Earthstorm | Official Trailer | Netflix

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Storm chasers, survivors and first responders recount their harrowing experiences with volcanoes, tornadoes, hurricanes and earthquakes.

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Earthstorm | Official Trailer | Netflix
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42 Comments

  1. The tornado episode focusing on climate change as the cause of tornados in Kentucky is misleading. It's disinformation to say Kentucky doesn't have tornados. In 1972 there were 31 fatalities from an F5 in Brandenburg Kentucky during a Super outbreak, luckily the population was smaller than Mayfield. Deadly tornadoes in Kentucky have been documented for over a century and have occurred since the inception of documentation in areas as far north as Canada as no country is immune to the phenomenon. While this is a good short documentary, it could delve deeper, be more informative. If I lived east of the mountains in Kentucky, I'd have a storm shelter or plan, even 50 years ago.

  2. I have the greatest respect for those who chase tornadoes to learn but those who do it for an adrenaline rush and to capitalize on other peoples misery I have none.

  3. I have had a major interest(?) in intense weather, mainly tornados and severe thunderstorms all my life. I love the beauty of pitch black clouds against a greenish haze and sunny skies, like a wall of fury. I HATE what it can do and does do to people. My half sister was pregnant with her second child and the Moore tornado of 2005 hit her house and leveled it with her takiing cover with her baby son in the bath tub (I think). She lost the pregnancy and two years later after dealing with all the stress, she had an acute adesonian crisis (adrenal failure) and she lost her life. She had Addison's Disease (I have it as well). It's a rare disease that stops the adrenal glands from making cortisol which the body uses to regulate stress hormones and electrolytes coming from the adrenal glands. Stress can cause the adrenaline and norepinephrine to flood your system and the cortisol isn't there to lower it. She was just never able to bring the anxiety and fear down even in therapy and could barely even talk about it. That tornado was one of the worst in history and she and her husband had a baby son and had just built their dream home which took a lot of work and a lot of time, and this enormous F5 tornado comes and in what felt to her like it took hours, but really only in a few minutes, her entire world was turned upside down and they lost almost everything. She was alone in the bath tub with their son and was 100% sure they were going to die. She laid on top of him. Ugh. I've seen a lot of footage of the storms that year and all the tornados and the Moore tornado was insane.

    Anyway, thanks for making this documentary. I haven't watched it yet but I'm really excited to binge it tonight and tomorrow. You professional storm chasers are truly the heroes who are making the difference between seconds, minutes and even hours of notice and preparation people need to make sure they're safe.
    The problem I see, after watching a documentary like thus, is the amateur storm chasers who slow you down and get in the way of you doing your job. Suddenly everyone's a storm chaser.
    I would like to offer my condolences to the friends and families of Tim and Paul Samaras and Carl Young who were top notch professional storm chasers but died in a tornado that turned on a dime changing directions giving them no time or place to get away. What a terrible thing to happen. They were known to be extremely intent on safety from my understanding. My heart goes out to everyone who knew them.
    I hope that people will stop treating these storms like a game and stay out of the way of the people who do this for a living to keep us safe.
    It's not a game. Weather has so much fury. I stick to my home and watch videos or documentaries like these to get my fill. I have no business being out there trying to get up close and personal. I've been there a few times and a few times is enough for me to not want to risk my life or the lives of others by driving in the caravan of 150 cars 15 miles per hour with no way out.

    EDIT I just started watching the first episode and they already mentioned the team who were killed. I wish I could remember what documentary it was I watched when they showed all the footage those guys got of that tornado up until just before they were killed which was captured on the audio recording and they've respectfully kept that private. I'm just so sorry they lost their lives, the footage and photos they captured of that storm was some of the best ever filmed. But boy, the pictures and video just in the first episode so far has been absolutely STUNNING. I wish I could get that close, safely. To see it in person, when the entire sky is turning like the El Reno tornado. Beautiful pictures but really freaking scary footage of them barely outrunning it! It literally looked like a scene from "Twister" when Helen Hunt yelled "Debris! We have debri!" And a farmhouse is flying over their car. Insane. The chaser who is in this episode is one I'm familiar with from a lot of documentaries. The footage and photos he has gotten have been astounding. Absolutely insane. Thank you for this. It's already amazing and I'm like 20 minutes in to the first episode! I'll try not to come back and keep blabbing about it all. This stuff is just really exciting to me!

