no. He didn't. He tracked the tornado using his tornado tracking satellites. it didn't strike his area. it was from Southeast Missouri to Southwest Indiana.
This was amazing and brought back memories/feelings I had forgotten about.. ...those of suspense & terror. Hunkering in tornado shelter at one house, bathroom at another, listening to only the weather radio and its frightfully inhuman voice and alarming buzzes.. feeling chills when the voice was suddenly interrupted by the long buzz.. '.. the National Weather Service in Norman, Oklahoma has issued a Tornado Warning for the following counties in western North Texas.. Wilbarger, Wichita.. ' I still live in Wichita Falls, and I must confess to being much less fearful as an adult, but during my childhood it seemed as if we were always under the gun during April & May with multiple scares possible every year. Many warned storms (and one funnel seen from front porch) and siren soundings remembered from back then, as well as seeing so many towering anvils as to think they were 'normal' t-storms. I haven't seen a good, proper anvil cloud in a few years.
You aren't the only one who isn't a fan of Tornadoes. I have never seen a tornado myself and I sure don't plan on viewing one anytime soon. I sure HOPE I don't see one.
Dude, this is BRILLIANT! Love the idea of taking classic events and doing this with them, I never would have thought of that. Talk about jumps - you got me several times!
I was listening to the guy talk about the weather, and i just kinda zoned out...and then my ears got blasted with the alert tone. I jumped really damn high. Great video!
I'll say, this is a good scenario you've set up. The rain, thunder, and even tornado siren ambience help illlustrate the whole thing, and even with the bot radio newscasters, things feel very grounded and as if it's happening for the very first time, even if it's based off of a historical event. Hats off to you. As an aside, I can't help but imagine this is set in a strange "it's actually the 1920s but with modern tech," lol.
This hit my great grandma and grandpas house in the little town called Shelburn, Indiana. You can still see the oath the tornado took with the trees slowly growing back and the ones that still stand with the nasty twist in them!
Spencer325 Poor attempt at making light of a horrible situation. Troll elsewhere. Trey Thompson, it must be fascinating (and eerie) to see those trees left by the tornado today.
If you really want to experience a scary tornado siren; pay a visit to Moore, Oklahoma in the spring. The people of Moore, Oklahoma know about terrifying tornadoes because they got hit by two devastating EF5 tornadoes on May 3, 1999 and May 20, 2013.
Except this year, I had a TOR in 2015, which is the only TOR I had in the 2010’s. Then, 2020 came, and I was placed under a ENH/SLGT risk. And then at 9:23 PM. A tornado warning was issued. On May 23, 2020, a TOR was issued for near my area, and I wasn’t scared. But I had people over so I had a little baby cry, it’s so sad! But I ran upstairs to grab the sirens, and I caught them, I was in extreme joy when I heard them, THEY WERE T-128’s AND A 2001-SRN, it could be new or old, we don’t know. June 26th, 2020. We are under an ENH risk. We have SVA 305, Fast forward to 6:24 PM. A tornado warning is issued, AGAIN. I CAUGHT SIRENS, AND THE TOR FOR MY COUNTY. I have that on YT, and the 2001 went off, so I knew it was coming. Then.. A moderate risk is issued for my area, Then IEMbot goes down.. I knew it, it’s a derecho. A PDS watch issued for my area, 426 actually. And then a few SVR’s and TOR’s are issued, Then, A TOR FOR MY COUNTY! I WAS IN THE SHELTER TOO! A EF-1 TORNADO WAS CLOSE TO MY HOUSE! AT ROCK VALLEY COLLEGE TOO! I was then under the HWW or High wind warning. Links for the videos soon:
More people need to do EAS videos based on what would happen if a historical disaster happened in current times! Here's a wonderful idea: Meteor (Barringer) Crater!
Do it, Dutch. Flagstaff, Prescott, Chandler (because everybody thinks of either Phoenix, Mesa, Scottsdale or Glendale), Page and Tucson, AZ, Farmington, Gallup and Albuquerque, NM, Durango, CO and Moab, UT would be the cities I'd like to see in this.
Illinois Stormwatch and in the warning I personally experienced they added Impact... You are in a life threatening situation. (Impacts here) To repeat a large, extremely dangerous and potentially deadly tornado is on the ground. To protect your life, Take cover now! Tornadoes are extremely difficult to see and confirm at night. Do not wait to see or hear the tornado. Another wording was "if you are in the Vergennes or elkville area, you need to be underground now."
this is pretty much, from what I deduce, what would happen if another like the tri-state tornado were to occur. from a master of the EAS Video, excellent work.
@@holytrinity2698 Basically died of their injuries a while after the tornado, not instantly. Tri-State had claimed its last victim in January 1926, 10 months afterwards.
