2:36 "Do not wait, do not look for the tornado. Take. Cover. NOW." Holy crap I got chills when I first heard that. I have seen many EAS scenarios on the internet, but none are as scary or intimidating as a real-life alarm. Especially one warning you of an EF5 tornado about to cross into a major city such as Oklahoma City.
Truly nightmarish. Of course I don't blame the announcer for sounding like he's on the verge of a nervous breakdown because this tornado outbreak occurred just two days after the devastating EF5 tornado in Joplin, Missouri. Fortunately for the residents of the Oklahoma City metro area and central Oklahoma in general; the media and the National Weather Service office in Norman, Oklahoma are extremely competent at covering severe weather situations. When the National Weather Service office in Norman issued a Tornado Watch for much of central Oklahoma at 1:10 PM Central Time on May 20th, 2013; three of the major TV stations in Oklahoma City (NBC affiliate KFOR Channel 4, ABC affiliate KOCO Channel 5, and CBS affiliate KWTV Channel 9) promptly suspended regular programming and went into wall-to-wall coverage of the weather. However, the city's Fox affiliate KOKH Channel 25 and their Telemundo affiliate KTUZ Channel 30 began covering the weather when the first thunderstorms erupted in southwestern Oklahoma. Personally for me it was utterly terrifying seeing the Moore, Oklahoma tornado on May 20th, 2013 touch down on air via helicopter footage from Channel 4.
@@TheGeeMaster1337 I don't blame the announcer for sounding like he's on the verge of a nervous breakdown because this tornado outbreak occurred just two days after the tornado that hit Joplin, Missouri. So he was doing the best that he could in order to warn, inform and protect the residents of the Oklahoma City metro area but was reminded of what had occurred in Joplin.
We live in northwest Arkansas and this system gave us heavy winds and small dime size hail, wasn’t the worst storm we saw but still scary for us, now yes in Oklahoma City it was bad!
I remember being in the path of this tornado when I was staying with my aunt. I used to have videos of it approaching her house directly. And believe me, When I first heard the emergency alert system? Like when it was telling us there was one on the ground to take shelter now? My heart skipped probably 1000 beats. If I’m not mistaking this is the one that happened on 31 May 2013, I know this EAS scenario was dated May 24th, (11 days after I turned 15) it was the scariest 2 weeks of my life.I mean I’m from South Carolina, so we are kind of use to bad weather in the summer and we can get tornadoes and have before but nothing that big!
The tornado that is used for this video is the tornado that hit El Reno, Oklahoma on May 24th, 2011; only two days after Joplin, Missouri was hit by a tornado.
@@michaellovely6601 I know. I watch Tornado videos. But it was the scariest situation of my life. I’m lucky I’m here. I don’t know if you believe me or really care honestly, but it was pretty frightening. My aunt remained homeless for a long time even after she got an insurance check. She decided to just buy RV and travel around the country.
@@YourFellowRNRSisterFan98 I believe you and I'm glad you survived. When I heard of the May 20 2013 tornado in Moore, Oklahoma I was horrified seeing the devastation and I started to cry when I learned that seven innocent children lost their lives at Plaza Towers Elementary School. At least nowadays Oklahoma has rather strict tornadic building codes to ensure safety and prevent loss of life.
@@michaellovely6601 yeah it was a very sad day, my mom was in another county she was so scared when authorities took me to a school or I don’t remember the entire details when she couldn’t find me anyways. My dad said she damn near had a heart attack. When she saw my aunts house. Even though she is the one that told me to get in shelter. If it were not for her I would not have believed a tornado was coming. I still didn’t when she called me from Walmart from I don’t know where, until they switched over to emergency broadcasting, and it showed the tornado and where it was at. Lucky for me I’m from South Carolina so I know what to do in this kind of situation. We have them to in South Carolina but not as much as anywhere in tornado alley. But you know at least I knew when they switched to emergency broadcast I knew it wasn’t no joke then. I was only about 14 or 15. So I was pretty scared . When I heard about the children that died my heart sank. Because I walked away unharmed I wish I could have helped save some of the children’s lives. Or all of them.
