hour. and the problem we have here now, joe, is that we have a lot of these tornado chasers so you can get money selling the video to the television stations now. and i think we all know now how dangerous this thing is. nature power. sometimes man thinks he can control nature. it s just amazing when you watch the average lifetime of a thunderstorm is 35 minutes. cells are always popping up and down. as far as what happened to mr. bets, i think he just got hit by a little satellite vortex. it wasn t the main thing. he was in a relatively safe place. bill: you are talking about the weather channel guy who is in the hospital right now. he is going to be all right. and then two other guys were shaken up. i have got to run, he gentlemen, thanks very much for your expertise. we appreciate it there is the car the weather guys got hammered in. when we come right back, eric holder should be forced to he resign. it should be interesting segment. adam can a carolla school
get to safety quick enough, the tornado eats you. in a way tornado chasers are like big game hunters and there is a risk that happens when you are hunting. more people probably die climbing mt. everest than storm chasing. the storm chasers at least get information that helps people. that s the real question, do they? things have been invented so they don t have to do that. some is for tv outlets who want it. it is exciting. i want to know do they add a percentage that helps people save lives or do they not? i tweeted this last night. i threw the question out there is this something we want to encourage or discourage? there were literally hundreds saying they help us out and tell us where the storms are and tell us when they are headed our way. people are interested in that continuing. do we have the time we have a sound byte we don t have
on a prairie and if you don t get to safety quick enough, the tornado eats you. in a way tornado chasers are like big game hunters and there is a risk that happens when you are hunting. more people probably die climbing mt. everest than storm chasing. the storm chasers at least get information that helps people. that s the real question, do they? things have been invented so they don t have to do that. some is for tv outlets who want it. it is exciting. i want to know do they add a percentage that helps people save lives or do they not? i tweeted this last night. i threw the question out there is this something we want to encourage or discourage? there were literally hundreds saying they help us out and tell us where the storms are and tell us when they are headed our way. people are interested in that continuing. do we have the time we have a sound byte we don t have
holiday inn in missouri after people were reported being injured. an amazing perspective from tornado chasers. this is what it was like for chasers at tbn, and they touched a tornado touch down in el reno, oklahoma. horizontal! it s going to be right in front of me, mike. it s coming down right now. an entire vortex coming down to the ground. mike, i have to back out of it. wow. wow.
they really did. this was actually the storm that took that path, developed west of el reno, oklahoma, it traveled along i-40 that caused that road to be shut down. took that right turn to the south, then moved back to the northeast towards the airport and oklahoma city. that created all of the initial alarm. the other two stayed in a straight line, just northwest to southeast, but it was, i don t know if this is the actual tornado they were driving through, there were so many different tornadoes in the bigger system. the path of it, for the tornado chasers themselves who have a full carload of technology to track storms, to get stuck in the middle of it is astounding. you can see it is important to point out, they re not trying to be brave, they re trying to get out of the way, save their own lives. you can see in this video as we continue to watch it another car flies by them, looks like it was just about to be picked up,