I, Dr. Doofenshmirtz, have created the perfect creation! The Infection-Inator! This storm will be so powerful, not anyone but me will be alive in the ENTIRE TRI-STATE AREA!
The tri state area in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey is luckily a very poor spot for a tornado to form. Not a lot of flatland here, and the temperatures are usually the same for each state at every point of the year. The worst tornado we have had was in the early 1900’s, a F1 that killed around 37 people (I think) Edit: correction. We do have tornadoes quite often in New Jersey, but they are so small and weak that they barely cause any damage at all. Edit 2: another correction. The worst tornado we have ever had was in 1973. A F3 touched down near Flanders, destroyed part of a town and injured 12 people. They are so weak that no one has ever died from a tornado in NJ. There were also other reports of possibly worse ones, but no damage records have been found
Grew up 7 miles from Murphysboro. This scenario is SO much like storm and tornado warnings we had as a kid. We didn't have "smart stuff"; we had the radio, the tV (if it was working) and the sirens. This is very well done.
"Cute touch"?? This actually happened and those sirens actually go off during a tornado warning here in the Midwest. It's not cute, its terrifying. Your naive, clueless attitude is "cute" though
@@erindzurison7498 I meant "cute" as in "clever," smartass. Not "cute" like kittens. I live in Tornado Alley. I know how scary hearing that siren can be.
Correction, there were missing gaps in Obion County, Tennessee, so the tornado that hit Arkansas and Missouri and the tornado that hit Kentucky were seperated however the supercell is still considered Quad-State.
I live in Arkansas. Arkansas is not even in Tornado Alley and we still have tornadoes, some of them have been large and violent like the one that hit Mayflower in April of 2014. Tornadoes that happen in Arkansas are usually surrounded by heavy rain and cannot be seen making them more deadly.
The tornado that hit Villonia, AR on April 27, 2011 was pretty bad. Though I don't think that many people know about the Villonia tornado as it occurred on the same day as the tornado in Tuscaloosa, AL.
@@michaellovely6601 The Vilonia tornado was hidden from view by heavy rain, no one could see it coming. A rain wrapped tornado will cause the same kind of damage as a tornado that's not rain wrapped.
@@scotthayes4135 At least whenever a tornado warning is issued by the National Weather Service they will specify if the tornado is wrapped in rain or not. They will also encourage people to seek immediate shelter and to not wait to see or hear the tornado.
What is with the British guy that is also talking in this video besides the Paul II voice? How did you get the British voice on your scenario, +SPCparamus8900?
Well, you can take this one down, seeing as how the Tri-State worst case scenario actually happened in my home state and 3 others. My city was one that was hit by the second massive tornado.
Sorry, but I'm not going to take this scenario down because of the recent quad-state tornado. This video does not mean to satirize or offend those affected by the severe weather. In fact, this scenario is meant to be a what-if scenario of the Tri-State tornado back in the early 20th century. There's no way I could've predicted an even worse tornado would strike.
Could a scenario be done for the Flint, MI tornado of 1953, and one for the Grand Rapids, MI tornado of 1956, and one for the Kalamazoo, MI tornado of 1980?
Can you recreate the Autumn 1966 "Black Friday" Tornado Outbreak that happened in Iowa and make it more like a may 3 event in Iowa with A widespread freeze on the Saturday night afterwards and winter weather advisory for Northwest Iowa especially the Sioux land
Make the Belmond Tornado Very long track from Fort Dodge to just to south to Minnesota Border and a PDS Tornado Watch East of US 71 and North of US 34 and West of Highway 218
Plus numerous long tracked violent tornadoes hitting the towns of Oskaloosa, Adair, Atlantic, Bloomfield, Wayland, Fairfield, Sully, Grinnell, Tama, Toledo, Pella, Osceola, Mount Ayr, and Cedar Rapids (the West neighborhoods) plus Robins, Hiawatha and
Can you do a remake of the Perryville-Rockwood-Ava-Vergennes-Elkville-Christopher tornado on 02/28/2017? The warnings are on Iowa Mesonet archived with some searching. I have Audio of the warning for vergennes (and hail pelting the car. And an image of the thing picked up by my camera as I drove by it. Very similar path to Tri-State Tornado and a second one formed after the first. Honestly I didn't see the tornado until I reviewed what I recorded out my window. Then lime sized hail and me wondering if I was going away from or into the tornado. Luckily it was away. Inside the Bears Cage/mesocyclone!
@@sandrabaker5930 yes it was it was the longest lasting tornado ever seen even the el Reno tornado the largest tornado lasted only 40 minutes so this was a freak of nature to see it go this long with such a wide path
I know it's out of season, but perhaps you could do a blizzard scenario for the DFW Meteoplex? It's an event that would probably never happen in real life, but that's what makes it fun.
