Qualquier donación o aporte para ayudar al canal a la cuenta de PayPal a continuación / Any donation or contribution to help the channel to the PayPal account below: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=9FA3U99QH6ZNC Siganme en mi nuevo canal secundario Earthquake Compilations Review, donde reacciono a mis compilados de sismos y explico sobre los eventos captados: ruclips.net/channel/UCl7Jzpx6GJQud4odDkCqQ0g Gracias / Thank you😉!!
Eu não sei como funciona o treinamento contra terremotos nesse país, mas eu acredito que a melhor solução para essas pessoas, seria desligar o gás, sair de casa e procurar um lugar aberto e sem coisas que possam cair sobre as suas cabeças.
I it’s kind of funny seeing the people on TV react to the shaking when the TV itself is also shaking. It kind of makes it seem like they’re inside the TV lol.
That's what it was like when the small Seattle quake shook for a good 5-7 seconds recently. My aunt was watching the news and every one got silent, even the news anchors on her t.v 😅😅😅
Watching a live newscast of an earthquake AS YOURE IN THAT EARTHQUAKE has got to be one of the most unforgettable experiences one can ever have. I never once considered something like that to be possible, but of course, it would be completely possible.
We got some of that up in NorCal during the 89 quake. I was in an area where you could feel it and see the ground rolling a little but not close enough to the actual disaster zone part. It was completely bizarre.
@@GlintzKollideThe commercials are all in a pre-planned playlist - they tossed to break to give themselves time to figure out the details and that was the next one up
Yep. Its a trip. During the Northridge quake, we would wait for aftershocks by watching the news. Their studios were much closer to the quakes then we were at that time, so we'd see them react, and about 15 seconds later, we'd feel them.
@@chrissaenz6213 No, it wasn't... the epicenter was actually a little east of there between Ridgecrest and Trona. Some giant cracks opened up in the earth and the road out that way needed to be repaired. There was still plenty of damage, but not nearly as much as there could have been. I know, I live in the general area and at the time worked as an insurance inspector. I saw a LOT of the apartments and motels in Ridegcrest, and many of them needed some form of repair. There were fires and gas leaks all over the area, and people were without power (in the middle of summer in the Mojave desert) for quite a while. Those two quakes cause billions in damage, but it was still relatively minor when you consider the magnitude of both quakes.... but not unscathed by any means.
This was interesting to watch since I live in Ridgecrest. I remember July 4th and 5th of 2019. We had 6.4 one day and 7.1 the next day. I slept outdoors for at least a week because I couldn't relax enough to sleep inside.
Same i was prob 7 by the time then when the 6.4 happend I was scared for my life my brother was taking a shower so imagine how scary that would be and when the 7.1 hit me and my family slept near jackson park we where not taking any chances
No one ever talks about this. I literally thought I was the only one who remembered this. The one that happened on the 4th happened in the morning, and this one happened the next day in the night. It was a very crazy and unique experience..
25:46 Love how something literally falls and shatters behind him and he's just like, "Shoot, let me finish what I'm watching/reading here and I'll get right to caring about this hazardous situation I'm in."
Eh. I’ve lived in SoCal my whole life and that’s about as much as I react to earthquakes at this point. 🤣 The only thing I ever worry about is if my pets are scared/okay/etc.
Only got two things to say: Never say "it's just an aftershock", and never try to keep things from falling. Treat earthquakes as if they will get worse.
I "experienced" the Christchurch NZ 6.3 earthquake, it was classed as an aftershock of the 7.1 Canterbury earthquake. I was 5 miles from the epicentre and was thrown around like a doll. It was close and shallow which added to the intensity, a MMI of XI. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Christchurch_earthquake
and I think her husband forgot that she was "going swimming"!😬 It took him awhile to come rescue her so it's a good thing she didn't make it all the way into the pool. Yikes. Great security camera footage though!👍
@@SilverXTikal aside from losing her balance in a 7.1 earthquake? Given how old she looked, perhaps she has a medical issue, bad back, bad knees, etc., who knows, who cares? I have a bad back (2 herniated discs) & a hip replacement, I can’t just jump up on a good day, lol. She needed help.
3:20 - the pool threw up! 3:59 - dude looks like he's modeling for that stove. 8:11 - all excited until shit got real. (read the chat comments LOL) 21:42 - dude gonna surf the quake!
I worked in a freezer with shelving just like Home Depot. We had 7 aisles. I would jump into a TranSafe. If you don't know what that is, it's a plastic icebox for trucks with no freezer, we stuff it with dry ice. Four people could fit in one.
What's interesting about earthquakes is that the number attached to it really doesnt mean much as far as whats felt or damages. The same size quake can be much different depending on the ground structure, depth, distance and type of quake. Some 7's are relatively minor like this and some are catastrophic like Turkey. Both were 7 ish.
You also have to factor in that a third world country like Turkey is going to have a poor infrastructure, not capable have handling quakes. In contrast to first world countries.
What you're describing is *intensity*, which is how much an earthquake is felt at a given location; versus its *Magnitude*, which is how much energy the earthquake released - and there are different scales for both! The latter is measured in the modern era as "Moment Magnitude" - though many often reference the "Richter scale," which is _technically_ measuring a different kind of Magnitude than MMI, but the numbers all conveniently line up so Meh - while the former is measured according to the Modified Mercalli Intensity (MMI) scale. Magnitude is always a single, objective number, with an increase of 1 on the scale equating to roughly 33x more energy: If a Magnitude 3 earthquake is roughly ~4,000lbs of TNT, then a Magnitude 4 is ~133,000lbs of TNT. This is also why the difference between a 6.4 and a 7.1 is so massive, despite being "only" a 0.7 difference in Magnitude. Intensity, like you said, varies a lot depending on distance from the fault, the geology of the ground the quake is traveling through, and the structure you're in. There's a lot of variation, and it's not entirely objective! For example, someone on the top floor of a skyscraper in a "mild" quake might find themselves being thrown a few feet by the swaying of the building while the ground floor barely moves at all. A house on bedrock may only have mild shaking for a few seconds, while a house on silty fill in a basin would feel shaking for minutes (Looking at you, LA). This is a big reason USGS collects "Did you feel it" data - it helps them better understand how different faults and energy levels transmit through different areas, which is an important part of planning for earthquakes in the first place, along with alerting people when they're about to happen.
@kilodeltaeight I'm aware of all that... I just said I found it fascinating. Thankfully, for being smack in the middle of the Cascadia Subduction Zone, I happen to be in a spot with all the least affected factors... BUT the house was built on a Boulder style foundation in 1916. And new foundations cost more than the house did when I bought it.... it'll be interesting to see what happens when it finally let's it rip.
