
As people continue to be drawn towards warm coastal towns or bustling urban cities, an unknown threat may be near… hurricanes or tropical cyclones are happening more and more frequently as our climate continues to shift. Reaching more than 1,000 kilometres with deadly winds, these storms are both technical and humanitarian problems, causing huge destruction and habitat loss for tons of humans. However, they also are proven to effectively redistribute heat around the earth. What have we learned from past hurricanes and can we do anything to help mitigate future crises?
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Code Red investigates some of the most notable disasters in our recent history. In each episode, the anatomy of one type of catastrophe is investigated, and the ways in which they have changed us are looked back at.
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story teller need to be fired, his voice is annoying
I don't understand why would anyone want to live near the ocean
Who else is here during Hurricane Hillary?
I guess they have to make a new one to add Hillary to show
I’m from Louisiana and I’ve only seen Hurricane Laura and that hurricane was the most terrifying disaster I’ve EVER seen!
Watching this as Idalia is ab come through Florida
27:14 it’s crazy, because when 9/11 happened, those people were there for relief from all over the country quickly in New York but when Hurricane Katrina happen, it took over a week for relief and months for rebuilding smh
I was directly in the eyewall of Hurricane Charley some years ago. Living in Florida all my life, I thought I understood how dangerous a hurricane could be, but honestly, I really didn't have a clue until Charley paid us a visit. The most terrifying weather I've ever had the misfortune of experiencing. Charley may have been relatively small, but packed a punch that you had to live through to believe.
This narrator 😆😆🤣🤣
As a Guamanian and Chamorro living in the island of Guam, i used to hear my parents talk about three specific storms that devastated our island in the past that destroyed Guam's infrastructure. Typhoon Paka 1997, (the year i was born) Typhoon Chata'an and Typhoon Pongsona (both 2002 and all three explained were category five super typhoons) but never thought anything of it. I always thought they overexaggerated these things till May of this year when Typhoon Mawar (category four violent typhoon) ravaged our island, the first to do so in over twenty years. The entire island didnt have power, some places for over three months and half the population didnt have water. People were scrambling for food, water, ice and gas. It was absolute madness. I remember seeing rain lierally fly sideways and coconut trees cracking and toppling over. I tried to comfort my 1 year old son and 6 year old daughter as they were crying when the winds howled through the walls of our home. It was terrifying yet almost beautiful. I hope to never experience another one ever again.
People are a bigger problem than a hurricane. Fear is a drug.
Mother Nature is nasty asf I’m surprised our planet hasn’t been wiped out yet
I stopped watching when they started with the brainwashing of climate change narrative. Not one climate change alarmist prediction has come true. Maybe Al Gore and Leonardo DiCaprio should stop telling us how to live, sell their multiple mansions that use enough power for small cities, and give up their private jets!!! Climate change is about money, power, and control. All part of the WEF globalist agenda. Wake up!
In spite of all the hyperbole, we really have had a dearth of severe storms during the last 10 years. A fact
which the Climate Change cultists can't avoid in their continual howling about weaponizing the weather
in order to force their Socialist agenda on us…,
Look at the doggy I'm proud doggy made it ❤
Nordic:🍿🥤
In Suffolk, VA, I had a customer come in the store to shop. She had a cart full of groceries, when she went to pay her card was rejected. After a short conversation, I learned that she that she and her family had lived in New Orleans and she wanted to get groceries so she could make breakfast for her relatives. I called my assistant manager to service desk for help. She said she would handle it. The hot food and deli were closing, so she called hot bar and told them not throw anything away. The Assistant Manager 'went to the back and got food for dinner. I was ready to get my card and pay for the groceries but I was told no she would handle it. Their EBT card was not being accepted because of the devastation of phone lines in New Orleans. I went back to my job on the cashier line so I do not know exactly what happened but they did get some groceries. I was so happy that my store came to their aid.
He'll yeah I remember the snow of sandy, we were snowed in a week without power, I had to walk to the cistern for water lel
I seen an episode of king of the hill where Hank Hill saved the day.
Katrina was a heartbreak! 💔 It took me close to ten years to watch a video from that disaster!
The day after maria hit my island Dominica when i saw my DA without her green coat i burst into tears. she look as if somone droped a bomb.she is known as the nature is land.David ,ķatrina and Maria blow up Dominca reaĺ bad.
Its so crazy to me as a european that the us does basically nothing in advance. Like wtf lol 😆
Watching this after Hurricane Beryl just went over my town.
Saying people in NO got enough warning is not true at all
Politicians in the Philippines took advantage of typhoon Haiyan to spread misinformation. This led to the monster from davao being elected as president to handing the position the son of the dictator.
They need to have a disclaimer in the beginning of the video saying that they'll be displaying footage of drowned individuals.
This type of thing is horrible.. but so wholesome. Everyone is there to help and they'll stop at nothing. I wasn't in Katrina.. but I was there on vacation to Biloxi Mississippi and New Orleans a few months before it happened. (I lived in South Carolina at that point). It was hard to watch the news coverage and I saw places that I had literally went to not too soon before she hit. I'm now a Tennessean and this also reminds me of the wild fires we had a few years back. I'm not too close (and disabled) so I wasn't able to help. But anyone and everyone who could.. they came out. And God's gift to Earth.. Ms Dolly Parton. She took care of those people. I don't know if it's still around.. it may be. But she started the "My People Fund" and helped all of us out so, so much. Natural disasters are awful. But it's a no brainer to help your neighbor. And last but not least.. God Bless the Cajun Navy!
Edit to add.. my mom still has a picture of us on the paddle boats for the 4th of July. The day before we walked the French Quarter and I used some of my allowance money to buy three stands of the regular Mardi Gras beads. Red, silver, and blue. We even say down at Cafe du Monde and got the most amazing beignets.
2:24 wtf… lol
What's the lobsters name off SpongeBob?…
The Katrina glazing is insane
How exciting and incredibly sad
Katrina was nasty but the Galveston Hurricane was absolutely devastating
14:46 the guy in red is cute asf😍. You like Black muscular Men? Hmu fr
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