If you live in the South, or tornado alley, you have an extra reason to keep your bathroom really clean.....you never know when you might be laying on the bathroom floor trying to survive a tornado!
March 28 1984 Carolinas Outbreak claimed 57 lives . The tornadoes were traveling at 65 mph . Many people found that their bathrooms offered no protection as their homes were completely swept away . They had to rescue one lady from a treetop with use of a fire truck ladder . A family of six was blown into a tree in their car . An infant male was carried several counties away by the giant supercell . The largest tornado that evening reached 2.5 miles wide near Red Springs NC . The Carolinas lost 25,000 acres of timber in this barrage of storms . I remember riding through Beaver Dam NC with my parents and seeing the entire community having been destroyed . There were was a car wrapped completely around a pole. I saw a single wide mobile home in a farm field that had flown four miles away in the giant tornado .
I was in a tornado in 1988, the lightning is whats so crazy ive never seen lightning like that before or since in person. It never stops, its like a strobelight.
I went through the Hattiesburg EF3 tornado in 2017. The lightning was back to back and I was the first one up that night. I had never seen lightning like that.
@@cassandraleonaward6228its wild isnt it? You can see clearly and its nighttime (in my case) from how fast and steady the lightning was, was quite a sight. Then the hail hit, then the sound of the tornado and my little 10yr old rear end went running to wake up Dad haha.
@@davidca96 My now 12 year old daughter said “But mom, I want to go back to sleep.” When me and my mom got her up. I had woken up at 2:59 AM with the deep down feeling that something wasn’t right. Half an hour later, I heard the sirens and looked out the window, not realizing there was a tornado on its way. I saw constant wind and back to back lightning. I woke my mom up and we heard it coming. I asked if it was a tornado and the lights flickered and went out. That’s when we got my daughter, who was almost 5 at the time. We got into the bathroom of the brick apartment we were in and my grandma and her husband got in the other bathroom. The tornado passed behind the apartment complex. I was up for the rest of the night. I won’t forget January 21, 2017. My dad went through the Hattiesburg EF4 tornado in 2013. So he was safe that night in 2017.
I love tornados and for sure love watching these videos. I appreciate them alot. Im more worried about them at night cause u cant see them unless their hitting power flashes and stuff.
@@harolynallison3962 What I was thinking. I lived through one, but was left without a home. Lived through two actually. I do watch all the videos that I find, but don’t find them ‘fun’. Some can really be beautiful, meaning the storm structure and all the ingredients of how they form. After I was hit, I made sure to learn all I could, didn’t want one to sneak up on me again! God bless !🙏🙏🙏
March 31st of this year my town was hit and that mosnter was right there on the other side of the tracks at 11 pm. I took my babiea and hid in the hall way closet and prayed. It was a nightmare. And fema doesnt have funding for grants to get anyone a storm shelter which is wrong. Im glad you were safe!! Ours was an ef3 or 4 wedge tornado
I live 46 miles South of Rolling Fork and I'm terrified of storms. Had Ryan Hall on the whole time! Seems like although they talk bad about MS tornadoes, the past few years seems it skips over us, the bad stuff, and hits mostly in Alabama. Or maybe equal? I'm glad y'all are okay!
This is WILD! Glad you and your family and house were okay! Can I use this for a compilation I'm making on tornadoes (with added context, analysis and narration)? It would use only a limited portion and credit and a link would be given, of course!
Did you NOT watch the video?? The power went out at the end. AND he's friend (or whomever the guy was) LITERALLY said, "I HAVE NO INTERNET!"🤦🏽♂️ My God, you people don't pay attention to anything.
This is one of the most awesome captures Ive seen. When you see this and decide , yea I ll take time to watch , you just dont know if or what you might see. It was right there. Glad yall are ok
@alexpalmer255 That's still a good storm! An EF1 will flip a car. EF2 is doing pretty good damage. No matter how strong the actual tornado is, they can all have pretty strong RFD, which is what I experienced. It looked just like what you videoed. A once in a lifetime experience for you! At home, anyway!