Agree. All it takes is someone to be a tough guy to downplay the seriousness of the situation. What we need are plans for what to do like we did in school so we aren't caught off guard
Yeah, same here! I was in Daly City when it hit. The Battle of the Bay World Series was on and suddenly everything started shaking. My grandma's glass curio fell over and all the dishes came flying out of the cupboard. The San Andreas fault runs right through my backyard, so we all thought our house was going to fall off the cliff. Some people say the reason why there weren't more casualties is because of the baseball game. Everyone was either at the game or indoors watching it. I think only 63 people died. In hindsight the only reasons why there weren’t more casualties is because the roads were almost empty die to everyone either being at the game or watching it at home or the bar.
I was all the way over in Davis for that one and still got quite the ride. My mom was supposed to be coming home on the 880 but didn't tell us that sh'ed swapped shifts with someone. Spent hours in a panic. Dude she swapped with watch it collapse in his rearview.
Now that was an earthquake! It pretty much destroyed downtown Santa Cruz and took them years to recover. I wasn't living there at the time but it was so scary not being able to get ahold of family over there to see if everyone was OK. I was living inland at the time and still felt it pretty good. Our pool was sloshing water all over the place. Man, all these memories are flooding back like seeing part of the Bay Bridge collapse. Such a devastating earthquake.
Nah, I was there attending UCSC. It damaged downtown but it didn't "destroy" it. We were all without power for days. Since all the meat in the freezer would go bad we had a block party BBQ. It was a bad situation but we did our best to get through it. I would prefer not to experience that again.
My son and I felt the second one in Stockton. I was sitting in the same direction as the waves, and I felt like I was riding a mini rollercoaster. Pretty trippy! 💚🌎
The second one reached Vegas! I was chilling in an Olive Garden when it hit. Granted, Vegas was so far that I thought at first it was just like a muscle twitching or something, then I noticed the chandelier was swaying slightly. It was super mild in Vegas, but we felt it!
We were in Las Vegas during this one, getting ready to go out on the town. Our room was on the 15th floor of Harrah's and, boy did we sway! Fortunately, everything went on as planned and there was no damage/injuries reported.
@@V-XENO as @vant83 said, tripping and pushing people in a rush is very dangerous. but in addition to that, if you know you live in an area where buildings are built with earthquakes in mind, then the need to leave the building immediately is low, and it's better to shelter in place underneath a table or the like.
Guys! Stop filming and get under a table! And hang on. As a native Californian who has been through plenty of earthquakes it’s alarming to me that people don’t seem to know what to do. IG does not need you to get crushed by your bookcase! Also, yikes. That was a BIG one.
I can only imagine living there and every time having that "Is this the big one?" thought. I guess its not too different from where I live and every tornado thinking "is this the ef5?"
At least with a tornado you’ll have some idea that a strong storm system is coming. Earthquakes have 0 prep time. That’s why I’ll pick a place where there’s 0 earthquakes lol
@@trantorthetroll8768 not necessarily. I mean you're right at least there is usually a warning a few hours out about a potential tornadic storm but predicting if it will be an ef0 or an ef5 is impossible. I actually had a tornado in Tulsa go through my backyard while I was sleeping in 2017. There were no warnings at all and the sirens didn't go off until after the tornado had already injured a few people at a TGIFridays and a few other places. I think it was an ef2. It was a wild storm and very unusual though.
@@ruivam in Tulsa we have never had an ef5 or an ef4 at least in documented history. So yeah tornadoes are a threat here but it's not a time bomb unlike California or somewhere that has earthquakes.
I live about 100 miles away from Ridgecrest, and it felt as strong here as it looks in the videos. I had just gone through a drive through to get myself and my pup some food. We were pulled over in the lot as I unwrapped her hamburger patty while she sat on the passenger seat staring intently at it like "Hurry up human, I'm hungry", when the car started bouncing like the vehicles in the videos. At first I thought some crazy street person was jumping up and down on the rear bumper, but nope. Then I noticed all of the plants including the tall palm trees lining the street were swaying and vibrating in unison. The odd thing was, people were still walking in and out of the nearby stores like nothing was going on. I looked down at the pup and she was still sitting there staring at the patty in my hand, head tilted, ears up. She had her priorities straight, food was more important than a stupid earthquake. 😄 All we could do was ride it out for the thirty seconds or a minute it lasted, and hope it wasn't about to get worse or another, stronger one wasn't going to follow it over the next several days.
The cars and trucks! That was by far one of the most interesting things I've ever seen. The motion of the cars and trucks looked like that of them rolling down a bumpy road, ALL of them at the same time. So much power, to realize that the actual ground is what is riding up, down and around like its driving down a bumpy road haha
Minute 20:15: "100% it's an earthquake, a swear to God!" Of course it's an earthquake, dude, you are in California, what else do you think it could be? ;-))
21:00 "The building SWANG" LOLLL I never heard of that word! I felt 3 of the quakes, the 6.4 quake on July 4 (10:33 am), an after shock at 6:10 am on July 5, and then the main quake (7.1) at 8:20 pm. I live in Los Angeles, so it wasn't as strong.....but the 7.1 quake shook my home for a minute and a half!
Dude I watched the entire video to the end and I'm "flaberghasted"! Ya shows my age ... started to read the comments and found yours! You are one of the very few people that posted a timeline. And I am speachless! I was going to go on a rant, but no. What I saw was utter complacency in 90% of this post. I've been in an earthquake aftershock, where the initail one was 7.1. The aftershock was 8.6, nine hours after the first. Then demishing there after for 6 day's, at least 2 per day. Never the less, "Catistrophic". I was part of an American military relief effort, my duties was a battlefield medic. Non the less, what I saw in this video was exteamly disheartning. "Grab the cell-phone make make sure we capture it, it's gonna go viral, not just one but two RUclipsr's laughing while streaming," One clip showing a food court and guests "just sitting there as if it was another normal day"! Man, I can honestly say "I've been to HELL and was one of the few to make it back" but these people that I watched need to WAKE UP! If you still live there dude,,,,,Please stay safe, be aware of your compass, and in my opinion....."GET THE HELL OUT OF DODGE"! Just sayin ... I'm 66 years old and my biggest treasure in life is the knowledge that I helped! avb 🤘
@@albeal9213 I've never been in an earthquake that was more than 5.0 within a 30-mile range. But the quakes from 100+ miles away in the 6-7 range I feel, just not as strong! Yes I would never even think to pick up a cell phone and record unless I just happened to be recording anyway....and I do stay safe and aware....earthquakes are scary because they happen any time with no warning!
