I've missed Storm Stories. One of my favorite shows. When this show was originally on The Weather Channel I was pregnant with my son and bed ridden. Having The Weather Channel on 24/7 to watch especially this show was so relaxing to watch. So glad to see it's back.
I had to watch that one scene again where the lady with her two babies (I call all little kids ,babies) told them her husband won't let them leave. And his dumb butt talking about he heard if you lay in a tub of water that was the safest place during a hurricane. Who in the world told him that craziness? Thanks to his stupidity, he wiped out his entire family and his future family line. Those poor girls.
And another thing about him...if his wife and two kids answered the door his sorry a$$ was the only one in the tub. Besides I think he got mixed up with tornadoes but never heard about water in the tub. He was probably drunk. I think I'm mad at him.
That one hit me, too. I'm just too independent to let a looney man tell me I can't save my children! He was so ignorant (and her, too, I fear), and must have come from the superstitious back country where they worshipped snakes! Any way, I would have been out of there so fast and left him floating in the tub.
@@pegs1659 I agree with you, he was confused about when to hide in a tub, making sure he was the only one in there? I would have grabbed those little ones and run. He was too waterlogged and booze happy to do anything! They are safe with Jesus, but some people should never, never have kids.
We just went through Hurricane Michael.. a cat 5 and I will never stay for one again..been through them all my life never seen anything or heard anything like it
@@ariannagorbet6674 Michael was initially rated Cat 4 but was later upgraded to a 5 after all the damage was assessed. It's not the first time this has happened, either; Andrew was also upgraded to Cat 5 post analysis. Seeing as how Michael basically wiped Mexico Beach off the map, I think the Cat 5 rating was well deserved.
I had just moved to Biloxi with my Mom and Dad and brothers Eric and Jeff and sister Linda in August 1969 when my Dad was transferred to Keesler. I was 14. We rode the storm out in Bryan Hall on Keesler AFB.
How stupid was that dad to put his entire family in danger and them letting them die just because,he was stupid enough to think a safe area for tornadoes would be a safe place in a *CAT 5 HURRICANE?!*
And where in the flying fuck did the WATER part come from? If he were a real man he would have insisted on his wife and children being in the tub, or at least his children if his wife couldn't fit in there, too. My parents married three years before this happened, in 1966. They rode out hurricane Beulah in south Texas when my oldest sister was an infant, and my dad would have died before he ever let anything happen to my mom or her. He was forward thinking for the time, though... one of the first things he did after they married was get my mom a credit card that was solely in her name (which she couldn't do on her own back in the '60s) just in case something ever happened to him. He was always planning for the future to make sure his family was taken care of, and he's still of that mindset almost 58 years later.
My family had been in Gulfport on vacation for one day and had to evacuate. I was very young young but I remember see wood washing ashore before we left and then the traffic jam leaving.
Hurricane Camille was a 6 not a 5 and I will never forget Camille. We had 13 pine trees on our house which kept the roof from coming off. The sound I will never forget. The ceiling actually breathing in and out. All of the adults crying and calling on the name of Jesus. The last report was winds at 200 MPH. Like a huge tornado. Moving like a freight train and sounding like a jet going through your home.i will never forget the eye came over and it was very quiet and then all hell broke loose. If you experienced Camille you would never forget and you respect what a hurricane can do. I pray to God their will never be another Camille.
Jesus warned, "And there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring" (Luke 21:25, KJV). Both storms and tsunamis will be more frequent, and bigger. (Lituya Bay, 1958).
People in tornado country think it is most devastating, but at least it's over in minutes. They should think about it lasting 24+ hours, and still causing the same destruction when it's done. And nobody in the South has storm shelters anywhere near the coast, because you would drown in them!
