HOUSTON STORMS: Resident take cover as windows are blown out on Texas skyscrapers

Published 2024-05-17
It was a scary situation for Houston residents.

All Comments (21)
  • @CA-tk8yn
    Don't worry folks, your insurance companies will delay payment for repairs long after they should be allowed too. What should take months to recover from will take years. Remember this each time you're forced to pay your insurance company. Oh, by the way, many of those companies see billions in revenue each year.
  • @s4iN3tTe
    My husband, my kids, and I got the tornado warning alert while we were literally 15 minutes from home. In less than a few minutes it became completely dark (around 6 ish). We noticed all the lights were out in our area and then the rain and wind picked up extremely fast. We couldn’t see anything. But we managed to get to Kroger parking lot and had to wait it out. One of the most scariest experiences of my life. I was just so grateful for my husband in that moment, because he kept us all calm.
  • @SelfMotivate24
    100 miles per hour winds, that's a hurricane 🌀🥴 no thunder ⚡ storm
  • @legacyXplore
    Decided to let my son travel alone for the first time with his AAU basketball team from Indianapolis to Houston yesterday for a tournament this weekend. I went back tonight to look at flight path, our text messages and time stamps and the reported time it hit downtown and they were literally holding just north of Houston as it was at its worst. They held so long they had to give up and go to Dallas because gas was getting low. The turbulence was horrible as you would expect. I felt helpless but the pilots and the airline did their job. Prayers to all there that had to ride it out.
  • Our neighborhood got a tornado. No question about it. I don’t care what the news says. I’ve been here for 25 years and never experienced a storm like this. Neighbors saw the wind swirling debris and I heard it. The train sound everyone talks about. So scary to hear that! Destroyed all the trees and my house. It’s devastating.
  • Sending prayers and major love to Houston and surrounding communities affected by this latest storm.Take care from Ireland 🙏🙏🙏💚💚💚🇮🇪
  • All the windows blew out of the skyscrapers during Hurricane Ike yet they rebuild the same windows and glass rains down again.
  • Those were the blackest clouds I've seen in my life! Felt like the movie war of the worlds!!
  • @michaelhill3754
    And Joel Olsteen still won’t let people in his mega church haha
  • @louiswhite805
    That storm was just a dress rehearsal 😳 for what's to come from the Gulf of Mexico. It reminds me of the weather conditions 😢 just before Alisha hit Houston. All the hurricanes that hit Houston after her were nothing in comparison. 😮 Hopefully, we dodge the bullet! 😅
  • I live in metarie,La suburb of new Orleans,that storm hit here after houston ,wind gust were up to like 80 mph per hour,it was like a cat 1 hurricane hitting ,the lightning lit up the sky like a Christmas tree,almost thought it was a tornado,never seen a regular severe thunderstorm like that in years ,then their went the power
  • @hansonel
    This was like a category 2 or 3 hurricane hitting the city at rush hour & during an Astros game with barely any warning. It's a miracle more people weren't injured and killed. Texas should declare a State of Emergency to get more FEMA aid.
  • Sending prayers from Dallas. I haven't heard anything from Gov. Abbott
  • @Milgracia23
    God Lord please 🙏🏾 protect all people in Houston TX!
  • Abbott should just cancel saying climate change like deathsantis and this won't be reality.....
  • @SafetyMentalst
    "Together" People in Texas are getting web feet Every day this week rain did repeat Now this next week we face the heat Pray for those without AC an no retreat Neighbor helping neighbor is how this we defeat
  • @jamesslate6664
    I lived in Houston for six years, which included the massive storm and power outage of February 2021. During that crisis, I learned there are three power grids for the entire country. There's the Eastern Grid, the Western Grid, and then there's Texas. I'm not sure why that is, but during periods of high demand, the Lone Star State has no one to go to. Other states can pool their electricity from each other, but not Texas.
  • Good grief!! That's terrible! I feel terrible for everyone going through these awful Natural disasters 😮 I pray everyone will be safe 💗