If you're ever in an earthquake please be aware of your surroundings. It never ceases to amaze me how most people do the exact opposite of what you're supposed to in an earthquake. Living in California, as little kids in school we were taught : - Stay calm. - Do NOT run outside. You risk falling debris, fallen power lines, etc... - Get underneath something sturdy, crouch on the floor, tuck your head and protect your head/neck using your hands. - Stand in a sturdy doorway. They are structurally strong areas.
When the Northridge quake hit I was out on Catalina and it woke me up. My ex who had never felt an earthquake jumped up and ran outside. He came back in after it was over and asked what “should I do?” I told him to go back to sleep and don’t run outside next time.
This might have been good advice for California at the time you were a kid, but it would have get hundreds of thousands more people killed in other countries - like in Turkey or rural China. And it’s actually not that great for earthquake-prone places like California and Japan in the 21st century, where most buildings are designed to not need you to block the doorway, and where the main hazard is furniture & ceiling falls and fires caused by cooking gas.
I with you 💪🏻 Don't EFF with animals, don't neglect animals, don't abuse animals and don't "Oh heck, he will be back" with animals. They are first! BTW, I quit my job as a dr4g counselor and bought a farm to take in neglected/abused/Disabled/ or homeless animals.. they are my everything. I hate how people get them, then turn on them 😔
A small quake hit eastern Pennsylvania years back and i was putting wheels on a car that was on the lift at y friends garage. Walked over and it was shaking on the lift and as I stood there I felt it roll under me through the concrete floor !!!!!😊😊😊😊😊
I supposedly slept through an earthquake. I didn't know at the time how to check reports but the person who was there with me said the trees were shaking wildly for a moment. This means, to date, I have slept through a pretty decent earthquake, slept 90% through a category 3 hurricane, and almost slept through a nearby tornado. Of course, at this stage of my life, I can be woken up by the fart of a deer at 500ft.
I was in the north ridge quake in 91 I think. What a ride! The sound came first, I thought a jetliner was crashing in the neighborhood…Apt buildings fell, freeways fell it was bad. I couldn’t sleep for days!
Yeah, this one had a weird deep deep rumbling sound. It was a sound that you knew was deep in the ground. You could feel the sound as well as the huge waves. Not fun in Vegas.
@@InternetJury I could have sworn it was 4:33am. I remember waking up just before it started, staring at my clock radio, and think about John Cage's 4'33" Turns out, I'd set my clock forward a few minutes... oops!
Nah, I’ll take tornado country. At least tornado season is only a few months out of the year, and you get warnings and can go to your shelter. I lived thru 3 small quakes in CA and would never want to experience that again!
Mission Viejo checking in. I grew up in Long Beach and moved to the OC in 2010. We felt this earthquake VERY strongly. I was standing at my kitchen sink and I thought, “Welp, the big one is finally here.”
I mean Alaska and California get the most earthquakes out of every state in the US, but large ones like this aren't that common. Usually smaller ones. But we are still prepared for it even if we get tiny earthquakes
Common yes, this big not so common. If this had been in LA it would have been much worse! Ridgecrest has a population of about 30,000 and is in the middle of the wide open Mojave Desert out by Death Valley so the destruction was not as extensive.
As a lifelong resident of California, these can be scary and unnerving; quick note, always secure heavy furniture to the wall. Never hang heavy items over the head of your bed (mirrors, pictures, lamps, etc). Make a note of where your gas and water mains are. Turn off the gas main as soon as you safely can. Always have an escape route planned and an emergency route ready for pets, kids, yourself, family etc. It only takes a few minutes to put it together. and it could save your life. Help those who cannot help themselves. Stay lovely. ❤
14:23 I know that area. That's the Tokyo House Restaurant at Ridgecrest. My family and I used to go there I think around 3-5 years ago before we moved out of state.
It’s interesting to see how the same quake can appear differently depending on your location. Did that one where the people were sitting in what looked like a hotel suite happen in Las Vegas? I don’t think I realized they got quakes in Vegas. Perhaps not everything that happens in Vegas stays in Vegas!
Yes, very much felt it in Vegas. Our little fault in town made something like little echos of the shaking. It was like the Earth was on a waterbed with long rolling waves. Strangest feeling I've ever been through. Lasted about 3 or so minutes.
For those who have experienced one, is the movement mostly laterally, forwards/backwards side to side in one axis or both? Or is it up and down too? Or just crazy random all over the place? Ive heard it throws your balance off and can make you feel drunk. I just have nothing to compare it to and cant imagine one! But I got you on hurricanes lol! Been in many eyes of many hurricanes.
Depends on the kind of quake. I've been in several large quakes. They were all so different from each other. The San Francisco one, almost felt like rolling. The streets literally looked like a wave
@MattH-wg7ou I'm born, raised, lived my whole life in CA. Nowhere else. When the 1971 San Fernando quake hit (6:00 am, 6.6 mag), our house had extremely loud rumbling and creaking, and the house was shaking violently up/down & side to side. When the 1992 Humboldt one hit (11:05am, 7.2 mag), we were traveling thru the area and the bldg was shaking violently in an up & down manner. When the 1994 Northridge one hit (4:30 am, 6.7 mag), our house (then) was swaying and rocking like we were on a boat, and the creaking & rumbling was very loud. When this 2019 Ridgecrest one hit (8:19 pm, 7.1 mag), we were visiting a city nearby & the noise sounded like the bldg was going to collapse and everything was swaying side to side like something huge was pushing the bldg back and forth. All of the other quakes for all these years (in the 3, 4, & 5 mags), it depended on where we were, the bldg age/structure, fault location, etc. Yes, it throws your gait off (like when you're trying to walk down the aisle on a moving train and you have to grab onto the railing). For the Northridge one, we had a 2-story house and we all sat down on the top stair and bumped down on our butts on each stair to the ground floor (it was too dangerous to stand up & go down the stairs). Things flew off shelves, lamps swayed and fell, dishes came out of the cabinets, and the worst thing to have is a freestanding fish aquarium (that's why I've seen a lot of people in CA build them in the walls). Our TV fell over and broke in the San Fernando quake, among other things.
Initially it does feel like you're dizzy. I kept a hanging lamp over my bed when I lived in CA as an early warning system. Different quakes have different feels, and can be affected by how close to the epicenter you are. I remember the Coalinga quake felt like the vibration of a truck or train. Loma Prieta was more a roller or "wave". Mind you I was a good distance away from both so didn't get the full force. I was in Laughlin NV for Ridgecrest and it was more of a shaker than a roll at that distance.
