BENJAMIN_LARABEE BRAD_WHITE CHEN_SUEN CLARE_NASIR DR_HAL_NEEDHAM FEMALE_SPEAKER FIREFIGHTER HARRY_SHIMMIN JAMAL JAYNINA JENNY_HILBURN JORDAN_HALL JOSH_MCEWAN KEEGAN_ELLIOTT KENNETH_PITTMAN KIMBERLY_SHAW MALE_SPEAKER MATTEO_IACONIS MICHAEL_BOBBITT MIKE_BOYLAN NARRATOR RYDER_PITTMAN SACHA_AMUNDSE SALVATORE_GIAMMINELLI WILLIAM_HILBURN WILLIAM_McNAMARA NARRATOR The weather JAMAL Argh! NARRATOR The pulse of our planet MALE SPEAKER Large tornado in progress. NARRATOR Capable of catastrophic destruction MALE SPEAKER Severe thunderstorm warning. NARRATOR Leaving landscapes in total ruin. MALE SPEAKER Totally mash up. Everything flattened. NARRATOR As global temperatures rise the weather is spiralling out of control. JOSH MCEWAN Oh shoot! NARRATOR With shocking, up lose footage BENJAMIN LARABEE We had foot dumpsters rolling by. BENJAMIN LARABEE Oh shoot! I�m losing it. My trailer�s going. NARRATOR From the frontline of fear SACHA AMUNDSEN This might be the last time I�m in my house. KEEGAN ELLIOTT Tornado! KIMBERLY SHAW I got sucked out feet first. Felt myself hit the ground. MICHAEL BOBBITT Our island is inn trouble. NARRATOR We meet the people who have stared death in the face HARRY SHIMMIN Oh dear God. JAYNINA All I could hear was run, run, run. NARRATOR And miraculously survived MALE SPEAKER Look at that! NARRATOR The World�s Deadliest Weather. Coming up An unstoppable inferno rips across Los Angeles in the US WILLIAM McNAMARA Oh no, this is not good!he heat and smoke and embers were so intense. It was like apocalyptic. NARRATOR Engulfing neighbourhoods RYDER PITTMAN Our house is on fire, officially. NARRATOR And forcing thousands to flee their homes. RYDER PITTMAN I see, like, the entire hillside burning. NARRATOR In Italy, a devastating deluge after relentless rainfall causes flash flooding trapping residents on their rooftops. MIKE BOYLAN This is absolutely insane! NARRATOR And in Florida, Hurricane Milton tears up towns JORDAN HALL Woah, power lines! Crazy Crazy! NARRATOR Leaving mayhem and misery in its wake. WILLIAM HILBURN The home is a pile of concrete now. NARRATOR Los Angeles, on the west coast of the USA, is a vibrant and diverse metropolis.Known as the entertainment capital of the world, A list superstars in multi-million-dollar homes live the Hollywood dreamthat turns into a nightmare in January of WILLIAM McNAMARA Oh no, this is bad! NARRATOR When Los Angeles is engulfed in a raging inferno of unimaginable destruction WILLIAM McNAMARA Oh my God! NARRATOR Turning into a blazing wasteland, from which hundreds of thousands of people are forced to flee for their lives. DR HAL NEEDHAM Wildfires really can have three main impacts. Number one: the built environment. We have homes and businesses that can burn in really hot fires. Number two: we have infrastructure that can burn, like telecommunication lines, roads, or even the railways of trainlines can actually melt in the incredible heat of a wildfire.And then finally, the smoke from wildfires can spread hundreds or even thousands of kilometres, with smoke spreading into populated areas, causing massive impact on human life. NARRATOR Santa Monica, to the west of downtown Los Angeles, is a popular coastal area, nestled beside the Pacific Ocean and the beautiful Palisades Park. It�s home to Hollywood film actor and animal activist William McNamara. WILLIAM McNAMARA I�ve been a working actor since around, and I�ve been doing animal rescue volunteering for at least years. I was an only child, so I didn�t have human brothers and sisters, but I guess I had animal brothers and sisters, you know, and I always think about the animals. So I�ve always had a respect for wild animals and Mother Nature. NARRATOR January Los Angeles is experiencing its driest winter on record, with less than one centimetre of rainfall in the previous eight months. With the Santa Ana desert winds approaching, a small brush fire starts amongst the vegetation in the hills just north of Santa Monica, and begins to spread quickly across the dry scrubland. WILLIAM McNAMARA I was doing my dishes at n the morning, and I look up and there�s a giant plume of smoke. I�m like, Oh my gosh. This looks like it�s in Santa Monica. This is not a small kitchen fire somewhere. This is something really large. I had to grab my keys and drive over to see if there�s anything I can do to help. WILLIAM McNAMARA Driving down to Sunset right now. I went north to Sunset. Oh wow. So Sunset is a famous street in Los Angeles, goes from the beach all the way to downtown. So I got to Sunset, where you could see everything. And that�s when I could see the hills of the Palisades were on fire. NARRATOR Pacific Palisades is a popular residential area to the west of downtown LA, around eight kilometres