@mkp3824 Yea Well For Most People That's The Second One I've Experienced The First Was An EF3 on April 27th 2011 I Got Very Lucky I Watched It As It Headed Straight Towards My House It Missed It By about 100 Yards It Still Took My Roof Off And Destroyed My Whole Neighborhood
@alexpalmer255 That was a bad day for tornados for sure. The odds of seeing one from your house is small. To see two of them from your house, even if you lived in two different houses, is really small!
At 0:43 you can start to hear it (turn up ur volume & listen.) That freight train sound starting followed by that rushing sound of wind a few seconds after. That is a loud wedge! That tornado is way closer than it appears to be; all rain wrapped & right in front of you!!!! Worst time though! Night tornadoes are hard to see coming unless you have lightning or power flashes. They'll be on you faster than you can think. This one almost Sounds just like Andover Kansas tornado when it gets close. You did the right thing by going to the bathroom.
The very first thing he says in the video was POWER FLASHES... The video is titled TORNADO. The POWER goes out. He's says POWER FLASHES and TORNADO throughout the video. You: "tHaT LiGhTeNiNg wUz aMaZing🤤" 🙄🙄🙄🤦🏽♂️
Moved to the south years ago from Southern California, used to love when the storms came through because I’ve never experienced anything like it …. Until tornadoes actually hit not directly but some people died two miles away the power was out for over a month with the heat and humidity it was fucking horrible!! Now I’d rather go through 10 earthquakes than one ef-0 tornado any day….. if I could afford to live in California:(
What gets me about a lot of these videos of people taking videos of these storm's is they see the tornado and stay out instead of getting to shelter. Then some of them are injured or die because they didn't go to shelter.
@@alexpalmer255 That sound at 0:43 seconds is your cue to take cover. If you ever hear that roar (Freight train) sound & rushing wind sounds it's coming closer.
I remember my first experience with a tornado, my girlfriend at the time asked me if I can get her home, and it was on tornado watch. I looked at her and said “well, see here’s the thing right. That’s how every scary man starts before coming up with a excuse of why not to take her home. I was so scared I said “you see I would, but I can’t because I got carpal tunnel syndrome in my knee just now” I don’t think I can “ I think that’s when she realized I was retarded. Lmao
Outside of your literal description of what this video is about... If you're just randomly standing outside at night, that's whats scary irl. You can't tell if its lightening or power flashes. Fortunately you could hear the wind howling. That let you know the tornado was near. You probably got a tornado warning too.
@@alexpalmer255 and that's why us chasers are here! People don't even know the difference between watches and warnings. Spreading weather knowledge is the least we can do 😂
Yea Very Close Call I Was Watching Radar And The Rotation Signature Didn't Look That Impressive So I Honestly Wasn't Expecting There To Be One On The Ground
If you have a vehicle, and you know a tornado is approaching and you don't use that vehicle to get out of a Supercells path, you are an idiot and deserve everything that happens to you. You can easily evade, outrun or go in the opposite direction, yet still choose to sit in the path of 150 to 300 mph winds, you deserve to be sucked up into the air. Lived in Tornado alley my whole life and chased many tornadoes, but never sat and waited to die.
@Storm Chaser Alex Palmer Glad you made it. I inadvertently got caught in the May4, 2003 Tornado outbreak and barely made it into Stacks Smokehouse BBQ. We huddled in the walking freezers. Those were literally all that was left of the building. At one point a total of 7 tornadoes were on the ground at the same time here in KC. I came out off the freezers and it looked like a bomb had leveled the area. Spent the rest of the time trying to find my daughter who worked there, but she jetted before it hit. Guess she got that from me. The one thing I remember so vividly was the pressure change. My eardrums felt ruptured. That was the EF-4 that totally destroyed almost I still everything in its path. I was scared, I didn't want to die, but it was what I'd been doing for so long before. I ended up getting trapped due to powerline poles and debri all in the street. Smokestack was my last chance. At that point as I exited to run into the building the updraft was so strong it nearly took me up for real. 30 seconds later, it hit. I'll never forget that day. Was like over 114 tornadoes in a span of about 14 hrs. I felt confident in my chasing abilities, but never expected the debris in the roadway. I had a Bronco but that was the end of the line that day for me. I got boxed in. Never found my Bronco again. It went somewhere, but I don't know where. Glad you were OK, but that wind came up superfast in your video. You probably did the right thing by sheltering where you were. Take care.