Camille was a good "7". A five starts at 157mph. Camille is a verified from a number of sources to have had winds of 210mph with gusts of 225mph. The difference between grades or classes is about 15-20mph. A "1" starts at 75 and goes to 95 to 100, 2 goes to 115 a three goes from 115 to 130, a four 130 to 156 a five 156 to 176, a six 176 to 196, a seven 196 to 216. Camille, a good seven. On Monday Aug. 18, 1969 at the start of the CBS NEWS Walter Cronkite came on and said the WeTher Service was considering naming Camille a Tornocane it was so strong. They have tried to upgrade Andrew and downgrade Camille. They don't tell u that they don't really know how strong Camille was because the Hurricane Hunters refused to fly the last 2 missions out of fear of what happened to the plane in a similar storm in 1955 named Janet which passed over Swan Island off Belieze with 210mph. winds.a Taiwanese freighter in Gulfport harbor registered 180knot winds that converts to 210mph. The grass was blown out of the ground beyond the reach of the surge. A meteorologist in D.C. told me that phenomenon STARTS at 200mph. Another location recorded 180kts. The barometric pressure at landfall was .900milibars. Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas had pressure of .918 minibars and winds of 185, Michael which hit Mexico Bch. With 160mph winds had .936 minibars, Ian in SW Florida had 150 mph winds and .940 milbars There a direct correlation between wind strength and baro pressure. Lower pressure equals higher wind.
There is no such "official" thing as a category 6, 7, or whatever else people try to claim. The scale tops out at a 5 because at that point it doesn't matter; the destruction is going to be just as catastrophic with winds at those speeds.
I live in Mississippi and I’m young enough that I barely remember katrina and Ive hardly ever hear anyone talk abt Camille bc barely anyone alive now is old enough to remember it but do remember katrina
I lived 70 miles inland and all the telephone poles and larger trees were blown down,it looked like the comet impact at tunguski literally total devastation
I wish they'd focus on things like this instead of ice road whatever towing companies and the other bullshit reality shows that only have something to do with weather if you tilt your head to the side and squint.
My cousins, aunts, uncles and grandma went through Camille, while my immediate family and I were safe in New Hampshire. When we moved to the MS gulf coast, we heard all about it! The first hurricane warning we had after we moved north of Biloxi, to d'Iberville, we headed to northern MS where my dad's family was from. The hurricane veered off at the last second. For the 2nd hurricane warning, we decided to stay home north of Biloxi. That storm veered off, too. Needless to say, both times natives of the gulf coast were very, very nervous.
The water was over the streetlights. Keesler AFB is on the north side of railroad tracks which run parallel to the beach about a mile north. It was a terrifying time for a 14 year old and his brother and sisters . I can only imagine how catastrophic it as for those along H 90 along the beach.
This was like the 1900 Hurricane that hit Galveston. At least 6000 people died in that tiny island town. They were totally engulfed in water, and it was up to the roofs of those fine 3 story homes.
Camille is the ultimate what if it hit somewhere populated storm, what if a storm of that magnitude hit Miami, Tampa or Galveston. If a storm with the winds and surges of Camille took the route of the 1926 Great Miami Hurricane it would’ve made Andrew look like a minor freak wind event
@@molly-zx9cr well Galveston was flat island right on the coast and in 1900 they got hit by 135 mph winds and 15 foot surges. Camille was 40-50mph faster with surges 8-10’ higher
Bert case ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤Rest in peace🙏🌹❤ this hurricane changed Mississippi for a lot of things. 76 years old when he passed great reporter I think I'm right about the age❤ rest in peace Mr Case❤ my dad remembers Camille if there ever was a true statement she was nothing to play with😪😪😪😪😪 to all the people that lost their lives in this hurricane rest in peace please Jesus❤🙏 is there anybody out there that remembers Ingalls Shipbuilding Pascagoula Mississippi 🤔❤🙏
I didn't bother doing the calculations but, at the end when the log says "Anemometer failed at 200 knots", 200 knots is the equivalent of 230mph. Hurricane Camille had the power of an EF5 Tornado.
Probably. My parents were in their very early 20s in 1969 and they're still going strong at 76 years old. They married in 1966 and rode out hurricane Beulah together when my oldest sister was an infant. They lost all of their wedding photos save for two proofs in that storm. 🙁
If you're talking about the Loma Prieta quake on Oct. 17, 1989, I was there also. I was there for a horse show, which was cancelled. My horse and I were never so scared in our lives. (Jan Griffiths).
