Adam, I'm just looking out for you, with weather reactions, just look out for copyright. Nick Sweigle, who you reacted to on this video, seems to be pretty cool with people reacting to his video. While he's not weather related, Lost In The Pond is as well okay with people reacting to his videos.
@Wx_TornadoDude0836 ай бұрын
4:30 hello, from Oklahoma ! my most recent tornado was on May 6th 2024
@billymurray13346 ай бұрын
I tend to set on the pourch and smoke a cigarette and watch. If it looks like it's going to come my way I'll go to a shelter. But if it looks like it's going to miss I'll just set and watch.
@Wx_TornadoDude0836 ай бұрын
@@billymurray1334 fr , my neighbors stand on their roof and watch the tornado
@billymurray13346 ай бұрын
@@Wx_TornadoDude083 I have seen people do that.
@jshadow626 ай бұрын
The tornado siren means its time to sit on the front porch with your phone out. The freight train sound is the sign to be in the basement 5 minutes ago. Its a difficult balance
@libertybell88526 ай бұрын
😂 I find that if it starts to sound a bit like a semi approaching, it's about time to get to said basement lol!!
@jshadow626 ай бұрын
@libertybell8852 I live near a highway, so I always hear semis, lol
@libertybell8852 like I said, it's a difficult balance lol
@Cchan536 ай бұрын
Yeah like the famous footage that an 85 yr old man took of the tornado coming right up to his house and the actual impact and destruction of him and his wife in it!. He stayed up stairs filming it while his wife stayed downstairs and in fact was killed! Why didn't she go in the basement? It was a 100 yr old farm house so must have had a basement. Was he telling her to wait? Was she disabled? Just ashame that he was aline downstairs and got killed! Frightening footage with sound!
@d0ublestr0ker0ll6 ай бұрын
You talked over "Susan get my pants"! The greatest tornado footage quote of all time. 15:05
@Timmah736 ай бұрын
We not only have sirens but also a loud booming voice like the voice of a god that blasts out "SEEK SHELTER NOW. A TORNADO HAS BEEN SPOTTED. SEEK SHELTER NOW." Which is Midwesterner for "Hey go outside and have a look"
@libertybell88526 ай бұрын
I'm an OKIE 😂 yes it's definitely code for "grab a beer and see if you can see it!"
@lightsalt85306 ай бұрын
Pretty much lol
@Kelli.B.6 ай бұрын
😂 Loved the "go outside" bit. I'm absolutely in the "I gotta see this" group.
@SGVRP-GV6 ай бұрын
The VEHICLE that was in the tornado was called the TIV-2 250+ Mph winds it was intercepting an EF4 tornado it is a crazy vehicle.
@peachyykeen805 ай бұрын
I moved from Oklahoma to North Carolina in 2019. I was so used to the siren testing happening every Saturday that when it didn't happen after i moved, i got concerned. There isn't a single damn tornado siren in North Carolina, at all. They use the emergency broadcasting system here to send text alerts...after the threat is done, cause that's useful. Not nearly as many tornados here as out in OK area, but I've been conditioned, dammit!
@manwithtwoeyes69116 ай бұрын
"the fucketh are you talking abouteth" -Adam Cousereth, 1024 ADeth
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
this made me laugh hahaha
@manwithtwoeyes69116 ай бұрын
@@MoreAdamCouser I am glad 😊
@manwithtwoeyes69116 ай бұрын
I mean I am gladeth
@atrmediaofficial6 ай бұрын
Jesus Christ Is The Only Way To Heaven Repent & Believe & Accept The Gift Of Salvation ✝️❤️🙏
@jmcsquared186 ай бұрын
@@atrmediaofficial take your delusions elsewhere, we're not buying.
@mrschurch19796 ай бұрын
The TIVs (Tornado Intercept Vehicles) had anchors they could deploy that would actually dig into the ground to keep the vehicle from getting sucked up, and that weird shape was both armor and designed to let wind and debris slide off rather than catch like it would if it was straight on. (Yeah, I was kind of addicted to those shows.)
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
thats so cool!
@lauradurango20186 ай бұрын
@@MoreAdamCouser Reed Timmer's Dominators all have that. His most current one is Dominator 3. It's a beautiful masterpiece. I'd love to ride out a tornado in that thing. Reed Timmer is actually my favorite chaser to watch. I love how excited he gets, it's like a little boy in a toy store told that he can get all the toys he wants, lol.
@death26416 ай бұрын
Didn't the first TIV owned by someone due to sean tweeted everyone to do a scavenger hunt to find the og car
@Wildxroses6 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in the heart of tornado alley. It’s something you both get used to it, and don’t. You get used to the constant warnings, you get used to the really severe storms. But taking a direct hit is something nobody can get used to. It’s always in the back of my mind when the sky gets dark. During storms, I sleep in my jeans, and keep my boots, and a coat next to the bed by me just in case. My grandfathers family was killed when one hit their farm in 1924.
