• 9 months ago

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00:00:00 [MUSIC]
00:00:10 My God.
00:00:21 Hey, are you okay?
00:00:24 My key.
00:00:28 You hit a guardrail. You need a doctor. You're bleeding.
00:00:31 Here, get in my car. It's running and it's warm. We'll call for help.
00:00:34 Come on.
00:00:35 Come on.
00:00:38 What's that?
00:00:43 [SCREAM]
00:00:56 Abnormally cold temperatures are being reported across the entire United States.
00:01:01 The President has declared a national state of emergency.
00:01:03 REACT is the controversial disaster response team making headlines for saving countless lives during the Mau-Wanakiya volcanic eruption.
00:01:09 And the SoCal Megaquakes team is led by genius environmentalist Dr. Molly Martin, funded by billionaire Griffin Richards, and some say masterminded by the shadowy David Diaz.
00:01:18 We will conduct an investigation, not only into Mr. Richards, but the entire REACT team.
00:01:23 For falsifying data and creating panic.
00:01:26 It's only a matter of time before REACT slips up.
00:01:28 Senator Carlson's war against REACT is completely unfounded.
00:01:31 Are they helping or are they doing more harm?
00:01:34 Many are turning to REACT to help out once again.
00:01:36 Okay, they did it once, they did it twice.
00:01:38 Could they do it a third time?
00:01:40 The scale of these environmental disasters has been increasing exponentially.
00:01:43 How do we know they haven't been making things worse?
00:01:45 People are in danger and REACT may be at fault.
00:01:48 [music]
00:01:58 Eric.
00:01:59 Molly here? I went around to the front house, but…
00:02:02 No, she's back here. Just in the office here.
00:02:06 I think…
00:02:08 Come on in, you'll find her.
00:02:10 Office?
00:02:11 Yeah, it's just around the corner here on the left.
00:02:14 Eric!
00:02:17 What are you doing here?
00:02:19 Griffin let me in.
00:02:23 Of course, it's his home.
00:02:25 He made some coffee, want some?
00:02:27 Yeah, I'll pass, thanks.
00:02:29 Oh, okay.
00:02:31 Well, if you're here to see the kids, I can go wake them up.
00:02:33 Otherwise, we do need to get to work.
00:02:36 The storms that are coming inland are much stronger and Yolanda and David are already at the hangar.
00:02:41 Okay, I've just been in contact with the VA about organizing Sven's funeral service and…
00:02:49 They recovered his body.
00:02:52 Oh my god.
00:02:53 So, I thought we could all chip in, along with his benefits, for his memorial.
00:02:58 Of course.
00:02:59 I'm taking care of all of it.
00:03:01 Yeah, you don't owe him that.
00:03:02 He's part of the team. I owe him everything.
00:03:05 Thank you, Griffin.
00:03:07 What are they arguing about now?
00:03:09 Looks like they're actually getting along. It's kind of freaking me out.
00:03:13 Give it time, it's only 9.30.
00:03:15 Did you know Clay wants to start seeing a therapist now?
00:03:19 Really? That's excellent.
00:03:23 Yeah, but we're going to have to work together on this as a team.
00:03:27 Dad!
00:03:29 Clay.
00:03:30 That was between us.
00:03:31 Clay, sweetheart, please come back.
00:03:35 I got this. Honey!
00:03:36 I got it.
00:03:38 Clay!
00:03:39 That was between us! How could you tell them?
00:03:42 Because I know how important it is to address this stuff.
00:03:45 And because I know how easy it is to avoid it.
00:03:47 I avoided it, so did Sven!
00:03:49 No, you don't get it. You don't get it. I'm not like you.
00:03:51 I know exactly what this is, why?
00:03:54 No, you don't!
00:03:55 I do! That's why I know how easy it is not to do anything.
00:03:59 Mom and Chrissy don't have to know that I've damaged goods.
00:04:03 You have not damaged goods.
00:04:04 Yes, I have!
00:04:05 You have not damaged goods.
00:04:06 I am! I'm just going to end up disappointing everybody!
00:04:08 Hey, look at me.
00:04:10 You could never disappoint me.
00:04:14 Never.
00:04:15 I'm so proud of you.
00:04:18 Come here. I am so proud of you.
00:04:21 We're going to walk through this together.
00:04:25 You, me, and your mom.
00:04:27 Alright?
00:04:28 We're going to walk through this together.
00:04:30 Oh, buddy.
00:04:35 [thud]
00:04:36 Come on, let's get out of here.
00:04:43 So this is how a billionaire lives.
00:04:51 She can even have a rocket.
00:04:53 Yeah, it's a nice rocket.
00:04:58 Well, looks as good as new.
00:05:04 Thank God for redundancy.
00:05:06 Even added some new pieces that weren't there before.
00:05:08 Well, I might have asked for an upgrade or two.
00:05:11 For starters, everything's locked down.
00:05:13 What was that?
00:05:23 The storm was over 75 miles away an hour ago.
00:05:28 Well, it sounds like it's here now.
00:05:29 [speaking in foreign language]
00:05:31 [glass shattering]
00:05:33 [screaming]
00:05:34 We have to get out of here.
00:05:35 We have to get out of here.
00:05:36 We have to get out of here.
00:05:37 We have to get out of here.
00:05:38 We have to get out of here.
00:05:39 We have to get out of here.
00:05:40 We have to get out of here.
00:05:41 We have to get out of here.
00:05:42 We have to get out of here.
00:05:43 We have to get out of here.
00:05:44 We have to get out of here.
00:05:45 We have to get out of here.
00:05:46 We have to get out of here.
00:05:47 We have to get out of here.
00:05:48 We have to get out of here.
00:05:49 We have to get out of here.
00:05:50 We have to get out of here.
00:05:51 We have to get out of here.
00:05:52 We have to get out of here.
00:05:53 We have to get out of here.
00:05:54 We have to get out of here.
00:05:55 We have to get out of here.
00:05:56 We have to get out of here.
00:05:57 We have to get out of here.
00:05:58 We have to get out of here.
00:05:59 We have to get out of here.
00:06:00 We have to get out of here.
00:06:01 We have to get out of here.
00:06:02 We have to get out of here.
00:06:03 We have to get out of here.
00:06:04 We have to get out of here.
00:06:05 We have to get out of here.
00:06:06 We have to get out of here.
00:06:07 We have to get out of here.
00:06:08 We have to get out of here.
00:06:09 We have to get out of here.
00:06:10 We have to get out of here.
00:06:11 We have to get out of here.
00:06:12 We have to get out of here.
00:06:13 We have to get out of here.
00:06:14 We have to get out of here.
00:06:15 We have to get out of here.
00:06:16 We have to get out of here.
00:06:17 Please.
00:06:18 Yeah, yeah.
00:06:19 What are you doing?
00:06:20 All right, check this out.
00:06:21 You see the rings?
00:06:31 This tells us a lot about the hailstone and the storm itself.
00:06:37 Like rings in a tree?
00:06:39 Exactly.
00:06:40 A hailstone is made when an ice particle, it gets caught in an updraft of a storm.
00:06:44 And what it does is it just freezes over and over.
00:06:47 But when the hailstone falls, it can get swept back up in the updraft and it just freezes
00:06:51 constantly again over.