And also it was such a shock to the people that they just couldn't even fathom what was unfolding around them. Katrina was the worst for reasons by death toll, storm surge and government reaction time. Camille was just unfathomable at that time.
Katrina was a category 3 storm when it made landfall. Winds at 125mph. Camille was a category 5. Winds at 175 mph. Katrina was dangerous, but it was blown out of proportion like most news now days.
@@joshpittman6021 it was definitely not blown out of proportion, in fact it was the opposite for those outside of New Orleans. A lot of people focus on New Orleans (and rightfully so) with it practically being a man made catastrophe there, but in Mississippi where the storm actually hit, it caused damage that was almost reminiscent of Camille. The death toll of both in the Mississippi area is practically the same, but Katrinas storm surge was atleast 5ft higher where it made landfall, and 15ft higher than Camilles for surrounding areas due to it's sheer size. If New Orleans didn't even exist and Katrinas only impacts were in Mississippi, it'd still be one of costliest ($30 billion) and deadliest in American history
I was in Camille in 69….no one knew it would be like it was. We were told to put things up high because of the water surge. I lived alone that highway. Only thing we found was a glass.
What a summer! Woodstock with thousands of hippies were reveling in the heat of the East Coast, the very same weekend that Camilla hit Mississippi, covering the whole coastline. Four weeks earlier, Astronauts were walking on the moon, July, 1969! Vietnam was going strong with the Tet Offensive, and my 18 yr old brother, had been shipped there with the Marines to be based at Da Nang! My only child was 7 mos. old, and I wondered then if any of us on the Gulf Coast of Texas would survive the next few decades! Katrina came close a few decades later, devastating New Orleans, just over 200 miles away!
The pumps and levees failed from improper maintenance. Katrina and Camille were close to the same strength and speed.. Also part of the levee was opened to save downtown New Orleans
Amsel her house. I couldn’t see it either but I was there when Katrina hit and I know people who only could find what was once their place because of the color of the debris, say a light blue or a yellow or whatever.
It has ben verified... As false that is. There are other survivors from that apartment complex. Mrs. Gerlach was a lying egomaniac. And for whatever reason despite vocal survivors from the same building saying otherwise they go with that woman's fabrication.
I remember a Chuck Scarborough who was a reporter for, what I believe, was WNYW in New York City. One and the same? Camille must have been a category 5 hurricane.
I think you mean WNBC New York, He's been there since 1974 as a news anchor in various newscasts, winning a caseful of awards and honors along the way. Yeah, Camille was designated a category 5 hurricane, according to the then-newly established Saffir-Simpson scale, co-developed by Dr.Robert H. Simpson, director of the National Hurricane Center at the time of Camille.
😂10:38-11:05 There is a dangerous hurricane and storm outside, stay inside. The man: Oh great, let’s go open the door and walk out, nevermind let’s crawl out I am that fucking curious 🤣😂😭 Just wow lol, you would think he would get back after he sees how bad it is, but nah he decided to crawl out into the storm 😬😭
There is no way in hell that I would let my husband forbid me from leaving with my children in a life threatening situation. He was a coward anyway putting himself in the place he thought was safest instead of his wife and children. Ignorant doorstop. I'd have left him there to rot and deal with his "consequences" later once my children were safe.
The anemometer of a beached ship where Hurricane Camille made landfall "fails at 200 knots" = 230mph winds, which is almost certainly not sustained by any chance of the imagination but impressive nevertheless. Yet, based on a factual barometer pressure reading of 900mbar, they downgraded the sustained winds from 185mph to 175mph on reanalysis of historic hurricanes several years back ... perhaps, they need to be reevaluate their decision with regards to Camille.
When Katrina made landfall, her winds were far weaker than Camille's ... twice the size, bigger storm surge correct ... winds at landfall ... not even close.
