This is a lot better than the real emergency alert those folks had, I like it! More information and it didn't have that terrifying wee ooo wee ooo noise :) Also, I love that you used Paul for extra accuracy!
@MichaelLovely-mr6oh it's from our NBC affiliate KFOR Channel 4. Chief Meteorologist Mike Morgan (he's still there) and on camera during this clip is Dan Threlkeld, who eventually went on to be chief at two Tulsa stations. Dan recently retired.
Interestingly; this tornado is what introduced the term "Tornado Emergency" into the Severe Weather Lexicon. By definition; a Tornado Emergency means that: 1.) A large, destructive and violent tornado has been sighted by either trained weather spotters, storm chasers, or law enforcement officers. 2.) This tornado is heading for a densely populated area. 3.) There is a high possibility of deaths or serious injuries resulting from the tornado. This is the text from the Tornado Emergency that was broadcast during the May 3, 1999 tornado that tore through Moore Oklahoma, Bridge Creek Oklahoma, and the southwestern parts of the Oklahoma City metro area: "Tornado Emergency in south Oklahoma City metro area! At 6:57 PM Central Daylight Time; a large tornado was moving along Interstate 44 west of Newcastle. On its present path, this large damaging tornado will enter southwest sections of the Oklahoma City metro area between 7:15 PM and 7:30 PM. Persons in Moore and south Oklahoma City should take immediate tornado precautions! This is an extremely dangerous and life-threatening situation! If you are in the path of this large and damaging tornado; take cover immediately! Doppler radar indicated this storm may contain destructive hail to the size of baseballs, or larger."
Tom Pastrano in 2023 is working a the Tulsa Oklahoma affiliate . He still works in tandem with Oklahoma City local affiliates. Frmr Chief Meteorologist Rick Mitchell from KOCO-TV is now working for an affiliate in Dallas/Ft Worth . Mike Morgan is still at KFOR-TV in Oklahoma City to this day.
It is. Though it was the tornado that struck Moore, Oklahoma on May 3rd, 1999 that introduced the term "Tornado Emergency" to the severe weather dictionary. By definition; a Tornado Emergency is only issued by the National Weather Service when the following criteria is met: 1.) A large and destructive tornado has been sighted by trained storm spotters, Doppler radar or law enforcement agencies. 2.) The tornado is moving rapidly towards a densely populated area. 3.) There is a high possibility of serious injuries or loss of life; so doctors, nurses, police officers, firefighters and paramedics need to get ready for a mass casualty situation.
This is a lot better than the real emergency alert those folks had, I like it! More information and it didn't have that terrifying wee ooo wee ooo noise :)
Also, I love that you used Paul for extra accuracy!
I heard the ooo wee ooo wee ooo sound in my head while reading your comment. This was way better than those affected by the tornado received.
That was captured on Oklahoma City's CBS affiliate KWTV Channel 9.
@MichaelLovely-mr6oh it's from our NBC affiliate KFOR Channel 4. Chief Meteorologist Mike Morgan (he's still there) and on camera during this clip is Dan Threlkeld, who eventually went on to be chief at two Tulsa stations. Dan recently retired.
Interestingly; this tornado is what introduced the term "Tornado Emergency" into the Severe Weather Lexicon. By definition; a Tornado Emergency means that:
1.) A large, destructive and violent tornado has been sighted by either trained weather spotters, storm chasers, or law enforcement officers.
2.) This tornado is heading for a densely populated area.
3.) There is a high possibility of deaths or serious injuries resulting from the tornado.
This is the text from the Tornado Emergency that was broadcast during the May 3, 1999 tornado that tore through Moore Oklahoma, Bridge Creek Oklahoma, and the southwestern parts of the Oklahoma City metro area: "Tornado Emergency in south Oklahoma City metro area! At 6:57 PM Central Daylight Time; a large tornado was moving along Interstate 44 west of Newcastle. On its present path, this large damaging tornado will enter southwest sections of the Oklahoma City metro area between 7:15 PM and 7:30 PM. Persons in Moore and south Oklahoma City should take immediate tornado precautions! This is an extremely dangerous and life-threatening situation! If you are in the path of this large and damaging tornado; take cover immediately! Doppler radar indicated this storm may contain destructive hail to the size of baseballs, or larger."
Tom Pastrano in 2023 is working a the Tulsa Oklahoma affiliate . He still works in tandem with Oklahoma City local affiliates. Frmr Chief Meteorologist Rick Mitchell from KOCO-TV is now working for an affiliate in Dallas/Ft Worth .
Mike Morgan is still at KFOR-TV in Oklahoma City to this day.
Ah yes, the old Alpha Moon Base tts.
WOAH! THIS LOOKS LIKE 99 SHOULD HAVE BEEN
Sounds like some one who works at 7 eleven 😂
I am going to use this EAS alert.
When you think the eas was the person then you turn up the volume and the real eas shows up
When he left the EAS transmission started
Where can I get this text to speech voice?
aeiou tts
What TTS program did you use?
DECtalk 5.0 digital version
@@SPCSafetyHarbor2235 thanks, I found a similar program and got the voice
What font is that?
VCR EAS
A 1999 TOR-E is exclusive
It is. Though it was the tornado that struck Moore, Oklahoma on May 3rd, 1999 that introduced the term "Tornado Emergency" to the severe weather dictionary. By definition; a Tornado Emergency is only issued by the National Weather Service when the following criteria is met:
1.) A large and destructive tornado has been sighted by trained storm spotters, Doppler radar or law enforcement agencies.
2.) The tornado is moving rapidly towards a densely populated area.
3.) There is a high possibility of serious injuries or loss of life; so doctors, nurses, police officers, firefighters and paramedics need to get ready for a mass casualty situation.
Aducity :)
The Men’s Voice Is Clean