@oklahomaair81975 ай бұрын
When I was a kid my mom always made sure we had our shoes by our bed on certain nights.
@glenmel786 ай бұрын
Ryan Hall is who to watch during storms. He predicted a small tornado to form in my area 20 minutes before NWS and it missed my house by 2 blocks. Got it on video by accident and sent it to him. I'm always watching him when bad weather is approaching. Bonus: he has like 6-8 storm chasers on live feed and during outbreaks you get to see many tornados.
@chrismaverick98286 ай бұрын
I saw his feed monday last week when things were popping up left and right and Barnsdall, OK got slammed. I was extremely impressed with his and his radar helper's predictions that were coming down a minute or two before NWS was even putting out alerts. I'm sure a lot of people made it to safety because of his feed. It's his calling, but I hope he doesn't burn himself out. That was a long week.
@WarhammerWings6 ай бұрын
Think you can upload the footage here?
@melissag.33256 ай бұрын
I've been watching Ryan for 3 years now. He is definitely recommend to watch during severe weather! Him and his team are on the ball when they are live!
@glenmel786 ай бұрын
@@WarhammerWings click my name and it'll bring you to the video. Its the only one I've ever uploaded so it's simple to find.
@nataliemadrigal8996 ай бұрын
No no no no no Reed Timmer and the Dominator is BOSS!
@katykwasny19515 ай бұрын
Ryan Hall and his team are phenomenal. Incomparable live coverage of severe weather events, plus the Y'all Squad goes out to impacted communities afterward to help however they can (provide food, internet, generators, etc). Just yesterday they covered the tornado outbreak that heavily impacted Iowa where they were able to get the word out about several unwarned storms before the NWS issued alerts. He works with a bunch of top notch chasers too, including the Reed Timmer mentioned in the video
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy6 ай бұрын
The Wizard of Oz tornado: A tube of muslin hung from a catwalk on the soundstage, where a man on a catwalk ran back and forth as a downward facing fan blew dust into it. That was recorded and then the footage was projected onto a screen behind the actors in the foreground.
@karlj80926 ай бұрын
This is how it was done! The fabric was an open weave, so the dust and dirt would come through it and look more realistic. The director wanted to continue trying to make it more realistic, but the producer said to stop,... They had already spent enough money.
@LadyBeyondTheWall6 ай бұрын
Sometimes when my eyes go down to the next comment I'm going to read, it doesn't start at the first few words and I end up looking at the middle or end of the first sentence. And this time, my brain didn't see "muslin", but "Muslim" lol.. So I read "muslim hung from a catwalk". I was so confused.
@Brighid456 ай бұрын
They used fuller's earth for the dirt--basically, ground up clay similar to cat litter. The stage crew doing the effect coughed up that stuff for days afterward.
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy6 ай бұрын
@@LadyBeyondTheWall Haha! That's funny! My autocorrect actually tried to change it to muslim. I can only imagine the shock when you read "They just hung a muslim from a catwalk" lol
@kelleewolfe28345 ай бұрын
Same
@colinbaxter47326 ай бұрын
Oklahoma in ground zero and right in the middle of Tornado Alley! The geography and weather at this time of year is ideal for the creation of tornados… and they get A LOT of them!!! 😱🌪️😱
@Nancy-g2o5 ай бұрын
I was in NE OK for seven years. I concluded that the weather was insane and came back to Wisconsin. (Not that WI doesn't get them.) There is nothing between the North Pole and the Equator than some barbed wire. Cold air and hot air do not play well together.
@rofyle6 ай бұрын
I'm in my 50s and have lived in "tornado alley" all my life. I have never heard tornadoes referred to as cyclones or whirlwinds. Cyclones are over the sea and whirlwinds are in the desert. Tornadoes are called either tornadoes or twisters, and they have always been called that.
@richarddraggan82906 ай бұрын
In the desert we call them dust devils. Whirlwinds are like a Kansas, midwest thing. Our always come with dust.
@knash976 ай бұрын
I'm sorry, you are mistaken. There are examples of tornadoes being called cyclones in period newspapers. For instance, in the 1906 tornado in Meridian, Mississippi, the headline for the Lima Daily News reads, "Fire follows fearful cyclone." With the subtitle "City of Meridian, Mississippi, in ruins." Later in the article, it states, "Information has reached Mobile[, Alabama,] by telephone. All telegraph wires are down. That a destructive tornado visited Meridian, Miss., killing 21 white persons and over a hundred colored people and damaging property to the extent of $1,500,000 (Sic)."
@knash976 ай бұрын
Sorry, you are mistaken. First the photo at 6:38 is label as a "Cyclone Taken at Kingsley, IA", and there are examples of them being called cyclones in period newspapers. For instance, in the 1906 tornado in Meridian, Mississippi, the headline for the Lima Daily News reads, "Fire Follows Fearful Cyclone." Subtitle city of "Meridian, Mississippi, In Ruins." Later in the article, it states, "Information has reached [Mobile, Alabama] by telephone. All telegraph wires are down. That a destructive tornado visited Meridian, Miss., killing 21 white persons and over a hundred [African Americans], and damaging property to the extent of $1,500,000."