00:06:53 And that just makes it get bigger and bigger.
00:06:55 Until finally it just hits the ground and the rings tell us how many times it's cycled
00:06:59 through the storm.
00:07:00 And the air temperatures, it just changes each time.
00:07:02 Well, I mean, can they get bigger than this one?
00:07:05 Air temperatures increases, the temperatures drop, a hailstone cycles through and through
00:07:08 and it just gets bigger as a result.
00:07:11 Dual polar radar echoes show large amounts of energy here.
00:07:15 Bad news guys.
00:07:16 So we have more hail coming in.
00:07:18 Those stronger wind echoes are really wide.
00:07:22 David, would you calculate the estimated hailstone sizes of the storm?
00:07:27 Six to eight inch hailstones.
00:07:28 Jesus.
00:07:29 The NOA is probably onto this by now and the National Weather Service is probably acting
00:07:35 on the same info we have.
00:07:37 The Weather Service has planes equipped for hail suppression, but there are more fast
00:07:42 moving storms coming and they're not going to be taking off considering their size and
00:07:46 speed.
00:07:47 I mean, the FAA is likely grounding and diverting flights by now.
00:07:50 Regional short-term weather models forecast predict marked lower temperatures.
00:07:56 The mapping system is showing a downward trend for the next three days.
00:08:01 So it's only going to get colder?
00:08:02 With more wind and freezing fog.
00:08:04 The storm is moving fast.
00:08:06 Hailstorms are going to get longer, dropping stones the size of bowling balls unless we
00:08:10 move fast.
00:08:12 So we suppress the hail.
00:08:13 Use cloud seeding rockets filled with silver iodide.
00:08:16 Silver iodide?
00:08:17 What's silver iodide going to do?
00:08:18 It's going to attract water at lower altitudes within the storm where it's warmer.
00:08:25 This way the hailstones don't throw to the size predicted in these forecasts.
00:08:29 If we don't do that, then their casualties will be in the thousands and damage is going
00:08:35 to be in the billions.
00:08:36 The size of actual bowling balls?
00:08:39 All right, so cloud seeding, silver iodide going up, how are we doing that?
00:08:47 Okay, well what the rockets do is they release the silver iodide at a specific maximum altitude.
00:08:53 And do we have that?
00:08:54 Yeah, we have your rockets.
00:08:56 We just need to fill them with silver iodide.
00:08:58 And you have that much silver iodide just lying around?
00:09:01 Yeah, of course.
00:09:03 One of these compounds is my science lab.
00:09:05 Oh, wait, so you load them up and launch the rockets and the storm just disappears.
00:09:12 Are we going to use your rocket?
00:09:13 No, that rocket is a prototype and we ran some tests.
00:09:17 It won't send you to the moon, which of course was the goal.
00:09:21 And that type of rocket won't work.
00:09:22 I want you to think more like small missiles.
00:09:24 I'll go get them ready.
00:09:26 Are we going to launch the rockets here?
00:09:28 Yes, Yolanda will launch them, but we're going to have to plant these devices.
00:09:32 That's the only way to do it.
00:09:33 They're going to tell the rockets where to go.
00:09:35 Where do we plant them?
00:09:36 We?
00:09:37 You're not going anywhere.
00:09:39 I'm going?
00:09:41 Mapping software is tracking the storm right now.
00:09:44 It'll tell us the best place to plant the tuning forks.
00:09:47 You're staying here?
00:09:48 Can you tell them I'm going?
00:09:50 Listen, this is a two-person job and we're going in three different directions.
00:09:54 Yolanda needs to stay here.
00:09:55 The kids have to go.
00:09:56 We can plant two of them ourselves.
00:09:58 No, cloud seeding will only work in the early stages of the storm.
00:10:02 If we wait any longer and the storm gets bigger, this will not work.
00:10:06 Well, you are going to need these.
00:10:14 Let's go, guys.
00:10:19 Come on.
00:10:23 All right, so here's what we're up against.
00:10:27 Snow.
00:10:28 We want you to be on the lookout for whiteouts, black ice, and hail stones the size of bowling
00:10:34 balls that are going to be falling from the sky at 95 miles per hour.
00:10:38 Molly, mapping software's giving us some coordinates.
00:10:41 Planting spots are going to be in three separate locations.
00:10:43 Mount Olive, Myrtle Beach, and Fairmount.
00:10:46 Those are all 75, 80 miles from here.
00:10:48 All right, then we're going to have to move fast.
00:10:50 Teams of two.
00:10:51 Kristi and I will take one.
00:10:54 I'll watch him.
00:10:56 David and I are going to T-bump so that we can keep an eye on the storm.
00:10:59 I'll drive.
00:11:00 Would you two just take turns?
00:11:03 Here's the tricky part.
00:11:04 You must plant the forks at the same time for maximum results.
00:11:07 But what if we lose communication?
00:11:09 Right.
00:11:10 So everyone sink to 1018.
00:11:13 It'll take you approximately two hours in this storm to get to the destination, another
00:11:17 hour to find the spot to plant.
00:11:19 So in exactly three hours, or 1318, you launch, unless you hear from all three.
00:11:25 If not, you launch without guidance.
00:11:27 Got it.
00:11:28 These will tell you everything you need to know about where you're going, and planting
00:11:33 the fork and arming for triangulation.
00:11:35 Good luck, everyone.
00:11:38 Stay focused and stay safe.
00:11:42 I, Natasha Nakami, solemnly swear to support and defend the Constitution of the United
00:11:53 States from all enemies, foreign and domestic, that I bear true faith and allegiance to the
00:12:00 same, that I take this obligation freely, and that I will well and faithfully discharge
00:12:06 the duties of the office on which I am about to enter.
00:12:10 So help me God.
00:12:12 Congratulations, Deputy Regional Administrator.
00:12:14 Welcome to Region 4.
00:12:16 Thank you.
00:12:17 Now that the formalities are out of the way, brief me on the current action plans.
00:12:23 Excuse me, before you get into that, I'd like to steal on Ms. Nakami for a moment, so if
00:12:28 you don't mind.
00:12:37 Can I be blunt, Ms. Nakami?
00:12:39 Of course.
00:12:40 I understand that you have some sort of special relationship with the REACT team led by Griffin
00:12:44 Richards.
00:12:45 Is that right?
00:12:47 I know of them.
00:12:50 Well then you understand that they don't have America's best interest in mind.
00:12:55 They are reckless.
00:12:56 No question.
00:12:57 And I can't be trusted.
00:12:58 The thought of Griffin Richards illegally drilling inside Hawaiian volcanoes makes me
00:13:07 sick to my stomach.
00:13:09 But sir, you exonerated them.
00:13:11 No.
00:13:12 No.
00:13:13 I protected America.
00:13:14 Do you understand?
00:13:15 Do you think we needed some other protracted lawsuit?
00:13:19 No, we got rid of him as CEO and that was the most important thing.
00:13:24 Now I need you as my eyes and ears to understand.
00:13:30 If you hear anything, you see anything, you call me.
00:13:35 That's my personal cell phone number.
00:13:38 Yes sir.
00:13:40 By the way, congratulations on the new promotion.
00:13:45 Thank you.
00:13:46 The site is a hospital.
00:13:58 The Strand Memorial Medical Center in Myrtle Beach.