northwest of Santa Monica, and the fire is spreading with terrifying speed across the hills behind the homes.Burning embers are picked up by the wind and dropped onto dry vegetation, starting new fires. WILLIAM McNAMARA I was starting to get a little concerned, because I saw other fires pop up along the hillside, very far from each other. So these hotspots kept arising. Oh no. The wind is picking up, so now we got this. That was my first indication that something was really wrong. Oh no, this is not good! NARRATOR Cesena, in the north of Italy. Days of heavy rainfall in early May saturates the ground and causes river levels to rise dramatically. Less than two weeks later, six months of rain falls in just hours, causing the river to burst its banks, leading to catastrophic flooding that traps residents and devastates the city. DR HAL NEEDHAM This was really a combination of back-to-back flood events. It�s not only that we watched the flood happen and leave.We also have elevated streams and rivers after that flood event, and the soils can remain saturated. That�s what happened in Italy. We had a second flood event that was triggered twelve days after the first one, with a tremendous amount of rainfall falling on already saturated soil. NARRATOR The historic city of Cesena sits on the banks of the picturesque Savio River,and is home to street vendor Lorenzo Grazini, his parents and his younger brothers. After the heavy rain and flooding in early May, the city is just starting to recover, but an unexpected flood alert is raised once again, just two weeks later. But as the rain worsens throughout the day, the river level rises rapidly.By midday, Lorenzo and his family begin to take heed of the flood warnings. But they�re too late. The Savio River bursts its banks, and thousands of gallons of river water begin to pour into the city streets and Lorenzo�s house. The ground floor of Lorenzo�s threestorey home is submerged, trapping him and his family on the upper level.Flash floods, like the ones in Cesena, can have deadly consequences. July. he Chinese city of Zhengzhou, in the Henan Province, saw its heaviest rainstorm on record. After rain run-off swamps the city streets, gallons of floodwater begin pouring into the entrance to this underground mall. A woman caught in the deluge is continually pushed underwater by the force of the flood, as locals desperately attempt to rescue her � eventually dragging her to safety. She is ucky to be alive. Around people tragically lost their lives in the floods. And it�s not just heavy rainfall that can cause flash flooding. July.The approaching Typhoon Maria causes enormous waves to wash over the waterfront city of Wenzhou in eastern China.As the waves worsen, they breach the seawall, flooding roads and submerging homes. But thankfully, no casualties were reported. Back in Los Angele WILLIAM McNAMARA Oh wow. NARRATOR A huge wildfire is spreading across the hills in the neighbourhood of Pacific Palisades with the Santa Ana desert winds blasting gusts of up to kilometres per hour over the mountains,fanning the flames. CLARE NASIR What allows these wildfires to develop and become real raging infernos is the strength and the direction of the wind. If the wind is blowing in one direction, towards more dry tinder, then these wildfires have a source of fuel, and this is why some can just get out of control. NARRATOR Emergency personnel across Los Angeles are deployed, including the entire Arcadia Fire Department, led by fire chief Chen Suen. CHEN SUEN We monitor the weather here pretty closely. We have these teams that we call pre-position teams. That�s a team of personnel, positioned locally in our area, ready to deploy anywhere. When the Palisades fire broke out, they were immediately dispatched to that fire. NARRATOR Also in the Palisades, actor and animal rescue volunteer William McNamara is growing more concerned, as the fires move closer to the homes in the neighbourhood. WILLIAM McNAMARA I started to see embers landing in and around houses, and I knew that the spot fires could start burning the houses. Spot fire right here. Maybe people are at work. Maybe they left their pets behind. There�s another spot fire. I just told these guys up there and the guys down there working on the other one. Hopefully these guys are gonna come up. There�s the sun. Look how thick this is. It�s crazy. NARRATOR William gets a message from a friend who lives locally, asking him to make sure her cat is safe. WILLIAM McNAMARA That�s when I hooked up Animal Advocacy Network. He�s a certified search and rescue guy. MALE SPEAKER Here we go. WILLIAM McNAMARA I asked, Do you have a crowbar?� He said,I do.And I said, �We�re just gonna pop the sliding glass door.