Good idea for a video as dallas isn't prepared for a blizzard and probably has never had one. im from DFW i was born here and raised here for all 13 years of my life. I remember in 2013 we got like 5 inches of snow and school was canceled for a long time. It was literally nothing, but yet people could barely drive in it. Lol. My grandparents live i n Detroit, MI and we go there in the winter so I've seen actual snow storms, not OMG IT SNOWED 1/2 AN INCH LAST NIGHT!!!! OMG OMG ITS A BLIZZARD!!! AAAHHHHH!!!!!!! which is what basically happens in dallas everytime it snows.
There is a possible chance of that happening in Texas. Do you remember the tornado that hit the metroplex of Texas the day after Christmas in 2015? Ever since then I have learned that you should never make statements like: "Oh that could never happen during the winter," because believe me Mother nature WILL prove you wrong.
I live in Alabama, so I'm used to tornado watches. I just grab my blanket & a pillow, put some flip flops on, and keep an eye on things. If things start to get dicey, I'll hightail it to the hallway that serves as my storm shelter [the bathtub in the bathroom near my shelter could be used as a last resort]. Thank god I live on the ground floor of my dorm building [I'm a freshman at the University of Alabama].
The Tornado Killed nearly 700 People. The Deadliest Tornado in US History. It stayed on the ground for 3 Hours and 37 Minutes. The Tornado traveled 219 Miles by crossing 3 States. Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana.
I have yet to find a scenario where a tornado like this hits the east coast including Washington DC and hits the White House. Would the president be takin down to the PEOC? Or to somewhere else.
@@rainer250 , actually, it would be seen as a relief by many, as polititards and activist groups that are of the left, right, middle, and fringe that keep arguing with one another will make the normal people like myself happy if we do not hear anything from them anymore.
While the video is well made...ya have to stop using red lettering against black background. It's impossible to read on a table or phone. Other than that, please continue to make and put up quality content. Thank you!
Maybe you could make a Nuclear Attack Scenario for Chicago or a tornado scenario for Cook County cities like Palatine, Arlington Heights and Barrington
This is such an interesting scenario if a real event that occurred in 1925 were to happen again. Fewer than over 625 people who perished in the event could’ve been prevented and if something like that ever happened in the same location for today, a lot of us are prepared to see the worst. If the Tornado Warning was invented in 1868, things could’ve changed. At the time they want to introduce weather warnings to increase public safety against hazardous weather at that time. Unfortunately, the US Weather Bureau banned the idea of introducing Tornado warnings as it could cause public scare. Way too late, a lot of people could’ve been saved. It all changed in 1948.
Does anyone know where the tornado dissipated? I've read articles saying it was 3 miles away from Petersburg but I would like to know approximately what the nearest landmark is.
Nate Bertholf valid tones only means they could cause an eas alert if picked up by the correct equipment which isn't v likely in the first place. the valid tone thing is mainly a legal precaution.
It came within 1/4 mile of my house when it crossed the Elkville/Vergennes blacktop. I was at work but my family was home. No damage to our house but it was like driving through a war zone coming home from work the next morning.
SPC Paramus, I have a video with an EAS from the Vergennes IL tornado with the hail. It is a real video if you want to use it. I only captured the last EAS attention burst. IDK if you could repair it? I am willing to say it is a Tornado Emergency. However it is over a rural area so the emergency part was ommitted.
That would be interesting. What makes the tornado that hit Washington, Illinois so shocking is the date it occurred: November 17th, 2013. People really don't expect a tornado to strike in late November. Because of this the residents of Washington had gone from being excited for Thanksgiving and Christmas to feeling helpless and heartbroken. To add to their misery it snowed a week after the tornado; which hindered cleanup efforts.
First of all, for the record, I grew up at Yukon in Texas County, MO (about 10 miles northwest of Summersville) and now live in West Plains, so I know the area well. Anyways, it's believed that last night (December 10, 2021), America may have seen a tornado that breaks some of the records set by the 1925 tri-state tornado. Last night's tornado was on the ground for 223 miles and, assuming it's proven to be from a single tornado, it's the first tornado in American history to traverse parts of FOUR states.
Doofenshmirtz accidentally used his "Self-Sustaining-Tornado-Inator" on the Tri-State Area when he didn't intend on using it yet.
no. He didn't. He tracked the tornado using his tornado tracking satellites. it didn't strike his area. it was from Southeast Missouri to Southwest Indiana.
@@bardthenascarfanaticdragon You ruined it you joke-nazi
@@SoldierMan755 Don't call me that.
@@bardthenascarfanaticdragon or what? You'll do a war? :D
@@SoldierMan755 No. I just don't want anyone calling me names that don't appeal to me. I just brought up another possible thing for Doofenshmirtz.
This was amazing and brought back memories/feelings I had forgotten about..