Can you blame him? This tornado occurred just two days after Joplin, Missouri was completely destroyed by an EF5 tornado on May 22nd, 2011; so he was trying to keep it together in order to warn and protect the residents of the Oklahoma City metro area but was reminded of what the residents of Joplin had experienced.
The guy clearly sounds like he's on the verge of having a nervous breakdown. I don't blame him for feeling like that because this tornado occurred just two days after Joplin, Missouri was completely destroyed by an EF5 tornado on May 22nd, 2011; so he was trying to keep it together in order to successfully warn the residents of the Oklahoma City metro area but was reminded of what the residents of Joplin had experienced.
You also have to realize that there was actually a tornadic supercell heading right Ford the national weather service office in Norman, where he is located. I’m sure that might have played a factor as well.
Hm.... If you make a Text to Speech using Playbasic (Which that could be impossible), How about combining them both! Where you can actually enter the EAS alert, Speech, and more...
2:36 "Do not wait, do not look for the tornado. Take. Cover. NOW." Holy crap I got chills when I first heard that. I have seen many EAS scenarios on the internet, but none are as scary or intimidating as a real-life alarm. Especially one warning you of an EF5 tornado about to cross into a major city such as Oklahoma City.
Truly nightmarish. Of course I don't blame the announcer for sounding like he's on the verge of a nervous breakdown because this tornado outbreak occurred just two days after the devastating EF5 tornado in Joplin, Missouri. Fortunately for the residents of the Oklahoma City metro area and central Oklahoma in general; the media and the National Weather Service office in Norman, Oklahoma are extremely competent at covering severe weather situations. When the National Weather Service office in Norman issued a Tornado Watch for much of central Oklahoma at 1:10 PM Central Time on May 20th, 2013; three of the major TV stations in Oklahoma City (NBC affiliate KFOR Channel 4, ABC affiliate KOCO Channel 5, and CBS affiliate KWTV Channel 9) promptly suspended regular programming and went into wall-to-wall coverage of the weather. However, the city's Fox affiliate KOKH Channel 25 and their Telemundo affiliate KTUZ Channel 30 began covering the weather when the first thunderstorms erupted in southwestern Oklahoma. Personally for me it was utterly terrifying seeing the Moore, Oklahoma tornado on May 20th, 2013 touch down on air via helicopter footage from Channel 4.
“Dangerous, deadly tornado outbreak is underway”. Jesus Christ that’s terrifying wording to hear.
Yeah Imagine having that pressure on you.
@@calebbwx You can hear him crack around 2:16
@@TheGeeMaster1337 I don't blame the announcer for sounding like he's on the verge of a nervous breakdown because this tornado outbreak occurred just two days after the tornado that hit Joplin, Missouri. So he was doing the best that he could in order to warn, inform and protect the residents of the Oklahoma City metro area but was reminded of what had occurred in Joplin.
@@michaellovely6601 honestly? neither do i. dude probably grew up in the place
The Day the Forgotten El Reno tornado occurred..
Yep. It occurred just two days after the tornado that hit Joplin, Missouri.
I will never forget. I was there if I hadn’t gotten into my aunts storm cellar when I did I’d be dead probably right now.
man, if my family still lived in El Reno. I’d be dead along with my family.
We live in northwest Arkansas and this system gave us heavy winds and small dime size hail, wasn’t the worst storm we saw but still scary for us, now yes in Oklahoma City it was bad!
To call any tornado a "damaging tornado" would be stating the obvious, as long as it's on the ground actively causing damage.
I remember this day. I was also in the High Risk area. We got several tornado warnings for my county. And an EF0 tornado just a mile from me.
Karson wow
Hey do you have any eas for missouri
I remember being in the path of this tornado when I was staying with my aunt. I used to have videos of it approaching her house directly. And believe me, When I first heard the emergency alert system? Like when it was telling us there was one on the ground to take shelter now? My heart skipped probably 1000 beats. If I’m not mistaking this is the one that happened on 31 May 2013, I know this EAS scenario was dated May 24th, (11 days after I turned 15) it was the scariest 2 weeks of my life.I mean I’m from South Carolina, so we are kind of use to bad weather in the summer and we can get tornadoes and have before but nothing that big!