Camille: HA! I have the second highest winds at us landfall, first being Labor Day and dorian at 185 mph winds, and me I had 175 mph winds. Allen: hahahaha, take that, I'm stronger than those 2 lame storms, I had 190 mph winds. Camille and Labor Day and dorian: Wait wait wait that does not count, you had cheap 115 mph winds at landfall that makes u a pathetic category 3!!! Allen: aww man, damn it that's not fair :( Camille: Oh wait, I had that too, 190 mph winds but I maintained it at landfall
By the way, what kind of hurricane was Camille? Category 5? Category 2? Category 4? Which one? Leave a like and a reply down below. 👇🏿👇🏿👇🏿👇🏿👇🏿👇🏿👇🏿👇🏿👇🏿👇🏿
Lol. Chill. It was not a 6 or a 7. Smh. People always try to exaggerate stuff they went through to make it seem more dramatic. A five is dangerous enough. Relax.
I've missed Storm Stories. One of my favorite shows. When this show was originally on The Weather Channel I was pregnant with my son and bed ridden. Having The Weather Channel on 24/7 to watch especially this show was so relaxing to watch. So glad to see it's back.
Do you ever go back to watch these with you kid?
I had to watch that one scene again where the lady with her two babies (I call all little kids ,babies) told them her husband won't let them leave. And his dumb butt talking about he heard if you lay in a tub of water that was the safest place during a hurricane. Who in the world told him that craziness? Thanks to his stupidity, he wiped out his entire family and his future family line. Those poor girls.
And another thing about him...if his wife and two kids answered the door his sorry a$$ was the only one in the tub. Besides I think he got mixed up with tornadoes but never heard about water in the tub. He was probably drunk. I think I'm mad at him.
That guy in the tub got the flu shot not his fault
Unbelievable.. and so so sad..
That one hit me, too. I'm just too independent to let a looney man tell me I can't save my children! He was so ignorant (and her, too, I fear), and must have come from the superstitious back country where they worshipped snakes! Any way, I would have been out of there so fast and left him floating in the tub.
@@pegs1659 I agree with you, he was confused about when to hide in a tub, making sure he was the only one in there? I would have grabbed those little ones and run. He was too waterlogged and booze happy to do anything! They are safe with Jesus, but some people should never, never have kids.
We just went through Hurricane Michael.. a cat 5 and I will never stay for one again..been through them all my life never seen anything or heard anything like it
K R my aunt Connie rode out Michael and my mom was a year old when Camille happened.
I believe that Michael was a Cat 4
@@ariannagorbet6674 Cat 5.
@@ariannagorbet6674 Michael was initially rated Cat 4 but was later upgraded to a 5 after all the damage was assessed. It's not the first time this has happened, either; Andrew was also upgraded to Cat 5 post analysis.
Seeing as how Michael basically wiped Mexico Beach off the map, I think the Cat 5 rating was well deserved.
OMG! Michael was Hell like Camille and Andrew!
I love these weather stories thank you for keeping these up
My husband was in Gulfport, MS during this as a teenager, then we went through Hurricane Katrina when it hit MS at Keesler in hospital.
My friends mom rode out this storm at her church in Mobile, AL. She took shelter under the churches grand piano.
As long as they were far enough from the Water! That’s what kills is that Water! Scary!
I had just moved to Biloxi with my Mom and Dad and brothers Eric and Jeff and sister Linda in August 1969 when my Dad was transferred to Keesler. I was 14. We rode the storm out in Bryan Hall on Keesler AFB.
How stupid was that dad to put his entire family in danger and them letting them die just because,he was stupid enough to think a safe area for tornadoes would be a safe place in a *CAT 5 HURRICANE?!*
And where in the flying fuck did the WATER part come from? If he were a real man he would have insisted on his wife and children being in the tub, or at least his children if his wife couldn't fit in there, too.
My parents married three years before this happened, in 1966. They rode out hurricane Beulah in south Texas when my oldest sister was an infant, and my dad would have died before he ever let anything happen to my mom or her.
