10 Historic US Blizzards and Winter Storms
20:25
When's the Next METEOR STORM??
19:38
Top 10 Worst US Hurricanes
21:05
5 ай бұрын
Twisters was GOOD
10:49
5 ай бұрын
Top 10 Famous Tornado Videos
22:02
Europe's Tornado Alleys
18:13
11 ай бұрын
Tornado Movies Ranked
22:31
Жыл бұрын
Evolution of Space Imagery
20:38
Жыл бұрын
Tornadoes are Scary...
16:53
Жыл бұрын
Evolution of Nuclear Bombs
19:13
Жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@Shane-sf9pv
@Shane-sf9pv 25 минут бұрын
That’s insane that the one lady flew 200 yards in a bathtub and managed to survive. Can’t imagine how traumatized she must have been
@Seahawksfan211
@Seahawksfan211 2 сағат бұрын
7:58 pov your at the dentist and they say open wide
@1969MARKETING
@1969MARKETING 2 сағат бұрын
what's crazy is how fast it's turning. even when it's full size it seems to be turning at a crazy rate. never seen any wedge tornado spinning that quickly.
@Nakyufcbj
@Nakyufcbj 3 сағат бұрын
Lo que más rabia da es que la gente se queda como estúpidos grabando el tornado inclusive cuando saben que el tornado está llenado a su dirección
@MasonThomas_yt
@MasonThomas_yt 3 сағат бұрын
Ion no bout anyone else but I'm just here for your soothing vocals and perdy face 🫶
@NotDaJayC
@NotDaJayC 5 сағат бұрын
I hate to be that guy but you spelled rogue wrong
@Cardinalium235
@Cardinalium235 5 сағат бұрын
6:08 idk why but that plume TERRIFIED me; I thought it was a big ass tornado
@dustinmoore2589
@dustinmoore2589 5 сағат бұрын
The snow of 93 helped the floods of 93 as it all melted away
@p2mAngil
@p2mAngil 5 сағат бұрын
Tyler is for the money and science but Kate's team is for the money
@jchooie
@jchooie 5 сағат бұрын
I live Alabama and in 2007 a tornado hit our highschool and killed 9 people, 8 were students needless to say I'm completely terrified of tornadoes
@ruthsaunders9507
@ruthsaunders9507 6 сағат бұрын
Storm Chaser Daniel Shaw is a good one to watch in Australia.
@Kavinplaysroblox
@Kavinplaysroblox 8 сағат бұрын
9:42 how dare you reveal the city I live in
@TalmadgeGray
@TalmadgeGray 9 сағат бұрын
Great content. This channel is one of my favorites.
@adammulanix6797
@adammulanix6797 10 сағат бұрын
Well, I never thought I'd grow a new appreciation for "Twister"...
@von.chaser
@von.chaser 11 сағат бұрын
Bro into the storm is GOATED
@ShadowDeathG
@ShadowDeathG 11 сағат бұрын
There was a crazy ice storm in Kentucky we had ice and no power for almost 2 weeks this was in like 2010-2007 something like that
@vibrant-Thunder-TDS
@vibrant-Thunder-TDS 11 сағат бұрын
1:51 bro got murdered by romans
@gchampi2
@gchampi2 13 сағат бұрын
Point of Order! The first tornado "Video" was the 1959 video referred to in the section about the 1964 Witchita Falls segment. Video originally was a format for broadcast TV transmission, not the content itself. Prior to Video cameras being used in-the-field for live broadcasts, all tornado footage would be cinefilm, of various sizes. 8mm & 16mm were common "domestic" formats, with 35mm & 70mm being the Cinema formats - referring to the image width on a piece of celluloid photographic film. This "Film" needed to be chemically converted from a negative to a positive image, and also chemically stabilized before it was viewable via a projector & screen setup. This is quite an expensive (and hazardous) process, which is one reason why tornado footage is so rare prior to the widespread adoption of domestic "Video" recorders & "Video Tapes" in the early/mid 1980's. Again, Video referred to the format, NOT the content. Why is any of this important? Image quality. Nowadays, 4K is regarded as "High Definition". 35mm cinefilm ranges from roughly 16K up to 32K native image quality, depending on the speed of the film used, and the lighting available when the original footage was shot. 70mm doubles that. It's why all those classic films from the 1950's, '60's & '70's look so good on Blu-Ray, while mid 1990's films or TV movies look terrible - the '90's stuff was shot on Video, not film. Yes, it was High Definition Video (for the time), but that isn't anything to write home about nowadays. Heck, the average smartphone has a higher image resolution nowadays than a $100,000+ 1990's High Definition Video camera...
@TiffanySanMiguel
@TiffanySanMiguel 16 сағат бұрын
0:34 that’s why my basketball hoop was knocked over
@MercuryKurogane
@MercuryKurogane 16 сағат бұрын
To be, tornado's were often this like otherworldy concept to me. I knew they could happen, we had some school training, but a lot of ours were earthquakes. We were under the impression that tornados were impossible here, we had the mountains on one side and the river on the other. It was probably stupid to think that, but I think it was 2017/2018 we had one form. It didn't affect my part of the city, but it did affect people I knew and went to school with and it was terrifying. The storms have gotten worse here even since that.
