Corduroy's button fell in the storm drain but they did get the button out of the storm drain and they did put the button back on Corduroy The Bear's overalls.
Cadfael - TV series - ended in 1998.
The Professionals - TV series - ended in 1983.
The Garage - TV series - ended in 2007.
Sisters - TV series - ended on 1996-05-04.
The duration of Storm Chasers - TV series - is 2700.0 seconds.
Storm Chasers - TV series - was created on 2007-10-17.
Storm Chasers Revenge of the Twister - 1998 TV is rated/received certificates of: Iceland:12 UK:PG
Reed Timmer.
There is no storm chasing company. Storm chasing is a hobby and not a real business. Some people have made a business out of it but, for the most part it is just a hobby that some storm chasers take seriously. Storm chasers do sometimes get paid though because some tv stations will pay chasers for their footage but, that is no guarantee.
The National Weather Service and television stations often depend on storm chasers. Storm chasers converge on the Great Plains, cameras and video recorders in hand, eager to capture the drama and beauty of severe weather-producing clouds. The tornado was estimated by some storm chasers to be anywhere from a half-mile to a mile wide. As one of the Air Force's early storm chasers in the 1950s, he learned plenty about the destructive power of hurricanes.
Storm chasing really isn't a career. Storm chasers mainly get paid by news agencies for their footage which they then air on tv. Many don't get any payment and merely chase as a hobby. Storm chasers love to chase for different reasons some do it for the adrenaline rush, some do it for scientific reasons, and obviously some just do it for the money. You can't really make a career of it. Most storm chasers either have other jobs or are attending college to become actual meteorologists. There are only a handful of career storm chasers.
Storm Chasers Revenge of the Twister - 1998 TV was released on: USA: 17 May 1998 Germany: 12 May 1999 Iceland: 26 June 2000 (video premiere) UK: 21 August 2002
the movies about the storm chasers like on tv who actually go towards tornados and crazy stuff like that but their mission goes wrong
Storm chasers do not make a lot of money. Don't let this get in the way of wanting to be one, just you might want to know this. Storm chasers spend a lot of money on equipment for the season. The first two or three seasons will be a big loss of money. Then again, some chasers make quite a lot. If you are famous, Reed Timmer, you will probably make a little more. Or if you film or capture data from a famous storm or record breaking tornado could bring in some extra cash. Hope this didn't disappoint :( storm chasing might be more of a hobby. Notice, most storm chasers are usually meteorologists.
Tim Samaras has: Played Himself - Storm Chaser in "ABC News Nightline" in 1980. Played Himself - Electronics Engineer in "National Geographic Explorer" in 1985. Played himself in "Storm Chasers" in 2007. Played Himself - Tornado Expert in "Inside" in 2007. Performed in "Storm Chasers" in 2007. Played himself in "Mile Wide Tornado: Oklahoma Disaster" in 2013.
Corduroy's button fell in the storm drain but they did get the button out of the storm drain and they did put the button back on Corduroy The Bear's overalls.