He was forward thinking for the time, though... one of the first things he did after they married was get my mom a credit card that was solely in her name (which she couldn't do on her own back in the '60s) just in case something ever happened to him. He was always planning for the future to make sure his family was taken care of, and he's still of that mindset almost 58 years later.
Straight idiot he was
My family had been in Gulfport on vacation for one day and had to evacuate. I was very young young but I remember see wood washing ashore before we left and then the traffic jam leaving.
I was (9) nine years old. We live in (BSL) Bay St. Louis. I remember the eye of the hurricane as it past over us. Then came the water.
Hurricane Camille was a 6 not a 5 and I will never forget Camille. We had 13 pine trees on our house which kept the roof from coming off. The sound I will never forget. The ceiling actually breathing in and out. All of the adults crying and calling on the name of Jesus. The last report was winds at 200 MPH. Like a huge tornado. Moving like a freight train and sounding like a jet going through your home.i will never forget the eye came over and it was very quiet and then all hell broke loose. If you experienced Camille you would never forget and you respect what a hurricane can do. I pray to God their will never be another Camille.
Jesus warned, "And there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring" (Luke 21:25, KJV). Both storms and tsunamis will be more frequent, and bigger. (Lituya Bay, 1958).
People in tornado country think it is most devastating, but at least it's over in minutes. They should think about it lasting 24+ hours, and still causing the same destruction when it's done. And nobody in the South has storm shelters anywhere near the coast, because you would drown in them!
Or a Katrina! Katrina was a Water Hurricane when Camille was a Wind Hurricane!
Camille was a good "7". A five starts at 157mph. Camille is a verified from a number of sources to have had winds of 210mph with gusts of 225mph. The difference between grades or classes is about 15-20mph. A "1" starts at 75 and goes to 95 to 100, 2 goes to 115 a three goes from 115 to 130, a four 130 to 156 a five 156 to 176, a six 176 to 196, a seven 196 to 216. Camille, a good seven. On Monday Aug. 18, 1969 at the start of the CBS NEWS Walter Cronkite came on and said the WeTher Service was considering naming Camille a Tornocane it was so strong. They have tried to upgrade Andrew and downgrade Camille. They don't tell u that they don't really know how strong Camille was because the Hurricane Hunters refused to fly the last 2 missions out of fear of what happened to the plane in a similar storm in 1955 named Janet which passed over Swan Island off Belieze with 210mph. winds.a Taiwanese freighter in Gulfport harbor registered 180knot winds that converts to 210mph. The grass was blown out of the ground beyond the reach of the surge. A meteorologist in D.C. told me that phenomenon STARTS at 200mph. Another location recorded 180kts. The barometric pressure at landfall was .900milibars. Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas had pressure of .918 minibars and winds of 185, Michael which hit Mexico Bch. With 160mph winds had .936 minibars, Ian in SW Florida had 150 mph winds and .940 milbars There a direct correlation between wind strength and baro pressure. Lower pressure equals higher wind.
There is no such "official" thing as a category 6, 7, or whatever else people try to claim. The scale tops out at a 5 because at that point it doesn't matter; the destruction is going to be just as catastrophic with winds at those speeds.
Those are really hard storms.
I remember as a kid living on Mobile Bay, Fairhope AL and what an impact it made and it wasn’t a direct hit!
I love TWC. Thank you for the excellent content. ❤️
I live in Mississippi, I wasn’t old enough to witness it but Camille was a monster, 200 mph winds
Same wind speeds as an EF5 tornado. Absolutely brutal.
I heard 230 mph wind ( maybe the gusts ?) in another doc about Camille. I wonder if it's even possible...
Sustained winds of 190, gusts up to 230.
I live in Mississippi and I’m young enough that I barely remember katrina and Ive hardly ever hear anyone talk abt Camille bc barely anyone alive now is old enough to remember it but do remember katrina
I lived 70 miles inland and all the telephone poles and larger trees were blown down,it looked like the comet impact at tunguski literally total devastation
Storm Stories was the best series TWC ever did!!!
