First time I've seen uninterrupted TV coverage of the weather serve a purpose.
Cincinnati is in the center of the area affected and I live 30 miles north of the city.
31 dead reported this morning with most in Ind. and Ky. Only 3 in Ohio.
Two huge and dangerous tornadoes passed 20 miles south of Cincy and entered Ohio east of the city.
Reports say this two "Super Cells", which where only miles apart touched down around lunch time and the crossed the Ohio River into Ohio at 6:00 PM...after traveling on the ground for 100s of miles and maybe 5 hours.
Cincinnati was getting debris from the storms when they were 50 miles south and it continued till they passed east of the city.
The two tornadoes were so on the ground so long, and moving so consistently that the TV stations where displaying a list of the small towns in northern KY and given ETAs minutes apart for them. One city would have a "hit" time of 4:23 the next to the NE would have 4:24, then 4:25 all the way into Ohio.
Folks were told when to stop running for shelter and to hug the ground.
The TV stations were receiving reports from the cities, my guess is from the highway patrol or other police units, and several times as the cities where hit, the broadcast would cease...I'm guessing radio towers where blown down.
Winds outside the tornadoes were reported at 115 mph with 80-90 mph winds inside.
Stories came in of whole towns that just weren't there any more.
Videos this morning shows a school bus that had been tossed into a house.
There was a Telethon running this morning asking for donations to help those hit.
Around 7:00 last night the storm activity that did all the damage in Ind. hit here, but it had weakened so we only got heavy rain and thunder storms.
It was reported that 89 tornadoes where spotted int he mid west yesterday...