My sympathies and prayers for the residents of Sulphur. There's something that happens when storm chasers catch up to a tornado. It makes most get hung up and speak repeatedly the same thing over and over and that tends to overload the brain so new messages arent processed. Lol.. They do an awesome job .
I live in Sulphur. Storm Chasers saved my friends who were downtown in flower bluff. Bless the Storm Chasers for the work they do ❤️ it’s not just about footage it’s about warning people and getting them out!
I am a truck driver and I drive up to OKC through the week and THIS!!!...is what scares me to death...I pray for good weather and dry roads...and now I will pray for ALL of the victims of this tragedy...good luck.
Yeah being caught in your truck during one of these is the last place you want to be. Tonados are amazing things to see, until you have it take everything from you or worse.
How do 18 Wheeler trucks fair in tornados? I've seen them get knocked over onto their side, but will the tornado just throw it in the air like other stuff? Obviously projectiles are a big worry, but i think I'd feel safer in a truck than a car or maybe even a house
@@BrokedDownPalace we sit higher and we try all the time to keep our heads on a swivel to see everything if possible and you try to let the madness happen in front of you....HOPEFULLY...be safe.
@@fluffycloud2069 Professional Storm chasers are have advanced our understanding of tornadoes vastly. Their work is incredibly important and saves countless lives…
@@WG-tt6hk did you hear them alerting authorities about the tornado at the end? Warnings like those help towns turn on their tornado sirens early enough for people to heed them.
for those wondering why they are narrating, they are live-streaming the coverage and are making the people and news partners aware of what they are seeing. Also he kept driving because he already knew the tornadoes motion (southwest to northeast) from radar and knew it would not change. Once the driver saw it was in front of him (approaching from due west) he knew he was fine to continue driving. He is highly experienced and calculated in what he does.
@@kevinmathewson4272 I meant no disrespect to the chasers who passed in el Reno I’m from Oklahoma City & remember that day very well I guess I just put the emojis cause I truly wouldn’t trust a tornado for anything im stayin in the shelter !
If i were a chaser id be pissed if i wanted ppl to stop and they didnt. Id have to be the driver or have my own car idk ive seen so many videos of ppl saying "stop" or "turn around" and the driver is like "we are fine" . My life couldnt be mishandled like that xD
The car did not need to stop, the person shouting "stop" was talking out of fear. The driver knew what he was doing. Passengers are always more fearful than the driver because they don't feel entirely in control. It doesn't mean that you stop every time someone blurts it out.
@themechaniacal1558 I really don't care what someone else views as safe or not safe. If my gut is telling me to stop I will stop. That's exactly why I said I'd be my own driver or in my own car as the only driver so I wouldn't be left to someone else's opinion on whether om safe or not.period.
@@TeshiMeshi Such is your right to do so. But, from that attitude, if your passenger told you to stop, you wouldn't if you believed it was safe. So there.
the thing about this tornado and storm, is that the storm reached all the way to tulsa, and i was admiring the storm from a safe place while sulphur got hit by this i hope everyone's okay
@anjijack5392 that's what I thought, thank you! And to everyone who responded; thank you! But tbh I already knew those things. However, I personally rarely hear about night 🌪 🌪 🌪 🌪
@@N.P.T.V44 cause its easier to chase during the day, thats also when more reporters are live. The movie twister shows a depiction of a night tornado thats pretty accurate. People tend to let their guard down once they cant see how scarry the sky looks.
I didn’t hear a 5 year old. I heard men out storm chasing, trying to warn others of severe weather, and encountering a large tornado at night, a truly frightening and powerful natural disaster occurrence.
@@Future-zx9ts They must be hard of hearing then. All that yelling doesn't help if your trying to contact the police or weather service. It sounds like it must be for show. Tsk, tsk.
I thought I wouldnt get my bet in on the Oklahoma Thunder, but cell signals stayed open. I won big, and now I am ready for any Tornado that comes my way.
Maybe if Tony Perkins of Focus on the Family and others would stop being Talibangelical zealots, God wouldn't punish Oklahoma like this. Come on, Tony! Behave yourself. God bless the innocent people. 🙏