Tornadoes can travel at 60 to 70mph, and they don't have to follow the roads, so they can catch up to a vehicle. There have been plenty of people killed or seriously injured over the years because they tried to out-run a tornado & were unsuccessful, they drove into a rain-wrapped tornado, or they were on the road & unaware of an approaching tornado. FYI, if you live in a properly built house or apartment building, and you take cover in the most interior room (without windows) on the lowest floor of the building (ideally wearing helmet & covering yourself with a mattress), your chances of survival area quite good. Even if you are hit by a violent tornado, you have a reasonable chance of surviving (..believe it or not, the data shows that the survival rate in F-5/EF-5 tornadoes has been around 90% for those taking shelter in a properly built house...) However, if you are in a car or truck, even a tornado capable of causing EF-1 level damage can launch deadly debris through the windows & body of the vehicle, leading to serious injuries or death. A tornado capable of causing EF-2 level damage can lift & throw, or roll, a car or truck a long way, and the occupants will be injured or worse by that, as well as debris flying into the vehicle. A tornado capable of causing EF-3 or more damage is likely to kill the occupants of a vehicle. So, unless (a) you know exactly where the tornado is headed, (b) you have a lot of lead time (10 minutes minimum), (c) you know exactly where to go to get out of its path, and (d) there are no traffic jams from everyone else doing the same thing.., you are in greater danger trying to drive away from a tornado than if you took proper shelter in a properly built home or apartment building. On top of all this, keep in mind that tornadoes are spawned by large, supercell thunderstorms, and these storms can cause flash flooding that can lead to the occupants of a car being drowned. The only exception to what I have described (which is what the NWS says) is if you live in a mobile home, 'manufactured home', trailer, or a similar structure. In that case, even strong straight line winds can lift, roll, and/or destroy the structure & leave you injured or dead. (there have been people who have been seriously injured or killed when a tornado misses their place, but strong winds from the storm destroyed their place or blew trees onto their place & crushed them) Those who live in mobile homes, 'manufactured homes', trailers, etc should always have a place they can go that will provide proper shelter, and those who live in such structures should not wait until the last minute to find a safe place. Those folks should know now where they can go (..e.g. the properly built house of a relative, friend, neighbour), they should have made arrangements with the owners of the 'safe place' so that they can go there whenever dangerous weather is possible. Last, they must monitor the weather every day, so they can head to their safe place before dangerous weather develops & approaches their location.
If you live in the South, or tornado alley, you have an extra reason to keep your bathroom really clean.....you never know when you might be laying on the bathroom floor trying to survive a tornado!
It's Not My Bathroom So I Don't Clean It
@@alexpalmer255 😂😂
March 28 1984 Carolinas Outbreak claimed 57 lives . The tornadoes were traveling at 65 mph . Many people found that their bathrooms offered no protection as their homes were completely swept away . They had to rescue one lady from a treetop with use of a fire truck ladder . A family of six was blown into a tree in their car . An infant male was carried several counties away by the giant supercell . The largest tornado that evening reached 2.5 miles wide near Red Springs NC . The Carolinas lost 25,000 acres of timber in this barrage of storms . I remember riding through Beaver Dam NC with my parents and seeing the entire community having been destroyed . There were was a car wrapped completely around a pole. I saw a single wide mobile home in a farm field that had flown four miles away in the giant tornado .
@@jeffbryan4019 unfortunately most of us only have bathrooms to hide in
@Jeff Bryan that sounds crazy! I am from Rockingham but was living in Germany during that time.
I was in a tornado in 1988, the lightning is whats so crazy ive never seen lightning like that before or since in person. It never stops, its like a strobelight.