� Still got lights on. Hi, sweety. It�s okay. We hooked up with two other girls that are cat wranglers. You�re alright. FEMALE SPEAKER Hi! WILLIAM McNAMARA Course, the cat panicked, and the two girls were chasing the cat around the room. Go that way, go that way. Oh gosh. Cat carrier. Got it? FEMALE SPEAKER There we go. WILLIAM McNAMARA I called the owner, and I said, �We�ve got your cat.She just started crying, you know, she was so happy and she was relieved. NARRATOR But it isn�t just the one cat in need of saving from the approaching fire. William is determined to help out as many other stranded pets as he can. WILLIAM McNAMARA Then I got a text from one of my animal activist friends. She alerted me to a fire starting on Pacific Coast Highway, on the beach, at these modular homes. They�re kind of like RV homes. Mostly old people, and they all have pets. What I�m trying to do right now is get down to where the RV park is. They need help right now. NARRATOR Just after midday, the flames start to engulf homes across the Palisades, and the wind, which is growing stronger, is pushing the fire east into more densely populated areas. CHEN SUEN The winds were quite extreme. There were times where it literally would blow me off my feet. It just seemed like one house after another would catch on fire. Our firefighters, they were really doing the best they could to try to save as much as they could, but it was just so extreme. NARRATOR And the disaster continues to escalate. A new fire starts in Eaton Canyon, kilometres inland from Pacific Palisades, near the town of Altadena, which is home to motorcycle enthusiast Ryder Pittman.His dad Kenneth lives nearby. RYDER PITTMAN Eaton Canyon caught on fire. It wasn�t anything crazy immediately, but as I�m coming home late at night, I see, like, the entire hillside burning. It�s mind-boggling. Like, I�ve never seen anything like that. NARRATOR Ryder tries to dampen the area around his house in an attempt to protect it. RYDER PITTMAN Just water the house here. I don�t know. That�s my neighbour�s house that�s on fire right now. This could be the difference in having a house tomorrow and not. I was trying to just comprehend the idea that my house was gonna go. This is terrifying. I don�t think I�m gonna have a house. Thankfully, it�s not a thought many of us have very often. Okay, let�s just let�s leave this running. Got my suitcases, passport, stuff like that. Just get my keys We were out of the house within fifteen minutes. NARRATOR Ryder evacuates at RYDER PITTMAN I am getting all of my belongings out of my house, because currently there are embers drifting down my street. NARRATOR And returns in the daylight, along with his dad Kenneth, to save more of his possessions, and his motorbike. RYDER PITTMAN Our house is on fire. NARRATOR Burning embers, spread on the wind, are igniting homes, including Ryder�s. He and Kenneth decide to risk their own safety in a desperate bid to save the house. RYDER PITTMAN There was shrubbery on the side of our house that had caught on fire from loose embers. There�s no water. I turn on the hose, unscrew it all the way, and there�s, like, nothing coming out of there. Come on, come on, come on, come on, come on. There�s zero pressure whatsoever. There�s like nothing. NARRATOR The water pressure has dropped, as hundreds of residents attempt to hose down their homes to protect them from the advancing flames. KENNETH PITTMAN Do you have a bucket? RYDER PITTMAN Yes. Yes, yes, yes, I do, yes. Yes. Then we realise that we have a pool. We found some buckets and pots and then we just started bucketing from there. KENNETH PITTMAN We were just trying to keep out what we could. The neighbour�s charging cable to their electric car must have been burning. RYDER PITTMAN That was crazy. KENNETH PITTMAN I threw water on it and it blew up in my face. I still couldn�t comprehend that we were in real danger. It just didn�t seem possible. NARRATOR October. Hurricane Milton is forming in the Gulf of Mexico, gaining strength and travelling toward the west coast of Florida. Eagerly awaiting its arrival is storm chaser Jordan Hall. JORDAN HALL Look at the cloud, guys. I�m a full-time storm chaser and multimedia journalist who travels all over the United States chasing the world�s most extreme weather. Violent tornado!What I enjoy most about storm chasing is seeing something new every day. Strong, strong, strong! Mother Nature at its rawest point, and something beautiful. It�s never the same thing twice. Lots of debris. It�s coming right at us. NARRATOR Storm chasing is a highly dangerous pursuit. But that doesn�t stop another storm chaser on Milton�s tail Mike Boylan. MIKE BOYLAN Since I�ve been in at least fourteen storms, I think, fifteen. I�ve been in six major hurricanes