...those of suspense & terror. Hunkering in tornado shelter at one house, bathroom at another, listening to only the weather radio and its frightfully inhuman voice and alarming buzzes.. feeling chills when the voice was suddenly interrupted by the long buzz.. '.. the National Weather Service in Norman, Oklahoma has issued a Tornado Warning for the following counties in western North Texas.. Wilbarger, Wichita.. '
I still live in Wichita Falls, and I must confess to being much less fearful as an adult, but during my childhood it seemed as if we were always under the gun during April & May with multiple scares possible every year. Many warned storms (and one funnel seen from front porch) and siren soundings remembered from back then, as well as seeing so many towering anvils as to think they were 'normal' t-storms. I haven't seen a good, proper anvil cloud in a few years.
Did you go through the Wichita Falls Tornado of 1979 (the 40-year anniversary of that is coming up, BTW)...
You aren't the only one who isn't a fan of Tornadoes. I have never seen a tornado myself and I sure don't plan on viewing one anytime soon. I sure HOPE I don't see one.
Had today's weather forecasting and warning systems existed in 1925, the death toll would have been far, far less.
Thank you for telling us something that pretty much nobody had considered.
Idk after seeing 2011 high death tolls can still happen.
After the February 28, 2017 event, that supercell traveled through the same area with two long track tornadoes killing a total of 2 people
Definitely. In 1925 the only way to warn about a tornado was shouting “Hey Bill, There’s a ternada a-comin!”
@@F5Storm1 it just on depends who takes it seriously and who does not
Dude, this is BRILLIANT! Love the idea of taking classic events and doing this with them, I never would have thought of that. Talk about jumps - you got me several times!
I was listening to the guy talk about the weather, and i just kinda zoned out...and then my ears got blasted with the alert tone. I jumped really damn high. Great video!
I'll say, this is a good scenario you've set up. The rain, thunder, and even tornado siren ambience help illlustrate the whole thing, and even with the bot radio newscasters, things feel very grounded and as if it's happening for the very first time, even if it's based off of a historical event. Hats off to you.
As an aside, I can't help but imagine this is set in a strange "it's actually the 1920s but with modern tech," lol.
This hit my great grandma and grandpas house in the little town called Shelburn, Indiana. You can still see the oath the tornado took with the trees slowly growing back and the ones that still stand with the nasty twist in them!
Wow, never know tornadoes had to take an oath, how honorable.
Spencer325
Poor attempt at making light of a horrible situation. Troll elsewhere.
Trey Thompson, it must be fascinating (and eerie) to see those trees left by the tornado today.
@@erindzurison7498 What's the matter Popeye, can't you take a joke?
this is my favorite eas scenario.....the long low whale of the tornado siren as the storm moved from frona to murphysboro was really eerie.
If you really want to experience a scary tornado siren; pay a visit to Moore, Oklahoma in the spring. The people of Moore, Oklahoma know about terrifying tornadoes because they got hit by two devastating EF5 tornadoes on May 3, 1999 and May 20, 2013.
you misspelled wail.
@@bardthenascarfanaticdragon this siren speaks whale.
@@carlmclemore6104 Yeah. like Dory.
EAS: **comes on**
Noaa weather radio: the we-
EAS : **comes back**
SO TRUE LOL
the media is so ubiquitous it would be too hard to just listen to news and mass media, and then all of a sudden this happens.
Listening to this gave me anxiety and I don't even live in tornado alley.
Elizabeth Swann, getting out of bed is the most dangerous thing you can do. Tornado is definitely a force that isn't understood in the least
TRUE OMG
Except this year, I had a TOR in 2015, which is the only TOR I had in the 2010’s. Then, 2020 came, and I was placed under a ENH/SLGT risk. And then at 9:23 PM. A tornado warning was issued. On May 23, 2020, a TOR was issued for near my area, and I wasn’t scared. But I had people over so I had a little baby cry, it’s so sad! But I ran upstairs to grab the sirens, and I caught them, I was in extreme joy when I heard them, THEY WERE T-128’s AND A 2001-SRN, it could be new or old, we don’t know. June 26th, 2020. We are under an ENH risk. We have SVA 305, Fast forward to 6:24 PM. A tornado warning is issued, AGAIN. I CAUGHT SIRENS, AND THE TOR FOR MY COUNTY. I have that on YT, and the 2001 went off, so I knew it was coming. Then.. A moderate risk is issued for my area, Then IEMbot goes down.. I knew it, it’s a derecho. A PDS watch issued for my area, 426 actually. And then a few SVR’s and TOR’s are issued, Then, A TOR FOR MY COUNTY! I WAS IN THE SHELTER TOO! A EF-1 TORNADO WAS CLOSE TO MY HOUSE! AT ROCK VALLEY COLLEGE TOO! I was then under the HWW or High wind warning.
