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Reed Timmer (born March 17, 1980) is an American
meteorologist and
storm chaser. Born in
Grand Rapids, Michigan, he took an interest in science, including weather, at a young age, before experiencing severe weather, including a hailstorm at age 13. After presenting weather forecasts at his high school, he began studying meteorology at the
University of Oklahoma, completing his
PhD in 2015.
Timmer was born on March 17, 1980 in
Grand Rapids, Michigan.[2][3] He has an older sister, Cortney, and a younger sister, Dayna, and Timmer's parents divorced when he was 10 years old.[4] He took an interest in science at a young age, including insects and weather, and was often bullied because of it.[4] He also played the
oboe, which he had a music scholarship in, and watched
The Weather Channel continuously.[4][5]
Timmer's first experience with storms was at the age of 5, during a tornado warned-storm which he described as chaotic while also being "scared to death", in part of his
fear of thunder and lightning.[4][5] He also experienced a hailstorm at the age of 13, which he called his first "storm chase", and resulted in his family's video camera being destroyed after attempting to capture it.[5][6] Timmer presented weather forecasts at his high school in Grand Rapids,
Forest Hills Central, while also participating in the
Science Olympiad competition in both middle school and high school.[4] He also became an
Eagle Scout in 1995, the highest rank of a
Boy Scout.[7][8]
In 1998, after graduating from his high school, Timmer began studying meteorology at the
University of Oklahoma (OU), completing his
PhD in 2015, at the age of 35.[9][10]
Storm chasing career
1998–2010: First filmed tornado, Dominator 1
On October 4, 1998, Timmer filmed his first tornado in
Perry, Oklahoma, which he recalled that he didn't "didn't feel like it could kill me, but I was mesmerized".[5][7][11] While as a freshman at Oklahoma University, Timmer began storm chasing on
May 3, 1999, where he encountered the
Bridge Creek–Moore tornado, forcing him and three friends to take shelter under a
highway overpass.[12][13] The EF5 tornado was ultimately recorded as one of the strongest tornadoes ever, with Timmer characterizing it as "overwhelming".[5][14]
On
June 24, 2003, Timmer intercepted an EF4 tornado that directly hit
Manchester, South Dakota.[14] On
May 12, 2004, while chasing a tornado, the vehicle he was in lost control on an unpaved road and crashed into a sewage ditch, destroying his computer equipment, which was uninsured.[15] A year later, in June 2005, Timmer chased a tornado east of
Madelia, Minnesota, and
Hurricane Katrina in August that year, with the latter event's flooding and
storm surge he described as "intimidating".[16][17]
In 2006, Timmer starred in the
documentary filmTornado Glory, along with Joel Taylor, another Oklahoma University meteorology student and storm chaser who was Timmer's friend.[18][19] Soon after, Timmer constructed the Dominator 1, as part of the
SRV Dominator series, which was modified from a 2007
Chevrolet Tahoe for use in the TV series
Storm Chasers beginning in October 2007.[20][21]
On June 5, 2009, Timmer filmed inside a tornado near
LaGrange, Wyoming in Dominator 1, also recording a wind speed of 155.2 miles per hour (249.8 km/h).[22] On June 17 that same year, he chased an EF2 tornado near
Aurora, Nebraska, where a vortex inside the tornado blew out a window, resulting in Timmer and photographer Chris Chittick suffering
lacerations to his face.[2][14] He also recorded a wind speed of 138.8 miles per hour (223.4 km/h), and the tornado, along with Timmer's chase, were included in a Storm Chasers episode.[2][23]
On
April 24, 2010, Timmer chased an EF4 tornado that struck
Yazoo City, Mississippi, where he and Joel Taylor conducted efforts to rescue victims in the aftermath of the tornado.[24][25] He later stated that it was "definitely one of the biggest tornadoes I've ever seen".[25] In the same year, he and Andrew Tilin wrote a book titled Into the Storm: Violent Tornadoes, Killer Hurricanes, and Death-Defying Adventures in Extreme Weather, which details Timmer's storm chasing experiences.[26]
2011–2018: Super Outbreak, cancellation of Storm Chasers, death of Joel Taylor
On April 27, 2011, during the
2011 Super Outbreak, Timmer observed four destructive wedge tornadoes across eastern
Mississippi and
Alabama, including tornadoes that impacted
Philadelphia, Mississippi and