  4. Just watched the first episode and I'm a little disappointed. I hate giving bad reviews, but literally, in 47 minutes they covered how a tornado forms (which was decent, but should have had supercomputer data), and then just two tornados and way too much story of the victims of these disasters. Considering this is the opening episode on arguably the most wonderous of meteorological phenomenons I think they really missed the mark on showing us the devastating beauty of how tornados really are.
    to be very specific, I'm annoyed that the aftermath of Kentucky got so much coverage when it was a messy tornado that happened at night which there was barely any footage of.

  5. Don't forget, though, these are man made disasters. Nature does what nature does. We just get in the way, mostly unprepared and stubborn even. Add to that the climate change we cause, making storms more intense.

  6. As someone who doesn't live in a country that has regular tornadoes there is one question that goes through my mind over and over again . Why oh why would you continue to live in tornado alley ? Why continue to rebuild and restart knowing all your hard work could be devestated within a year ? Why doesn't the US government deem this place to be too hostile to live in . I get you have the freedom of choice but why risk everything?

    This is a genuine question so I'd appreciate a genuine reply . Thank you

  7. Hay un capítulo de terremotos, hablan medio capítulo de USA y sus terremotos de 7.2 grados. Existen otros países, como Chile, con registros de los mayores terremotos existentes, tanto en el pasado con el de Valdivia que fue sobre 9 y actuales como el de cobquecura.

  8. I’ve binged watched this last night and already am finished with episode 4. I am a weather enthusiast and have to say this was/is ridiculously well documented. I experienced so many emotions watching each episode thus far. It’s crazy how beautiful something can be can lead to tragedy. I shall never take life for granted. It is a but a vapor in this world. Thank you for this documentary.

  9. It featured almost American events..amid US productions, researchers failed or shone away featuring some catastrophic events of equal magnitude than what were featured in the Philippines like Mt Pinatubo Volcanic Eruption, Baguio City Earthquakes & the Super Tyhoon in Visayan Region ..

  10. That idiot screaming we going to die at the driver doing his best to speed away from the tornado was the main reason why they took so long to leave in the first place. Can't stand idiots like that

  11. "We've had more billion dollar events in the last ten years…..with climate change it'll just keep happening" 🙄

    If covid didn't cause it's climate change. Getting old asf

  12. How much longer will we allow the coastal regions to be rebuilt storm after storm. I predict insurance will go through the roof on these properties and in 25 years they will be designated off limits. No more construction. Back to nature. Personally I agree with that. They shouldn't be rebuilt. How many times will you rebuild those disaster prone areas? Where does all the destroyed stuff go? How does constantly having a house destroyed and rebuilt fit into the "green agenda"? Is it eco friendly to have that crap blown all over the place and disposed of constantly? Or would it be more "green" to just let nature take it back?

  13. Amazing Series ! The Way we love to see Real Weather and Stormchasers in what they doing.And big kudos to mention all the people who contributed Footage in the Credits. The Volcano and Earthquake part was great too.
    Some more Topics would be great : Blizzards ,Avanlances / Mudsildes , Flooding ( the catastrophic Flooding in Germany 2021) , Hailstorms , Monsoon, Drougts , Heatwaves , there a lot you could add to this.
    Great Job

  14. I'll never forget in 2013, we had a severe super ice storm here in north America and Canada I think before or after Christmas Eve We had three days of power outage, stuck inside the house, we decide heat some hot water while united states hit really hard, stuck in the highway!

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