It varies… I’ve been in shorter ones that feel like swaying side to side, and others that feel like a tremble… one of the most violent ones felt like the entire house was picked up and SLAMMED down quickly. I don’t remember the magnitude but I was terrified. Also have experienced most of them at night, so the bed must change the impact? At this point I actually wake up or feel weird right before one hits, to the point I’ve felt smaller tremors when no one else noticed and I had to look it up to confirm 😢
My wife and I flew back to Los Angeles, the following day. Everyone in the airport was just library quiet. It was immediately noticeable. I guess most tourists got to experience more of California than they had planned to. 😂
I've lived on the east coast my entire life and the only one I've felt was back in April. That was just a 4.8, so I couldn't imagine what a 7.1 would feel like.
That is some fascinating contrast between "Lol we have an Earthquake live on while streaming" and people panicly exiting that restaurant thingy while everybody is screaming bloody murder. Also realisation just came to me *eyes bottles and glases on the table* If an earthquake would ever start over here of that size I'd be so fucked ^^; Luckily I'm in Germany and the highest here I ever felt was I think 3 or something
I remember being in that earthquake. We just came back from my grandma's house and I was in the garage getting my bike. I remember seeing everything in there shaking and then felt it a little later. Idk why but I ran inside my house and went under the table even though you're supposed to go outside during an earthquake 💀💀 I was 11 at that time so I guess my little brain was so scared I just wanted to be with my family inside LOL. Our t.v fell over and some picture frames were broken, but other than that there wasn't a whole lot of damage. I don't live in Cali anymore and I really wish to go back, but one thing I'm happy about is that where I live now there are never any earthquakes jajajaja
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Siganme en mi nuevo canal secundario Earthquake Compilations Review, donde reacciono a mis compilados de sismos y explico sobre los eventos captados:
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Gracias / Thank you😉!!
Eu não sei como funciona o treinamento contra terremotos nesse país, mas eu acredito que a melhor solução para essas pessoas, seria desligar o gás, sair de casa e procurar um lugar aberto e sem coisas que possam cair sobre as suas cabeças.
Ggggg😂
burrito
Everyone knew
I it’s kind of funny seeing the people on TV react to the shaking when the TV itself is also shaking. It kind of makes it seem like they’re inside the TV lol.
That's what it was like when the small Seattle quake shook for a good 5-7 seconds recently.
My aunt was watching the news and every one got silent, even the news anchors on her t.v 😅😅😅
me when I trap the news anchors in my tv
Earthquakeception.
@@niles8102You guys ready for that mega quake tsunami with a million deaths up there? Any day now.
lol ikr
You've gotta love the irony of a news broadcast cutting to a commercial right in the middle of an actual story that's unfolding around them.
who asked
@arctiax9916 obviously not your father since he was never there for you, considering your demeaning edgy behavior.
how do you think they make money?
THE EARTH IS SCREAMING TOWARD THE SUN! News at eleven.
@@michaeldwyer9656 Aliens have invaded NYC! Now, onto the weather.
1:30 Cats: "WTF WTF WTF WTF WTF WTF WTF"
That one cat DRIFTED
That's a very good older brother at 10:15.
Does they blasting WW2 German marches?
@@AlexFalkon-n2x that's "Schwarzbraun ist die Haselnuss", a german soldier's song, don't know why that's playing there LOL
I thought the same thing. He got her to safety and calmly explained to her what was happening.
@@AlexFalkon-n2x - BLUUUUMELEIN
@@Killbaynebruh? That's Mickey mouse parade music lolol
Watching a live newscast of an earthquake AS YOURE IN THAT EARTHQUAKE has got to be one of the most unforgettable experiences one can ever have. I never once considered something like that to be possible, but of course, it would be completely possible.
We got some of that up in NorCal during the 89 quake. I was in an area where you could feel it and see the ground rolling a little but not close enough to the actual disaster zone part. It was completely bizarre.
And they try to sell you a new car during the earthquake. Love it 😂
@@GlintzKollideThe commercials are all in a pre-planned playlist - they tossed to break to give themselves time to figure out the details and that was the next one up
Yep. Its a trip.
During the Northridge quake, we would wait for aftershocks by watching the news. Their studios were much closer to the quakes then we were at that time, so we'd see them react, and about 15 seconds later, we'd feel them.
It’s definitely a trip. Has happened twice to me. They have so much above them that can easily fall on them, but they know what to do.
Legend says they’re still looking for Trevor.
lmaoooo
LMFAOOO
WHERES TREVOR!
@@TheMrDarius He clipped into the backrooms during the shaking
saw this comment RIGHT when the vid got there lmaoo
The fact that there was no real damage is a real sign of up-to-date codes.
if this happened in my country, there would be a building collapsed and fatalities already
same if this happened where I live there would be tons of homeless people
This is why the same earthquakes in California and let's say India or Mexico produce completely different damage.
Except the fact that the epicenter was hundreds of miles away in the middle of nowhere
@@chrissaenz6213 No, it wasn't... the epicenter was actually a little east of there between Ridgecrest and Trona. Some giant cracks opened up in the earth and the road out that way needed to be repaired. There was still plenty of damage, but not nearly as much as there could have been. I know, I live in the general area and at the time worked as an insurance inspector. I saw a LOT of the apartments and motels in Ridegcrest, and many of them needed some form of repair. There were fires and gas leaks all over the area, and people were without power (in the middle of summer in the Mojave desert) for quite a while. Those two quakes cause billions in damage, but it was still relatively minor when you consider the magnitude of both quakes.... but not unscathed by any means.
This was interesting to watch since I live in Ridgecrest. I remember July 4th and 5th of 2019. We had 6.4 one day and 7.1 the next day. I slept outdoors for at least a week because I couldn't relax enough to sleep inside.
Dang I’m sure that must’ve been a rough time. At least it wasn’t too bad and you’re more prepared now I hope
Same i was prob 7 by the time then when the 6.4 happend I was scared for my life my brother was taking a shower so imagine how scary that would be and when the 7.1 hit me and my family slept near jackson park we where not taking any chances
I was born there in ‘84 and we moved away in 1990. But it’s still a special place for me.
No one ever talks about this. I literally thought I was the only one who remembered this. The one that happened on the 4th happened in the morning, and this one happened the next day in the night. It was a very crazy and unique experience..
i always thought that was some sort of dream since nobody i knew ever talked about it 😭
25:46 Love how something literally falls and shatters behind him and he's just like, "Shoot, let me finish what I'm watching/reading here and I'll get right to caring about this hazardous situation I'm in."
A lot of idiots out there during an earthquake.
Why the Hell did he NOT mount the TV on the wall? This is So Cal. Think.
Well, so long as the house isn't falling down, not a huge rush to do anything lol
Eh. I’ve lived in SoCal my whole life and that’s about as much as I react to earthquakes at this point. 🤣 The only thing I ever worry about is if my pets are scared/okay/etc.