Tuscaloosa–Birmingham.[14][27] At the time, Timmer stated that the severe weather event was "hands down the most unforgettable day", while also describing the amount of tornadoes as "heartbreaking" and "overwhelming".[27] The severe weather event was premiered as an episode as part of Storm Chasers, titled "Tornado Rampage 2011".[27] In the same year, Timmer built the heavily-armored Dominator 2, modifying it from a GMC Yukon XL.[28][29]
In 2012, Storm Chasers, the television series that Timmer starred in, was cancelled following declining ratings.[30] In the television series, Timmer also followed severe weather with his TornadoVideos.net team in a SRV Dominator vehicle, the team of which consisted of Timmer, photographer Chris Chittick, and driver Joel Taylor.[19] After the cancellation of Storm Chasers, Timmer then starred in another television series, Tornado Chasers.[31] On April 14 that year, Timmer chased the
Arnett–Woodward, Oklahoma tornado which would ulimately result in six deaths and 28 injuries.[32][33]
A year later, in 2013, Timmer was injured after chasing the
2013 El Reno tornado for
KFOR-TV, which ultimately killed four storm chasers, including
Tim Samaras.[5][34] On May 28, several days after the El Reno tornado, Timmer chased an erratic-moving, EF4 tornado near
Bennington, Kansas, which he recalled it as "probably the most powerful, most intimidating tornado that I've ever chased".[14][31] On
October 4, 2013, Timmer was hospitalized after suffering a
seizure while storm chasing in Nebraska as part of the KFOR-TV weather team. According to Timmer, it was his second seizure.[35]
In the same year, Timmer constructed a third vehicle, the Dominator 3, modifying it from a 2013
Ford F-350 Super Duty pickup truck and weighing 11,000 pounds (5,000 kg).[36] He chased his first tornadoes inside the Dominator 3 near
Shawnee, Oklahoma in May that year.[37] Additionally, in 2013, he became a storm chaser for
KFOR-TV's 4WARN Storm Team, with his SRV Dominator 2 as 4WARN Dominator 4.[38]
In 2015, Timmer chased an EF2 tornado, with his mother, as part of a
Mother's Day gift.[39] On
May 7, 2016, Timmer filmed a photogenic EF2 tornado near
Wray, Colorado on
U.S. Route 385 that went viral, garnering nearly 43 million views as of May 2021.[40][41][42] On November 10 that same year, Timmer joined
AccuWeather, covering severe weather until 2019.[43] A year later, on
May 16, 2017, Timmer deployed a weather probe inside an EF2 tornado southwest of
Elk City, Oklahoma, which recorded a 360-degree video that received praise from AccuWeather affiliates.[44]
On January 23, 2018, Joel Taylor, one of Timmer's friends and the driver of the SRV Dominator vehicles, died from a
drug overdose while on a cruise ship in
San Juan, Puerto Rico.[45] As a result, Timmer stated that he was "shocked and absolutely devastated by the loss of my incredible, caring friend", while also reporting his death.[46] The same year, in 2018, Timmer chased several natural disasters, including
Hurricane Michael and a tornado in
Federal, Wyoming, the latter event of which he recalled seeing "cows flying through the air".[47]
2019–present: Departure from AccuWeather, Hurricane Ian
Timmer, in a Dominator 3, chased an EF2 tornado in
McCook, Nebraska on May 17, 2019, which covered his face with field manure as he encountered near-zero visibility.[48][49] In the same month, Timmer launched a rocket probe, designed by a colleague, into
an EF4 tornado on May 28 near
Lawrence, Kansas to collect data of the tornado-producing supercell and the tornado itself, which he called "incredible".[50] After his tenure with AccuWeather ended in 2019, Timmer became a content creator for weather forecasts and storm chasing on social media,[51] including
Twitter, where he created the popularized term "gorilla hail" on April 13, 2021 after experiencing large hail.[52][53]
In 2020, Timmer and
Mike Theiss, another storm chaser, took part in the
National Geographic television show Category 6.[54] A year later, in 2021, they both starred in Storm Rising, a documentary television series.[55][56]
In 2022, while inside the
eyewall of
Hurricane Ian, Timmer fillmed videos of the storm surge on
Pine Island, which significantly damaged his vehicle, Dominator Fore, a modified 2018
Subaru Forester.[20][57][58] After the Category 5 hurricane, he was stranded on the island after the bridge connecting Pine Island to mainland
Florida was impassable.[59]
On
March 24, 2023, Timmer chased a supercell in western
Mississippi that would produce the
Rolling Fork–Silver City tornado.[60] After the tornado struck
Rolling Fork at EF4 intensity, Timmer and other storm chasers began their search-and-rescue efforts that would result in Timmer himself transporting two people to hospitals.[60]