@TheKuptis6 ай бұрын
I've lived in Texas most of my life and have heard them called that. Just depends on who's talking and/or region I guess.
@TheKuptis6 ай бұрын
@@richarddraggan8290 I've lived in Arizona which has some large dust devils but these in the video are not that.
@voragovoidling6 ай бұрын
The Wizard of Oz tornado scene was way ahead of its time in terms of effects. They used a muslin sock, shaped using chicken wire, connected to a gantry crane above the stage and a rod at the bottom, situated below the stage floor. They moved the crane and rod to give the tornado its sliding movement. Combine that with compressed air hoses shooting out a brown dust above and below the sock and a lot of trial and error, and you have a pretty sick practical effects tornado.
@a.k.a.Kaitlyn6 ай бұрын
Reed Timmer has a recent video from I think last year, where he successfully intercepted a tornado in Nebraska, and also some really cool drone footage of the intercept. It's definitely a video to watch! And Ryan Hall, Yall is the go-to for all our severe weather forecasting! His whole crew and the storm chasers he has working for him have saved COUNTLESS amount of lives! Giving us live streams of where tornados are on the ground, in the moment search and recovery on any impacted areas they run into and hr also raises money to help and give back to the areas that are hit with the devistation.
@knash976 ай бұрын
I've been waiting so long for someone to react to that TIV2 Brandon Ivey footage. It's wild watching them get hit by an EF-4 tornado, with debris sparking on the window - probably rocks or metal!
@UnchainedAmerica6 ай бұрын
Thought it was an EF3.
@Maxthepro10126 ай бұрын
@@UnchainedAmericaRated EF-3 , EF4 175-185 winds on the anemometer before it broke - but it seamed after it broke the tornado got more violent so ( possible ) maybe it had 200+ like 201-207 range
@peanutmwo60016 ай бұрын
when it comes to sheer numbers Texas takes first and Kansas takes second, BUT Oklahoma and Alabama take the cake when it comes to the most well-known and most powerful ones
@kalebbort92466 ай бұрын
Actually Florida gets the most per square mile but Texas Oklahoma etc gets the most powerful
@aureissimus6 ай бұрын
@@kalebbort9246 I just looked it up, and it's Oklahoma. I've lived in Florida for 53 years, and it can't touch Oklahoma. Look at graphic maps that show in colored dots every tornado for which there's a record, and it becomes obvious that while Florida has one spot that is active, the most active area takes up a big chunk of Oklahoma and spills over into north Texas and southern Kansas.
@mitchellgildea2546 ай бұрын
Came for the tornadoes, stayed for Adam vibing to the theme music
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@rickrevees99236 ай бұрын
@@MoreAdamCouserBro literally the other day when you let out your first tornado video we had three or four tornadoes in Oklahoma that night it was hilarious just the coincidence
@jmansmom62966 ай бұрын
Only people from Oklahoma would describe it as hilarious 😂. They all think we are crazy for living here and not being terrified of storms/tornadoes. Not to mention the running joke is when the clouds start getting dark you will find Oklahomans in their front yards looking up at the sky.
@mitchellgildea2546 ай бұрын
@@jmansmom6296 checks out 😂
@joshbarlow39915 ай бұрын
I heard it and immediately recognized it from all my time playing assassin's creed odyssey
@tornadospin96 ай бұрын
I lived through a tornado when I was four years old. At the time, I lived in a place in the United States that wasn't known for producing tornadoes. It was the middle of summer, and I remember standing in the sunroom and looking out of the window as our house began to be pelted with hail. The voice of the weatherman was suddenly cut off by a tornado warning that popped up on our TV and my father said that we needed to get to the basement. We rushed down the basement stairwell and huddled in a corner. On the far side of the basement was a sliding glass door through which you could partially see our backyard and the forest behind it. The vegetation thrashed about with blinding speed in the violent wind. We could hear the snapping and splintering of trees as the tornado tore through our backyard. I distinctly remember that the wind roared with an intensity that I have never experienced before nor since. Then it was over, as quickly as it had started, and it was replaced with a humid stillness that fell over us. In the end, we were alright as it was only a weak EF1 tornado. The tornado never directly struck our house, just passed very close to it (like within 80 yards). Dozens of trees were knocked down or were damaged to the point of needing to be cut down in our backyard but luckily, none of the trees fell on our house. We sustained some minor damage to the paneling on the back of our house and we needed to buy new wind chimes, but all of our windows were still intact. Overall, we were lucky and it could have been a lot worse. But it was definitely an experience that I will never forget.
@johnstup44796 ай бұрын
Adam, your facial expressions throughout these videos is priceless! 🤣🤣
@McMagmuh-X6 ай бұрын
Reed Timmer and Pecos Hank are my favorite storm chasers ever!
