Five FEET of hail swamps the eastern area of Guadalajara mexico, leaving cars damaged and turning roads into rivers of ice (or is this all busllhit? Why isn't there hail on the tops of ANYTHING?
Well, if it's a hoax, methinks they've done a pretty good job photoshopping, and with getting the story into various news outlets. Both Fox News and Noo Yawk Times reported it.
It is actual hail but it was way less than 5 ft. It was carried in a flash flood due to blocked culverts and ditches, probably from the hail itself. That's why the cars are piled on each other, etc. More akin to a mud flow than a snow storm. Pretty much fake news.
The fake news part is that there was 5 ft of hail dumped on the area. There was hail but the accumulation in the pictures was from the flood . It is similar to a reporter standing next to a snowdrift and claiming there was 10 ft of snowfall when in fact there was only one but the wind piled it into drifts. A big difference.
Especially that bottom picture, it looks like ice spilled out of a building or something, rather than falling from the sky.
ReplyDeleteMy first though was that this was a movie or tv show set. So, i'm waiting for the internet to figure out if it's a hoax
DeleteWell, if it's a hoax, methinks they've done a pretty good job photoshopping, and with getting the story into various news outlets. Both Fox News and Noo Yawk Times reported it.
ReplyDeleteIt is actual hail but it was way less than 5 ft. It was carried in a flash flood due to blocked culverts and ditches, probably from the hail itself. That's why the cars are piled on each other, etc. More akin to a mud flow than a snow storm. Pretty much fake news.
ReplyDeleteUm, it's right there in front of you. That's not what fake news is.
DeleteThat makes sense from the pictures.
DeleteThe fake news part is that there was 5 ft of hail dumped on the area. There was hail but the accumulation in the pictures was from the flood . It is similar to a reporter standing next to a snowdrift and claiming there was 10 ft of snowfall when in fact there was only one but the wind piled it into drifts. A big difference.
ReplyDelete