This is seriously one of the most realistic and dread inducing scenarios I’ve ever watched. I genuinely was feeling scared for the first time in a very long time watching this scenario due to its realism. This has quickly become one of my favorite scenarios in the entire community. You’ve outdone yourself, incredible job!
I am planning a Hurricane Scenario of my own. It is for 2028 with Hurricane Laurie. I'm using Laurie as the name of the hurricane since it hasn't been used since 1969.
Jeez, first ClayRanger143 blows me away every single time he does a scenario, and now you hit me with a hurricane 200 miles inland! :) (I live on the Cabarrus/Rowan County line near Kannapolis.) This is a VERY well-done scenario. Couple minor text-to-speech glitches but nothing that wouldn't happen in real life. The concept of a literal cat 2-3 hurricane making it all the way to the Charlotte metro is terrifying. Things were bad enough down here, so I heard, when Hugo came through in 1989 at TS strength (albeit a strong one) after shredding its way up through SC.
I was just a wee lad when Hugo hit. I was only four years old at the time. I don't know if I really understood what was going on, but I know I was scared. I lived in Lexington at the time(SC born and raised, woooo). After Hugo came through, we had another storm come through Lexington a couple days later. According to my dad, I was playing outside and saw it getting cloudy. I then ran inside yelling 'AHHHH! HUGO'S BACK!'
Also I remember I actually was one freaking parish away from getting a extreme wind warning during Laura. To be honest I don’t know how my parents would of reacted to a extreme wind warning
I'm loving the video as someone who lives on the coast of NC and actually survived Florence. I do have some suggestions to improve this and also if you do anything else in either NC Or NYC id love to collaborate as I still live in NYC but was raised in NYC. Keep up the awesome videos! Thanks
Jesus, looks like Emily is freaking mad after it didn’t do much damage in 2005 even though it was a cat 5 hurricane. Sad thing is this is possibly the reality of hurricanes rn. If the conditions are freaking perfect
This is the Carolinas but I would be interested in what would happen if Maryland would take a direct impacts from a Hurricane. It's very rare for one to hit here and most of the time, they go around. What would happen if it was a direct hit. I'm nearly 50 and I have never known a hurricane to hit here directly in my lifetime.
(1:48:13) I think a better, more accurate statement regarding Emily's pressure would be: "This measurement by reconnaissance is one millibar lower than the 870 millibar pressure recorded in Super Typhoon Tip of 1979, making Hurricane Emily the most intense tropical cyclone ever recorded, barring any changes made in post-season analysis."
Me: oh, cool. Another scenario where Myrtle Beach gets featured. *reads a particular chilling comment* Me: Hey, it’s probably a better death than pink radioactive blobs, right? Right? *gets annihilated by nearly 200 mph winds* Me: well, shit, that escalated quickly. All joking aside, this was an excellent scenario, that with the FM radio segments and the NOAA bulletins and graphics alongside the usual NOAA radio discussions and warnings helping to visualize the scenario in a way most scenarios I’ve seen don’t. (Would have put this up sooner, but I had some shakeups happen in my life right around the time I finished the scenario.)
not disappointed at all :) actually been going through the older videos in order and came across uncalled for... that was a teaser wasn't it. And all these wonderful scenarios based in the carolinas!!!
She needs to slow down before she hits the Stream. The pressure drop and tightening of the Inner-Eye Wall NE, happen when the Trop System stalls and crawls. Here's hoping Myrtle gets taken out. Surf's Up at CapeHat!!!
That's a Chrysler Victory siren. It was powered by a V8 engine. None remain in service to this day, but there a few still out there, abandoned. Some are rusting away on top of some buildings in Chicago, while some are in private possession.
Oh dear god, I overstayed my time here way too far. At least I am SMART enough to move back to New Orleans where I came from! But this is NOT how I wanted my time in South Carolina to end. Also I’d be concerned if anyone was headed up to Norfolk… that’s gonna be playing it close, Best case scenario was an evacuation to Florida or at least DC…
" Residents who are still in the warned area and are somehow hearing this message must seek the most secure shelter, *and pray*. "
"Extreme Wind Emergency" IM SORRY WHAT??
this was amazing, i cannot with how good this scenario is and how much dread it made me feel
Dang, this has got to be one of the most realistic scenarios I’ve ever seen. As a South Carolinian you made me scared 😂
Same
Hello fellow Carolinian buddy
I was born and lived in North Carolina
im from nc and i gotta say the same thing
Hi ft
I visited Surfside Beach, South Carolina in May 2020. I was sleeping when Bertha went onshore. I also endured Cristobal later that year.
I remember that! I live in Goose Creek, and just after I took a shower, I saw on the news that Bertha formed and had already made landfall lmao
@@JamesConnor116 Bertha made landfall when I was asleep.