Yeah and he had a dog and didn't seem to give a rat's ass about how he/she was doing.
"MUFFIN 😳"
I died when his tone changed in that moment, lol
That’s when the shaking REALLY started 😮
Only got two things to say: Never say "it's just an aftershock", and never try to keep things from falling. Treat earthquakes as if they will get worse.
I "experienced" the Christchurch NZ 6.3 earthquake, it was classed as an aftershock of the 7.1 Canterbury earthquake. I was 5 miles from the epicentre and was thrown around like a doll. It was close and shallow which added to the intensity, a MMI of XI. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Christchurch_earthquake
"We're experiencing a very strong earthquake"
Producers: "cue the Ford Explorer commercial"
Lolll
That poor woman who was caught in a tsunami from her own pool.😢
and I think her husband forgot that she was "going swimming"!😬
It took him awhile to come rescue her so it's a good thing she didn't make it all the way into the pool.
Yikes. Great security camera footage though!👍
Good thing she wasn’t in the pool yet, scary stuff!
Wait what stopped her from standing up? Instead of waiting for him to come save her phone first then her?
@@SilverXTikal aside from losing her balance in a 7.1 earthquake? Given how old she looked, perhaps she has a medical issue, bad back, bad knees, etc., who knows, who cares? I have a bad back (2 herniated discs) & a hip replacement, I can’t just jump up on a good day, lol. She needed help.
@@SilverXTikalthe phone is important, she could use it to CALL for help
Somewhere in one of the first clips, cats were running for their lives across the driveway.
Those poor kitties went skitterin'... :(
@@LadyMissCoppertoneWho cares about them
3:20 - the pool threw up!
3:59 - dude looks like he's modeling for that stove.
8:11 - all excited until shit got real. (read the chat comments LOL)
21:42 - dude gonna surf the quake!
Muffin!!
Oh hell no being inside home depot... Fuk that
I worked in a freezer with shelving just like Home Depot. We had 7 aisles. I would jump into a TranSafe. If you don't know what that is, it's a plastic icebox for trucks with no freezer, we stuff it with dry ice. Four people could fit in one.
What's interesting about earthquakes is that the number attached to it really doesnt mean much as far as whats felt or damages. The same size quake can be much different depending on the ground structure, depth, distance and type of quake. Some 7's are relatively minor like this and some are catastrophic like Turkey. Both were 7 ish.
You also have to factor in that a third world country like Turkey is going to have a poor infrastructure, not capable have handling quakes. In contrast to first world countries.
It was 7.8 in turkey. So 5 times stronger than this.
@@goodkrypollo1706 Turkey is not a third world country lol
What you're describing is *intensity*, which is how much an earthquake is felt at a given location; versus its *Magnitude*, which is how much energy the earthquake released - and there are different scales for both! The latter is measured in the modern era as "Moment Magnitude" - though many often reference the "Richter scale," which is _technically_ measuring a different kind of Magnitude than MMI, but the numbers all conveniently line up so Meh - while the former is measured according to the Modified Mercalli Intensity (MMI) scale.
Magnitude is always a single, objective number, with an increase of 1 on the scale equating to roughly 33x more energy: If a Magnitude 3 earthquake is roughly ~4,000lbs of TNT, then a Magnitude 4 is ~133,000lbs of TNT. This is also why the difference between a 6.4 and a 7.1 is so massive, despite being "only" a 0.7 difference in Magnitude.
Intensity, like you said, varies a lot depending on distance from the fault, the geology of the ground the quake is traveling through, and the structure you're in. There's a lot of variation, and it's not entirely objective! For example, someone on the top floor of a skyscraper in a "mild" quake might find themselves being thrown a few feet by the swaying of the building while the ground floor barely moves at all. A house on bedrock may only have mild shaking for a few seconds, while a house on silty fill in a basin would feel shaking for minutes (Looking at you, LA). This is a big reason USGS collects "Did you feel it" data - it helps them better understand how different faults and energy levels transmit through different areas, which is an important part of planning for earthquakes in the first place, along with alerting people when they're about to happen.
@kilodeltaeight I'm aware of all that... I just said I found it fascinating. Thankfully, for being smack in the middle of the Cascadia Subduction Zone, I happen to be in a spot with all the least affected factors... BUT the house was built on a Boulder style foundation in 1916. And new foundations cost more than the house did when I bought it.... it'll be interesting to see what happens when it finally let's it rip.
I've learned that during a bad earthquake, NEVER BE AROUND OTHER HUMANS. Human reaction to an earthquake is scarier than the earthquake.
Agree. All it takes is someone to be a tough guy to downplay the seriousness of the situation. What we need are plans for what to do like we did in school so we aren't caught off guard
Don't be a sheep then?
Even during and earthquake
*ads*
21:06
Legend has it, he is still swearing to God
have to say, being in a earthquake has got to be one of the most surreal and scariest feelings in the world.
Scariest if the earth ever decides to open its belly and eat one of these states lol.
I was in an earthquake on April 5 in NJ and it was terrifying
And how many times, do people shout "OMIGOD!" during these things?...So unoriginal.
after having been in a small one recently here in NY, a 7.1 must have been terrifying
same goes for tornadoes!
Anyone else left hanging on whether or not muffin was indeed found to be ok?
Or Trevor! 😅
@ 5:26 - Pretty weird to be nearly drowned by your pool, when you not even in it!
I was in the Loma Prieta shake in ‘89. That was quite a ride, too.
Yeah, same here! I was in Daly City when it hit. The Battle of the Bay World Series was on and suddenly everything started shaking. My grandma's glass curio fell over and all the dishes came flying out of the cupboard. The San Andreas fault runs right through my backyard, so we all thought our house was going to fall off the cliff. Some people say the reason why there weren't more casualties is because of the baseball game. Everyone was either at the game or indoors watching it. I think only 63 people died.
In hindsight the only reasons why there weren’t more casualties is because the roads were almost empty die to everyone either being at the game or watching it at home or the bar.
I was all the way over in Davis for that one and still got quite the ride. My mom was supposed to be coming home on the 880 but didn't tell us that sh'ed swapped shifts with someone. Spent hours in a panic. Dude she swapped with watch it collapse in his rearview.
Now that was an earthquake! It pretty much destroyed downtown Santa Cruz and took them years to recover. I wasn't living there at the time but it was so scary not being able to get ahold of family over there to see if everyone was OK. I was living inland at the time and still felt it pretty good. Our pool was sloshing water all over the place. Man, all these memories are flooding back like seeing part of the Bay Bridge collapse. Such a devastating earthquake.
I was in the '71 Sylmar quake as a kid.