Links for the videos soon:
I live in tornado alley and you're more likely to die from a flash flood or car accident than a tornado.
@@ooo_Kim_Chi_ooo true lmao
More people need to do EAS videos based on what would happen if a historical disaster happened in current times!
Here's a wonderful idea: Meteor (Barringer) Crater!
Roy Goodhand you asked for it, If you want I can make that idea
Roy Goodhand Lived through the 27 April, 2011 outbreak in Tuscaloosa, AL., watching on TV as long as the power lasted. No thank you.
The 2012 solar storm
WW2
Do it, Dutch. Flagstaff, Prescott, Chandler (because everybody thinks of either Phoenix, Mesa, Scottsdale or Glendale), Page and Tucson, AZ, Farmington, Gallup and Albuquerque, NM, Durango, CO and Moab, UT would be the cities I'd like to see in this.
5:07 You gave me a bloody heart attack!
Same
Me too
I was scared of that when I was little but not anymore
Not me
That sometimes does that to me.
Who’s here after yesterday’s tornado outbreak?
I really like this!! I’ve been looking everywhere for a scenario including my town!!
NWS Paducah uses the Enhanced wording for "HAZARD..." "SOURCE..." and "IMPACT...", but during Severe Weather Statements they aren't used.
Illinois Stormwatch and in the warning I personally experienced they added Impact... You are in a life threatening situation. (Impacts here) To repeat a large, extremely dangerous and potentially deadly tornado is on the ground. To protect your life, Take cover now! Tornadoes are extremely difficult to see and confirm at night. Do not wait to see or hear the tornado.
Another wording was "if you are in the Vergennes or elkville area, you need to be underground now."
tyler stern sunset in Princeton was 7:01 pm. The tornado lifted before 5:00 pm.
24:31 I love the sound of a whelen tornado siren with the 560HZ sound card winding up. I don’t know why though
I don't like hearing the siren but I do like hearing the EAS alert tone go off. Don't know why either.
Who misses the Tom voice?
ShinobiTreecko8 ReactionsandRandom me :)
Not me
ShinobiTreecko8 Under Red Alert me :(
ShinobiTreecko8 Under Red Alert me
I grew up listening to Tom he was my favorite
this is pretty much, from what I deduce, what would happen if another like the tri-state tornado were to occur.
from a master of the EAS Video, excellent work.
Thanks for watching!
SPCparamus8900, I like how you decided to go back in time and do a tornado that was heavliy recognized by others. Otherwise, GREAT WORK!
This is what the final toll was for the tornado:
SE Missouri: 6 dead, 200+ injured, 6 fatally
Gorham: 30 dead, 170 injured, 6 fatally
Murphysboro: 188 dead, 1,086 injured, 46 fatally
De Soto: 56 dead, 105 injured, 5 fatally
Williamson County: 10 dead, 37 injured, 4 fatally
Franklin County, south of Royalton and Ziegler: 20 dead, 68 injured, 5 fatally
West Frankfort: 81 dead, 410 injured, 21 fatally
Caldwell: 24 dead, 40 injured, 2 fatally
Parrish: 28 dead, 60 injured, 5 fatally
Hamilton County: 28 dead, 86 injured, 9 fatally
White County: 17 dead, 64 injured, 11 fatally
Griffin: 41 dead, 202 injured, 5 fatally
Princeton: 38 dead, 152 injured, 6 fatally
whats fatally
This tornado: i have 438 dead
Original tri state tornado above 600 dead: lame
@@holytrinity2698 Basically died of their injuries a while after the tornado, not instantly. Tri-State had claimed its last victim in January 1926, 10 months afterwards.
I, Dr. Doofenshmirtz, have created the perfect creation!
The Infection-Inator!
This storm will be so powerful, not anyone but me will be alive in the ENTIRE TRI-STATE AREA!
I also used the Voice-In-Your-Head-Inator to make you read this my voice.
Lol 2nd doof joke I found
The tri state area in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey is luckily a very poor spot for a tornado to form. Not a lot of flatland here, and the temperatures are usually the same for each state at every point of the year. The worst tornado we have had was in the early 1900’s, a F1 that killed around 37 people (I think)
Edit: correction. We do have tornadoes quite often in New Jersey, but they are so small and weak that they barely cause any damage at all.
Edit 2: another correction. The worst tornado we have ever had was in 1973. A F3 touched down near Flanders, destroyed part of a town and injured 12 people. They are so weak that no one has ever died from a tornado in NJ. There were also other reports of possibly worse ones, but no damage records have been found
how much damage in mullica hill?
The sirens in the background during the Jackson County segment are a cute touch. This is a well-executed video.
Grew up 7 miles from Murphysboro. This scenario is SO much like storm and tornado warnings we had as a kid. We didn't have "smart stuff"; we had the radio, the tV (if it was working) and the sirens. This is very well done.