@AllenStormTracking I was in Surfside beach at the time.
Who’s here after Helene flooded the hell out of western North Carolina?
Really errie I watched this a month or so be Helene hit
Also it making landfall during the night has to be the most single scariest thing ever
In 2020, Bertha made landfall at night. I was asleep in Surfside Beach during that time.
This is seriously one of the most realistic and dread inducing scenarios I’ve ever watched. I genuinely was feeling scared for the first time in a very long time watching this scenario due to its realism. This has quickly become one of my favorite scenarios in the entire community. You’ve outdone yourself, incredible job!
Maaaaaaaaaaaaaan....you have outdid yourself with this one. Love it!!!!
I have one point of criticism:
The "E" name in 2022 is Earl
2023's "E" name, however, is Emily
1:17:00 190 mph is around 305 kph
I am planning a Hurricane Scenario of my own. It is for 2028 with Hurricane Laurie. I'm using Laurie as the name of the hurricane since it hasn't been used since 1969.
@@bardthenascarfanaticdragonok
x
@@VeraxifiedI wish Grant was a Hurricane Name.
Jeez, first ClayRanger143 blows me away every single time he does a scenario, and now you hit me with a hurricane 200 miles inland! :) (I live on the Cabarrus/Rowan County line near Kannapolis.)
This is a VERY well-done scenario. Couple minor text-to-speech glitches but nothing that wouldn't happen in real life. The concept of a literal cat 2-3 hurricane making it all the way to the Charlotte metro is terrifying. Things were bad enough down here, so I heard, when Hugo came through in 1989 at TS strength (albeit a strong one) after shredding its way up through SC.
Hugo was still hurricane force when it made it to Charlotte, i think it had 75-80 mph sustained winds with 90-100 mph gusts
I was just a wee lad when Hugo hit. I was only four years old at the time. I don't know if I really understood what was going on, but I know I was scared. I lived in Lexington at the time(SC born and raised, woooo).
After Hugo came through, we had another storm come through Lexington a couple days later. According to my dad, I was playing outside and saw it getting cloudy. I then ran inside yelling 'AHHHH! HUGO'S BACK!'
that clayranger part aged terribly i hope youve realized that
@@jardsboyfriendandhusbamd Yyyyyyep. I caught up on that part a few months ago after posting this. Yikes.
@@KobayashiBrynhild😂 Some stuff you learned from that storm
I've never been in a hurricane before so a category 1 hurricane would be horrific enough... I can't even imagine how catastrophic a category 5 is.
The answer is simple: you won't know it personally because you'd have run long beforehand
Amazing scenario as always!
I love ur vids
As a columbus county resident, i offically give a im dead out of 10 rating
Also I remember I actually was one freaking parish away from getting a extreme wind warning during Laura. To be honest I don’t know how my parents would of reacted to a extreme wind warning
I managed to get through Cristobal in 2020.
This is fantastic. One small thing, 190mph is 305kph, not 290. 290 is 181 mph.
YES! FINALLY a new long scenario i can fall asleep to!!
(edit: i use EAS scenarios to fall asleep so this is supposed to be a compliment lmao)
(That's not a compliment. For those wondering.)
@@ScrollsofSombra why are you always so mad at this guy lmao
@@ScrollsofSombra ??? i always fall asleep to EAS scenarios
@@Bitzy im kind of curious how you can fall asleep to eas scenarios especially when the sirens start!
I would retire immediately if I saw this in my comment section. You are definitely built different!
Very Impressive! I loved everything.❤
GYA-
I'm loving the video as someone who lives on the coast of NC and actually survived Florence. I do have some suggestions to improve this and also if you do anything else in either NC Or NYC id love to collaborate as I still live in NYC but was raised in NYC.
Keep up the awesome videos!
Thanks
How'd you survive Ida?
@@bardthenascarfanaticdragon Ida didn't hit us, do you mean Florence?
@@wukichra I was talking about Ida in 2021.
@@bardthenascarfanaticdragon I'm on the coast coast. Ida was a non event for us
@@wukichra Oh. I see. I experienced both Bertha and Cristobal in 2020.
This was a great scenario. Watched all 2 hours and 20 mins of it without stopping. 10/10
Can't wait.
Carolina Hurricanes, literally…
Fr this took the Carolina Hurricanes literally
1:03:50 That is no doubt One of the creepiest and most Terrifying sirens in EAS scenario history. Where did you get the siren?
It’s the Chrysler air raid siren
Basically "The Second Great Hurricane" or "The Great Hurricane of 2022"
Emily: Look, I pulled a Florence!
