April 27, 2011 Tornado Outbreak: What We Know Now — Including a Newly Identified EF-2 episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 27, 2025 · 29 MIN

April 27, 2011 Tornado Outbreak: What We Know Now — Including a Newly Identified EF-2

from Carolina Weather Group · host CarolinaWeatherGroup.com

In this week’s episode of the Carolina Weather Group, we revisit one of the most catastrophic weather events in modern U.S. history: the April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak — a generational severe weather disaster that produced more than 60 tornadoes in Alabama alone and altered the course of severe weather communication forever. We’re hear from ABC 33/40 Chief Meteorologist James Spann, who takes us behind the scenes of that day — the forecasting, the wall-to-wall coverage, the failures in communication infrastructure, and the lessons that still shape severe weather messaging today.But this year’s anniversary carries new significance.⭐ Special Segment: A Newly Discovered EF-2 Tornado — Identified 14 Years LaterAs part of ongoing research into the April 27, 2011 outbreak, meteorologists have just confirmed another previously undocumented EF-2 tornado that occurred during the event. This additional tornado — uncovered nearly two decades later — highlights how massive, chaotic, and difficult to analyze the outbreak truly was.We’ll break down:How this tornado went undetected for 14 yearsWhat new data and methodologies led to its discoveryWhat this means for the official April 27 tornado countWhy reanalysis of historic outbreaks still matters in 2025This new finding adds an entirely new chapter to an event many thought had already been fully documented.🎙️ Episode HighlightsThe overwhelming scale of the outbreak across AL, MS, TN, GA, and the CarolinasWhy radar wasn’t enough — and why video changed everything The failures of communication systems as storms destroyed critical infrastructure What meteorologists learned about overwarning, the siren mentality, and public response How today’s severe weather coverage has evolved because of 4/27/11#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Nov 27, 2025

In this week’s episode of the Carolina Weather Group, we revisit one of the most catastrophic weather events in modern U.S. history: the April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak — a generational severe weather disaster that produced more than 60 tornadoes in Alabama alone and altered the course of severe weather communication forever. We’re hear from ABC 33/40 Chief Meteorologist James Spann, who takes us behind the scenes of that day — the forecasting, the wall-to-wall coverage, the failures in communication infrastructure, and the lessons that still shape severe weather messaging today.But this year’s anniversary carries new significance.⭐ Special Segment: A Newly Discovered EF-2 Tornado — Identified 14 Years LaterAs part of ongoing research into the April 27, 2011 outbreak, meteorologists have just confirmed another previously undocumented EF-2 tornado that occurred during the event. This additional tornado — uncovered nearly two decades later — highlights how massive, chaotic, and difficult to analyze the outbreak truly was.We’ll break down:How this tornado went undetected for 14 yearsWhat new data and methodologies led to its discoveryWhat this means for the official April 27 tornado countWhy reanalysis of historic outbreaks still matters in 2025This new finding adds an entirely new chapter to an event many thought had already been fully documented.🎙️ Episode HighlightsThe overwhelming scale of the outbreak across AL, MS, TN, GA, and the CarolinasWhy radar wasn’t enough — and why video changed everything The failures of communication systems as storms destroyed critical infrastructure What meteorologists learned about overwarning, the siren mentality, and public response How today’s severe weather coverage has evolved because of 4/27/11#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.

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April 27, 2011 Tornado Outbreak: What We Know Now — Including a Newly Identified EF-2

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In this week’s episode of the Carolina Weather Group, we revisit one of the most catastrophic weather events in modern U.S. history: the April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak — a generational severe weather disaster that produced more than 60 tornadoes in...

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