@benning1386 ай бұрын
We get 2 reaction videos in the same day???? Whaaaaa??? Good stuff bro! Cheers!
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
Hahaha yessir!
@SaltyPug5 ай бұрын
I love the shout out for Reed Timmer on that guys video. I watch him all the time. He’s still chasing storms
@robinhokenson41186 ай бұрын
I grew up in Washington State. My British buds, that would be the Pacific Northwest just above Oregon. Tornadoes are SUPER RARE in Washington!! three years ago we moved to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan (think LOW cost of living and no traffic jams!) The first week we lived here, we got a tornado warning! I never understood what "weather fear" is until then!
@alphawolf74176 ай бұрын
I'd recommend checking out the Tornado Alley coverages of Moore, Tuscaloosa, and of course Joplin. Some of the footage and people's reactions are just straight up nightmare fuel.
@opp10opp6 ай бұрын
Love for you to see some of Pecos Hank's videos, they are incredible!
@Midnight244356 ай бұрын
17:43 - Many folks don't know that at this very moment, the green objects that's rapidly flying outside the TIV (right as Adam takes his headphones off briefly) is quite literally the grass and hay being ripped out of the ground by the tornado. This tornado was violent enough to pull it straight out of the ground. Inside of the tornado certainly doesn't look anything like the movie Twister made it out to be; it's just death and chaos wrapped in darkness.
@hilarytimpe70565 ай бұрын
I can confirm. Besides the 70 year old Norway Pine and a Ceadar that were ripped out by the root, all my plants & bulbs were gone too. It was an EF1.
@dakotaparker83676 ай бұрын
As a born & bred Oklahoman, we're kinda used to it. We expect at least 3 to 4 tornadoes every stormy season lol so places like Moore gets hit more often but there are all over the place in Oklahoma & of course surrounding states each tornado season. Tornado alley stretches basically the entire length of the country from north to south, Oklahoma is just right in the middle of it.
@ChoosingKindnessAndLove2 ай бұрын
I lived in Moore for 3 years and it was straight up terrifying. Miss the people, but NOT the weather!
@dimension-ji7xk5 ай бұрын
I once had a tornado that was quite helpful. One summer afternoon in 2013 I was going to sweep off a concrete driveway. The very moment I set down the broom to begin sweeping a little tornado came down out of the sky and touched down right in front of my broom. It was the same width as my broom. It then moved around me and began sweeping back and forth across the driveway. It it never went over the edge of the driveway as it made its way back and forth down the driveway. And it was even making sweeping sounds as it swept . Upon complety sweeping the driveway it lifted back up into the sky never to be seen again. Another person was at the other end of the driveway and saw this happen and walked away scratching his head. The driveway got swept off and didn't have to do anything because God swept it off for me !
@Blizmogames13376 ай бұрын
the cause of the very loud sound for when in the tornado is due to 2 things... 1 being the winds.... 2 being the drop in pressure.
@spectre99576 ай бұрын
Being inside a tornado sounds like the world is grinding itself into oblivion. It sounds like two freight trains humping while screaming full-speed down the track. You feel the sound in your chest more than hear it. I've been inside two. Been near 5.
@livelifeTOrcr1p6 ай бұрын
Let that sink in edit cracked me up good. Beautiful
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
hahaha love ya bro
@rchaven96716 ай бұрын
im really enjoying the new content adam keep it up also i recommend the swegle studios video called tornado sirens are scary or emergency alert systems are scary
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
Thanks mate!
@amberlong54986 ай бұрын
Ok, I'm from Texas and the best way I can explain tornados, or rather tornado alley, it to imagine a valley. The Rocky Mountains in one side of the valley, and the Appalachians on the other side of the valley. The center of the valley is mostly smooth flat land. The Gulf of Mexico channels warm air up through Texas into this valley, and cold northern air is channeled down into this valley too. Where they meet, the warm rising air, shoves up under the cold falling air, and if conditions are just right, this creates a spiral formation of cold and warm air that will form tornados. The high mountains keep these winds pretty centralized, but if the wind shifts it can cause the tornado to travel. Most tornados do not cause much damage, as many hit in open fields, but if they hit or travel into a heavily populated area then their is a higher chance of damage and fatalities. Early tornados were so much worst because there were not many systems in place to alert and warn people of coming tornados. Technology has made it safer, but tornados can form very quickly and without much warning. Most communities, mine included, run monthly maintenance checks on their sirens, to make sure they will not fail when needed the most. I have been in several tornados, and it is weird. It starts out very loud, growing louder, until nearly deafening, then a strange quiet before it reverses. I usually worry that my loved ones will be hurt, lol even when our garage ended up on the roof. If you are interested, look on KZbin and there is a copy of an original 9mm film taken of Haskell Texas, where I live, after about 95% of it was wiped out by a series of tornados, according to my grandfather, who was a young man there at the time. ( 1962) kzbin.info/www/bejne/l3fJlXd_qtmiapY
@michaelgeorge-oj7mn6 ай бұрын
I know something about the Wizard of Oz featured tornado. The effect was decribed as created by spinning long lengths of cotton infused with coal dust in such a way to create a very convincing effect.