"Cute touch"?? This actually happened and those sirens actually go off during a tornado warning here in the Midwest. It's not cute, its terrifying.
Your naive, clueless attitude is "cute" though
@@erindzurison7498 I meant "cute" as in "clever," smartass. Not "cute" like kittens. I live in Tornado Alley. I know how scary hearing that siren can be.
This is good and to the point!
"The Quad-State Tornado" "4 states, 19 tornadoes, longest tracking tornado yet in a December."
I only just found this, but I love the idea of historical weather disasters being reimagined as modern scenarios.
Me: *pauses video but siren doesnt stop*
Also me: We dont have tornados i-
*dies from heat stroke*
❓
Tornadoes can happen anywhere
i love this video :) this is what got me into eas scenarios
The thunderstorm sound effects are awesome
The transmitter sound was the KIH20 Transmitter Power Equipment.
Well, to our utter surprise, the Tri state tornado has been beat out by the Quad state tornado.
Correction, there were missing gaps in Obion County, Tennessee, so the tornado that hit Arkansas and Missouri and the tornado that hit Kentucky were seperated however the supercell is still considered Quad-State.
Missouri-Illinois-indiana
fun fact. back in 1925, they couldn't say tornado on radio. The reason was it would freak people out.
I live in Arkansas. Arkansas is not even in Tornado Alley and we still have tornadoes, some of them have been large and violent like the one that hit Mayflower in April of 2014. Tornadoes that happen in Arkansas are usually surrounded by heavy rain and cannot be seen making them more deadly.
The tornado that hit Villonia, AR on April 27, 2011 was pretty bad. Though I don't think that many people know about the Villonia tornado as it occurred on the same day as the tornado in Tuscaloosa, AL.
@@michaellovely6601 The Vilonia tornado was hidden from view by heavy rain, no one could see it coming. A rain wrapped tornado will cause the same kind of damage as a tornado that's not rain wrapped.
@@scotthayes4135 At least whenever a tornado warning is issued by the National Weather Service they will specify if the tornado is wrapped in rain or not. They will also encourage people to seek immediate shelter and to not wait to see or hear the tornado.
This helps me sleep
What is with the British guy that is also talking in this video besides the Paul II voice? How did you get the British voice on your scenario, +SPCparamus8900?
Tri-State-Tornado 2: Electric Boogaloo
I'm a little bit worried that I watch the channel a lot, and I keep forgetting to subscribe.
this was a great recreation.
my state, indiana, was one of the states that was most impacted by this tornado. this creeps me out so much
Well, you can take this one down, seeing as how the Tri-State worst case scenario actually happened in my home state and 3 others. My city was one that was hit by the second massive tornado.
Sorry, but I'm not going to take this scenario down because of the recent quad-state tornado. This video does not mean to satirize or offend those affected by the severe weather. In fact, this scenario is meant to be a what-if scenario of the Tri-State tornado back in the early 20th century. There's no way I could've predicted an even worse tornado would strike.
Could a scenario be done for the Flint, MI tornado of 1953, and one for the Grand Rapids, MI tornado of 1956, and one for the Kalamazoo, MI tornado of 1980?
This sounds like the actual NWR Paul... Pretty neat.
You are freaking me out!!!
Can you do a eas scenario of the Topeka tornado of 1966
The BMH uses 2 different Pronunciation presets, and Springfield uses the non enhanced version, so that's coincidental.
I'm surprised no one did a Winter Storm Uri EAS scenario. That was easily the worst winter storm to hit Texas in recorded history.
Nothing pecos hank can’t outrun
While saving random animals from being run over along the way
@@notoriousblt1038Yep
Can you recreate the Autumn 1966 "Black Friday" Tornado Outbreak that happened in Iowa and make it more like a may 3 event in Iowa with A widespread freeze on the Saturday night afterwards and winter weather advisory for Northwest Iowa especially the Sioux land
Make the Belmond Tornado Very long track from Fort Dodge to just to south to Minnesota Border and a PDS Tornado Watch East of US 71 and North of US 34 and West of Highway 218
Independence and Urbana
Plus numerous long tracked violent tornadoes hitting the towns of Oskaloosa, Adair, Atlantic, Bloomfield, Wayland, Fairfield, Sully, Grinnell, Tama, Toledo, Pella, Osceola, Mount Ayr, and Cedar Rapids (the West neighborhoods) plus Robins, Hiawatha and
I already made it clear years back that I no longer make scenarios, I never took requests either. Sorry.
s p r i n g f i e l d
“Winter storm warning” had me laughing but great vid man
WSIU IS in a Basement. The studios are in the basement of the Performing Arts Building on the SIU campus.