now. We�re getting some really intense rains and some pretty fast winds here behind me. It�s a weird adrenaline rush. Forecasting storms, talking about storms, sitting on the other side of a computer is one thing, but seeing it first-hand � it�s a strange addiction. My God, this is incredible winds here. Any time there�s a storm, I�m gonna go hurricane chasing. NARRATOR It�s mid-afternoon on Octoberth, and Hurricane Milton is predicted to make landfall in just a few hours� time near St.Petersburg on the west coast of Florida. MIKE BOYLAN You can hear the howl. Listen. Kind of freaky here, hearing the hurricane howl early on, right? I was completely taken away by the power of the winds. Could be ground zero for the Hurricane Milton that�s coming tonight. The waves are crashing against the seawall like I�ve never seen. NARRATOR As the hurricane approaches, wind gusts reach speeds ofkilometres per hour. MIKE BOYLAN Hey everybody, this is Mike, and I�m coming to you from St. Petersburg, and this is absolutely insane!The water was spraying, feet in the air, just blanketing palm trees. With these winds you get transformers starting to blow, and the power outages begin, and that�s one indication things are getting pretty serious. We started hearing reports of the Tampa Bay Rays. It�s a baseball stadium. I remember turning that corner, and my heart sunk. I just could not believe what I was looking at. Waves were still howling, you know, and you could just see the roof flapping. The stadium, basically, was gone. NARRATOR Back in northern Italy, floodwater from the Savio River continues to engulf the city of Cesena, trapping residents in their homes. The Italian air force immediately dispatch helicopter rescue teams. One of them is led by search and rescue pilot Captain Matteo Iaconis. MATTEO IACONIS During the flood, all the rescues we performed were by hoist operations. We have a rescue swimmer on board, that is took down with the hoist winch, and he performs all the first aid actions to bring people safe on board. Flying over to Cesena was tough, because the low visibility, the heavy rain coming down, and also there was some mist, and very, very low lighting around. It made it very difficult. The water was rising up, and some buildings were covered up to the first floor, so about six metres high, and all the cars were surrounded by water. People were trying to save their lives by climbing on the rooftops and also balconies. NARRATOR Matteo is working with helicopter rescue specialist Salvatore Giamminelli to retrieve the residents that are trapped on their roofs and balconies. SALVATORE GIAMMINELLI I calm them by talking to them before hoisting them up, explaining the situation, what they have to do, what they have to touch and don�t.So a little briefing on essential things. NARRATOR As darkness falls, Lorenzo and his family are still trapped in their home, after floodwater has completely submerged the ground floor. MATTEO IACONIS My biggest memory in that moment was the dark. You couldn�t see anything. A lot of torches and phone torches as well, people pointing them towards the helicopters to be seen. Lorenzo was one of the many. SALVATORE GIAMMINELLI We saw him with his flashlight on the phone. He was waving to us, so we flew over his house. MATTEO IACONIS As a pilot, my main job was just to keep the helicopter straight and not moving as much as possible. NARRATOR The Italian air force rescued a total of people from the floods of northern Italy. Both of the May flood events combined are estimated to have caused � .billion worth of damage, and lives were tragically lost in the floods. Lorenzo�s parents were rescued by boat the next day, but the damage to their home and to Lorenzo�s livelihood was devastating. In Los Angeles, wildfires are continuing to spread rapidly across the county, fuelled by hurricane-force winds. WILLIAM McNAMARA Oh no! The wind is picking up. NARRATOR Animal activist William is risking his life, driving into the fire surrounding a beachfront RV park in search of animals that need rescuing. WILLIAM McNAMARA This is the beach right here, and that�s the RV park. Winds became like gale-force winds, which I�ve never experienced in Los Angeles. Incredible wind, incredible smoke, and hot, large embers flying through the air, hitting me. This is where I�m trying to get to, right here. This is the RV area. I want to go in there and help, but it doesn�t look possible. The heat and smoke and embers were so intense. It was like apocalyptic. There�s an RV right up there, burning. All these modular homes run on propane. You hear explosions going on. Those are propane tanks exploding. It goes boom! Boom! Huge explosions. So the sound alone of these explosions is terrifying. FIREFIGHTER