Yeah. Whoever created that sound must've had a deep understanding of aural psychology. I've heard it plenty since and never fails to make me scream a bit inside. Maybe that's what hearing it the first time in a day like that does. I remember looking at the Mc Intyres plume on Friday evening and saying they'd be fighting it in the ACT Saturday if it broke containment but I never expected it to reach the river.
Modulated ascending frequency tones are piercing both aurally and mentally in any situation - the alternation between a rising tone and a beep at the end repeating over and over creates a good mix between a simple attention tone that simply annoys you (looking at you USA) and something that lumps it all together in a simply chaotic and not so much scary as it is startling sound (looking at you NZ). The Australian SEWS tone is, by all means, something you can tell was at the very least designed by someone who takes it seriously. You can tell it's good because they've been using it at LEAST since Tracy.
I remember that day in 2003 and alert like yesterday. By this time Duffy was already up. My heart goes out to the current men and women fighting the fires in VIC and NSW.
@@venangoproductions The scariest part of the US alert tone is the header, which is used to designate where the warning reaches (I think, second hand information), the real "Alert tone" of the US alert system are the 2 "Beeps" heard after the header.
I was 1 when this happened, living in the Tuggeranong area. Apparently my mum wanted to leave in case things got worse down there but my dad was against it so we didn't leave. She told me that her, my dad, and the neighbours all sat on our roof watching the fires happen in the distance.
I was 16 at the time, our (now ex) friend was targeted, a group of farmers in my area's addict clinic made sure we Fadden Hills guys weren't facing anything, I owe those 7-8 men
I will never forget this day - I was trapped in the suburb of Duffy and was lucky to get out. Every house in the street went up. I was listening to the radio and this sound still chills. me 21 years later
Why did youtube algorithm decide to reccomend me EAS alarms and send me down this rabbit hole, only to remember I never got my 7th birthday. Sometimes I forget how far back the childhood trauma really is. It took finding this video to remind myself that it's okay to still feel affected by it.
As someone who has been involved in some fucked up stuff, I agree with this completely. It takes something random to send you back into it all, and it's about not letting it consume you, but not letting it be ignored. You have to acknowledge it's there.
Just to clear up confusion here, the sound isn't played for that long. The clip here is from a montage made by ABC radio of their content during the day, and the siren is just repeating at the end of that clip. The rest of the montage is cut off. The pictures are from the 9News camera operator who filmed that day. That footage is quite famous and the whole thing is on RU-vid.
the first 3 tones serve a similar purpose - they are not for tones sake (that's what the solid tone is for) but for communicating the information to the decoders at radio stations.