The tornado that is used for this video is the tornado that hit El Reno, Oklahoma on May 24th, 2011; only two days after Joplin, Missouri was hit by a tornado.
@@michaellovely6601 I know. I watch Tornado videos. But it was the scariest situation of my life. I’m lucky I’m here. I don’t know if you believe me or really care honestly, but it was pretty frightening. My aunt remained homeless for a long time even after she got an insurance check. She decided to just buy RV and travel around the country.
@@YourFellowRNRSisterFan98 I believe you and I'm glad you survived. When I heard of the May 20 2013 tornado in Moore, Oklahoma I was horrified seeing the devastation and I started to cry when I learned that seven innocent children lost their lives at Plaza Towers Elementary School. At least nowadays Oklahoma has rather strict tornadic building codes to ensure safety and prevent loss of life.
@@michaellovely6601 yeah it was a very sad day, my mom was in another county she was so scared when authorities took me to a school or I don’t remember the entire details when she couldn’t find me anyways. My dad said she damn near had a heart attack. When she saw my aunts house. Even though she is the one that told me to get in shelter. If it were not for her I would not have believed a tornado was coming. I still didn’t when she called me from Walmart from I don’t know where, until they switched over to emergency broadcasting, and it showed the tornado and where it was at. Lucky for me I’m from South Carolina so I know what to do in this kind of situation. We have them to in South Carolina but not as much as anywhere in tornado alley. But you know at least I knew when they switched to emergency broadcast I knew it wasn’t no joke then. I was only about 14 or 15. So I was pretty scared . When I heard about the children that died my heart sank. Because I walked away unharmed I wish I could have helped save some of the children’s lives. Or all of them.
lived through it in Blanchard...The one out of Chickasha just missed me
Poor guy sounds like hes about to lose it.
Can you blame him? This tornado occurred just two days after Joplin, Missouri was completely destroyed by an EF5 tornado on May 22nd, 2011; so he was trying to keep it together in order to warn and protect the residents of the Oklahoma City metro area but was reminded of what the residents of Joplin had experienced.
@@michaellovely6601 nope cant blame him at all. Unprecedented circumstances
Not looking forward to the tornadoes but I'm looking forward to the spring storms
EF-5 Tornado?
@theEASexperience I was watching your videos and noted you replied to that guy... is there really going to be an EAS Creator 4.0?
TheEASExperience, can i make a request once you get your mock EAS stuff up again, cause I want to do a EAS myself.
this announcer sounds like the announcer in the tsunami warning videos you have. wierd.
@EduardoTVideos How is that an emergency?
@theEASexperience Will it include all screens instead of having to download each individually?
good work ;-)
man wit the EAS creator put the voice modulation and sound without that its just a screen with a scroll
You can hear the fear in this guys voice
The guy clearly sounds like he's on the verge of having a nervous breakdown. I don't blame him for feeling like that because this tornado occurred just two days after Joplin, Missouri was completely destroyed by an EF5 tornado on May 22nd, 2011; so he was trying to keep it together in order to successfully warn the residents of the Oklahoma City metro area but was reminded of what the residents of Joplin had experienced.
2:17
You also have to realize that there was actually a tornadic supercell heading right Ford the national weather service office in Norman, where he is located. I’m sure that might have played a factor as well.
@@terrellstorms I'm honestly surprised that he didn't end up shitting his pants in fear.
by chance how many of the usa's county codes do you have in your weather radio
Hm.... If you make a Text to Speech using Playbasic (Which that could be impossible), How about combining them both! Where you can actually enter the EAS alert, Speech, and more...
***** Text to Speech?
***** Oh that's right... You would need to hire a TTS specialist for that to create your own TTS. Like, A Employee at Sitepal.
i actually have these recorded also! cool.
Yes
Canadian county???????
It's the county just to the west of Oklahoma County, named for the Canadian River which forms its southern border.
What about a PSN Hacking EAS?