Storm Chasers (TV series)

This article is about a television series. For the occupation or avocation, see storm chasing.
Storm Chasers

Season 4 title screen shot of Storm Chasers
Genre Documentary
Reality
Weather
Starring Sean Casey
Joshua Wurman
Reed Timmer
Tim Samaras
Tony Laubach
Carl Young
Matt Grzych
Brandon Ivey
Matt Hughes
Joel Taylor
Chris Chittick
Byron Turk
Opening theme "Blaze of Glory" by Bon Jovi (season 3–4)
Composer(s) Didier Rachou
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 36 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Charlie Corwin
Brian Nashel
Ronan Nagle
Jay Peterson
Location(s) United States
Running time 45 minutes
Production company(s) Original Media
Distributor Discovery Communications
Release
Original network Discovery Channel
Original release October 17, 2007 (2007-10-17) – November 10, 2011 (2011-11-10)
Chronology
Preceded by Tornado Intercept (2005) on the National Geographic Channel
Followed by The Science of Storm Chasing (2007) on the Science Channel
External links
Website
Production website

Storm Chasers is an American documentary reality television series that premiered on October 17, 2007, on the Discovery Channel. Produced by Original Media, the program follows several teams of storm chasers as they attempt to intercept tornadoes in Tornado Alley in the United States. Season 5 commenced on September 25, 2011.[1] The show was canceled by Discovery Communications on January 21, 2012.

Overview

Storm Chasers was filmed each year in the central United States (an area known as Tornado Alley due to the frequency and severity of tornadoes occurring there) primarily during late spring and early summer, the time of the most frequent tornado activity (though some episodes of recent seasons have also been filmed in the lesser-known Dixie Alley in the southeastern U.S.). Several teams of storm chasers appear in the series. During the 2007 and 2008 seasons Dr. Joshua Wurman, a renowned atmospheric scientist and creator of the Doppler On Wheels (DOW), teamed with documentary IMAX filmmaker Sean Casey. Wurman's goal is to collect tornado data in order to improve warnings systems, while Casey's goal is to film footage inside a tornado using his armored Tornado Intercept Vehicle (TIV).

An early version of the Tornado Intercept Vehicle (TIV).
The SRV "Dominator", featured in the Discovery Channel series, Storm Chasers.

The TIV crew was led by Casey[2] and Ronan Nagle, driver and executive producer (since 2009), of the series, and Byron Turk, navigator and a shooter/producer for the show. The TIV was outfitted with weather instruments which collect data from approximately 12 feet above ground that, when combined with the DOW radar imagery and the probe data, can help to give Josh a more complete picture of a tornado's structure. Casey produced/directed his second IMAX feature about tornadoes. The first, Forces of Nature, was released in 2003 with a third of the film dedicated to tornadoes, the other two thirds were dedicated to volcanoes and earthquakes. Ronan is an executive producer on the film entitled, Tornado Alley, with the release on March 18, 2011.[3]

Beginning in 2008, the program also began following the team from the website TornadoVideos.Net (TVN) led by meteorology Ph.D. candidate Reed Timmer, Joel Taylor (Driver/Meteorologist) and Chris Chittick (Photographer/Probe Technician). The goal of Reed's small but highly mobile team is to capture "extreme video" as well as scientific data from tornadoes. Timmer's team is known as "Team Dominator" in the show, referring to the name of their own armored chase vehicle, the SRV Dominator. This new season also brought a change to Casey's team, replacing the TIV with the TIV2. The vehicle suffered constant chronic mechanical problems, and was sent for re-modification early in the season, and was replaced with the original TIV. TIV2 did not return from repairs until the middle of the third season.

During the 2009 season, the series also documented the TWISTEX team, led by engineer and veteran storm chaser Tim Samaras, who was killed in 2013 while storm-chasing in El Reno, Oklahoma along with his son Paul and fellow storm-chaser Carl Young. The main purpose of the TWISTEX team is to deploy their "turtle" probes into the path of tornadoes and deploy mesonet vehicles around the twister. Carl Young helps pilot the Probe vehicle while Tony Laubach drives one of the mesonet vehicles, M3. Another addition to Casey's team was the addition of the Doghouse, driven by meteorologists and storm chasers Matt Hughes (died 2010) and Brandon Ivey, who chased as part of the TIV team. The original Scout, PROBE, TWISTEX, and TVN vehicles all carry probes that are designed to be placed in the projected path of tornadoes to collect data and film footage from the lowest portion of the tornado.