00:14:01 Okay, then we need to let them know that we're on our way there.
00:14:04 If you could call Yolanda please.
00:14:06 Yolanda, come in.
00:14:08 Go ahead, David.
00:14:10 Molly and I are about 50 miles out from Myrtle Beach.
00:14:12 Contact Strand Memorial.
00:14:13 We don't want to be held up anywhere with security.
00:14:16 Copy that.
00:14:17 I'll let them know that you're on your way in Y.
00:14:18 Great.
00:14:19 Thank you.
00:14:20 Over.
00:14:21 Hey, do you think you were a little hard on dad this morning?
00:14:32 After what he did?
00:14:35 Telling mom something I told him in confidence?
00:14:37 About seeing a therapist?
00:14:39 Clay, when all of this is over, I think I'm going to need to talk to somebody.
00:14:43 Look, I don't need everybody thinking that I'm a mess.
00:14:46 I wouldn't.
00:14:47 We're all a mess, okay?
00:14:49 None of this is normal.
00:14:51 We are literally driving in the snow to some destination called Mount Olive to plant tuning
00:14:57 forks to launch rockets into a winter storm.
00:15:03 And now we're stuck in traffic.
00:15:04 Hudson Park.
00:15:05 I remember playing Little League there when I was 12.
00:15:11 You know this area?
00:15:13 Oh, you grew up here, right?
00:15:15 I did.
00:15:16 I'm actually from Wilmington, but I haven't been to Fairmont since I was a kid.
00:15:20 You ever install one of these things?
00:15:22 The forks?
00:15:23 Yeah.
00:15:24 No, mate, no.
00:15:25 I've never even seen one of them before.
00:15:27 Trust Molly to know all about it, though.
00:15:29 She's always been a gearhead for that type of stuff.
00:15:33 Tell me, how'd you two meet?
00:15:35 Let's just focus on the mission for now.
00:15:36 Oh, come on, come on.
00:15:37 Did you ask her out or did she ask you?
00:15:41 She seems like the kind of person to take the initiative.
00:15:43 Mate, do you know how to install one of these forks?
00:15:45 No, I do not.
00:15:47 Right.
00:15:48 We have just over an hour to learn how, and then we've got to get the thing up and operational
00:15:54 in the next 22 minutes after that.
00:15:56 This sounds like a baseball hitting the car.
00:16:03 It's because they are.
00:16:06 Look at the size of these things.
00:16:13 Look out for signs.
00:16:18 Blue tire, hold on.
00:16:25 Molly.
00:16:27 Molly, can you read me, over?
00:16:34 What is it?
00:16:36 We're about 60 miles from Fairmont, caught in some kind of hail storm.
00:16:41 Busted up the car, busted up the highway, we blew a tire.
00:16:45 Look at the size of this thing.
00:16:48 You're right, it's as big as a baseball.
00:16:50 Did he just say baseball?
00:16:52 Eric, is the hail bigger than what fell back at the hangar?
00:16:56 Affirmative.
00:16:57 Yeah, Griffin's holding one in his hand right now.
00:16:59 It's roughly the size of a baseball.
00:17:02 That's a four inch diameter.
00:17:05 The hail's getting larger.
00:17:06 It means the storm's intensifying.
00:17:08 They need to get to Fairmont right now.
00:17:10 Eric, how long will it take for you to fix that flat?
00:17:14 We need you to get back on the road in less than an hour, fast.
00:17:18 Copy that.
00:17:19 Can you imagine these things getting to the size of a bowling ball?
00:17:22 I'd rather not, mate.
00:17:23 Let's get this spare tire on and get going.
00:17:28 Everything okay?
00:17:29 Yeah, it's just that not everything's getting through on the tablet.
00:17:33 Clay?
00:17:34 Chrissy, come in.
00:17:36 Hey, Mom, what's up?
00:17:39 I just want to check in.
00:17:41 What's your 20?
00:17:42 Oh, we're still on the I-40.
00:17:43 We got stuck in some traffic, so we're running behind.
00:17:45 Okay, your father got a flat tire.
00:17:47 He and Griffin were caught in a hail storm.
00:17:50 How is the weather where you guys are?
00:17:52 Oh, I mean, we're still in the fog and it's been snowing off and on, so that's been causing
00:17:55 the traffic, but other than that, so far so good.
00:17:58 Drive safe.
00:17:59 The other teams are both running late now.
00:18:03 We're going to be cutting it close on this launch window.
00:18:06 David, look, when this is over, I really want to talk to you about REACT.
00:18:11 What's wrong?
00:18:12 Nothing.
00:18:13 But...
00:18:14 Are you going to leave?
00:18:17 Leave?
00:18:18 No.
00:18:19 Well, then, I mean, this is your baby.
00:18:22 This is your company.
00:18:23 Lou, it's not that.
00:18:25 What is it?
00:18:26 Not now.
00:18:27 I'll tell you later.
00:18:28 Molly, David.
00:18:29 Come in, please.
00:18:30 We've got a major problem.
00:18:31 Yolanda, what is it?
00:18:32 The Strand Hospital.
00:18:33 We want no parts of this.
00:18:34 They're extremely concerned that the electromagnetic forces from the emissions of the fork are going
00:18:35 to interfere with the medical devices in the hospital.
00:18:36 Even after everything you explained we're doing to their administration?
00:18:37 Yes, I explained that, but the more I explained, the more adamant their refusal.
00:18:38 They don't know who we are and they don't want us anywhere near the hospital with those
00:18:39 forks.
00:18:40 Okay, we can readjust the coordinates to our location.
00:18:41 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:42 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:43 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:44 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:45 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:46 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:47 Okay, we can readjust the coordinates to our location.
00:18:48 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:49 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:50 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:51 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:52 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:53 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:54 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:55 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:56 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:57 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:58 We can't go to the hospital.
00:18:59 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:00 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:01 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:02 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:03 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:04 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:05 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:06 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:07 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:08 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:09 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:10 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:11 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:12 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:13 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:14 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:15 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:16 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:17 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:18 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:19 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:20 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:21 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:22 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:23 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:24 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:25 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:26 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:27 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:28 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:29 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:30 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:31 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:32 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:33 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:34 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:35 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:36 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:37 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:38 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:39 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:40 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:41 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:42 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:43 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:44 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:45 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:46 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:47 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:48 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:49 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:50 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:51 We can't go to the hospital.
00:19:52 We're only going to increase in diameter unless we can get these rockets up.
00:19:56 Rockets?
00:19:57 Did you say rockets?
00:19:58 Oh, cloud seeding rockets filled with silver iodide, suppressed to reduce the hailstones.
00:20:05 No one is putting rockets in the air, do you understand?
00:20:09 No one.
00:20:10 I know.
00:20:11 FEMA does not authorize rockets.
00:20:14 You need to contact the NSA.
00:20:16 No, no.
00:20:18 We're only planting a guidance system.
00:20:20 We're launching the rockets some 80, 90 miles away from any population center.
00:20:25 Strand Memorial Medical Center doesn't know who we are and they won't grant us access.
00:20:29 Natasha, I need you to vouch for us and get permission into that campus.
00:20:34 I'm telling you, this is not my jurisdiction nor authority.
00:20:37 Natasha, I would be happy to debate the necessity and value of our efforts with you, but we
00:20:42 are literally running out of time.