Exactly..it's not powerflashes
I went through the Hattiesburg EF3 tornado in 2017. The lightning was back to back and I was the first one up that night. I had never seen lightning like that.
@@cassandraleonaward6228its wild isnt it? You can see clearly and its nighttime (in my case) from how fast and steady the lightning was, was quite a sight. Then the hail hit, then the sound of the tornado and my little 10yr old rear end went running to wake up Dad haha.
@@davidca96 My now 12 year old daughter said “But mom, I want to go back to sleep.” When me and my mom got her up. I had woken up at 2:59 AM with the deep down feeling that something wasn’t right. Half an hour later, I heard the sirens and looked out the window, not realizing there was a tornado on its way. I saw constant wind and back to back lightning. I woke my mom up and we heard it coming. I asked if it was a tornado and the lights flickered and went out. That’s when we got my daughter, who was almost 5 at the time. We got into the bathroom of the brick apartment we were in and my grandma and her husband got in the other bathroom. The tornado passed behind the apartment complex. I was up for the rest of the night. I won’t forget January 21, 2017. My dad went through the Hattiesburg EF4 tornado in 2013. So he was safe that night in 2017.
I love tornados and for sure love watching these videos. I appreciate them alot. Im more worried about them at night cause u cant see them unless their hitting power flashes and stuff.
You wouldn't love them if you lived thru one
You ever been in one ? You sure af wouldn’t be laughing and joking in the bathroom or standing at the door that long !!
@@harolynallison3962 What I was thinking. I lived through one, but was left without a home. Lived through two actually. I do watch all the videos that I find, but don’t find them ‘fun’. Some can really be beautiful, meaning the storm structure and all the ingredients of how they form. After I was hit, I made sure to learn all I could, didn’t want one to sneak up on me again! God bless !🙏🙏🙏
Wow that's crazy, thank you for sharing to us, be safe, thumb up here
I'm from Florence. I have lots of family there, still. None of my family were injured from this tornado.
Thanks for sharing this with us, great footage of the wedge... 😮
March 31st of this year my town was hit and that mosnter was right there on the other side of the tracks at 11 pm. I took my babiea and hid in the hall way closet and prayed. It was a nightmare. And fema doesnt have funding for grants to get anyone a storm shelter which is wrong. Im glad you were safe!! Ours was an ef3 or 4 wedge tornado
Looks like, fortunately, the wedge missed you. However, very strong inflow jet affected your neighborhood. Wow! What an intense episode!!!!!
I live 46 miles South of Rolling Fork and I'm terrified of storms. Had Ryan Hall on the whole time! Seems like although they talk bad about MS tornadoes, the past few years seems it skips over us, the bad stuff, and hits mostly in Alabama. Or maybe equal? I'm glad y'all are okay!
Dixie Ally, it came to be. All that warm air/Tropical air Masses converging over HOT GROUND!
Geoengineering
“Hey, my Emo music’s still on!”
I may be a sucker for tornadoes and severe weather but I gotta admit that this was my favourite part of the video lol
Cool footage. Lucky you dodged it 😊
This is WILD! Glad you and your family and house were okay!
Can I use this for a compilation I'm making on tornadoes (with added context, analysis and narration)? It would use only a limited portion and credit and a link would be given, of course!
Yes
Can You Send Me A Link To It When Your Finished
@@alexpalmer255 Absolutely!
@@alexpalmer255 Dr Prowl makes awesome videos! I'm sure being subscribed to his channel is why your video came up in my feed!
@@alexpalmer255 It's up! Your clip is the second-last one. Thanks for letting me use it! ruclips.net/video/A5_ABYUp7cQ/видео.html
Didn’t even know there was one that close that day! Smh 🤦♀️ I’m in Decatur
That is something out of a nightmare. Glad you were all okay.
That's a tornado in the deep south for ya. Rain-wrapped and they come in the dark of the night. It's no wonder they are so deadly.
Amazing your power stayed on with all those power flashes.
