Notas del episodio
Ever seen the sky turn a "bruised shade of green" and wondered if the universe was about to throw hands? On April 10, 2001, the "Tristate Hailstorm" did exactly that, raining down grapefruit-sized ice blocks at 100 miles per hour. Silas and Brooklyn rewind to a Tuesday afternoon in St. Louis where commuters on I-70 were suddenly trapped in metal boxes while the sky literally fell. We’re talking about a storm that caused damage numbers so high they sound like a typo—reaching deep into the billions. How does a single afternoon of weather lead to car dealerships looking like war zones and insurance companies having an absolute meltdown? From the terrifying science of "terminal velocity" to the harrowing stories of people caught in the open, we break down how one supercell became a statistical anomaly that no one saw coming. Grab your helmet; this on ...