00:20:45 You have the data in front of you for once.
00:20:47 Please, let's work together on this.
00:20:50 I will handle Strand Memorial Hospital personally.
00:20:58 [Rocket launch]
00:21:00 Wait, keep this thing on the road.
00:21:21 I am.
00:21:22 How much further do we have to go?
00:21:26 We have nine miles until we're at our destination.
00:21:29 Tell mom we're almost there.
00:21:31 Mom, come in.
00:21:32 Reading you, Chrissy.
00:21:33 Yeah, we're almost at our destination in Mount Olive, but the wind is picking up really fast.
00:21:38 Copy that, honey.
00:21:40 David and I are pulling up to the Strand Medical Center now, but be careful.
00:21:43 Let us know when your tuning fork is assembled and be ready and active.
00:21:47 Okay, copy that.
00:21:49 The National Weather Service has called for a freeze and wind chill warning for Georgia,
00:21:55 Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, all the way up through New York.
00:21:59 We're looking at temperatures below 20 degrees by tonight.
00:22:04 Jeez, and these severe Yale storms are...
00:22:07 They're going to start heating more than the Carolinas.
00:22:10 It's 1242.
00:22:15 Almost time to launch.
00:22:17 Natasha, please come through with FEMA magic.
00:22:19 May I help you, please?
00:22:21 Dr. David Diaz, Dr. Molly Martin, we're here to install the tuning fork we called ahead.
00:22:26 Uh, you're gonna install what?
00:22:29 A tuning fork. We spoke to someone in administration and we also had someone from FEMA call.
00:22:35 FEMA?
00:22:36 I don't have anything from FEMA.
00:22:39 Hold on.
00:22:46 Yeah, hi, this is Vosk at the main desk.
00:22:48 I got some people here from FEMA.
00:22:50 They said they came to install, uh, something.
00:22:54 Oh.
00:22:58 I see.
00:23:00 Okay.
00:23:03 If, if.
00:23:07 Okay.
00:23:09 I need you two to stay here. The administrator is on her way down.
00:23:12 Okay, can you please tell her that this is an urgent matter?
00:23:15 I understand, ma'am. And she is on her way down now.
00:23:19 Thanks. Come on.
00:23:20 All right, okay.
00:23:21 Uh, you're gonna take the next left in about 400 feet.
00:23:23 Okay.
00:23:25 Once the flanges are secured in position to the main antenna, it can be stretched to full extension.
00:23:29 And the sensor engaged for system boot.
00:23:33 Hey, hey, hey, you're gonna miss it. Here.
00:23:35 Now what?
00:23:41 It's straight ahead. The park should be on your left in about a mile and a quarter.
00:23:45 Take those instructions with you. You're gonna need them.
00:23:47 You think?
00:23:48 It's...
00:23:50 It's 1252.
00:23:53 The wind's still picking up.
00:23:57 Ground must be frozen by now.
00:24:00 Okay, honestly, we're gonna need to figure out some way to keep the tuning fork in place.
00:24:04 Sir.
00:24:11 This is an emergency announcement. Can all porters report to A&E? All porters to A&E. We have an emergency situation.
00:24:17 I'm Erica Rossiter, chief administrator of the facility.
00:24:20 So, you're here on behalf of FEMA?
00:24:22 Yes, and we don't have much time. We've already been authorized for this operation.
00:24:26 All right, something about the installation of a transmitter for a weather modification system due to the storm?
00:24:32 Yeah, a hailstone suppression exercise.
00:24:34 Yes, and we are already in our launch window. If we could please get started.
00:24:38 I understand. Senator Terry Carlson called me to explain on behalf of FEMA.
00:24:43 Senator Carlson?
00:24:44 And he feels it best that you leave.
00:24:46 Okay, this is very important. This is life-threatening. I mean, this is really...
00:24:49 And if you stay, I'm going to have to call the police.
00:24:52 All right, let's go.
00:24:55 Okay, all right. Thank you very much.
00:25:05 Okay, we're in time. It's 13-7, but we've got to hurry.
00:25:09 See if you can get that secondary up by the tree there.
00:25:13 Use the flanges to put it in the ground.
00:25:18 Okay.
00:25:22 We're going to try and get the primary up on the jungle gym.
00:25:25 We need to get to the roof.
00:25:27 Follow me. I've got an idea.
00:25:29 Excuse me, excuse me. I need to get this man a wheelchair now.
00:25:33 Okay, um, first... Here we go. Fill out this form.
00:25:36 We have been overwhelmed because of the storm.
00:25:39 I understand. I don't think you know who this man is.
00:25:41 Ma'am, can you just please have a seat?
00:25:44 Listen to me. This is Dr. George Strand. Do you know who that is?
00:25:47 Please take a seat.
00:25:49 His name is on the freaking hospital.
00:25:52 Listen, I don't want to make a scene here, and I don't want to get you in trouble,
00:25:56 but I will do what I need to do. If you don't get him a wheelchair now, damn it!
00:25:59 Thank you!
00:26:03 You can be pretty scary when you want to be.
00:26:05 You'd be surprised how many petroleum plants I snuck into.
00:26:07 I can't see three feet in front of me. Where's the edge of the building?
00:26:13 Just be careful, alright?
00:26:15 Alright, just... Let's pace this out. Stop here.
00:26:18 Okay.
00:26:20 Hurry, let's get this thing built. We can't miss the launch window.
00:26:23 13-12.
00:26:29 13-12. Only six minutes to go.
00:26:32 I hope no one heard that.
00:26:40 I hope that didn't go off the side of the roof, or we're screwed.
00:26:43 We're going to attach this to the jungle, Jim.
00:26:46 See if this metal can't act as a giant conducting structure.
00:26:57 I got the Yolanda! Her tuning fork is active and operational.
00:27:01 Eric. Eric, your fork is operational.
00:27:05 Yolanda, have you heard from Clay or Chrissy or Molly?
00:27:08 Nothing yet.
00:27:09 The launch window is closing.
00:27:12 Whoa, whoa, whoa! Easy there. You got it? Steady.
00:27:15 Yeah. Thank you.
00:27:17 Careful. I got it.
00:27:20 Chrissy, you're right behind it.
00:27:25 Yolanda, we're nearly ready to launch. The window's going to close in four minutes.
00:27:29 I'm all set. Just waiting on verse with Chrissy and Clay.
00:27:32 David, be careful. This entire roof is covered in ice.
00:27:39 Alright, let's get this thing set up and boot the navigational system.
00:27:42 Yolanda, we're setting up the tuning fork. Boot up the navigational system.
00:27:49 Yolanda, we're getting the tuning fork operational and ready to navigate.
00:27:54 Yolanda! Yolanda, are you there?
00:27:57 Molly! Molly, the launch missile got buried in the tree branches.
00:28:03 I'm picking it up and preparing it for launch now.
00:28:07 But we only have four minutes. If we don't launch it by then, this will all have been a waste.
00:28:11 We're almost ready. Come back.
00:28:13 But that's only two. I haven't heard back yet from Chrissy and Clay.
00:28:17 Yolanda, you haven't heard from either of them?
00:28:19 Negative, Molly. I'm going to go back to the launch system.
00:28:22 Negative, Molly. Not since the launch window opened.