It Did Go Off At The End And We Was Without Power For 3 Days
@@alexpalmer255 life without electricity sucks.
Yea I went through an EF-3 Tornado April 27th 2011 and Our Power Was Out For Over A Month
@@alexpalmer255 that was a rough year!
Did you NOT watch the video?? The power went out at the end. AND he's friend (or whomever the guy was) LITERALLY said, "I HAVE NO INTERNET!"🤦🏽♂️
My God, you people don't pay attention to anything.
Damn tornado hit your bathroom!! 🌪️At least an EF2.
It Was A Spin Up Tornado The Bathroom Was The Only Thing Hit
@@alexpalmer255 what’s a spin up tornado?
This is one of the most awesome captures Ive seen. When you see this and decide , yea I ll take time to watch , you just dont know if or what you might see. It was right there.
Glad yall are ok
That’s some good footage you captured
Good video! We had RFD and circulation like that when we had an EF1 go by the house, about 1/2 a mile away. Good video!
It was rated an EF2
@alexpalmer255 That's still a good storm! An EF1 will flip a car. EF2 is doing pretty good damage. No matter how strong the actual tornado is, they can all have pretty strong RFD, which is what I experienced. It looked just like what you videoed. A once in a lifetime experience for you! At home, anyway!
@mkp3824 Yea Well For Most People That's The Second One I've Experienced The First Was An EF3 on April 27th 2011 I Got Very Lucky I Watched It As It Headed Straight Towards My House It Missed It By about 100 Yards It Still Took My Roof Off And Destroyed My Whole Neighborhood
@alexpalmer255 That was a bad day for tornados for sure. The odds of seeing one from your house is small. To see two of them from your house, even if you lived in two different houses, is really small!
@@mkp3824 I Lived In Hodges,Alabama at The Time Of The First One And Yea That's The Reason I Moved And Then I Had Another Close Call With A Tornado
You can see the thing! And hear it not to mention!
That’s a massive storm!
That was a beast! 😮
Coughing hillbillies
Wow thats amazing to Watch im glad you all are ok i lived in Moore Oklahoma for a long time no matter what the tornados are always scary!
In the first few moments, it looks like extraterrestrials are coming in for a landing 😮
Glad y'all are alright!!
Florence KY is where I live dude lol
Good footage friend
At 0:43 you can start to hear it (turn up ur volume & listen.) That freight train sound starting followed by that rushing sound of wind a few seconds after. That is a loud wedge! That tornado is way closer than it appears to be; all rain wrapped & right in front of you!!!! Worst time though! Night tornadoes are hard to see coming unless you have lightning or power flashes. They'll be on you faster than you can think. This one almost Sounds just like Andover Kansas tornado when it gets close. You did the right thing by going to the bathroom.
That lightening was amazing and scary at the same time.
Yeah Some Of It Was Also Power Flashes
The very first thing he says in the video was POWER FLASHES...
The video is titled TORNADO.
The POWER goes out.
He's says POWER FLASHES and TORNADO throughout the video.
You: "tHaT LiGhTeNiNg wUz aMaZing🤤"
🙄🙄🙄🤦🏽♂️
@wadewilson8011 It Was A Tornado Dumbass Could You Not See The Outside Edge
Moved to the south years ago from Southern California, used to love when the storms came through because I’ve never experienced anything like it …. Until tornadoes actually hit not directly but some people died two miles away the power was out for over a month with the heat and humidity it was fucking horrible!! Now I’d rather go through 10 earthquakes than one ef-0 tornado any day….. if I could afford to live in California:(
I think tornadoes in the South are a more active danger than earthquakes in California and Hurricanes in Florida
Omg not looking good out there God bless the people who live their and God bless take care of our storm Chasers
That's nightmare fuel.
Looks intense.
What gets me about a lot of these videos of people taking videos of these storm's is they see the tornado and stay out instead of getting to shelter. Then some of them are injured or die because they didn't go to shelter.
