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Unknown 0:00
Good afternoon, everyone. It is Tuesday afternoon, November 2, November is the month where the most intense storms develop here, certainly in the Great Lakes area, which is a novelty to me, it's a big shocker to me, because to me, I would have thought that it's the month of March. How could you get better than March where you have tremendous solar insulation, combined with Arctic coal that is just about at its peak, only a couple months away from its peak, the sun is as hot as can be not at least in the tropics it is. But no, November actually is the month where the storms are most intense. And we are seeing this on the weather map today. In weather map last week, especially with the bomb, the bomb, that cyclone, that storm that bombed out, they moved into the Northwest. And then there was this North Easter that moved off the coast. And this is the latest. This North Easter that moved off the coast later last week then became into a named subtropical storm. It's unbelievable a named subtropical storm.

Unknown 1:13
Thank you crowd. I just love the energy in the room so much energy.

Unknown 1:30
It's just such a pleasure to Yeah, named tropical storm. And you know what, in this situation, we have no reason not to celebrate. This storm is not going to be hitting land anywhere. That's amazing. This storm is not going to be hitting land. That's just wow, do we have? How come the audience is not saying Hooray to that? No, I can't figure that one out. Well, I don't know why the audience is not saying already to that. It's quite amazing to me, because, you know, we have all these devastating things and they all seem to hit land. But this time around, it's not hitting land. But we reached a new milestone today as that sub tropical storm turned into a tropical storm, an actual tropical storm I believe in made its way into the tropics, I believe that's what it means. The other possibility is that it now has the traits of 100%. A tropical storm system, that's for sure the system is getting all of its energy from the water. Quite amazing to have a nor Easter a system a storm system that gets its energy from contrast and temperatures to then move on to the Atlantic and be like a hybrid, and then eventually become a complete tropical storm where there's no difference in air temperatures at all. And all of the energy is coming from the warm water temperatures. And the water temperatures are not even that warm. We have a barometric pressure as of yesterday was 29.2 I believe it was a strengthening system. This is just a powerhouse thing. And it's unique. And it's something I've we've heard of the other. We've heard the other version, the backwards version where you have tropical storms then move on to the east coast and they combine with a front and then turn into a nor'easter. That is something that we've heard of before. But for this nor Easter to turn into a named Tropical Storm is absolutely it's very noteworthy and remarkable. And one has to ask a big cash over here, a very strong question is why is it that the North Pacific bombs, the North Pacific powerful low pressure systems under 29.0, which also strengthen at such a rapid pace? It's also considered a Bama Genesis. That's the official word. Why don't they have names? Why are there no names over there? So that's a question that we all have to ask. But this is the month of November, we certainly are seeing the storms out in the ocean. We're seeing this but the question is what about here in the Midwest and the South states and the East Coast? Where are the storms around here? Well, we don't have any November storm systems around here. But we do have a storm system. It's just not of November quality. We have a front The Washington Post is calling it an arctic cold front. There are other forecasters from national weather services that are also calling this an arctic cold front as the St. Louis National Weather Service. One of the...