00:28:25 Did we crash?
00:28:35 Chrissy, are you... your eye... are you okay?
00:28:39 Yeah, I'm fine. Are you okay?
00:28:41 We're going to miss the launch window. We have to hurry.
00:28:44 Eric! Come in, Eric!
00:28:50 Yep, roger that. I'm here.
00:28:52 Have you heard from Chrissy or Clay?
00:28:54 No, I've been trying them for the last 20 minutes. I can't get them.
00:28:57 I can't reach them either.
00:28:59 It's almost 1318. We're down to three minutes.
00:29:02 Molly, we're getting those bowling balls you were talking about coming out of the sky.
00:29:09 I'm not sure how much longer we can be out here.
00:29:12 Okay. Rockets are ready to launch. Two minutes remaining.
00:29:16 Our tuning fork is active.
00:29:19 Our tuning fork is active and operational. Over.
00:29:22 We have to plant the fork.
00:29:29 It's frozen shut.
00:29:31 Come help me.
00:29:33 Clay, be careful.
00:29:44 [explosion]
00:29:46 Elana, this is Chrissy.
00:29:51 Chrissy. Thank God you guys are okay.
00:29:55 Just worry about me later, okay? Clay and I have the tuning fork ready.
00:29:58 Raise your rocket again.
00:30:00 Rockets are away.
00:30:11 [explosion]
00:30:13 Clay, Chrissy, you read me?
00:30:33 Please, please answer. Clay, Chrissy.
00:30:36 Buff, Mom, we made it.
00:30:40 [music]
00:30:42 The hail is smaller.
00:30:45 It's just snow.
00:30:47 We did it.
00:30:50 You guys did really good. You know that?
00:30:53 Just wait until you see what we did with the SUV.
00:30:56 I'm really proud of you both.
00:31:07 Molly, David, I need to talk to you right there. Over.
00:31:10 Yeah, Yolanda, what is it?
00:31:12 Good news. The cloud seeding, it worked.
00:31:16 Hailstone forecasts have significantly reduced to normal sizes.
00:31:19 That's good. I'm guessing there's bad news. There's always going to be bad news.
00:31:23 Weather and patent took a turn.
00:31:25 You remember the Great Texas Freeze?
00:31:29 The storm in February of '21, it killed 700 people, left 5 million without power for days.
00:31:35 It sent Ted Cruz fleeing to Mexico.
00:31:37 I don't know what you're saying.
00:31:40 We're about to enter a new ice age.
00:31:43 [music]
00:31:46 [music]
00:31:49 [music]
00:31:52 [music]
00:31:54 [music]
00:31:59 [music]
00:32:11 [music]
00:32:16 [music]
00:32:18 We need to make out.
00:32:36 [music]
00:32:44 Hello?
00:32:46 Hello?
00:32:50 Hello?
00:32:54 They'll be back to us, okay?
00:32:58 No, they're not, Chrissy.
00:32:59 Yeah, they will. They'll be back.
00:33:01 They have a location of the tuning forks, okay? They know where we are.
00:33:05 Chrissy, we're in the middle of nowhere, in a freaking snowstorm.
00:33:11 With hail the size of boulders, how are they going to find us?
00:33:15 They'll be back. They'll be back, okay?
00:33:19 Mom always comes back.
00:33:23 So, do you want to talk about it?
00:33:30 About what?
00:33:31 You said you wanted to talk to me.
00:33:33 No, not now.
00:33:34 You know, are you thinking about...
00:33:37 I just want to make some changes to my company, that's all.
00:33:41 Your company? Was that ever decided?
00:33:43 What are you saying, Diaz?
00:33:45 Forget it.
00:33:47 Look, Molly, I'm really sorry about Griffin. I had no clue about his illegal drilling.
00:33:52 No, I...
00:33:54 And you can't get rid of me. My name's on half of the government contract.
00:33:57 David, what are you talking about?
00:33:59 You think it's as simple as making a call and poof, we're permitted?
00:34:03 No, it takes months, sometimes years.
00:34:06 What did you do?
00:34:07 I did what I had to do. I got us operational. I'm the one keeping us together.
00:34:12 Okay, this is about my kids.
00:34:14 Griffin's going to jail. Your actions destroyed every relationship from FEMA to every other government agency.
00:34:19 Whatever you're talking about, we need to fix.
00:34:22 Wait, Molly, what are you doing?
00:34:28 Wait, is that them? I think that's the SUV.
00:34:35 Oh my God, it's them.
00:34:37 Go.
00:34:42 Oh my God.
00:34:44 No!
00:34:50 Gracie, come on, sweetheart, come on!
00:34:54 Come on, come on, come on, you got it.
00:34:56 Do you think you have hypothermia?
00:34:58 No, but if you keep standing here any longer, I...
00:35:00 Molly!
00:35:01 Come on!
00:35:02 We got you, are you okay?
00:35:04 Mom!
00:35:05 Oh my God, oh my God.
00:35:11 Yes, so warm.
00:35:16 You guys okay?
00:35:17 Did the rockets go off? Did it work?
00:35:19 It worked.
00:35:20 Well, if it worked, then why isn't the storm dying down?
00:35:23 Desmond, we just need to get back to the command center.
00:35:26 What do you mean?
00:35:27 I can't believe I let you guys go out by yourselves. I don't know what I was thinking.
00:35:31 Then we're adults? Mom, we're fine, just tell us what's going on.
00:35:35 Okay, okay, okay.
00:35:37 Molly, David, do you read me?
00:35:44 Go ahead, Yolanda.
00:35:46 What's your 20?
00:35:47 We picked up Clay and Chrissy. We're about 35 miles out.
00:35:50 Thank goodness.
00:35:52 Clay, Chrissy, thank God you guys are okay.
00:35:58 I never thought I'd be this excited to head back to a tech rig.
00:36:01 Hey, Molly, do you guys think you can make it back in the hour?
00:36:05 I want David to corroborate some of the stuff I'm reading here at HQ.
00:36:09 Yolanda, I'm running a volume scan now, building data imaging models.
00:36:13 David, David, what is it?
00:36:19 These models, they're...
00:36:23 Hey.
00:36:25 Yolanda, let's toggle through a jet stream analysis models across the globe, projected over the entire day.
00:36:29 Copy that.
00:36:30 Have you spoken to Molly?
00:36:32 Yes, everyone's fine.
00:36:33 Clay and Chrissy are alright?
00:36:35 Yeah.
00:36:36 Okay, do you mind if I...
00:36:37 Molly, you find Clay and Chrissy?
00:36:41 Yeah.
00:36:42 Dad, Dad, we're good. Just cold.
00:36:45 The SUV is another story though.
00:36:47 Yeah, maybe next time I should drive. This would definitely not have happened if I were driving, okay?
00:36:52 You want a cookie?
00:36:53 A little.
00:36:54 Alright, you, hey, you two, does that answer your question?
00:36:57 Yeah.
00:36:58 Um, Griffin and I just, uh, been attempting repairs.
00:37:02 We may have to see if he's got another vehicle though, if we want to go back out again.
00:37:06 Well, I got a fleet of about 1,500 black Volvos.
00:37:09 So we got plenty of cars to go back out again if we need to.
00:37:12 No one is leaving Mobile Command again in this weather.