Can you do a remake of the Perryville-Rockwood-Ava-Vergennes-Elkville-Christopher tornado on 02/28/2017? The warnings are on Iowa Mesonet archived with some searching. I have Audio of the warning for vergennes (and hail pelting the car. And an image of the thing picked up by my camera as I drove by it. Very similar path to Tri-State Tornado and a second one formed after the first. Honestly I didn't see the tornado until I reviewed what I recorded out my window. Then lime sized hail and me wondering if I was going away from or into the tornado. Luckily it was away. Inside the Bears Cage/mesocyclone!
I like this very well done
In just 40 minutes the tornado claimed the lives of 541 lives
F5Storm1 it killed 695 people in total
This tornado was on the ground for 3 hours!
@@sandrabaker5930 yes it was it was the longest lasting tornado ever seen even the el Reno tornado the largest tornado lasted only 40 minutes so this was a freak of nature to see it go this long with such a wide path
Connor Van Deventer and fastest tornado last eat for 1 hour and 25 mins
I know it's out of season, but perhaps you could do a blizzard scenario for the DFW Meteoplex? It's an event that would probably never happen in real life, but that's what makes it fun.
Cameron Cruz dude that would be awesome! I'm from DFW and I remember when it snowed just a little bit and ppl could barely drive in it
A blizzard wouldn't be THAT strange in DFW....
Good idea for a video as dallas isn't prepared for a blizzard and probably has never had one. im from DFW i was born here and raised here for all 13 years of my life. I remember in 2013 we got like 5 inches of snow and school was canceled for a long time. It was literally nothing, but yet people could barely drive in it. Lol. My grandparents live i n Detroit, MI and we go there in the winter so I've seen actual snow storms, not OMG IT SNOWED 1/2 AN INCH LAST NIGHT!!!! OMG OMG ITS A BLIZZARD!!! AAAHHHHH!!!!!!! which is what basically happens in dallas everytime it snows.
There is a possible chance of that happening in Texas. Do you remember the tornado that hit the metroplex of Texas the day after Christmas in 2015? Ever since then I have learned that you should never make statements like: "Oh that could never happen during the winter," because believe me Mother nature WILL prove you wrong.
@@amandasmith2399 that is true about mother nature
*BEHOLD MY TRI-STATE AREA TORNADO-INATOR!!*
lol
more like tomato-inator lmao
Finally a doof joke
Time Traveller: **sneezes**
The whole timeline:
Tri state tornado:
(Gets shifted 100 years into the future)
I live in Alabama, so I'm used to tornado watches. I just grab my blanket & a pillow, put some flip flops on, and keep an eye on things. If things start to get dicey, I'll hightail it to the hallway that serves as my storm shelter [the bathtub in the bathroom near my shelter could be used as a last resort]. Thank god I live on the ground floor of my dorm building [I'm a freshman at the University of Alabama].
americanpatriot Tuscaloosa got hit by a Ef4 tornado on April 27 2011
If eas existed back then be like:
Puro pfp
It did not exist all they had was radio and newspapers. There was no NWS then just the US Weather Bureau.
Actually the tri-state tornado was in march 18 1925
Claudio Ruiz, 2 days before Spring
The Tornado Killed nearly 700 People. The Deadliest Tornado in US History. It stayed on the ground for 3 Hours and 37 Minutes. The Tornado traveled 219 Miles by crossing 3 States. Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana.
Why do i torture myself with these
Do you mean the anniversary of the 1925 outbreak?
The tri-state tornado of 1925 was not an outbreak of tornadoes but rather a single tornado
@@mg3873
That's debated by experts. Some say that there could have been a "family " of tornadoes. Tbh that makes much more sense
M G maybe it was part of an outbreak?
It’s not 2025
Faby Ana we shall never know
this honestly creepy and scary t think about
Awesome!
something like this makes want something like this for a Krakatoa eruption, and knowing how it was likely the loudest sound ever heard on earth.
or one on the Peshtigo Wi fire
Doofenshmirtz really stepped it up
I have yet to find a scenario where a tornado like this hits the east coast including Washington DC and hits the White House. Would the president be takin down to the PEOC? Or to somewhere else.
Mr.Baofeng, an F 5 missed Washington DC by a few miles. It would have destroyed D.C. completely
Wasn't there something on The Weather Channel about a EF5 hitting DC before?
I’d like to see New York City
@@EdEddnEddyonline1 Yes, there was. I watched it. Really scary to imagine if it actually happens.
@@rainer250 , actually, it would be seen as a relief by many, as polititards and activist groups that are of the left, right, middle, and fringe that keep arguing with one another will make the normal people like myself happy if we do not hear anything from them anymore.
Why was I thinking about Doctor Doof when I saw the title? .=.
Same
While the video is well made...ya have to stop using red lettering against black background. It's impossible to read on a table or phone.
