Storm chaser and pilot

Joined January 2010
71 Photos and videos
Skip Talbot retweeted
You may have heard that hundreds of employees were just cut from NOAA and the National Weather Service (NWS). These agencies were already critically understaffed, and these firings will have real consequences—for public safety, disaster response, and even the economy. But here’s the bigger picture: This looks like the first step toward privatizing the NWS, which would be a disaster. Why? Because the NWS is a public service that keeps us all safe. Privatization could mean paywalls for tornado warnings, delayed hurricane alerts, and profit-driven weather forecasting. 🔎 Here’s why the NWS (and NOAA) should NEVER be privatized: ➡️ Private weather companies RELY on NWS data. -The Weather Channel, AccuWeather, and local meteorologists don’t generate their own raw data—they use NOAA & NWS resources like satellites, radar, and observation stations. 📡 -Without the NWS, private companies would either have to build their own billion-dollar infrastructure or work with incomplete data. 💰 ➡️ Public safety should NEVER be paywalled. -The NWS provides free, immediate alerts for hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and severe storms. ⚠️ -Privatization could mean delays in warnings, paid subscriptions for life-saving information, or companies selling critical data before the public gets access. 💲 ➡️ The NWS is a national security asset. -FEMA, the military, emergency responders, airlines, and shipping industries depend on NWS forecasts. 🛑 -A privatized system could prioritize corporate clients over public safety, leaving vulnerable communities without real-time warnings. 📊 ➡️ The private sector would ignore rural and low-income areas. -The NWS operates 120 local forecast offices, including in rural areas that private companies would have no financial incentive to serve. 🌎 -A for-profit model could leave small towns with incomplete or delayed weather data. ⏳ ➡️ Weather research & climate science would take a massive hit. -NOAA and NWS are key players in climate research, hurricane forecasting, and extreme weather tracking. 🌡️ -Universities, farmers, environmental groups, and global partners depend on free, accurate weather data. Privatization could restrict access or commercialize it. 📉 ➡️ The NWS is already funded — privatization would just make weather forecasting more expensive. -Tax dollars already pay for the NWS, meaning everyone gets equal access to critical weather info. 💵 -If privatized, private companies would still rely on government-funded data but charge consumers and businesses to access it. ⚖️ ➡️ International cooperation would be disrupted. -The U.S. provides free weather data to other nations, helping global disaster preparedness. 🌍 -If that data is monetized or restricted, it weakens global storm tracking and emergency response efforts. 🚫 ⚠️ The Bottom Line: Privatizing the National Weather Service is dangerous, unnecessary, and purely profit-driven. Weather data belongs to everyone, not corporations. Cutting NWS staff is already putting public safety at risk, and if privatization happens, we will all feel the consequences. This is a conversation we need to be having. If you care about public safety, disaster preparedness, and free access to life-saving information, share this post and make your voice heard. 🗣️💙 #ProtectTheNWS #NOAA #NationalWeatherService #PublicSafetyNotProfit #KeepWeatherFree
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11 years since El Reno, we still chase Oklahoma, even High Risks. But we've changed since then. How we chase, where we chase, and who we are as chasers youtube.com/watch?v=ww-yHvg5…
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Detailed breakdown of the accidents that occurred April 4 last year, along with recommendations for safer storm chasing: youtu.be/6PWtNkh-MPE

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A monster lurking in the corn. Shots from Sunday in Illinois: youtu.be/IWPkAIz-0Z4
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Now I know why they call it meteorology. We found the meteors! The craters in this van have their own craters.
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Join us live in a few minutes for a storm chasing safety briefing. I'll be discussing escape route planning and going over some scenarios you might find yourself in someday.
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This is an issue of competency on the most basic level 1. Escape as soon as you recognize you're in the path. 2. Escape away from the path, not across it. Failure may result in death. All chasers need to understand this before they ever take to the road. youtu.be/ea8DgOA-mr0
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"Supercell" movie releasing March 17. I played a small part in the film as a gas station cashier where the main characters stop before the location is struck by a tornado! Super fun to be involved. Official trailer: youtu.be/U1zBYtFHMx4
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3 January 2023 Illinois tornado shots: youtu.be/eJjSb9KCwis

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One of my favorite chases of all time
Happy Eads day! The dream chase, with clean, open air tornadoes from a cyclical supercell, over open land. Eads, CO on May 9, 2015.
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In-depth analysis of the events that led to a commercial storm chasing tour being impacted by a #tornado on 28 May 2019 near #Lawrence #Kansas youtu.be/By_b0Fj99yE
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Our own angle on the Tipton tornadoes, gathering multi-perspective imagery in the hopes of studying low level wind fields: youtu.be/Hovq9wVfGrQ

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youtu.be/rVIQtKuDr2c Analysis of the 1 December 2018 Illinois tornado outbreak, cold core tornado forecasting, understanding supercell cycles and tornado formation. This is a recorded version of my presentation for the 2019 #DupageWxSeminar @ProtectDuPage

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