00:37:15 Molly, we might not have much of a choice in that.
00:37:17 Well, I am making the choice. No one's leaving in this weather.
00:37:20 Copy that.
00:37:21 Moisture levels in the front are continuing to increase.
00:37:24 Now casting models show a storm system moving in a steady pattern,
00:37:27 bringing southerly winds and a 35 degree drop in temperature by tomorrow.
00:37:32 Well, it practically is tomorrow already.
00:37:35 And the day after that, projections indicate a further drop of 20 degrees.
00:37:40 That's a 55 degree drop.
00:37:42 Yeah, in less than 36 hours.
00:37:50 So this is NASA JPL atmospheric infrared sounding readings
00:37:54 showing frigid Arctic air moving from the North Pole to the lower latitudes across the Northern Hemisphere.
00:38:00 Now the purple and blue denote the coldest temps coming off of the polar vortex.
00:38:05 When the polar vortex becomes weaker, all of the cold Arctic air it brings just,
00:38:10 it gets pulled down by the jet stream, allowing it to reach lower than it might normally would do.
00:38:16 So it's so cold this far south?
00:38:18 Basically, yeah. I mean, the polar vortex is split off and it's just stretched down.
00:38:23 That disruption brings it with these brutal sub-zero temperatures that we've never experienced before.
00:38:29 And all the snow, hail and ice that comes with it?
00:38:32 Correct. Multiple storms have gathered on the jet stream,
00:38:36 becoming both more intense and more organized.
00:38:40 They're moving in a southwesterly direction.
00:38:42 Converging massive storm fronts responsible for plummeting temperatures,
00:38:46 reaching a record low of minus 80 degrees within the next 36 hours.
00:38:51 Minus 80? That's insane. That's like Montana in the dead of January.
00:38:55 Yeah, the record low for Montana was negative 70 back in the 1950s.
00:39:01 You're telling me that the Carolinas are about to go into a deep freeze that we can't even begin to fathom?
00:39:07 Not just the Carolinas or the eastern seaboard.
00:39:11 Yeah, Yolanda and I have been tracking the storms.
00:39:14 These wind speeds and temperatures, accumulation of ice levels,
00:39:19 in such short periods of time, the severity of the precipitation.
00:39:23 We're already seeing these in these last few days.
00:39:26 The split vortex is branching out from the Carolinas.
00:39:30 The current severity of this split polar vortex,
00:39:33 we have 15 hours until we're about to see multiple parts of the world
00:39:37 start freezing at extreme record temperatures that we haven't seen in millions of years.
00:39:45 Man, that frigid air from the Arctic is moving down,
00:39:50 I mean way further down this time and it's way, way less forgiving.
00:39:54 I mean we're looking at precipitation levels that we haven't experienced in over a century.
00:40:00 I mean in the US alone we're looking at at least 30 feet of snow or more in the Midwest
00:40:06 beyond branching out from there.
00:40:08 How do we stop it, Molly?
00:40:11 I mean, we have an answer for this, right?
00:40:17 Come on!
00:40:20 We fought volcanoes, didn't we?
00:40:25 We don't have a plan for this?
00:40:27 Winter? Yes.
00:40:29 Do you know ten times more people die from extreme cold than geographical catastrophes?
00:40:36 And that number is just rising.
00:40:39 But we've already altered the physical structure of precipitation with two rockets.
00:40:48 I'm saying why can't we do it again?
00:40:50 The silver iodide is limited in its efficacy and this is worldwide now.
00:40:55 Yeah, and seeding clouds for a storm is far less complex than interfering with precipitation on a cold storm front.
00:41:03 You know what? Let's just send more.
00:41:08 How many rockets and missiles do we have to fire at this storm to reduce the size of it?
00:41:14 We can't. Not with the tools that we have.
00:41:16 The temperatures fried the drivers and the hailstones did the rest.
00:41:20 Even a massive rocket would freeze before we had a chance to release any of the silver iodide.
00:41:25 That makes sense as to why the SUV looked like that. I thought it was just Clay's handiwork.
00:41:29 Chris. Clay. You okay?
00:41:32 Yeah, we're fine. We're fine.
00:41:33 I thought so. I just, you know, had to see for myself.
00:41:35 I'm just happy to be back here, that everybody's safe.
00:41:37 Well, that's you always thinking of everybody except yourself.
00:41:40 But seriously, guys, Griffin's right. If the seeding clouds doesn't work, we have to find a way to at least delay it.
00:41:45 I mean, Yolanda, run your stats again, please.
00:41:50 Yolanda? Are you good?
00:41:54 Yolanda, are you okay?
00:41:57 Dude.
00:42:00 Yeah, uh, excuse me.
00:42:05 Be right back.
00:42:09 [Crying]
00:42:27 Do you want to talk for a minute?
00:42:31 I'm sorry. Um, yeah. I just, I didn't expect.
00:42:36 I guess I just...
00:42:46 You and your brother could have really been hurt. Or worse.
00:42:52 It's just a bruise, okay? We're fine. Nothing happened to us.
00:42:59 It's just every time I say another location, it's another risk.
00:43:03 You know, I feel like I'm just giving bad news after bad news after bad news.
00:43:07 And we already lost Sven during the megaquake.
00:43:11 And I should have been there. I should have been there, but I left.
00:43:14 No. No.
00:43:17 We needed you safe.
00:43:23 I, I needed you safe.
00:43:27 Really?
00:43:33 I mean, do you really think that I can trust that mustached idiot David?
00:43:38 Give me the correct data without you backing him up? No. No way.
00:43:44 This might be too much too soon, but, um, I don't have a lot of family.
00:43:52 My dad raised me and, um, he died when I was 14. Car crash.
00:43:59 He was on his way to pick me up from soccer practice.
00:44:04 I'm so sorry. I've been on my own for a while.
00:44:10 I just never felt like I wanted to be a part of a family again. Too much heartache.
00:44:16 But then I met you.
00:44:19 And your family and this team.
00:44:23 And everything we've been through and it made me realize that I miss feeling like I'm a part of something.
00:44:32 And I thought that I might lose that again.
00:44:42 I'm fine. Um, you should, you should go in.
00:44:45 Yolanda, you're not going to lose me.
00:44:49 Really? Really.
00:44:53 Okay, so what do we know about this storm?
00:44:58 A polar vortex is an upper level, low pressure area.
00:45:03 Cyclonic in nature and gaining strength through differences in temperature.
00:45:08 Yeah, it relies on horizontal changes in temperature from cold to warm.
00:45:14 Sort of like a hurricane relies on vertical changes in temperature.
00:45:20 You okay? Yeah, yeah, good.
00:45:25 The polar vortex has already split. Jet stream is moving in the direction over the Atlantic basin, carrying all of the storms with it and the other ones are moving over the Appalachian Mountains into the Midwest.
00:45:38 Molly, our NOCAST has an update.
00:45:41 When these vortices meet, the heat from the collision and the cold from the vortices themselves are going to create a vacuum, freezing Earth to absolute zero.
00:45:51 And the vortices are already moving faster than they have in the past, so we've got about 10 hours.
00:45:59 Is that enough time for us to even do anything?
00:46:01 Any time left on the clock means that we have time to come up with a plan and we have hours.
00:46:08 Let's just think about this scientifically.