@kitskivich5 ай бұрын
Either last week or the week before, Reed Timmer recorded a multi-multi-vortex tornado during the severe weather in Iowa. I was astounded when I saw Timmer's live update videos popping up on social media throughout the day. I just checked and he now has his ground and drone footage compiled into a video entitled "THE MOST INCREDIBLE TORNADO VIDEO EVER CAPTURED." Gird your loins; it's terrifying.
@DemonKingFinnBalor19166 ай бұрын
Yep Oklahoma is the motherland of twister alley, Oklahoma is actually where the movie Twister was filmed.
@KaseyWithers5 ай бұрын
1:15 the problem with the sirens is that people hear them for years, or even their whole lives, and almost NEVER see or experience a tornado. Eventually, people aren't as concerned as they should be. Thats why most people go out to look, to see if they're actually in danger or not (and to see something "cool" they've never seen before). Its unfortunate, you should take shelter any time you recieve a warning, but it kinda makes sense too when you get "siren fatigue" as we call it. You straight up stop trusting the sirens after a while.
@Cupo6666 ай бұрын
I’m sure Indigenous people in tornado alley have thousands of years of tornado knowledge! I’ve seen one of those ropey little ones with a bunch of debris around it and it scared the heck out of me
@KonglomeratYT28 күн бұрын
Some "indigenous" peoples claim that processed cakes and fast food are foods important to their rituals and long-term beliefs. I wouldn't trust "thousands of years" of knowledge from a society that passes information by word of mouth. They lose the plot pretty quickly. Literally.
@melodygrim4716 ай бұрын
No, Adam, if they're over water, they're a waterspout. If it moves onto land, they become a tornado. At least, that's the way we call'em here in Florida, when we see one move off of the Gulf of Mexico onto the beach. Then everybody runs, because we're used to them dying down while they're still over water. Love ya, Dude!❤ (OH, people, get over it! I'm a grandmother!)
@retrosonghits6 ай бұрын
Adam, you're just too much, I mean funny! Ya got such a great sense of humor as ya comment. I'm from Northern California (Earthquake Country) so years later I moved to Tennessee for only a year. Talk about culture shock, cotton everywhere, people using words I never used for things but I remember wanting to experience a tornado. People must have thought I was crazy but just was hoping one would come. Unfortunately, only had a severe storm with lightening...I felt cheated!😂😂😂
@amateuryoutuber6 ай бұрын
You should react to the evolution of the emergency alert system by the same channel, it is very interesting.
@wickedmirage6 ай бұрын
Yes! I was hoping someone would suggest this.
@Dr_Kyutoko6 ай бұрын
I knew it was gonna be "Susan get my pants!" right as soon as I saw the tornado itself. LOL
@daphnea54475 ай бұрын
I hope Adam knows that Reed Timmer goes inside tornadoes routinely, multiple times a year. You should definitely react to some of his videos! Especially the Cole, OK tornado intercept! I watched it happen live and I was clenched the whole time.
@AntavasSpeaks6 ай бұрын
Oklahoma is the tornado's favorite hunting ground and trailers are it's favorite food.
@brendanrusso4594Ай бұрын
Hey bud! Love your work! I work in the film industry and heard some stories from FX people who worked with or trained under those old timers from back in the day. Apparently, for the Wizard of Oz tornado, they took one leg of a pair of black stockings, stretched it out so it would be more transparent, filled it with dirt, black paper, and other junk, stuck one end to the ground with a string so it could be pulled around a miniature landscape, and put the top on a rotating fan so it would spin out while pumping smoke onto the set from above and below :) They then took the footage of that, and projected it on a big flat translucent background behind the actors who are looking back and reacting to the footage in real time. No fancy editing compositing, they could see that all on set :)
@libertybell88526 ай бұрын
As an Okie, that meme in the beginning is ACCURATE!! 😂😂 We're just used to it. "Oh they said F2? Lets go look at it! Grab the alcohol!" 😂 Now, the BIG ones scare the hell out of everyone. But they are usually small in comparison to the big ones from Moore, Joplin, etc. Ive been in OK all my life and been through several. One spun up quite literally over my pond in 2019 then traveled diagonally and ripped the roof off of my place of employment. I was in the building, felt the pressure shift, told everyone "its here," then we heard wind, a BOOM, and dull roar then silence about 15 seconds later.
@thamertanner54486 ай бұрын
"himself... or herself... or itself, whatever it wants to be" I laughed so hard! This made my night, thank you!