Nah, I was there attending UCSC. It damaged downtown but it didn't "destroy" it. We were all without power for days. Since all the meat in the freezer would go bad we had a block party BBQ. It was a bad situation but we did our best to get through it. I would prefer not to experience that again.
My son and I felt the second one in Stockton. I was sitting in the same direction as the waves, and I felt like I was riding a mini rollercoaster. Pretty trippy! 💚🌎
seems like it was a blast for the both of you!
The second one reached Vegas! I was chilling in an Olive Garden when it hit. Granted, Vegas was so far that I thought at first it was just like a muscle twitching or something, then I noticed the chandelier was swaying slightly. It was super mild in Vegas, but we felt it!
19:00 the dog playing with the water😂 Also, I'd love to see someone actually IN a pool while it's happening
We were in Las Vegas during this one, getting ready to go out on the town. Our room was on the 15th floor of Harrah's and, boy did we sway! Fortunately, everything went on as planned and there was no damage/injuries reported.
Loved the reaction of the eagle at 35:00. 14:25 never do that during an earthquake, chances are higher to get hurt by doing that.
Doing what? Leaving a building that can collapse on you? It's dumb to stay inside.
@@V-XENO The act of leaving a building in a rush, trampling over people and things, causes more injures and deaths than the collase of buildings.
@@V-XENO My point is that something that is instinctive is not, many times, also logical or correct.
@@V-XENO as @vant83 said, tripping and pushing people in a rush is very dangerous. but in addition to that, if you know you live in an area where buildings are built with earthquakes in mind, then the need to leave the building immediately is low, and it's better to shelter in place underneath a table or the like.
@@V-XENO You get in a doorway or under a heavy table. Rushing outside is what gets people killed. Source: am a Californian
Guys! Stop filming and get under a table! And hang on. As a native Californian who has been through plenty of earthquakes it’s alarming to me that people don’t seem to know what to do. IG does not need you to get crushed by your bookcase! Also, yikes. That was a BIG one.
THIS! @18:04, the people under the table get it right. I’m not near anything tall, so my ass is running outside.
I can only imagine living there and every time having that "Is this the big one?" thought. I guess its not too different from where I live and every tornado thinking "is this the ef5?"
At least with a tornado you’ll have some idea that a strong storm system is coming. Earthquakes have 0 prep time. That’s why I’ll pick a place where there’s 0 earthquakes lol
@@trantorthetroll8768 not necessarily. I mean you're right at least there is usually a warning a few hours out about a potential tornadic storm but predicting if it will be an ef0 or an ef5 is impossible. I actually had a tornado in Tulsa go through my backyard while I was sleeping in 2017. There were no warnings at all and the sirens didn't go off until after the tornado had already injured a few people at a TGIFridays and a few other places. I think it was an ef2. It was a wild storm and very unusual though.
The question in both cases are: WHY DON'T YOU MOVE?
@@ruivam in Tulsa we have never had an ef5 or an ef4 at least in documented history. So yeah tornadoes are a threat here but it's not a time bomb unlike California or somewhere that has earthquakes.
@@ruivam I love when people say "just move then lol" as if that isn't a major life event that requires great amount of time, effort and money
I live about 100 miles away from Ridgecrest, and it felt as strong here as it looks in the videos. I had just gone through a drive through to get myself and my pup some food. We were pulled over in the lot as I unwrapped her hamburger patty while she sat on the passenger seat staring intently at it like "Hurry up human, I'm hungry", when the car started bouncing like the vehicles in the videos. At first I thought some crazy street person was jumping up and down on the rear bumper, but nope. Then I noticed all of the plants including the tall palm trees lining the street were swaying and vibrating in unison. The odd thing was, people were still walking in and out of the nearby stores like nothing was going on. I looked down at the pup and she was still sitting there staring at the patty in my hand, head tilted, ears up. She had her priorities straight, food was more important than a stupid earthquake. 😄
All we could do was ride it out for the thirty seconds or a minute it lasted, and hope it wasn't about to get worse or another, stronger one wasn't going to follow it over the next several days.
The cars and trucks! That was by far one of the most interesting things I've ever seen. The motion of the cars and trucks looked like that of them rolling down a bumpy road, ALL of them at the same time. So much power, to realize that the actual ground is what is riding up, down and around like its driving down a bumpy road haha
Great compilation. The people that run outside during a STRONG earthquake, though🤦♀..
Minute 20:15: "100% it's an earthquake, a swear to God!" Of course it's an earthquake, dude, you are in California, what else do you think it could be? ;-))
He is talking to someone
You sure can tell which areas were close to the epicenter via the pools and cars.
21:00 "The building SWANG" LOLLL I never heard of that word! I felt 3 of the quakes, the 6.4 quake on July 4 (10:33 am), an after shock at 6:10 am on July 5, and then the main quake (7.1) at 8:20 pm. I live in Los Angeles, so it wasn't as strong.....but the 7.1 quake shook my home for a minute and a half!
"The building's swaying." Actually.
Dude I watched the entire video to the end and I'm "flaberghasted"! Ya shows my age ... started to read the comments and found yours! You are one of the very few people that posted a timeline. And I am speachless! I was going to go on a rant, but no. What I saw was utter complacency in 90% of this post. I've been in an earthquake aftershock, where the initail one was 7.1. The aftershock was 8.6, nine hours after the first. Then demishing there after for 6 day's, at least 2 per day. Never the less, "Catistrophic". I was part of an American military relief effort, my duties was a battlefield medic. Non the less, what I saw in this video was exteamly disheartning. "Grab the cell-phone make make sure we capture it, it's gonna go viral, not just one but two RUclipsr's laughing while streaming," One clip showing a food court and guests "just sitting there as if it was another normal day"! Man, I can honestly say "I've been to HELL and was one of the few to make it back" but these people that I watched need to WAKE UP! If you still live there dude,,,,,Please stay safe, be aware of your compass, and in my opinion....."GET THE HELL OUT OF DODGE"! Just sayin ... I'm 66 years old and my biggest treasure in life is the knowledge that I helped! avb 🤘
@@albeal9213 I've never been in an earthquake that was more than 5.0 within a 30-mile range. But the quakes from 100+ miles away in the 6-7 range I feel, just not as strong! Yes I would never even think to pick up a cell phone and record unless I just happened to be recording anyway....and I do stay safe and aware....earthquakes are scary because they happen any time with no warning!
The 1:20 clip with the cats made me laugh so hard. Am I going to hell?
If you are, so are all the rest of us! 😂
Did they ever find Trevor?
