Deadly Disasters Full Episode | Blizzards

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Featuring interviews from leading weather experts such as Karsten Haustein from Oxford University’s Environmental Change Institute, this episode of Deadly Disasters will focus on Blizzards and extreme cold weather events from all over the world, including a pair of historic blizzards that hit the mid-Atlantic coast of America in 2010, and a shocking storm that struck Central Europe in 2017.

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Deadly Disasters explores some of the most terrifying and destructive natural disasters to ever strike the planet, uncovering fascinating new details and packed with jaw-dropping footage.

Each episode focuses on a different disaster, with contributions from some of the world’s leading experts and eyewitness accounts from survivors who recount their powerful and insightful stories. From the devastating earthquake which unleashed a tsunami killing an estimated 225,000 people in South Asia, to the shocking mudslides that swept up to 30,000 people to their deaths in the Vargas region of Venezuela, Deadly Disasters reveals the devastating impact that Mother Nature can have.

Deadly Disasters – Blizzards – Season 1, Episode 5

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28 Comments

  1. Its so surreal hearing about the winter of 2009-2010 in a documentary. I was only like six years old, but I remember it vividly. I was one of the people who lost power, and my family had to go stay with friends who hadn't lost theirshad a generator. I didn't realize how bad it was because I was so young.

  2. Why do they call NY the most popular city, never in my life did I consider that place popular, out of every place I ever traveled to NY was on my nix list.

  3. How we loved blizzards in Massachusetts! At least twice a winter the snow hissed against the windows all night, the wind kicked the house, and you knew SCHOOL would closed the next day. “Snow days” were gifts from Mother Nature — and so beautiful! Blizzards ought to be a human right.
    (We had an oil heater but I don’t know why we never lost electricity.)

  4. I live in the tropics so I've only been through a few blizzards – but I am well aware of the unbelievable power of windchill in very low temperatures, which cuts right through all your layers of clothing. And I also know how tiring and sometimes hopeless it can feel to be struggling through deep snow that makes it very difficult to walk.

  5. These disasters as y'all call them are acts of God,, He's cleansing this planet of wickedness before returning for His chosen children the Hebrew Israelites,, if you don't read the Bible then you won't understand these happenings,
    Israel,,, come out of her,,
    Shalawan

  6. Geez. Someone spills their coffee & government closes but for doctors, nurses, technicians, grocery, restaurant workers, factories etc, it's just another day of work that a little harder to get to.

  7. I have lived in Pennsylvania for the majority of my life and not only do I remember the blizzard of 1993, when we got 29 inches overnight and another 9 inches the next day in Allentown, but I had to dig not only my car, but also my wife's in February of 2010 when we got 26" overnight here in Beaver Falls and another 14 inches a few days later. I dug my Cadillac out and tried to drive to my job over an hour away until I said screw that and drove back home. I got stuck in a median before I could get on the interstate…thank God I didn't get on that interstate…

  8. I remember that Saturday morning i had to go deliver a load of water but I called the customer up at 3am (24 hour warehouse) and was told they where closing at 4am and not to bring the load plus NYC Mayor was closing all of NYC ! My boss called me yelling that the customer wanted the load (they where closed but he didn’t know I knew) I just hung up on him !!

  9. Having lived in Northern Maine in the 1980’s & 1990’s I moved back to New Jersey in 1996 because my mom was not in good health and I needed to help her, so I was in NJ when this hit and as a tractor trailer driver these storms where just wonderful !!

  10. I lived just south of Pittsburgh in early 90’s. We had heavy snow fall every weekend and it cleared up during the week. This lasted over a month… blizzards also.

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