This is The Second One I've Seen And It Mesmerized Me Both Times When I Felt Real Danger Is When I Couldn't See It Anymore
@@alexpalmer255 That sound at 0:43 seconds is your cue to take cover. If you ever hear that roar (Freight train) sound & rushing wind sounds it's coming closer.
Was the lightning really so blue?
I could not see the tornado, but I could HEAR it!
The scariest part about this is the lack of toilet paper.
Y’all were lucky.
Thats what we call bathroom decorations in Alabama.
Scary very scary especially at night
you can hear that big mf too
Yeah stand under metal with lighting flashing around. Real f****** brilliant
🤣 yeah that's a man thing we wanna watch it women stay inside thats why males are the leading people who die from lightning
God spared us. Hit at night. Sounded like a train. Lights went out. After a moment the silence is so profound you think you've gone deaf.
I couldn't see shait either lol
I'd be right there with you.
Oh dear
Can’t tell if that’s lightning or a sparking transformer!
Yeah it's hard to tell but some is transformers and some is lightning
Was this is Alabama?
Yes
Some storm chaser! Those are NOT power flashes! It's the strobe-like lightning that accompanies super cells.
Most of it was lightning but there was a couple power flashes I know the difference
Did they ever find Brian?
Yea they found him Lol
He now lives with the Griffin's in Quohawg , Rhode Island...
Hi billie
Holy god
What I wanna know is how you've got the bollocks to be recording that and not getting into a safety. 😳 I'd be shitting myself.
I Was Scared But I Couldn't Move
There is no way these people are professional storm chasers.
Is this the one that destroyed Rolling Fork MS as well?
No it was a different one but on the same day
@@alexpalmer255 Alr
Lucky.
I remember my first experience with a tornado, my girlfriend at the time asked me if I can get her home, and it was on tornado watch. I looked at her and said “well, see here’s the thing right. That’s how every scary man starts before coming up with a excuse of why not to take her home. I was so scared I said “you see I would, but I can’t because I got carpal tunnel syndrome in my knee just now” I don’t think I can “ I think that’s when she realized I was retarded. Lmao
Outside of your literal description of what this video is about...
If you're just randomly standing outside at night, that's whats scary irl. You can't tell if its lightening or power flashes. Fortunately you could hear the wind howling. That let you know the tornado was near. You probably got a tornado warning too.
It was an f2 didnt destroy any houses major trees down that hit some houses. Scared the hell out of me.
No such thing as an f2. We don't use f scale anymore and haven't for decades
Some People Don't Study The Weather Like We Do But I Know What They Was Trying To Say And Yes It Was Rated An EF-2
@@alexpalmer255 and that's why us chasers are here! People don't even know the difference between watches and warnings. Spreading weather knowledge is the least we can do 😂
@@lifeintornadoalleypeople still do. Who cares if someone says ef2?
@@lifeintornadoalleyalso not all storm chasers are reliable either.
Close call!
Yea Very Close Call I Was Watching Radar And The Rotation Signature Didn't Look That Impressive So I Honestly Wasn't Expecting There To Be One On The Ground
I know where you live i used to live there
Yea Hermitage Apartments
@@alexpalmer255 yepadoodle
Warum sucht man keinen Schutz???😱😱😱😱
German ?
@@alexpalmer255 jes Germany
Hey storm chaser when did this happen
Same day rolling fork got hit
You should've been in the bath tub face down & head covered.
My momma says dat dare a tornader
Yup that bathroom looks like a tornado.
Kim is sick of your shit 😂
How to record a video:
Step 1: Turn your phone sideways. (THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT STEP!)
Step 2: Hit Record
Step 3: Hit stop
Sideways to me?...or sideways to the world?...🤔😁
What a mess
If you have a vehicle, and you know a tornado is approaching and you don't use that vehicle to get out of a Supercells path, you are an idiot and deserve everything that happens to you. You can easily evade, outrun or go in the opposite direction, yet still choose to sit in the path of 150 to 300 mph winds, you deserve to be sucked up into the air. Lived in Tornado alley my whole life and chased many tornadoes, but never sat and waited to die.