Jesus, looks like Emily is freaking mad after it didn’t do much damage in 2005 even though it was a cat 5 hurricane. Sad thing is this is possibly the reality of hurricanes rn. If the conditions are freaking perfect
Good to see some nice improvement from your other vids. Keep going man!
Fun fact: Horry County, SC is actually pronounced like or-ree county
Oh. I see. Not like the brand (Hori)?
@@bardthenascarfanaticdragon yeah
@@titanytofficial_ I see.
This scenario is great!
Good show, my friend! Great piece of viewing, this.
This is the Carolinas but I would be interested in what would happen if Maryland would take a direct impacts from a Hurricane. It's very rare for one to hit here and most of the time, they go around. What would happen if it was a direct hit. I'm nearly 50 and I have never known a hurricane to hit here directly in my lifetime.
(1:48:13) I think a better, more accurate statement regarding Emily's pressure would be: "This measurement by reconnaissance is one millibar lower than the 870 millibar pressure recorded in Super Typhoon Tip of 1979, making Hurricane Emily the most intense tropical cyclone ever recorded, barring any changes made in post-season analysis."
Me: oh, cool. Another scenario where Myrtle Beach gets featured.
*reads a particular chilling comment*
Me: Hey, it’s probably a better death than pink radioactive blobs, right? Right?
*gets annihilated by nearly 200 mph winds*
Me: well, shit, that escalated quickly.
All joking aside, this was an excellent scenario, that with the FM radio segments and the NOAA bulletins and graphics alongside the usual NOAA radio discussions and warnings helping to visualize the scenario in a way most scenarios I’ve seen don’t.
(Would have put this up sooner, but I had some shakeups happen in my life right around the time I finished the scenario.)
Good lord this is underrated, very awesome scenario 👏
That is the best EAS scenario movie
oooh this should be fun!!!
not disappointed at all :) actually been going through the older videos in order and came across uncalled for... that was a teaser wasn't it.
And all these wonderful scenarios based in the carolinas!!!
Amazing scenario!!!
She needs to slow down before she hits the Stream. The pressure drop and tightening of the Inner-Eye Wall NE, happen when the Trop System stalls and crawls. Here's hoping Myrtle gets taken out. Surf's Up at CapeHat!!!
The fact this could actually happen with Invest 95L (Future Tropical Depression Lee)
yeah it can’t be a good sign that the NHC immediately forecasted Lee to be a 140mph Cat 4…
@@wilyriley_ yeah
It happened with Helene in western NC (but it was incredibly catastrophic flooding instead of wind)
1:04:00 Only criticism here, I would barely expect anyone to have a Chrysler Siren active. Other than that, well done.
I have family all over North Carolina this could really happen oh God 🙏🙏
You realize Emily is on the list of the 2023 Atlantic Hurricane season
No Tornado Warning issued on EAS Scenario?
Let's go!
the taylor swift was so great i actually thought my spotify started playing for a sec
I went to the hurricane. WORST MISTAKE OF MY WHOLE 2 WEEKS.
Btw nice video
Oh, and I did a funny at the main comment. It was a meme!
It’s like Typhoon Odette but worse 10/10
Instead of a tropical cyclone, I like to pretend that my friend Emily is the subject of this video.
Imagine a chick walking out from the ocean and destroying SC just for shits and giggles
Which sirens are sounding at 1:29:29, apart from a Cold War bi-tone Carter?
That's a Chrysler Victory siren. It was powered by a V8 engine. None remain in service to this day, but there a few still out there, abandoned. Some are rusting away on top of some buildings in Chicago, while some are in private possession.
@@GMAuraeon there’s actually a Abandoned Chrysler Siren in Greenville SC on top of the Poinsett Hotel.
Oh dear god, I overstayed my time here way too far.
At least I am SMART enough to move back to New Orleans where I came from!
But this is NOT how I wanted my time in South Carolina to end.
Also I’d be concerned if anyone was headed up to Norfolk… that’s gonna be playing it close, Best case scenario was an evacuation to Florida or at least DC…
I hope that I never live to see the day that we get a storm this strong to hit ANYWHERE in the United States.
The scariest part of all this? This could happen. It's not a matter of if, only when.
... at the beginning, faded, my favorite Alan Walker song. Was added :')
ironically 2022 earl formed near this time near this general area
Around 27:00 I think there is a explosion noise in the background because my headphones picked up something in the background and I heard it
Uh.. Dillion? It’s Dillon.
Thank GOD they finally got rid of Myrtle Beach.
Great content but what the hell is lantitude?
This is just Atlantic Patricia it's fine.
Jacksonville was destroyed or damaged
How strong was Emily during it’s peak in this scenario?
A Category 5 hurricane, with 215mph/346kmph sustained winds, with 260mph gusts
1:08:55 thats my noaa station (im in wayne county)
10 seconds...
Oh goody
43:37