@kamuroshow4884
@kamuroshow4884 16 сағат бұрын
Hubble space telescope. You missed that. 😅 great video though! ❤
@F15ESTRIKEEAGLE-iw9nl
@F15ESTRIKEEAGLE-iw9nl 20 сағат бұрын
1:13 😳
@linzayyathant2005
@linzayyathant2005 20 сағат бұрын
How to stop tornadoes Don't have air
@slowdownnn11
@slowdownnn11 Күн бұрын
SWEGLE - IT HAPPENED! Video of meteor impact from home security camera with sound in PEI Canada, look it up if you haven’t seen it.
@LightningEthan
@LightningEthan 6 сағат бұрын
I was about to comment this haha, as soon as I saw that video it reminded me of swegle saying how cool it would be if the ring camera captured that meteor strike
@liamprogamer2322
@liamprogamer2322 Күн бұрын
Yall think the American EAS sound is terrifying? Listen to the canadian one
@rudolphmantoothbanksy5143
@rudolphmantoothbanksy5143 Күн бұрын
Will u marry me?
@8bearcare5
@8bearcare5 Күн бұрын
5 inches an hour is insane
@rosarioromo8288
@rosarioromo8288 Күн бұрын
My cousins dad went to visit jackson Misisipi from February 27-March 6 of 1966. One day after his birthday no March 3 he saw the candlestick park tornado
@VIDireWolfIV
@VIDireWolfIV Күн бұрын
You have such an underrated channel man these videos about other aspects of history are incredible!
@rudolphmantoothbanksy5143
@rudolphmantoothbanksy5143 Күн бұрын
Answer: never
@pinnnn2234
@pinnnn2234 Күн бұрын
and you know what else is massive?
@Gsdmom
@Gsdmom Күн бұрын
Moore is the Bullseye for tornado activity!!
@mrnoob4274
@mrnoob4274 Күн бұрын
Only cumulonimbus clouds can dislike this comment😅 🫐 🍑
@Xerdar36
@Xerdar36 Күн бұрын
SNOW DAY!!!!! LOL
@Kaboo784
@Kaboo784 Күн бұрын
The Mongolian tornado is so cool looking omg
@EileenLettsome-d4u
@EileenLettsome-d4u Күн бұрын
They look like eyeballs to me😂😂😂😂
@EileenLettsome-d4u
@EileenLettsome-d4u Күн бұрын
What the slip😂😂😂😂😂
@Af5j
@Af5j Күн бұрын
13:26 no matter what interceptor I’m NOT intercepting that🙏
@Glorious_Lily
@Glorious_Lily Күн бұрын
i was only 4 in 1996 but i do remember the blizzard! my dad somehow shoveled out a chunk for me & my little brother to play in & most of it was well over our heads 😂
@Cosmo_Sim
@Cosmo_Sim Күн бұрын
NOOOOO NOT ALBERT!😭
@ShauryaKulkarni-2518
@ShauryaKulkarni-2518 Күн бұрын
I guess it isn't intentional...but the whole video appeared to be a lot USA and Russia Centric...like...we don't even have mentions of ESA, JAXA, ISRO...or other countries. Like even for the ISS, we have modules from ESA and JAXA...and who can forget...the CANADARM! Other significant developments like growing cotton on the moon...which was carried out by Chang-e4...and the first country to land on the Moon's South Pole, India with the Chandrayaan-3...it just feels a bit diminishing. But all of that aside...its a wonderful video...goes all the way from the origins to the recent Starship landing...summing it up neatly. Kudos man, keep it up
@Miami.grackle
@Miami.grackle 2 күн бұрын
Glad you covered the Blizzard of 78 (both of them). I was in elementary school in NE Massachusetts (Haverhill), and a big weather fanatic even then. The February one was wicked. Both 78 storms were notable in my area, as well as a series of storms in January. As we know, Swegle is a weather channel, so my story might be interesting for someone. Northeast Massachusetts, Jan-Feb 1978: After earlier snow cover was wiped out be temperatures near 60 and heavy rain, winter returned with three big storms in one week starting on Jan 13th. The first two, a few days apart were nasty. Both had heavy snow, sleet, and freezing rain. The first had rain with temperatures in the upper teens. Then on the 20th, the big blizzard hit. Boston had two feet, one of the heaviest on record. Five days later, the Great 78 Blizzard, aka The Cleveland Bomb, arrived. For my area, it was a catastrophic (for snow fans) New England meltdown. Torrential rain and high winds blasted through, again with 60 degree temps. 2-3 feet of snow cover turned to about 8 inches of mush. Like in Ohio, the thermometer plummeted into the single digits. Unlike Ohio, it arrived just as the precipitation ended. In no time, all the slush froze solid. A delightfully calm, yet bitterly cold, spell finally came later. Ten days with sunny skies and rock hard frozen slush. On February 5th, the forecast warned of another winter storm. Unlike popular belief, a decent snowstorm (6+ inches), was indeed expected. Warnings came out, and early computer models picked it up. The real problem was the forecast- more correctly-forecasts, that failed in the earlier storms, especially the big blizzard back on the 20th. That storm was expected to change to rain, which in N Mass, it did not. Instead, we got a back-breaking, extremely heavy, wet snowfall. Even worse, timing was a little off with this latest storm. The flakes were to start at sunrise. As elsewhere, In Haverhill the morning was dry. Nor’easters (the cold, all snow ones) in New England often start with light snow, and light winds. Snow and wind intensities gradually worsen, until the full blizzard is on. This one, the actual great blizzard for us, began in a way that’s etched in my head. All morning it was