@colinbaxter47326 ай бұрын
As for how the Tornado in “The Wizard of Oz” was made. I know this because I was a Universal Studios Tour Guide when I was in College. And SFX was on of the things we discussed on Tours. The effect was created by photographing a twisting woman’s silk stocking. 😂😂😂
@jessicamerriman23366 ай бұрын
I live in Oklahome. We get tornadoes all year around. The higgest cause is our location. We get warm gulf air and Colorado cold, dry weather. When they meet? Boom! I was a paramedic/firefighter and deputy sheriff. I have seen some funky stuff and lots of deaths. My property gets EF1 - EF2s hitting every year. Last tornado took my trailer skirting, topppled several ton trees and we never found our doghouse and storage building. I have seen big rig trailers in trees, standard rulers impaled in a tree 8 inches, private plane miles from the airport and the Air Force base, i served in Security Forces, evacuating all aircraft. We have the AWACS fleet, B-1 bombers (the bone), B-2 bomber, a doomesday plane and Navy aircraft. I cannot confirm or deny the presence of nuclear ordinance. It would be underground (safe) and would have ordinance tunnels to aircraft. They have failsafe and would not detonate even if left on a runway topside. Not that i know. 😏😏
@jeffcorbin14866 ай бұрын
Adam, I hope your channel continues to grow. You are hilarious and your content appeals to many different kinds of people. I’m an old retired cop and so were my uncle and grandfather. The scariest one I ever encountered was during a patrol of an interstate during a thunderstorm. Son of a bitch just dropped out of the sky about 500 yards to the west of me it was an F2 but I remember seeing a goat whirling in the air 100 feet up. I was on a freeway structure and the goat was right next to me. I was wondered what happened to him.
@GrandCamino66 ай бұрын
@MoreAdamCouser Aww man your thumbnail went over the middle of the windshield right near the best part of the video. A piece of debris hit the windshield and caused a spark from the friction extending across much of the surface. Insane video! I don’t think my anxiety could handle it either lol
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
It’s in the actual video :)
@nishaingle13274 ай бұрын
Fun fact! The depiction of the tornado in the wizard of oz was some cloth wrapped around on a coil that spinned. They filmed it seperatly from Dorothy, who the wind was done with fans and the dirt was added after through superimposing layers of the film. The noise of that tornado in the film was heavy fabric being pulled along a wodden wheel, which sounds eerily accurate to irl storms. (I just got soo excited you asked! I worked at the Wizard of Oz museum in Wamego Kansas for a while and I love the Wizard of Oz in general!)
@Andigirl19926 ай бұрын
I recently saw a video called Trapped Inside this Tornado by Tanner Charles. I think that tornado video is the one that freaked me the hell out more than any others. Between hearing the guys in the car screaming and pleading for their lives and the way the car looked afterward, it’s absolutely terrifying.
@debragonser7456 ай бұрын
Storm chaser videos are the best with their special made vehicles
@WanderingRoe6 ай бұрын
These tornado videos are addicting! Swegle Studios has some great tornado content to be sure. Very much looking forward to more of this stuff! 👏
@AngryKatie185 ай бұрын
Being inside of a tornado is like being in the ‘other side’ in “Silent Hill.” The lights go out, your little storm radio is just static, and that terrifying siren keeps blaring.
@Kelli.B.6 ай бұрын
When the movie Twister came out, everyone I knew (I was in grade 7) called it, "Kelli's movie" as my love for tornadoes and learning about them was as well known as my bright red hair!
@tazhienunurbusinezz17034 ай бұрын
That tornado vehicle that looks like a tank actually has super thick like bulletproof glass & I believe it sorta drills itself into the ground to anchor it in place against the incredibly powerful winds. I believe it even lowers so it's super low profile so the wind can't get under it easily. It's a really cool feat of engineering imo.
@jpjh88446 ай бұрын
In the past they edited film by cutting out individual clips and taping the film back together. Movie production still uses this technology to this day.
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
I’d love to see how that works!
@Nathan-sh1zg6 ай бұрын
17:42 "is that the actual sound?" yeah it is. basically there was so much constant audio input that it just messed up the sound, like how a rock concert recorded on a mobile phone never sounds good and it's all grainy and broke up. except put to the extreme. tornado noises are terrifying. they usually sound like a freight train when approaching mixed with screeching metal and your general extreme storm noises
@cherrypickerguitars6 ай бұрын
I’m a Canadian (Northern Ireland born) and I’m 66. I’ve experienced F3’s in both South Western Ontario and Southern Alberta. Americans don’t realize how frequently tornadoes occur north of the border! Peace
@LQOTW6 ай бұрын
Who says we don't? Some epic Canadian footage from about 5 or 6 years ago is online.
@Wildxroses6 ай бұрын
The sound is like a freight train going right over your head. Your ears pop, your hair stands on end, and you can feel the pressure changing.
@license2kilttheplaidlad6406 ай бұрын
In Michigan at least the people definitely watch the tornado before shelter but we all have basements so its quick work to take cover
@Wildxroses6 ай бұрын
My grandparents had just gotten married and were living in Dallas when the 1957 tornado hit downtown. I asked my grandmother about it recently. She said it was just awful. The noise was terrifying, and debris was everywhere. A predominantly black neighborhood was hit hard, and that’s where many of the deaths were. She said she’ll never forget it.
