This video of the 2011 EF5 Hackleburg tornado approaching Phil Campbell is one of the scariest things I’ve ever seen.
When you’re in the path of a wedge like this, the average person usually cannot recognize it as a tornado.
This is why. It’s just too big.
Gonzaga ran the same middle ball screen concept basically every single half court possession the final 12 minutes of the game yesterday and Kentucky had zero answers.
(One more Ike bucket isn't on here because the TV director cut to a fan shot mid-play)
@eBay I made my first sale on eBay and it was genuinely the worst experience I’ve ever had. The website is glitchy, it’s impossible to navigate, there was an error with my order and you have no customer support to help me. The ai assistant is awful. Horrible product.
He’s six-under for the last nine holes. This major will get mocked in years to come, we all know it, but if you swap out Rai for Scheffler it becomes one of the great closing performances of this generation. It does not get better.
The Interest Expense on US Public Debt hit $1.27 trillion over the last 12 months, another record high. If it continues to increase at the current pace it will soon be the largest line item in the Federal budget, surpassing Social Security.
$LULU new 8-year lows
$NKE new 12-year lows
Retail research analysts built their entire persona pumping the “moat” of these two.
Here’s a lesson: Brands have no moat. They’re either getting hotter, or they’re cooling.
You win by observing at which stage the brand is at.
Basically how tornado alley works:
Green - less tornadoes but more photogenic
Yellow- mixed
Red - more tornadoes but less photogenic
Some of the quieter years like 2018 and 2014 didn’t have the numbers but had the photogenic tors because the green area was the focus
Enid was one of the more EF5 capable tornadoes we have seen this decade. While I doubt it’ll achieve that rating; the contextuals point to an extremely violent tornado (along most of its path) with complete debarking of trees/shrubbery, ground scouring, and vehicle annihilation.
From 2:30 pm to 9:09 pm on April 27, 2011, there wasn't a single moment where there wasn't an EF-4 or EF-5 tornado on the ground. At a few times there were as many as four ongoing concurrently. That is one of the craziest statistic of 15 years ago.
The terrifying view of the tornado near Enid, Oklahoma this evening as it crossed the road. Join our live streams & watch the full chase edit coming up via https://t.co/nieJn2YwxP