windy. When the snow started it was a sudden white sheet flying by, fine and powdery. It got worse real fast. Didn’t resemble snow coming down. In some weird way, it was like the sheets of rain (where drops aren’t apparent) I’ve seen in the height of a few of the hurricanes we had in Miami, minus bath-water precipitation sheets, of course. As bad as the beginning was, it did get more severe over time- another clear memory. At home in late afternoon, the veil of white was now solid. Our house was an old wooden one, with creaks and loud wind. My parents stapled plastic on some of the windows (a 1970s thing?). I can’t forget the sound of wind and snow slashing into the material. Also it was very dark outside in the afternoon. Pretty unforgettable, all around. My brothers and my bedroom was on the second floor, with the big window facing the street (and the NE wind). For me especially, an exciting night. Didn’t sleep much; constantly got up to look out as everything was being buried. When dawn came, it was still very dark, very windy, and a fierce blizzard in progress. Whenever a snowstorm takes place at night, the brightness of the new fallen snow seems to glow from the streetlights and the approaching day, especially fun when nothing was there the night before. This time, It was very different, the snow on the ground seemed gray. The drifts were huge, cars, shrubs, everything, was buried. Unlike in every other storm, I felt a little frightened when I first looked outside that morning. The power was on at least. I also remember ‘The New Zoo Revue’ a bizarre kids program with full-animal suit characters, on the big old color TV downstairs. That moment was also a bit eerie, I think…We had no school for a long time, and normal winter vacation a week later, with weeks of winter fun. We made up those snowcover days for a few years. Hope reading all that was as incredible for you as it was reminiscing for me. I doubt it.. As many who ‘Survived the Blizzard of 78’ will tell you, it was, well, incredible! Thanks for all you do, the videos are great.
@mendyviola
@mendyviola 2 күн бұрын
The Blizzard of 1978 in Pittsburgh was “interesting”. We were literally snowed in our condo and my school was closed for a month. The 2011 freeze brought rolling blackouts in Houston, 2021 grid collapse in Texas. Moving south didn’t bring any relief. Was also in Houston for Harvey which was also “interesting”. It looks like Houston may get a noticeable amount of snow next week. It will shut down the city.
@OhioStormChaserthecat
@OhioStormChaserthecat 2 күн бұрын
2:30 nazi germany aka the third reich
@ashokkumar-zw8vi
@ashokkumar-zw8vi 2 күн бұрын
I agree with you about the video of Mars. Scientist are so bad at marketing but when people lost interest and budget got cut they complain. Its dumb. How you expect people to be excited for space when you dont even wanna put a camera for video? I cant believe in Voyager 1 they didnt put a camera at first. They dont want to. A woman scientist fought and managed to get the approval to put a camera and she the reason why we have beautiful images of Jupiter,Saturn,Uranus,Neptune,the heart shape on Pluto and infamous The Pale Blue Dot. If not for her we wouldnt have those amazing photos. That mission was a really big thing and they didnt even want a camera and just put some scientific instrument to measure some things. And now in Mars they can definitely take a 4k video or at least like 720p HD video on Mars but still they didnt do it. All we have is a bunch of photos. Like you said yeah it is still amazing but a video will be even better. Getting people interest in science and space is important. Thats how people get excited and will start to support the science and we can make big progress from there. Like getting a funding. Or more people join to further support and progress forward. But sadly mos of our scientists doesnt give a shit about like taking beatiful pictures and videos. They only care about data. And that is dumb. This is why not many people are interested in science. Because they are actively making stupid decision to not get people interested and excited about science. We went to the moon because of interest. And even after that our scientists doesnt realise that and keep getting their funds cut down. Until they realise their mistake,we will not be getting the interest and excitement more than what we have now. And it is sad
@jameshoare-le9qg
@jameshoare-le9qg 2 күн бұрын
England got hit by a tornado in November 2024 and October 2024
@coryhoornstra6781
@coryhoornstra6781 2 күн бұрын
Can't believe we were so jelly of Russia we faked a moon landing 😂 if you believe we went to space when a computer in 1969 was like a basic calculator you are a smooth 🧠 that probably also believes the government cares about you 😂.
@coryhoornstra6781
@coryhoornstra6781 2 күн бұрын
I FN love Sweeeeeegle 🎉🎉🎉
@Little_Donut1
@Little_Donut1 2 күн бұрын
This tornado feels like it was actually alive and sentient. Almost like it was possessed by hell itself. This was truly an evil storm.
@Redgamingtv191
@Redgamingtv191 2 күн бұрын
Bro love that moustache looks amazing