees leave. This is absolutely neglect, if not endangerment of employees. Which absolutely is a serious crime. That is probably the scariest event of my life so far, and I wasn't even scared during it. That's what scares me now. That I wasn't scared. During that tornado my mom and dad, 2 brothers and 2 sistersand I all crammed into the tiny hall bathroom and waited for the second all clear siren as well as the weather radio to tell us it was all clear before we came out. Super scary. I hope we can better prepare our selves, jobs, and especially homes for any more tornados.
gotta get yourself an adblocker! good react tho! you should find vids about joplin, el reno, or jarrell. Jarrell is by far the scariest imo not just because of the infamous dead man walking photo, but also because as an F5, it did the worst thing it could have done. it completely stalled over the town and basically just sat there blasting everything for several minutes instead of passing over edit: i see you DID watch about jarrell! time to go watch that react now lol! if you ever want any content to react to, i highly recommend watching Carly Anna WX, Swegle Studios, Alferia, and DEFINITELY pecos hank
5 people died in the hospital because there was no electricity to power their respirators. The town has mostly bounced back. Our population has risen and new businesses opened up. A few empty lots here and there. There is a beautiful park where the hospital used to be. They built a bigger, safer one on the other side of town. Something you may not know is we had 18 suicides in the few weeks after. Domestic violence rose and mental health providers were swamped with people who needed mental help. If you look at a video of 10 years after, you can see we had all ready come a long way.
the ear poppintg is the dead give away to get under something right away. felt that shit 3 times. twice on purpose by chasing a tornado. its otherworldly that air pressure difference. and when ur driving to work from northeast dallas to plano texas you call ur boss and its an amazon factory and you say "i dont wanna drive there its just a big ball of lightning at 10pm at night you know. 4 people died. on that road. one that i know of was a worker. with me. at amazon. told them to never contact me again ever.
joplin is the deadliest in history . its not the strongest . it was rain wrapped and hovered between ef3 and ef5 and very large. this was like the el reno tornado. but at night . so not a half to a full mile wide. it was a couple miles wide of mutliple vortecies surrounding a massive central one. and it straight up whiped out a town. i live by it. most people in that town litterally drove away before the weather people even said to take shelter.
ah greensburg it destroyed the entire town on a direct hit it was a wedge tornado. most people saw that shit an hour or more away just heading towards them and said "well im just gonna drive away" - so only 12 or so di8ed in the entire town. and most of who left if not most the town had underground basement level like a typical ranch house. they just saw it and drove away. notice no survivors from a trailor park.........