I wish they'd focus on things like this instead of ice road whatever towing companies and the other bullshit reality shows that only have something to do with weather if you tilt your head to the side and squint.
@@kriscynical
I agree completely
I remember 😢
It hit Richmond VA a couple of days later
My cousins, aunts, uncles and grandma went through Camille, while my immediate family and I were safe in New Hampshire. When we moved to the MS gulf coast, we heard all about it! The first hurricane warning we had after we moved north of Biloxi, to d'Iberville, we headed to northern MS where my dad's family was from. The hurricane veered off at the last second. For the 2nd hurricane warning, we decided to stay home north of Biloxi. That storm veered off, too. Needless to say, both times natives of the gulf coast were very, very nervous.
The water was over the streetlights. Keesler AFB is on the north side of railroad tracks which run parallel to the beach about a mile north. It was a terrifying time for a 14 year old and his brother and sisters . I can only imagine how catastrophic it as for those along H 90 along the beach.
This was like the 1900 Hurricane that hit Galveston. At least 6000 people died in that tiny island town. They were totally engulfed in water, and it was up to the roofs of those fine 3 story homes.
Hwy 90 was completely destroyed and everyone was washed away.
Camille is the ultimate what if it hit somewhere populated storm, what if a storm of that magnitude hit Miami, Tampa or Galveston. If a storm with the winds and surges of Camille took the route of the 1926 Great Miami Hurricane it would’ve made Andrew look like a minor freak wind event
If it does it's over🤷♂️🙏
A storm that bad did hit Gavelston back in 1900. The accounts are crazy. There’s a video about it on the channel bad day hq
@@molly-zx9cr well Galveston was flat island right on the coast and in 1900 they got hit by 135 mph winds and 15 foot surges. Camille was 40-50mph faster with surges 8-10’ higher
Andrew was a cat 5. Hit louisiana as a cat 3
Hurricane Camille was very powerful and intense. Recently in Albany Ga we've had Hurricane Helene.
When the dad's that delusional its time to kidnap the rational humans in the building and assume the dad won't live long enough to pursue a lawsuit
Tornado: Causes death and alot of injury and destruction
Camile: hold my beer
camile had F4 strength winds
Katrina: nah hold mine
@@ajking8836 dang
Camille was basically a 40 mile wide tornado with rain and a storm surge.
Hey hey my boy Bert case! Loved him on the news!
RIP Bert Case
He also covered the '66 Candlestick Park tornado.
Burrrrrrrt Case
Bert case ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤Rest in peace🙏🌹❤ this hurricane changed Mississippi for a lot of things. 76 years old when he passed great reporter I think I'm right about the age❤ rest in peace Mr Case❤ my dad remembers Camille if there ever was a true statement she was nothing to play with😪😪😪😪😪 to all the people that lost their lives in this hurricane rest in peace please Jesus❤🙏 is there anybody out there that remembers Ingalls Shipbuilding Pascagoula Mississippi 🤔❤🙏
It's now been 55 years since Hurricane Camille.
the scream 😳
I was there 7 years old and it really scared the s##t out of me.i mean really.😮😮
I didn't bother doing the calculations but, at the end when the log says "Anemometer failed at 200 knots", 200 knots is the equivalent of 230mph.
Hurricane Camille had the power of an EF5 Tornado.
That was probably a gust, not sustained winds.
I wonder if the lady that yelled, yonder it IS, THAT'S MY HOUSE, THAT'S MY HOUSE, is still living today in 2020?
She sounded fairly young, so probably.
Probably. My parents were in their very early 20s in 1969 and they're still going strong at 76 years old. They married in 1966 and rode out hurricane Beulah together when my oldest sister was an infant. They lost all of their wedding photos save for two proofs in that storm. 🙁
I've never been through a hurricane. But I was in Santa Cruz 1989 7.1 earthquake
That's nothing. Check out Alaska, 1964.