Over here, in here, right here. NARRATOR The fire services are completely overwhelmed, and call in reinforcements as the fires barrel inland, tearing through multi-million-dollar homes. CHEN SUEN We had firefighters from Utah, Nevada, Washington. I believe there were firefighters that were deployed from Mexico. A large part of our firefighting operations, we heavily rely on air support, having helicopters, having what we call rotor wing helicopters and airplanes dropping retardant to basically take some of the heat out of the fire. But because of the winds, we had absolutely no air resources. WILLIAM McNAMARA The flames were gigantic and were spreading so fast, but the wind was whipping so hard. Behind me, this is terrible. This is a really � those are all -- oh! These embers, they get right in your eye. I tried two or three times to run into it. I was just beaten back by the heat. I want to get in there toYou hit a wall of, like, three, four hundred degrees. I texted my friend: �Hey, the modular homes, there�s nothing I can do.� NARRATOR Emergency crews have now closed the Pacific Highway in an attempt to control the spread of the fire. So William abandons his vehicle and his mission to save any more pets in order to get home safely on foot. But he�s horrified at what he�s witnessing. WILLIAM McNAMARA This is a massive disaster. I had to walk through the village, Palisades Village. Nobody was there. There�s a Tesla. Seeing cars burned to the ground, a little bit of the frame left. Just home after home after home nd the landmarks were gone. There�s a famous theatre in the Palisades completely gone. Oh no. It�s the theatre. Oh my God. It�s so far from reality Everything�s gone. to see this type of destruction up close, and the immense magnitude of it. These are all the homes on Sunset, as you drive into the village. Hundreds of houses in the Pacific Palisades, like all mini-mansions, gone, as far as you could see, everywhere. It�s apocalyptic. NARRATOR June in the Hunan Province, China. Following a period of heavy rainfall, a hill by the side of the road begins � to break apart, and the land starts to slide. Terrified residents run for cover, as hundreds of tons of mud and rock crash into homes and shops, shattering glass and blocking their exit with cars and debris. This shocking footage shows just how suddenly a landslide can occur, and the deadly, devastating carnage it can leave behind in its wake. In the Hanan Province, heavy rainfall in September of causes a mudslide to slip off a mountain near the city of Luoyang. The mud, along with the continuing rain, forms a fast-flowing river that takes over the roads and bringing traffic to a literal standstill, proving that roads and automobiles are no match for the might of Mother Nature. In Florida, storm chaser Mike Boylan is still in the middle of Hurricane Milton filming the storm�s rampage as it rips across St. Petersburg. MIKE BOYLAN We heard a crash.Literally about a block away this massive crane fell onto a building. There was bricks everywhere.It was a huge crane that just completely covered the road.Craziest thing I�ve ever seen. NARRATOR An hour south, another storm chaser, Jordan Hall, is capturing the carnage that Milton is causing in Venice. JORDAN HALL Venice, Florida, was right in the path of the most intense winds on the northeast quadrant of the eye. JORDAN HALL There went the power. Power lines were exploding. Substations were exploding. You could hear the distant rumble of the electricity fizzling as the salt was hitting the powerlines with all the wind. I pulled over, and I looked over at this house, and it was at that moment the power line exploded. Woah, power lines! CrazyCrazy!It was loud. It actually scared me. It actually knocked the power out there as well, so that was just one of the thousands of power line explosions that had happened that night. NARRATOR Hurricane Milton brought wind gusts of up to kilometres per hour, making it the fifth most intense Atlantic hurricane on record, and causing catastrophic flooding along the coast. DR HAL NEEDHAM If a hurricane is large and very powerful before it hits the coast, it�s guaranteed that you�re gonna get a massive storm surge. Hurricane Milton inflicted a storm surge that was three to four metres high. Not only did it inflict wind and flood damage; it also pushed in tremendous amounts of sand to many Florida coastal communities, with sand reaching as high as one to two metres in many buildings. NARRATOR One of the parts of Florida worst affected by Milton�s storm surge was Manasota Key on the west coast.Jenny and William Hilburn are long-term residents and evacuees. WILLIAM HILBURN Milton did a lot of damage to the home. If we�d have stayed we would have been JENNY