Views : 217,846
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Jun 2, 2023 ^^
Rating : 0 (0/0 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-07T18:15:17.501835Z
See in json
Top Comments of this video!! :3
Anthony PLEASE do an episode on the Orlando Pulse Nightclub Shooting. It is not talked about enough. 49 died, 51 injured. The worst terrorist attack since 9/11. The worst mass shooting at that time. I worked at the hospital in the Emergency Department and Trauma Center (ORMC) that day just a few buildings down and it was the craziest day of my life. I helped create the list of names of survivors the FBI released to the public. I still remember hearing the screams of the family members finding out their loved one didnāt make it. Itās the 7 year anniversary on the 12th, 10 days from now. Please please please consider making an episode to honor those victims and help America never forget this ISIS attack.
3.2K |
My dad was a firefighter at the time of Hurricane Katrina. I remember my mom telling me that he told her he had to retrieve so many bodies out of the river. The whole thing was awful. I also remember my mom being on the phone with my father while he was on a bridge and the bridge broke.
To this day, that hurricane is the reason why I have such a horrible fear of thunderstorms.
1.6K |
I can tell Anthony was quieter in this episode than typical. He always makes it a priority to listen and be in tune to his guest, but this episode I felt he just gave Shelton the floor to speak. Many blessings to Shelton and thanks to Anthony for his platform to allow people to share their stories. š
518 |
I was 10 when Hurricane Katrina hit us and I remember thinking it was a field trip when we evacuated. My parents did a good job distracting us from how bad things had gotten. When we got back home, we had to wait a week until the power came back on and another week or so until we could go back to school again. We lost all of our food and had to survive off of the water that we had left over. Since the eye of the storm came over where we lived, our home was safe. But, I canāt say the same for the people around us. Rest In Peace to those who lost their lives. Thank you for covering this, Anthony!
374 |
although i was a kid and donāt remember it vividly, i remember evacuating for katrina. Katrina caused generational trauma for those in louisiana which has yet to be healed to this day. Itās heartbreaking seeing the devastation it has caused for others living in louisiana. i only had minor damage to my house at the time, but i remember the fear. itās about not knowing whether youāll have a home to come back to. Itās extremely frightening and unsettling
162 |
Not something I usually comment but on this topic, I hope someone could find this interesting.
Father worked with ex-SF guys since 2001 and did two tours in Afghanistan. When hurricane Katrina hit he was sent to NOLA with the rest of the National Guard, and he stated, āNew Orleans after Hurricane Katrina was worse than the two tours Iāve did in the Stan.ā
My heart goes out to everyone who suffered in this tragedy
221 |
17:39 is a slam poetry moment damn
25 |
17:47 - genuinely a very good poem. I don't think Anthony noticed he was reciting a poem lol
9 |
I was in Louisiana and didn't evacuate during Katrina. Thankfully we went to my aunts house across town because if not we would have been dead. 3 massive oak trees fell on our trailer and completely demolished it. Lived at my aunts house for a couple of months. That is a time I'll never forget. For all of us here in Louisiana who were here for the storm, we use it as a measurement of time. We refer to certain things as before and after Katrina.
90 |
@AnthonyPadilla
11 months ago
come back next week for I spent a day with VSAUCE MEMBERS WATCH UNCENSORED & AD FREEāø youtube.com/anthonypadilla/join
313 |