If you're talking about the Loma Prieta quake on Oct. 17, 1989, I was there also. I was there for a horse show, which was cancelled. My horse and I were never so scared in our lives. (Jan Griffiths).
Jan Griffiths again. We were outside of Oakland.
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Yt is drunk 🥴
Just realized I’m first!!
•J a v a C h i p• okay..... does your life need validation THIS badly or can ya just nibble on a cookie 🍪?
Dame Ashely Attic ????
Dame Ashely Attic ok so people can’t comment anymore? stfu
Dame Ashely Attic NO one asked for your opinion…
um you want a 🥇?
Camille the mother of all Hurricanes
Katrina, hold my beer
Brob 1990 Camille: the mother of all Hurricanes
Katrina: hold my beer
Well Camille is...Katrina may have been worse but, Camille hit much earlier and arguably stronger winds.
And also it was such a shock to the people that they just couldn't even fathom what was unfolding around them. Katrina was the worst for reasons by death toll, storm surge and government reaction time.
Camille was just unfathomable at that time.
Katrina was a category 3 storm when it made landfall. Winds at 125mph. Camille was a category 5. Winds at 175 mph. Katrina was dangerous, but it was blown out of proportion like most news now days.
@@joshpittman6021 it was definitely not blown out of proportion, in fact it was the opposite for those outside of New Orleans.
A lot of people focus on New Orleans (and rightfully so) with it practically being a man made catastrophe there, but in Mississippi where the storm actually hit, it caused damage that was almost reminiscent of Camille. The death toll of both in the Mississippi area is practically the same, but Katrinas storm surge was atleast 5ft higher where it made landfall, and 15ft higher than Camilles for surrounding areas due to it's sheer size. If New Orleans didn't even exist and Katrinas only impacts were in Mississippi, it'd still be one of costliest ($30 billion) and deadliest in American history
"Never in my lifetime will I ever experience anything more severe than Camille."
Katrina: "hold my beer!"
Katrina was bigger size wise and created more damage, but Camille was a more powerful storm with winds approaching 200 mph.
I was in Camille in 69….no one knew it would be like it was. We were told to put things up high because of the water surge. I lived alone that highway. Only thing we found was a glass.
Along that highway
Vintage footage! Storm Chasers today have the same passion, just better technology.
~it was the summer of SIXty nine~
What a summer! Woodstock with thousands of hippies were reveling in the heat of the East Coast, the very same weekend that Camilla hit Mississippi, covering the whole coastline. Four weeks earlier, Astronauts were walking on the moon, July, 1969! Vietnam was going strong with the Tet Offensive, and my 18 yr old brother, had been shipped there with the Marines to be based at Da Nang! My only child was 7 mos. old, and I wondered then if any of us on the Gulf Coast of Texas would survive the next few decades! Katrina came close a few decades later, devastating New Orleans, just over 200 miles away!
That's back when you could use a telephone (including 911) without any electricity.
elizabeth hollins cordless phones should be in all homes with a landline
Nothing like old Tymers telling a story
if hurricanes had family tress im sure Andrew and Katrina would be in Camille's tree
Just went through Idaliah
R.I.P. Bert Case
I agree 💯
how to survive: stand in a circle
I saw hat video too
Thats for seabears 🤣🤣🤣🤣
OMG! THAT LOOKS LIKE TOTAL DESTRUCTION!!!
6:59 is that a tornado 😳
Just lightning.
However, Camille did spawn some 80 tornadoes after landfall.
At 1:19 is that a picture of Frederic in 1979?
yes
I wonder why the New Orleans levees didn’t fail during Camille? It was much stronger than Katrina.
Camille was a smaller storm so the storm surge and water level rise was in a more localized area. Katrina was a much larger storm.
@@Dj0287 Makes sense.
@@bensmall6548I think Camille’s hurricane force winds extended for 40 miles. Katrina’s was about 100 miles.
The pumps and levees failed from improper maintenance. Katrina and Camille were close to the same strength and speed.. Also part of the levee was opened to save downtown New Orleans
@@commiehunter733completely false
What is the woman in 18:44 looking at?