Before the beginning of the 2009 season, Josh Wurman become one of the leaders of Vortex 2, a government sponsored tornado research program, which lead to massive cast changes. The DOW, Scout, Probe vehicles, along with all personnel except Casey, Turk and Neagle leaving the show's main cast. Vortex 2, Josh Wurman and some of the other cast reappeared in several episodes across Seasons 3 and 4.

Dedications

The episode titled "Dedication" which debuted on November 3, 2010, begins and ends with a dedication to Wichita native Matt Hughes, who had attempted suicide on May 14, 2010 and died twelve days later at age thirty in Valley Center, Kansas.[4][5] Matt was part of the TIV team, first in the Doghouse and then, in 2010, inside the TIV under Casey's direction. Casey's completed IMAX film Tornado Alley (opened in March 2011) is dedicated to Hughes. The 2010 season is dedicated to Yazoo City, Mississippi as TornadoVideos.Net chased the mile-wide tornado and were among the first people on the scene to help.

Chasing groups featured

DOW and Scout were headed by Dr. Wurman in seasons one and two. Wurman and the DOW made only sporadic appearances in seasons three and four, as they had joined the VORTEX2 project, which is not generally followed by Storm Chasers cameras. In season four, Dr. Wurman was also shown to be involved in the funding of Casey's IMAX film, when he addressed Casey about a video showing reckless driving by TIV2. The Scout team of Danny Cheresnick and Aaron Ruppert appeared in the first two seasons as part of the DOW team, but were featured in only one episode in season three.

Chasing groups Season 1 Season 2 Season 3 Season 4 Season 5
Tornado Intercept Vehicle No No No No No
Doppler on Wheels No No
TornadoVideos.Net No No No No
TWISTEX No No No

Episodes

In other media

Storm Chasers Sean Casey and Reed Timmer appeared on an episode of the MythBusters. They had the TIV 2 and the Dominator tested by MythBuster experts Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman to see if the vehicles could withstand wind speeds of 200 to 250 mph using a high powered jet engine. (See Storm Chasing Myths.)

Cancellation

On January 21, 2012, Tim Samaras and Sean Casey confirmed on their Facebook pages that Storm Chasers was cancelled by Discovery Communications.[6] Tim Samaras was reportedly relieved when the show was cancelled as he thought it focused more on interpersonal drama than on the storms themselves.[7]

After the series

Timmer and others continued a web series, Tornado Chasers, funded by Kickstarter campaigns.

On May 31, 2013, three members of the TWISTEX team, Tim Samaras, his twenty-four-year-old son Paul Samaras, and California native Carl Young (aged 45), lost their lives while chasing an EF5 tornado in El Reno, Oklahoma.[8] The three were featured in a Storm Chasers special, "Mile Wide Tornado: Oklahoma Disaster", aired on The Discovery Channel on June 5, 2013.[9] They were also featured in The Weather Channel's television special "Dangerous Day Ahead" which aired a month later.

See also

References

Notes
  1. "‘Storm Chasers’ Season Premiere Sunday, September 25 On Discovery". TVbytheNumbers. 2011-08-31. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  2. Sean C. Casey at the Internet Movie Database
  3. "Tornado Alley Official Website".
  4. Blaser, Aaron (June 7, 2010). "R.I.P. Matt". Retrieved November 5, 2010.
  5. Grossberg, Josh (November 4, 2010). "Storm Chasers Star Commits Suicide". E! News. Retrieved November 5, 2010.
  6. "Tim Samaras Confirms Storm Chasers Canceled". January 24, 2012. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  7. Draper, Robert (November 2013). "The Last Chase". National Geographic.
  8. "Three storm chasers killed in Oklahoma". CNN. 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  9. The Hollywood Reporter: "Discovery Airing Tribute to 'Stormchasers' Stars Killed in Oklahoma Tornado", June 3, 2013

External links

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