00:46:13 Isn't that what we always do?
00:46:15 Very cute, Clay.
00:46:18 Okay, the polar vortex is formed due to severe temperatures and the differences between the poles and the equator.
00:46:25 Right, so what are you suggesting we do?
00:46:27 There's no sunlight in the polar stratosphere, making it extremely cold while the equator stays very warm.
00:46:35 We replace the sun that's been lost in the polar stratosphere with another heat source.
00:46:42 We use microwaves.
00:46:45 Microwaves for heat?
00:46:47 From where?
00:46:50 Solar energy.
00:46:51 Yep, exactly right.
00:46:54 Heat the cold air right where it's splitting directly from above, bypassing the polar front that separates the Arctic air from the warmer air surrounding it.
00:47:06 Wait.
00:47:10 Weaken the storm from within and the storm dies out.
00:47:15 But when you say from above, you mean...
00:47:18 Space.
00:47:20 Stationary orbiters collecting solar power.
00:47:30 That could very well work. That's worth a shot.
00:47:32 Hold on. Are you suggesting that we heat this storm with microwaves?
00:47:40 Yes.
00:47:43 From satellites.
00:47:45 That store solar energy.
00:47:47 Where do we gain access to these said satellites?
00:47:50 That's the million dollar question, isn't it? Or should I say the billion dollar question?
00:47:56 Yeah, you should have some pals with some satellites lying around, shouldn't you, mate?
00:48:00 Guys?
00:48:02 We're still trying to determine if the severe winter storm is also at fault for the derailment. An investigation is underway.
00:48:10 That's GALICO, transports cargo from New York to Miami.
00:48:15 Where did it crash?
00:48:17 Reports are saying somewhere near the Greenworth Pass in an area by the Brock Hill Range.
00:48:26 Looks like they're just blaming the accident on the frigid temperatures.
00:48:30 Well, they aren't wrong. Temperatures are falling.
00:48:34 We have to get our plan into effect.
00:48:36 How? Where are we going to find satellites with that kind of capability?
00:48:41 The National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration has that access.
00:48:45 No, NOAA is only in the business of data collection and observation. They don't have equipment to do anything else.
00:48:51 NASA and the NOAA had partnered up to experiment with solar containment.
00:48:56 NEO is intended to prevent and divert hurricanes, but that program was shut down years ago.
00:49:04 So do these satellites even exist anymore?
00:49:08 Well, I guess there's only one way to find out.
00:49:11 We have to contact NOAA. I mean, if they were the agency in charge, they would have the answer to these questions.
00:49:21 I don't have any contacts at NOAA. FEMA, I do. So they could probably fast track what we need.
00:49:29 No. No, no, no, no, no, no.
00:49:33 Sorry, I'm afraid so.
00:49:36 Hey, how are the volunteers coming along for the phone trees?
00:49:42 Phone trees are up all around the county.
00:49:46 Half the state's snowed in by now. They're all happy to help. And no place else to be.
00:49:54 It's the ones with no place to go that I'm concerned with.
00:49:58 Have you talked to Senator Carlson?
00:50:00 He's busy with California. He's not giving this any attention.
00:50:05 Are you serious?
00:50:06 [phone rings]
00:50:07 Molly? Listen. About the hospital?
00:50:12 It happened. It's fine.
00:50:14 But you were right about the cloud seeding.
00:50:16 Um, thank you.
00:50:18 I'm assuming you're seeing these reports. This thing has split and is only expanding.
00:50:24 Do you know what we're up against?
00:50:26 If my models are correct, we don't have enough cloud seeding to even make a dent.
00:50:30 I know, but Natasha, we have to stop the storm. I mean, if they don't, when the vortices meet, the entire planet will hit absolute zero.
00:50:39 Are you sure?
00:50:40 We've run the models several times. They're all showing the same thing.
00:50:45 I'm assuming you have a plan? That's the only reason why you ever call me.
00:50:50 We need access to a series of geostationary orbiters with large capacity storage for solar power.
00:50:57 FEMA and NOAA always work hand in hand through these crises.
00:51:01 Right. NOAA supplies us with pertinent data upon which we make critical decisions about public safety.
00:51:07 That's about the extent of their capacity.
00:51:09 But that data center has the ability to communicate with the other U.S. operational assets in geosynchronous orbit.
00:51:16 I'm not privy to the specifics of their functioning capabilities.
00:51:19 Okay, then you know what? Put me in touch with NOAA directly.
00:51:24 We can advise on how to utilize the existing in-orbit capabilities with what we have at their disposal.
00:51:32 Okay. Let me try.
00:51:34 Thank you.
00:51:38 Luckily, I still have some international friends.
00:51:44 NOAA can connect with the satellites as needed.
00:51:49 Thank you, Griffin.
00:51:50 Welcome.
00:51:52 It's great.
00:51:53 Yolanda, David, can you guys come confirm these numbers?
00:51:58 What's wrong?
00:52:00 As the vortices move across the planet, the cold is increasing Earth's magnetic field.
00:52:06 Yeah, and it's wreaking havoc on our satellite communications.
00:52:11 We only have 20 minutes to reach them and implement our plan.
00:52:15 Molly, Natasha, any luck?
00:52:18 Look, we've run the numbers again and we only have 20 minutes to make this work.
00:52:22 Okay, NOAA is patched in.
00:52:24 Molly, this is Regional WCM Program Director Clark Dunfield.
00:52:28 Hello, Mr. Dunfield?
00:52:30 Yes, this is Mr. Dunfield.
00:52:34 Okay, Mr. Dunfield, I know that this is going to sound extreme, but we have been working on a model where it's showing an ice age.
00:52:43 What? Hold on a minute.
00:52:45 Mr. Dunfield? I don't hear him.
00:52:50 I'm calling Dunfield back. Hold on.
00:53:03 Uh, Molly, there's a problem.
00:53:06 Forecast data, models, every facet of the mapping software is dismantled.
00:53:13 I can't update any of the now-casting projections.
00:53:17 How is that possible?
00:53:19 I don't know. It's like the National Weather Service just completely stopped providing any data whatsoever.
00:53:25 Lei, what is it? What happened?
00:53:31 We lost NOAA. OSPO.
00:53:33 Natasha, what is going on?
00:53:35 We lost the Office of Satellite and Products Operations. That's the main communications hub of NOAA. It's completely frozen.
00:53:42 Okay, but that leaves us relying on localized radar at best for the time being. I mean...
00:53:48 What about rerouting all NOAA data to auxiliary facilities? That would have NWS back at full capacity a whole lot sooner.
00:53:58 OSPO is down. NOAA isn't getting back up in time for us to stop this thing.
00:54:02 We have no comms capability with the satellites.
00:54:06 There's nothing we can do. There's no way to get back up to the satellites now. I'm sorry.
00:54:11 Thank you for doing what you could, Natasha.
00:54:14 If you could please just continue with the evacuations.
00:54:18 Especially continue evacuations underground.
00:54:22 We should get to the hangar.
00:54:24 Okay. Come on.
00:54:27 [Dramatic music]
00:54:29 Well, it looks like we have a deal. Congratulations, Dr. Diaz.
00:54:35 This wasn't easy for me. I don't want this to get out. This is between you and me, Senator.