Amsel her house. I couldn’t see it either but I was there when Katrina hit and I know people who only could find what was once their place because of the color of the debris, say a light blue or a yellow or whatever.
Funny they keep using the Scott's Bluff Nebraska footage of tornadoes in the 1950's
Does anybody know what rock song was playing in the background at the start of 1:02
That's just generic late 60s styled guitar produced for this doc.
Camille was no lady
I wonder if that story about the hurricane party at the Richelieu Apartments has ever been verified.
It has ben verified... As false that is. There are other survivors from that apartment complex. Mrs. Gerlach was a lying egomaniac. And for whatever reason despite vocal survivors from the same building saying otherwise they go with that woman's fabrication.
@@chdreturns Yeah, Mary Anne was a real whack-job. I think she was convicted of murdering her 11th husband, which is pretty amazing.
It's false
This happens one month after our very own Gloria Diaz of the Philippines won the Miss Universe title.
I remember a Chuck Scarborough who was a reporter for, what I believe, was WNYW in New York City. One and the same?
Camille must have been a category 5 hurricane.
I think you mean WNBC New York, He's been there since 1974 as a news anchor in various newscasts, winning a caseful of awards and honors along the way.
Yeah, Camille was designated a category 5 hurricane, according to the then-newly established Saffir-Simpson scale, co-developed by Dr.Robert H. Simpson, director of the National Hurricane Center at the time of Camille.
yo
Wrong answer it was too sad🙏
😂10:38-11:05 There is a dangerous hurricane and storm outside, stay inside.
The man: Oh great, let’s go open the door and walk out, nevermind let’s crawl out I am that fucking curious 🤣😂😭
Just wow lol, you would think he would get back after he sees how bad it is, but nah he decided to crawl out into the storm 😬😭
SS231
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At 1:45 what about Katrina dude?
DeStolenCake Katrina was nowhere near the strength of Camille
@@WickedlyMe328 wow! really?
@@axialkai7230 Camille was a cat 5 at landfall
@@WickedlyMe328 i see thanks lol
Thye should upgrade the safford simpson to include a Cat 6 for Monsters like Cammeile
Yikes
that me
☻▬☺
There is no way in hell that I would let my husband forbid me from leaving with my children in a life threatening situation. He was a coward anyway putting himself in the place he thought was safest instead of his wife and children. Ignorant doorstop. I'd have left him there to rot and deal with his "consequences" later once my children were safe.
The anemometer of a beached ship where Hurricane Camille made landfall "fails at 200 knots" = 230mph winds, which is almost certainly not sustained by any chance of the imagination but impressive nevertheless. Yet, based on a factual barometer pressure reading of 900mbar, they downgraded the sustained winds from 185mph to 175mph on reanalysis of historic hurricanes several years back ... perhaps, they need to be reevaluate their decision with regards to Camille.
Can nabis
Katrina says High. Same strength and twice the size. As far has Tropical Storm Winds or higher are concerned.
When Katrina made landfall, her winds were far weaker than Camille's ... twice the size, bigger storm surge correct ... winds at landfall ... not even close.
I think Katrina got camile beat
Camille: HA! I have the second highest winds at us landfall, first being Labor Day and dorian at 185 mph winds, and me I had 175 mph winds.
Allen: hahahaha, take that, I'm stronger than those 2 lame storms, I had 190 mph winds.
Camille and Labor Day and dorian: Wait wait wait that does not count, you had cheap 115 mph winds at landfall that makes u a pathetic category 3!!!
Allen: aww man, damn it that's not fair :(
Camille: Oh wait, I had that too, 190 mph winds but I maintained it at landfall
Named after John Hope's daughter
By the way, what kind of hurricane was Camille? Category 5? Category 2? Category 4? Which one? Leave a like and a reply down below.
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It was Category 5, no comments! Just likes.
Overrated.
Lol. Chill. It was not a 6 or a 7. Smh. People always try to exaggerate stuff they went through to make it seem more dramatic. A five is dangerous enough. Relax.