Everyone loves magical Trevor, cause the tricks that he plays are ever so clever…
No he unfortunately was found underneath a large piece of rubble and succumbed to his injuries
Trevor is still lost wandering around lost in the desert!!!! LOL!😅😮😮
If you're ever in an earthquake please be aware of your surroundings. It never ceases to amaze me how most people do the exact opposite of what you're supposed to in an earthquake. Living in California, as little kids in school we were taught :
- Stay calm.
- Do NOT run outside. You risk falling debris, fallen power lines, etc...
- Get underneath something sturdy, crouch on the floor, tuck your head and protect your head/neck using your hands.
- Stand in a sturdy doorway. They are structurally strong areas.
No don't stand in a doorway that's how ppl die also unless u live in a city if u can run outside do it
When the Northridge quake hit I was out on Catalina and it woke me up. My ex who had never felt an earthquake jumped up and ran outside. He came back in after it was over and asked what “should I do?” I told him to go back to sleep and don’t run outside next time.
@@u4riahsc I guess that's why he's your ex?.... because you're a c-word?
The doorway is not the safest area to be unless you are in an old masonry building.
This might have been good advice for California at the time you were a kid, but it would have get hundreds of thousands more people killed in other countries - like in Turkey or rural China.
And it’s actually not that great for earthquake-prone places like California and Japan in the 21st century, where most buildings are designed to not need you to block the doorway, and where the main hazard is furniture & ceiling falls and fires caused by cooking gas.
My question is did they ever find Trevor where the f*** is Trevor ? Let me find out that's a dog or a cat I swear to God?
I with you 💪🏻
Don't EFF with animals, don't neglect animals, don't abuse animals and don't "Oh heck, he will be back" with animals.
They are first!
BTW, I quit my job as a dr4g counselor and bought a farm to take in neglected/abused/Disabled/ or homeless animals.. they are my everything.
I hate how people get them, then turn on them 😔
😂
The bobble head at 17:04 is like “SOMEBODY HELP ME!!!” 🤣
*slowly inching closer to the edge*
"Finally, I can end the suffering!"
When the Northridge quake hit it was a 6.5 with a lot more destruction. This was a 7.1 with way less damage.
One was centered in a heavily populated metro area, the other was 150 miles NE of there, way out in the desert.
A small quake hit eastern Pennsylvania years back and i was putting wheels on a car that was on the lift at y friends garage. Walked over and it was shaking on the lift and as I stood there I felt it roll under me through the concrete floor !!!!!😊😊😊😊😊
the people stuck in the tv can even feel it
14:27 yeah dont go under the table trample everyone everyone to the door.
It is always so disconcerting at first when an earthquake hits.
Man the street view at 0:33 really shows you the actual scale of these events. Very cool and quite scary too.
Look at the pool @ 0:46. Those first ripples must be the P Waves and then the S Waves hit @ 0:48. Fascinating.
My sister lives in Ridgecrest, her walls cracked. She slept in her car for two days.
I supposedly slept through an earthquake. I didn't know at the time how to check reports but the person who was there with me said the trees were shaking wildly for a moment. This means, to date, I have slept through a pretty decent earthquake, slept 90% through a category 3 hurricane, and almost slept through a nearby tornado. Of course, at this stage of my life, I can be woken up by the fart of a deer at 500ft.
I've slept through tornadoes as well, but I can hear my door being open..😂
You can hear a power line buzzing at 18:55.
Thanks I hate it😂
MUFFIN!!!!
0:11 The newscasters were scared too
In L.A. when this happened. Was pretty strong and went on for what seemed forever! 😫
There were two videos taken at Disneyland - 125 miles away, and two at Las Vegas - 145 miles away.
It’s all fun and games until Muffin goes missing…😂
@@Frookie11😂😂😂
Nah, sending you to commercial in the middle of an earthquake is wild. Like at least hit us with an old fashioned “we’ll be right back”
I was in the north ridge quake in 91 I think. What a ride! The sound came first, I thought a jetliner was crashing in the neighborhood…Apt buildings fell, freeways fell it was bad. I couldn’t sleep for days!
1994... 6.7
Yeah, this one had a weird deep deep rumbling sound. It was a sound that you knew was deep in the ground. You could feel the sound as well as the huge waves. Not fun in Vegas.
Yup. MLK Day. We had Monday off so in the end we didn't miss any school where we were (an hour from the epicenter).
January 17, 1994, 4:30am. My 19th birthday.
@@InternetJury I could have sworn it was 4:33am. I remember waking up just before it started, staring at my clock radio, and think about John Cage's 4'33"
Turns out, I'd set my clock forward a few minutes... oops!
0:21 why didn't turn on the Emergency Broadcast System
9:28 the pain in her voice from laughter to fear. Scary part that could've been the big one.
we never have the EBS go off for earthquakes 😭
@@acid7658that's awful ngl
By the time the warning went off it'd probably be over.
Not going to lie; I miss earthquakes. Grew up in Orange County, ,moved to Colorado in 1995. Would trade tornados for earthquakes any day!
I grew up in La Habra and moved to Florida in 2009. I miss California and would trade a hurricane for an earthquake!
Yeah, I would much rather deal with the earth shaking a bit than to deal with tornadoes. I've been through both, and a hurricane.
Me being from colorado and thanking the lord I don’t have to deal with earthquakes lol
Nah, I’ll take tornado country. At least tornado season is only a few months out of the year, and you get warnings and can go to your shelter. I lived thru 3 small quakes in CA and would never want to experience that again!
Mission Viejo checking in. I grew up in Long Beach and moved to the OC in 2010. We felt this earthquake VERY strongly. I was standing at my kitchen sink and I thought, “Welp, the big one is finally here.”
Is this a common thing for people who live in California?
Not this big.
I mean Alaska and California get the most earthquakes out of every state in the US, but large ones like this aren't that common. Usually smaller ones. But we are still prepared for it even if we get tiny earthquakes
Common yes, this big not so common. If this had been in LA it would have been much worse! Ridgecrest has a population of about 30,000 and is in the middle of the wide open Mojave Desert out by Death Valley so the destruction was not as extensive.
Every time someone says there was an earthquake I never feel it
As a lifelong resident of California, these can be scary and unnerving; quick note, always secure heavy furniture to the wall. Never hang heavy items over the head of your bed (mirrors, pictures, lamps, etc). Make a note of where your gas and water mains are. Turn off the gas main as soon as you safely can. Always have an escape route planned and an emergency route ready for pets, kids, yourself, family etc. It only takes a few minutes to put it together. and it could save your life. Help those who cannot help themselves. Stay lovely. ❤
14:23 I know that area. That's the Tokyo House Restaurant at Ridgecrest. My family and I used to go there I think around 3-5 years ago before we moved out of state.