Other than that, please continue to make and put up quality content.
Thank you!
Maybe you could make a Nuclear Attack Scenario for Chicago or a tornado scenario for Cook County cities like Palatine, Arlington Heights and Barrington
0:03 Woop! Woop! That's the sound of the ERT!
if EAS systems were around back then all the casualties could have been toned down.
5:14 where can I find the original video of this sound?
If you're talking about the weather radio alert tone, I recorded that myself from my own radio.
Date: 3/18/2025
Love this, especially whenever my county went through it
You should do a eas SCNERIO of a bunch of scps breach containment
This is such an interesting scenario if a real event that occurred in 1925 were to happen again. Fewer than over 625 people who perished in the event could’ve been prevented and if something like that ever happened in the same location for today, a lot of us are prepared to see the worst.
If the Tornado Warning was invented in 1868, things could’ve changed. At the time they want to introduce weather warnings to increase public safety against hazardous weather at that time. Unfortunately, the US Weather Bureau banned the idea of introducing Tornado warnings as it could cause public scare. Way too late, a lot of people could’ve been saved. It all changed in 1948.
A TRI STATE tornado? Sounds like the work of doofenschmirtz if you know what I mean
Yeah...
Code Alpha Red
Does anyone know where the tornado dissipated? I've read articles saying it was 3 miles away from Petersburg but I would like to know approximately what the nearest landmark is.
www.researchgate.net/publication/268801867_The_1925_Tri-State_Tornado_Damage_Path_and_Associated_Storm_System
I think it dissipated in Southern Indiana
Can you please do the 2017 Feb 28 outbreak? Especially the Perryville MO tornado
This was actually pretty cool
Did you record those thunderstorm sounds?
I derived these sounds from public domain works.
5:14 why is a sangean sound playing?
Will valid tones matter if i have earbuds? I don't think they will do any harm. I am new to the valid tone warnings in these videos.
Nate Bertholf valid tones only means they could cause an eas alert if picked up by the correct equipment which isn't v likely in the first place. the valid tone thing is mainly a legal precaution.
February 28, 2017 was it's return, and I saw it, fortunately the death toll was much less.
F5Storm1 Same here, I drove in the path of it and into the hail shaft. It was amazing when the NWS damage survey showed how close it got to me.
I had to take shelter in a roadside ditch on I-55 near Perryville.
It came within 1/4 mile of my house when it crossed the Elkville/Vergennes blacktop. I was at work but my family was home. No damage to our house but it was like driving through a war zone coming home from work the next morning.
F5Storm1, 2017 had the least Tornadoes but, there were 2 violent Tornados. Strange !
looks like doof's weather machine broke
where did you get the voice?
Doofensmirtz is really getting desperate.
8:59... Did mobile homes exist in 1925???
This is not actually 1925. It is like what it would be like in those cities today.
SPC Paramus,
I have a video with an EAS from the Vergennes IL tornado with the hail. It is a real video if you want to use it. I only captured the last EAS attention burst. IDK if you could repair it? I am willing to say it is a Tornado Emergency. However it is over a rural area so the emergency part was ommitted.
Let's just say NWS Paducah switched to the initial preset to fix their "St. Louis" problem.
do an eas scenario based on the washington, il tornado in 2013.
That would be interesting. What makes the tornado that hit Washington, Illinois so shocking is the date it occurred: November 17th, 2013. People really don't expect a tornado to strike in late November. Because of this the residents of Washington had gone from being excited for Thanksgiving and Christmas to feeling helpless and heartbroken. To add to their misery it snowed a week after the tornado; which hindered cleanup efforts.
@@michaellovely6601 A large and extremely dangerous tornado hit St. David, IL today.
@@bardthenascarfanaticdragon Oh my God!
@@michaellovely6601 I hope everyone is alright.
should i watch these if i have anxiety?
And the TriState tornado just happened..
Next EAS scenario: *Severe thunderstorm in Iceland 🇮🇸*
Even though I know this happened nearly 100 years ago, I still felt my heart race when the eas buzzes sounded. Absolutely love it
Quad state tornado happened on Dec 10 2021
@@conorflynn6666 It didn’t
What is it with listening to the weather that makes you so relaxed or is it am I the only crazy one? That’s OK, you can tell me the truth!
695 percent died due to the tornado
noice
First of all, for the record, I grew up at Yukon in Texas County, MO (about 10 miles northwest of Summersville) and now live in West Plains, so I know the area well.
Anyways, it's believed that last night (December 10, 2021), America may have seen a tornado that breaks some of the records set by the 1925 tri-state tornado. Last night's tornado was on the ground for 223 miles and, assuming it's proven to be from a single tornado, it's the first tornado in American history to traverse parts of FOUR states.
Udea:If the El Reno tornado hit bridgecreek and moore like 1999