I Was Looking at the radar but didn't know that there was a Tornado on the ground till it was to late
@Storm Chaser Alex Palmer Glad you made it. I inadvertently got caught in the May4, 2003 Tornado outbreak and barely made it into Stacks Smokehouse BBQ. We huddled in the walking freezers. Those were literally all that was left of the building. At one point a total of 7 tornadoes were on the ground at the same time here in KC. I came out off the freezers and it looked like a bomb had leveled the area. Spent the rest of the time trying to find my daughter who worked there, but she jetted before it hit. Guess she got that from me. The one thing I remember so vividly was the pressure change. My eardrums felt ruptured. That was the EF-4 that totally destroyed almost I still everything in its path. I was scared, I didn't want to die, but it was what I'd been doing for so long before. I ended up getting trapped due to powerline poles and debri all in the street. Smokestack was my last chance. At that point as I exited to run into the building the updraft was so strong it nearly took me up for real. 30 seconds later, it hit. I'll never forget that day. Was like over 114 tornadoes in a span of about 14 hrs. I felt confident in my chasing abilities, but never expected the debris in the roadway. I had a Bronco but that was the end of the line that day for me. I got boxed in. Never found my Bronco again. It went somewhere, but I don't know where. Glad you were OK, but that wind came up superfast in your video. You probably did the right thing by sheltering where you were. Take care.
Tornadoes can travel at 60 to 70mph, and they don't have to follow the roads, so they can catch up to a vehicle. There have been plenty of people killed or seriously injured over the years because they tried to out-run a tornado & were unsuccessful, they drove into a rain-wrapped tornado, or they were on the road & unaware of an approaching tornado. FYI, if you live in a properly built house or apartment building, and you take cover in the most interior room (without windows) on the lowest floor of the building (ideally wearing helmet & covering yourself with a mattress), your chances of survival area quite good. Even if you are hit by a violent tornado, you have a reasonable chance of surviving (..believe it or not, the data shows that the survival rate in F-5/EF-5 tornadoes has been around 90% for those taking shelter in a properly built house...)
However, if you are in a car or truck, even a tornado capable of causing EF-1 level damage can launch deadly debris through the windows & body of the vehicle, leading to serious injuries or death. A tornado capable of causing EF-2 level damage can lift & throw, or roll, a car or truck a long way, and the occupants will be injured or worse by that, as well as debris flying into the vehicle. A tornado capable of causing EF-3 or more damage is likely to kill the occupants of a vehicle. So, unless (a) you know exactly where the tornado is headed, (b) you have a lot of lead time (10 minutes minimum), (c) you know exactly where to go to get out of its path, and (d) there are no traffic jams from everyone else doing the same thing.., you are in greater danger trying to drive away from a tornado than if you took proper shelter in a properly built home or apartment building. On top of all this, keep in mind that tornadoes are spawned by large, supercell thunderstorms, and these storms can cause flash flooding that can lead to the occupants of a car being drowned.
The only exception to what I have described (which is what the NWS says) is if you live in a mobile home, 'manufactured home', trailer, or a similar structure. In that case, even strong straight line winds can lift, roll, and/or destroy the structure & leave you injured or dead. (there have been people who have been seriously injured or killed when a tornado misses their place, but strong winds from the storm destroyed their place or blew trees onto their place & crushed them) Those who live in mobile homes, 'manufactured homes', trailers, etc should always have a place they can go that will provide proper shelter, and those who live in such structures should not wait until the last minute to find a safe place. Those folks should know now where they can go (..e.g. the properly built house of a relative, friend, neighbour), they should have made arrangements with the owners of the 'safe place' so that they can go there whenever dangerous weather is possible. Last, they must monitor the weather every day, so they can head to their safe place before dangerous weather develops & approaches their location.
Bathroom is nasty.
Hillbillies
Clean your bathroom while your in there, that’s awful
How many times do I have to tell people it's not my bathroom damn
Would you volunteer to clean it if it wasn't your bathroom hell no so shut up
Clean your house
It's Not My House if You Don't Have Anything Nice To Say Don't Say Anything