@Bernandez41396 ай бұрын
Before digital compositing, they used a matte process, which is basically a double exposure with parts shadowed out. You'd have the two films you want to combine, the matte, and the film you wanted to record on. First you'd take for example the film of the man moving in front of the window and shine a light through that onto the final film. Then you'd take the footage of the tornado, and shine a light through that onto the final film, but you'd have the matte film between them, which shadows out the parts of the tornado footage you don't want. This is what blue screens were for, creating a strong, clean matte. Blue worked best for film exposure, but digital sensors worked better with a green screen. The new Dune even used khaki colored "Sand Screens" to solve the problem of green or blue light being reflected back onto the actors.
@DomRhoades6 ай бұрын
My mother is a huge Wizard of Oz fan and knew a lot about behind the scenes stuff. That said, the tornado in Wizard of Oz is actually a leg of pantihose with a fan blowing down from the top to inflate it. It was attached to to different "gimbles" so the top and bottom could move independently. And to create the debris ball at the bottom I believe they used a very fine dust piled at the base so the fan would blow it out as they filmed.
@Mtndude766 ай бұрын
I'm the first one to go outside to see if I can see it. We had our sirens in our town go off 3 times last week, and their was a tornado that hit a town near us... northeast alabama here.
@MoreAdamCouser6 ай бұрын
Be safe!
@karladoesstuff6 ай бұрын
An EF2 came through the south end of my town last week, flattening trees and power poles, wrecking boat docks on the lake, and ripping the roof off of several condominiums.
@puppypoet3 ай бұрын
Regarding the Brandon Ivey video, at 2:07 you see a butter yellow swirl. That is literally the middle spinning thing of the tornado. And a few seconds later, the light disappears because the tornado is blocking it and almost smothering the light beam.
@shadowcastyt5 ай бұрын
I will say tornados are fascinating, if you want to see some great footage of both beautiful and down right terrifying tornados I’d recommend Pecos Hank
@kalebbort92466 ай бұрын
Florida has the most tornados per square mile. But Texas Oklahoma, Kansas are most known for tornados.
@hardtackbeans97906 ай бұрын
Oklahoma/Kansas border is the area that is a mega tornado magnet. You might be surprised how transfixed on a tornado you will be. Your ears pop from the pressure difference. Probably not the actual sound. But wind whipping by at 200 MPH is maxing out his audio levels.
@tj_27015 ай бұрын
Adam makes the best content and is an absolute Stud. 💚💚💚💚
@wyatt74656 ай бұрын
old school hollywood special effects relied on optical illusion so that tornado footage behind the man in the office, was probably the original tornado video being played on a screen outside the set the actor was in. making it appear like an active background, i recommend you look into videos that go into more details it's wild what they were able to do especially with Stunts.
@katiewennerberg2106 ай бұрын
You should look up the Dominator! Another storm chaser vehicle. I think he’s on version 4 now due to the vehicles getting totaled. These things start as regular cars, stuff like Suburbans, as evident by the headlights, that get heavily modified (duh) with everything from anchors to armor to bulletproof glass and then some. Essentially tanks, but for weather. These storm chasers, as cool as their footage is, are in extreme danger and sadly some pros have lost their lives doing this, one instance being particularly famous. I know a few meteorologists and storm chasers, and grew up always being told to take weather very seriously. For a really good reason.
@rhinoek5 ай бұрын
I can confirm Wichita Falls, Texas is a tornado hotspot. Lived there from when i was born in 2005 to 2015 and experienced a large amount of tornado and a random blizzard
@wizzka16 ай бұрын
Funny you are taking an interesting in tornados Adam, since there is going to be another Twister movie coming out this year. It's going to be called Twisters.
@andrewwatkins48526 ай бұрын
In the state of Georgia we have history of devastating tornadoes no joke that video of the Warner Robins tornado was legendary
@kbwolfe94913 ай бұрын
My sergeant used to tell us stories about the first live one caught in Wichita Falls. He lost his finger helping a guy pinned under a truck from it and later when he went to the hospital there were so many injured people they had them laid out on the grass outside the building. He saw a guy with his eyeball hanging from the socket. My stepmom went through it too and said the only thing left of the house they lived in was the closet they took shelter in.
@lelarich21485 ай бұрын
Yes, that is the sound of a tornado or all the camera could pick up on, at least. I was unfortunate enough to be caught close to a tornado when I was about 12 and it was one the worst experiences of my life. When the tornado got close I could feel the ground vibrating, the noise got so loud that I was unable to hear myself screaming and I later found out that both of my eardrums had burst.
@kevinbrink4236 ай бұрын
I saw the TIV 3 footage in IMAX format at a museum exhibit. Imagine that video with a wrap-around screen the size of a small house and speakers that shake your very bones. Terrifying.
