Local forecast recorded less than 18 hrs before Hurricane Katrina made landfall with part of a hurricane local statement. Notice the winds forecasted on the daypart forecast at 6am!!
@@mikeyg.thecnanddisneyfan9069 This was my era as well. Though for me, it was August 2003 until sometime late 2006, but 2005 probably the most. Especially when Katrina was happening
I love how instead of just saying " hurricane weather conditions" when it reads out the weather forecast, it just translates it to thunderstorm or heavy rain conditions not even mentioning a hurricane
0:26 Guys, the reason why I think it said “A Hurricane Warning,” two times is because not also is there a Hurricane Warning, there’s also an Inland Hurricane Warning.
They actually now have an alert known as the "Extreme Wind Warning", in which the code wasn't introduced until 2007 (two years after Katrina), but no Hurricane would be powerful enough to trigger the warning to be issued for nearly another decade. An Extreme Wind Warning is issued when winds that are associated with the Hurricane's Eyewall (115 MPH or higher) are forecasted to move onshore within the next hour or two after the warning is issued. It warns the winds can do damage that's equivalent to that of a Tornado, hence why it says, "Treat these imminent extreme winds as if a Tornado was approaching and move immediately to the safe room in your shelter. Take action now to protect your life!" In other words, you take your precautions like you would for a Tornado Warning.
@Brock101011 Rain Squalls is not a new term...rain squalls are typically found in hurricanes and tropical storms...its a band of heavy rain and wind that lasts about 10-20 min possibly longer...then it calms down with little or no rain and light winds for a brief period only to pick right back up again...the closer you get to the main circulation of the hurricane the quiet period doesnt last and its constant rain and wind until the storm has passed.
lol well actually i was relaxed..i was freaking out that morning when it was upgraded to a cat.5 but then its like what can you do whatever happens is gonna happen so i recorded a bunch of TWC and local stuff until the power went out around 4:30 am.
Pause it at 1:23 and take it all in. The bone chilling message from the NWS office in Slidell, the satellite radar loop, the fact that in 12 hours time new orleans and the Mississippi gulf coast would be unrecognizable
very true. in fact, my college professor said as much. because sandy was so massive, the winds had a hard time getting up to speed (no pun intended). he also thinks that the saffir-simpson scale should be modified to include pressure, like it once was. pressure is a more accurate representation of intensity, not wind speed.
This local forecast reminded me of when hurricane charley hit. We had just seen the eastern turn hours before and me and my family were huddled around the the tv, the last thing we saw before the power went out everywhere was the tropical update showing the rapid intensification of charlies and the local on the 8s that showed doppler radar of charlies highly defined eyewall hauling ass towards us at 25mph. Sent chills up my spine.
Watching this while Hurricane Florence is headed towards North and South Carolina... Anyone else think this would be much scarier if it were Jim Cantore's voice?
Aside from the two hurricane warnings (lol), my personal favorite part of this is how the wording "Direct strike of potentially catastrophic.." happens to scroll across right as the sat/rad transitions in. BTW, did you get my PM?
I lived through this............ I still live in New Orleans. I remember the night that I left like it was yesterday. On the night of aug 27 2005, the National Hurricane Center adjusted it's forecasts and the local TV stations started saying that the eye would roll right over New Orleans. At that point, my aunt decided to leave immediately and my mom did as well. If my mom & I hadn't convinced my dad to come along I don't know if he'd be alive today...... Looking back @ what is here on the inte
"A hurricane warning, a hurricane warning, a tornado watch, and a flash flood watch has been issued by the national weather service." Might as well just said "If you are reading this, get the heck out of dodge." Neat Video
It's really interesting how the Weather Channel said this is a catastophic and life threatening hurricane, like its a small storm or something.... This is just amazing, the moment right before this huge disaster captured on the weather channel.
I love that music! That dramatic local forecast tune appears whenever a hurricane is about to make landfall in the U.S. It doesn't matter where you live, that music will be on if something is about to make landfall.
0:26 A HURRICANE WARNING, A HURRICANE WARNING, A TORNADO WATCH, AND A FLASH FLOOD WARNING HAS BEEN ISSUED FOR OUR AREA BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE.
Hurricanes that changed building codes and thinking about Hurricanes are Andrew, Kartina and Havery. Andrew the wind of 175 mph , Kartina storm surge of 25 feet in Mississippi and Havery 30 to 60 inches of rain.
@Brock101011 ooh okay my fault...yeah during the '04 and '05 hurricane seasons we saw that a lot on TWC it was very active in this area those two years.
"A hurricane warning, a hurricane warning, a tornado watch, and a flash flood watch have been issued for our area by the National Weather Service." LOL I cracked up at that part.
My question is where exactly did they pull 104 MPH from? The rest of the forecast uses the nice round numbers such as 70,90,150 MPH...gotta think they just guessed on that one
It was 12 years ago at this time that Katrina was approaching the Gulf Coast. Now, 12 years later, Hurricane Harvey has stalled for Texas bringing catastrophic damage unprecedented. I am wondering if Harvey will surpass Katrina in terms of damage cost. Only time will tell. By the way, I also see that it is forecasted to bring heavy rain to Louisiana and Mississippi, though now where near to the extent of Texas. How much are you expecting on the MS Gulf Coast?
Hey guys I just got cell service back from Irma since I live in South Florida. Still waiting on power, would you guys say this season has been really active similar to 05? I was only 5 years old during that season.
Bands of heavy rain with gusty winds in the outer spiral bands of a hurricane, that usually occur before the widespread rain and constant wind with the main part of the hurricane.
Its funny how they issue high temperature forecasts for that day. Like anyone would care! "The wind will be blowin' at 150mph, but at least it will be 85 today." lol
I'm assuming Tropical Storm Isaac local forecasts and/or coverage will be posted soon. I was in east central MS when Katrina hit in 2005, we were surprised to see hurricane force winds even 3 hours inland. Still live here. Anxiety is not as high for Isaac. I've watched this clip off and on since when I first discovered it and is in my favorites collection. Watched it more often recently to see if Isaac would compare to Katrina and its a relief that it won't. Nevertheless, folks should still p
Wait when and how was this monetized? I have been seeing ads on this video. Can you monetize a video after its uploaded, did another company copyright claim this and monetize it, or was it monetized when it was uploaded back in 2007.
*A hurricane warning a hurricane warning a hurricane warning a hurricane warning a hurricane warning a severe hurricane warning a flash flood warning and a hurricane warning is in a effect for our area.*