A New Path for Live Storm Chasing
No one's done anything quite like this before...
The traditional live chase on platforms like YouTube has always been a spectacle of what: a tornado on a screen, a car full of screaming, and then you return to your day. But when that same severe weather appears in your own forecast, are you any more prepared than you were before?
We have always believed that weather is a reality we all share, and that knowledge is the only true defense when the atmosphere turns dangerous. Our number one goal has always been to provide knowledge about severe weather. I’m excited about what we are about to unveil starting this weekend: the ultimate live storm chase platform for those who want to learn in real time about storms as they happen.
Introducing TitanTrack
TitanTrack is a first-of-its-kind atmospheric command center that re-engineers how we experience the sky during a live chase. TitanTrack is a major step forward in scientific communication and the most ambitious broadcast intelligence ever used during a live weather broadcast.
When you sit down to watch a Tornado Titans live stream this season, you will see two layers working together. On top, camera angles wrap around the chase vehicle to deliver a 360-degree tactical vantage point: in every direction the team can look, you can look. Underneath that visual layer, an advanced computational engine narrates the entire day in real time and lets us teach about the storms with live telestration and more.
What TitanTrack actually does
Every single second, TitanTrack recomputes the state of the atmosphere. It tracks dozens of critical parameters from the surface to the stratosphere, fusing high-resolution radar, dual-satellite imagery, geostationary lightning detection, official watches and warnings, and the same mesoanalysis fields professional forecasters use into a single integrated picture.
It then translates that raw, complex data into vital context. Why is this storm rotating? What is the atmospheric environment doing right now that wasn’t true an hour ago? What conditions may begin to materialize over the next thirty minutes if the trend holds? TitanTrack carries thousands of distinct storytelling possibilities on any given chase day, so no two chases ever sound exactly the same.
It also navigates uncertainty the same way any storm chaser might. The system goes quiet when the science is quiet, and it speaks up when something genuinely changes. We are teaching you to filter out the noise and identify the signals that matter most, a valuable skill in a world where information is constantly flowing.
Why this matters
Live storm chase broadcasts have followed roughly the same template for over a decade. A windshield camera. Voices that may or may not be exceptionally loud. A static map in the corner, perhaps. These are fine formats for watching storms as they happen — but we wanted to try something different.
While the tech around the chases has changed, the broadcasts have not. We are delivering a level of atmospheric insight that has quite literally never been attempted in a live broadcast, not because the technology was unavailable, but because nobody had built it. Think of it like a “StatCast” version of storm chasing — if that sounds interesting, this is probably something you’ll really find compelling.
By the end of a season of chases with us, you should know how to read a radar, recognize the setups that produce tornadoes, hear what a meteorologist hears in a forecast, and feel calmer (not more panicked) the next time severe weather shows up in your own forecast. That transformation is the entire point. We aren’t just chasing the storm. We are helping you decode it at the speed of the chase.
That knowledge you learn will spread and create safer communities in the future…we hope.
Out of beta. Into the season.
We have quietly run TitanTrack on six live broadcasts already this 2026 season. It works. So we are done calling it a beta and giving it the introduction it deserves.
The next time we go live, sit down and watch. By the time you stand up, the next storm coming your way will look a little less mysterious, and you will be a little more ready for it.
That has always been our goal for nearly twenty years. Now our live streams match that promise.
We will see you on the next chase, which should be Saturday!