@Ohlens5 ай бұрын
Tuesday May 7th we had our sirens going off, and I stepped outside, pulled Ryan Hall up and was listening to him talk about storms South of us. Then I glanced down at my phone to see that he suddenly noticed a tornado forming in a town 40 minutes North of us. It was crazy. Still stood outside to watch though, cause you know, it's what we do when we hear those sirens.
@suem60044 ай бұрын
Inside the Tornado. The sounds is pressure drop. The green stuff was shafts from a hay bail traveling 170mph... basically would go through your body. The animal that hit the screen was a baby calf. The spark that hit the screen was a circular saw that got caught up flying around. Basically, you would be in a blender or food processor. Your body would get minced from the debris going through your body and sanding it to bits.
@sargentrowell816 ай бұрын
It would take some absolutely INSANE winds to spin the TIV II when it's deployed properly in the path of a tornado. It has panels on the all sides so the wind can't get under it, and it has huge spikes on the left and right that embed themselves into the ground. Add on top of that it's own weight of nearly 15,000 pounds and it's going to take a hell of a lot to move it.
@reaIixx6 ай бұрын
Anything short of EF5 it should at least keep you inside the vehicle, although a strong EF4 may be able to dislodge it. But once you pass the 200mph mark the wind is just too strong, even the Dominator 3 couldn't survive that
@terryjones38274 ай бұрын
I live in Oklahoma but I've never been in a tornado. However, I've been through countless tornado warnings, and have seen so much damage from them.
@jamesmayes43516 ай бұрын
It must have been well over 100db in tgat TIV to peak out the mics so much. It must have sounded like being in the bowels of a volcano.
@gardenofsn59555 ай бұрын
I love Swegle Studios so much! I'd love seeing you react to even more of his stuff!
@Giganotus6 ай бұрын
There's no denying the power and lethality of a large tornado, but I definitely think there is a strange, eerie beauty to them. There's something captivating about them even when you know they're dangerous. Kinda like how people admire large predators like sharks, tigers, or crocodiles. It's awe at the power. I think it helps too that a lot of Americans living in the Midwest are used to them to a degree. We hear the sirens, go through the storms, we generally know what to expect. And most of the time, not much happens. Most tornadoes aren't super strong or cause a lot of damage. So we find them oddly beautiful, but still respect them.
@arewilliams3986 ай бұрын
Well our stormchasers do hurricanes and blizzards also...once you write down states in tornado alley, states prone to hurricanes and blizzards there is maybe 5-7 states to move to. LOL
@aura812956 ай бұрын
What's left when you add earthquakes, volcanos, droughts, wildfires and floods to the list?
@Kelli.B.6 ай бұрын
I grew up in California. When I was 9, my great grandma survived a brutal tornado in Kansas. My family was sent a tape (yes, I'm 40 and tapes are what we used) of their local news before and after the tornado hit. And that was it for me. I was obsessed. For my 16th birthday I didn't ask for a car. I begged to go on a 2 week "tour" with a company of experienced storm chasers during tornado season. Sadly, it was over $2,000 per person. I'll were forever be the idiot that refuses to take cover, as the magnificence and wonder cannot overcome the danger for me. If one day it's to my detriment, I will go with the childish wonder I've ever so craved. I see the horror and danger. I loathe the loss of family and that which is irreplaceable. My child like amazement yet remains.
@loribelknap81016 ай бұрын
I have lived in Oklahoma my whole life and it’s mostly around the Oklahoma City area , will the south of OKC that gets the biggest and most tornadoes. We get more tornadoes than any other state if you go by size. Of course Texas gets more , but Tx is bigger than France .
@artemis0096 ай бұрын
Reed's tornado transportation looks like a small tank going down the road
@crichards0375 ай бұрын
17:43 - I could be wrong, but at least regarding the noise in my tornado experience, it sounds like the mic is just constantly peaking. The EF1 I got caught in was incredibly loud, but certainly didn't sound like that...between the wind and the rain, the noise was more like a screech atop a growl, interspersed with the hail's drum solo lmao.
@enduringhope68596 ай бұрын
♥ your reactions!
@BuckyBarnesNC6 ай бұрын
I actually do work for a few popular tornado chasers here on KZbin. Evan Fryberger is one of them, you’d like him brother.
@keithmoore31996 ай бұрын
I think the tornado in the Wizard of Oz was a cloth on a rope that was hung from above and moved back and forth by stage hands.
@rama306 ай бұрын
You really need to watch "The 1966 Topeka Kansas tornado: Path of disaster" a 5-star documentary.
@NatPat-yj2or6 ай бұрын
That loud noise at the beginning just blew out the mid speaker on one of my $650 studio monitors. It's fine though because they have a lifetime warranty. I already filed the claim and put the speaker in a package to return it and they will ship the new one in the morning and it will arrive by the weekend. lol just a head's up Adam, to be careful about the volume!
@brantleyseay57666 ай бұрын
A great video to watch is from the tornadoTRX channel on the breakdown of the 2023 rolling fork EF4 tornado
@Sawdoff26 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Kansas. Seen many form but never had one hit our town while I lived there 🌪