HILBURN Not here. WILLIAM HILBURN not here. JENNY HILBURN This was or living room, and all the walls were glass.The sun room was over here. We had a sun room along the whole house, all glass. WILLIAM HILBURN I had over albums right here that I�d collected since I�ve been years old. JENNY HILBURN Collection. WILLIAM HILBURN We had a hot tub somewhere. It was over there somewhere. JENNY HILBURN No, it was back here. It was right in here, but the trees are gone. You couldn�t see this corner of the house with the trees, the bushes. WILLIAM HILBURN And this area here, it was all bushes and landscaping and irrigation through here. There was vegetation all along there, and then the rocks were three or four foot higher than this. They�ve laid down in the yard now due to the wind and water. On the other side of these rocks is where our life was at, right there. Absolutely beautiful. WILLIAM HILBURN It�s a pile of concrete now. NARRATOR At leastpeople tragically died in Florida as a result of Hurricane Milton, and the damage was estimated at around billion. WILLIAM HILBURN Are we scared of Mother Nature? No. JENNY HILBURN No. WILLIAM HILBURN You just have to respect it, and move out of its way. Oh, it�s okay, though. We�ll be back one day. I love you. JENNY HILBURN I love you too. NARRATOR Back in Altadena, Los Angeles, Ryder and Kenneth are still trying their best to beat back flames and rescue Ryder�s home. But they�re fighting a losing battle. KENNETH PITTMAN I realise the conditions are getting worse and worse and worse. I became more concerned for our safety, and safety for my kid. It was raining fire on us and very hard to breathe. There was no oxygen. The smoke was so thick, it was just poisonous. The neighbour�s house, looking over the fence, was just a wall of fire. RYDER PITTMAN I think this is a lost cause. This may bethis may be it. KENNETH PITTMAN When I looked at the other side of the fence, I thought this was just gonna make its way straight through the house. That�s when I thought we gotta get out of here. We�ve got to get out of here, Ryder. RYDER PITTMAN Okay. KENNETH PITTMAN I think that we�re in danger now, and I don�t think this is a safe place for us to be, and we�ve got to go. RYDER PITTMAN I am actually in the apocalypse right now. NARRATOR The fires in LA burnt for a total of 3 days, and people tragically lost their lives people were forced from their homes, and more than structures were destroyed, making the fires one of the most destructive in California�s history. CHEN SUEN To see entire blocks just levelled and devastated was just shocking. There�s a lot of anger out there, you know, natural human feelings of, you know, �Why did this happen?� NARRATOR It took fire crews from seven different US states, as well as teams from Mexico and Canada, to get the blaze under control. But it still wasn�t enough. Ryder�s home was burned to the ground. RYDER PITTMAN The house was a complete loss, and it just was like � hit me like a knife. I had so much of my life in my home. NARRATOR But Ryder finds hope among the ashes, in the form of his first ever motorbike. RYDER PITTMAN I just look at it and I just was like, I bet this thing starts. Ha-ha-ha! Look at that! KENNETH PITTMAN We were like, No way! It was wonderful. NARRATOR William, and other animal activists, spent weeks rescuing and rehoming thousands of terrified animals that had been affected by the fires. WILLIAM McNAMARA The list of rescues was, like, horses, pigs, goats, male and female, er, chickens, peacocks. We�ve got three over here. A lot of coy fish. There�s a lot of coy fishponds. The satisfaction I get is the animal being alive and happy and being reunited with the owner. FEMALE SPEAKER Oh, look at you, little one! DR HAL NEEDHAM Wildfires can be uncontrollable. FIREFIGHTER Over here, in here, right here. DR HAL NEEDHAM From the time a spark ignites a fire till it�s on a populated area, it can be a matter of minutes before people are in harm�s way. WILLIAM McNAMARA Oh my God! KENNETH PITTMAN We�ve got to get out of here, Ryder. DR HAL NEEDHAM Wildfires are nature�s reminder that we�re never truly in control. NARRATOR The weather MALE SPEAKER Tornado! Stay low! NARRATOR the pulse of the earth, and an uncontrollable force. MICHAEL BOBBITT Our island is in trouble. NARRATOR As global temperatures rise SACHA AMUNDSEN This might be the last time I�m in my house. NARRATOR The weather is getting more extreme MALE SPEAKER It�s an unstoppable force. NARRATOR and even more catastrophic BRAD WHITE That�s the most active I�ve ever seen it. NARRATOR With devastating consequence MALE SPEAKER We�d better go. It�s coming. NARRATOR proving once again that we are no match for the world�s deadliest weather. HARRY SHIMMIN Oh dear God.