Not gonna lie. This vehicle booty shaking compilation has got me all riled up.
Its just wild to see this and to think that we live on ground that constantly moves 🤯
"Its okay its just when the Earth is shaking" that has to be the scariest feeling for a kid who thought the Earth couldnt move like that haha
Some wild footage. Interesting to see different people's reactions an animals as well. Another reminder of how precarious life is.
1:00 The Bike still standing blows my mind! Mine cant even STAND with just the smallest gust of wind! WTF
That first clip of the news anchors is kinda funny. Looks like theyre shaking inside the tv and reacting to it LOL
The woman knocked down next to the pool getting slammed by waves.🌊 wow.
Cat @ 1:28 😂
It’s interesting to see how the same quake can appear differently depending on your location. Did that one where the people were sitting in what looked like a hotel suite happen in Las Vegas? I don’t think I realized they got quakes in Vegas. Perhaps not everything that happens in Vegas stays in Vegas!
I think that bit was Vegas but it was still the RIdgefield quake; I know Vegas felt it though. Some folks felt it up north in the Sacramento area too.
Yes, very much felt it in Vegas. Our little fault in town made something like little echos of the shaking. It was like the Earth was on a waterbed with long rolling waves. Strangest feeling I've ever been through. Lasted about 3 or so minutes.
That's trippy, watching the people on the TV react to the TV shaking
LOL The lady just riding out the pool-nami!
I know! I laughed so hard 😂
10:15 What is more dangerous then an earthquake? Live power next to an above ground pool, during an earthquake and standing right next to it. 😂
8:27 gotta find Muffin.
i feel so bad for the animals just running around helpessly
For those who have experienced one, is the movement mostly laterally, forwards/backwards side to side in one axis or both? Or is it up and down too? Or just crazy random all over the place? Ive heard it throws your balance off and can make you feel drunk. I just have nothing to compare it to and cant imagine one!
But I got you on hurricanes lol! Been in many eyes of many hurricanes.
Depends on the kind of quake. I've been in several large quakes. They were all so different from each other. The San Francisco one, almost felt like rolling. The streets literally looked like a wave
@MattH-wg7ou
I'm born, raised, lived my whole life in CA. Nowhere else. When the 1971 San Fernando quake hit (6:00 am, 6.6 mag), our house had extremely loud rumbling and creaking, and the house was shaking violently up/down & side to side. When the 1992 Humboldt one hit (11:05am, 7.2 mag), we were traveling thru the area and the bldg was shaking violently in an up & down manner. When the 1994 Northridge one hit (4:30 am, 6.7 mag), our house (then) was swaying and rocking like we were on a boat, and the creaking & rumbling was very loud. When this 2019 Ridgecrest one hit (8:19 pm, 7.1 mag), we were visiting a city nearby & the noise sounded like the bldg was going to collapse and everything was swaying side to side like something huge was pushing the bldg back and forth. All of the other quakes for all these years (in the 3, 4, & 5 mags), it depended on where we were, the bldg age/structure, fault location, etc. Yes, it throws your gait off (like when you're trying to walk down the aisle on a moving train and you have to grab onto the railing). For the Northridge one, we had a 2-story house and we all sat down on the top stair and bumped down on our butts on each stair to the ground floor (it was too dangerous to stand up & go down the stairs). Things flew off shelves, lamps swayed and fell, dishes came out of the cabinets, and the worst thing to have is a freestanding fish aquarium (that's why I've seen a lot of people in CA build them in the walls). Our TV fell over and broke in the San Fernando quake, among other things.
Initially it does feel like you're dizzy. I kept a hanging lamp over my bed when I lived in CA as an early warning system.
Different quakes have different feels, and can be affected by how close to the epicenter you are. I remember the Coalinga quake felt like the vibration of a truck or train. Loma Prieta was more a roller or "wave". Mind you I was a good distance away from both so didn't get the full force. I was in Laughlin NV for Ridgecrest and it was more of a shaker than a roll at that distance.
It varies… I’ve been in shorter ones that feel like swaying side to side, and others that feel like a tremble… one of the most violent ones felt like the entire house was picked up and SLAMMED down quickly. I don’t remember the magnitude but I was terrified. Also have experienced most of them at night, so the bed must change the impact? At this point I actually wake up or feel weird right before one hits, to the point I’ve felt smaller tremors when no one else noticed and I had to look it up to confirm 😢
It felt like waves rolling through
It's interesting to see the wide range of reactions. :D
the advetisement hahahahaha 0:25
this is crazy, it's like watching an intro to a found footage thriller movie
7:52 Your nose?
4th of July SHAKEATHON
I want to know who Muffin is 😂
smartest in the moment thing i have heard.. turn the oven off
0:11 crazy the same thing is happening
That rare moment when the terrain is more unstable than the inhabitants.
Robim Williams: I live in California I live on God's Etch a sketch it's crazy!
My wife and I flew back to Los Angeles, the following day. Everyone in the airport was just library quiet. It was immediately noticeable. I guess most tourists got to experience more of California than they had planned to. 😂
I've lived on the east coast my entire life and the only one I've felt was back in April. That was just a 4.8, so I couldn't imagine what a 7.1 would feel like.
You can tell... people dont use their parking break. The transmission is not meant to lock wheels.
10:30 feels like an ominous scene in a movie, dad comforts son that “its only the earth shaking” right before an apocalyptic event happens !
That is some fascinating contrast between "Lol we have an Earthquake live on while streaming" and people panicly exiting that restaurant thingy while everybody is screaming bloody murder.
Also realisation just came to me *eyes bottles and glases on the table* If an earthquake would ever start over here of that size I'd be so fucked ^^;
Luckily I'm in Germany and the highest here I ever felt was I think 3 or something
Trevor! Where’s TREVOR??
I've only experienced a 4.5 in NJ. The sound of it is as scary as the vibration. You can feel the power of the earth and nature.
The lady who sat down was the smartest one of all.
That’s cool & terrifying at the same time.
i felt that earthquake 60 miles away when i was living in mojave, ca. and it was pretty damned strong even from that far away.
I remember being in that earthquake. We just came back from my grandma's house and I was in the garage getting my bike. I remember seeing everything in there shaking and then felt it a little later. Idk why but I ran inside my house and went under the table even though you're supposed to go outside during an earthquake 💀💀 I was 11 at that time so I guess my little brain was so scared I just wanted to be with my family inside LOL. Our t.v fell over and some picture frames were broken, but other than that there wasn't a whole lot of damage. I don't live in Cali anymore and I really wish to go back, but one thing I'm happy about is that where I live now there are never any earthquakes jajajaja
Stop telling your kid it is not shaking, when it clearly is. LOL