00:54:40 Understood. You get to be president of REACT as long as I get Griffin Richards.
00:54:46 I sent you all the paperwork. You have enough to put him away.
00:54:50 That's for sure. The deal is complete.
00:54:53 You have my protection and the U.S. government recognizes REACT with you as its president.
00:54:59 Well done.
00:55:02 The ARCSTAR spaceplane Mark 8.
00:55:11 It was a prototype we were developing to reach sub-orbital heights above Earth.
00:55:16 Griffin, can this thing still fly?
00:55:19 [Chuckles]
00:55:20 Yes, but it depends on how far up you're planning to go.
00:55:24 We can't move any of the orbiters into position, let alone aim a microwave beam into the proper vectors right in the path of the storm.
00:55:31 Are you asking if we can launch a flight that will bring our transmitter close to the satellites?
00:55:37 Now we're starting to use the same brain. I was thinking the exact same thing.
00:55:43 Technically, yes. But we have two challenges.
00:55:49 First, the weather.
00:55:52 The Mark 8 wasn't designed to sustain the impact that taking off from the storm can endure.
00:55:59 If the wind doesn't blow us off course, the precipitation could damage the hull, the tiles, you name it.
00:56:07 And that's if the onboard electronics don't blow on the way up.
00:56:12 See, you have to see we're taking this to the max height.
00:56:18 From the bottom of the stratosphere to the top of the mesosphere.
00:56:23 Okay, well that's the first. What's the second?
00:56:26 Propellant. We don't have that. Weather's irrelevant.
00:56:30 And where do we get that?
00:56:32 [Chuckles] Well, the train that crashed was transporting it.
00:56:37 At least that's where it was the last time I got an update.
00:56:42 Okay, then we just go get it.
00:56:44 We have another problem.
00:56:46 Unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine has a freezing point of negative 75.3 degrees.
00:56:52 Those containers have been around there for hours.
00:56:57 Yeah, then we need to move ASAP.
00:56:59 We need to take the REACT command center.
00:57:03 This thing can make it through Greenworth Pass in the storm.
00:57:09 It's large enough to transport the containers.
00:57:11 Plus, it's not likely to freeze because it uses the same materials as the suits.
00:57:17 Eric and I will drive up there.
00:57:20 I'm going too.
00:57:22 Nope, you stay here.
00:57:23 You need a third person to watch the rig while you go out in the cold and lug these things back. Come on.
00:57:27 Alright, well here's what's going to happen.
00:57:30 Griffin, Eric, Chrissy, you're going to go in the command center.
00:57:34 Okay.
00:57:35 David, Yolanda and I are going to stay here and prep the Mark 8 for takeoff.
00:57:38 Now hold on a second.
00:57:40 This cold is deep. We're literally lined up to freeze within seconds as the core temperatures drop.
00:57:46 That means that everyone, and I mean everyone, is to be in protective thermal suits.
00:57:53 But we don't have enough.
00:57:56 I'll see what I have.
00:57:57 Molly. Molly.
00:58:01 What?
00:58:03 I was hoping I could get those papers back off you.
00:58:05 Look, I know we have a lot to talk about, but if we make it through this ordeal, I think we can make it through anything.
00:58:13 Just like we used to when things were different.
00:58:17 I don't know what you're saying.
00:58:20 Great.
00:58:32 Here.
00:58:33 Molly!
00:58:39 Uh, you good to go?
00:58:44 Yeah, good to go. Come on, let's do it.
00:58:49 Hey, be careful, okay?
00:58:59 Remember what I said? You're not losing me.
00:59:02 Yeah, I'll hold you to that.
00:59:05 Go for it.
00:59:06 Hey. Hi.
00:59:09 Could you please just get back here fast? No one else knows how to fly this thing.
00:59:14 It's been a minute since I've flown it myself, Molly.
00:59:17 As long as the rocket gets up there, but...
00:59:21 Please be careful.
00:59:25 Without this rocket, there's no... planet Earth.
00:59:30 I understand.
00:59:33 Thanks.
00:59:35 [Music]
00:59:38 [Music]
00:59:41 [Music]
00:59:43 [Music]
00:59:52 [Music]
00:59:59 [Music]
01:00:07 [Music]
01:00:09 We've been hit by lightning.
01:00:12 I grip it.
01:00:14 What do these containers of rocket propellant look like?
01:00:18 They are heavy black boxes, but they may be buried in snow by now.
01:00:22 So, we could miss them.
01:00:27 [Music]
01:00:31 [Music]
01:00:59 This is the third time that I've run a telemetry analysis.
01:01:02 The report keeps showing me a faulty command or a data systems alert.
01:01:07 What does that mean?
01:01:09 I don't know. This is more David's department.
01:01:12 How's it going over here?
01:01:18 Well, transmitter's been reprogrammed. Now I need to get it to talk to the satellites.
01:01:23 Space-bound computer systems are notoriously tough to infiltrate, but every system has a vulnerable attack point.
01:01:28 That's my specialty, or so I thought.
01:01:31 But I'm having a lot of trouble finding the weakness on the NOAA internal command network.
01:01:36 Am I supposed to know what any of this means?
01:01:40 I'm hacking into the US Geostationary Communications Array.
01:01:44 But instead of porting into the separate sat units themselves, I'm invading the ground station network so you can talk to all of them.
01:01:50 Okay, sweetheart, just promise me you're going to use your powers for good and not evil, okay?
01:01:57 I promise, Mom. Just let me work.
01:01:59 Okay.
01:02:01 It's a mess out here.
01:02:05 GPS says we're right on top of it.
01:02:08 Visibility is terrible.
01:02:10 Okay, I see it.
01:02:14 [Train whistling]
01:02:16 Now that is a literal train wreck.
01:02:29 Alright, so how are we supposed to find these containers in that mess?
01:02:32 Well, we'll start with the train cars, and if no luck there, we'll start digging.
01:02:36 Okay.
01:02:38 I'm gonna help.
01:02:39 Chrissy, no.
01:02:41 Fine, okay, I'll just stay and watch the rig, but you guys, please be safe, okay?
01:02:46 Fine, we'll be fine.
01:02:48 Come on, mate.
01:02:49 Yeah.
01:02:50 What's our stuff called again?
01:03:06 Unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine. They're in the cylinders.
01:03:10 Alright, okay.
01:03:11 Griffin, look out!
01:03:15 Griffin, are you hurt?
01:03:20 I hurt my leg, but I'll be okay. What's that on the ground over there?
01:03:22 This isn't entirely snow.
01:03:26 It's registering as sodium hydroxide.
01:03:29 Chromic acid.
01:03:31 If those are corrosive materials, they would have stored those with the dimethylhydrazine.
01:03:34 We must be close.
01:03:35 Flip!
01:03:39 I think I found it. Chrissy, I'm coming inside.
01:03:41 Aha.
01:03:43 Shovels.
01:03:44 I'll help you.
01:03:45 I managed to uncover two of the containers, but we need to dig them out.
01:03:55 They're buried under the snow.
01:03:57 Griffin's hurt his leg.
01:03:59 Are you okay?
01:04:00 I don't know, but we'll fix it up so we can get through this.
01:04:03 Good, that's great.
01:04:05 Dad.
01:04:07 Yeah?
01:04:08 Let me come with you. It'll be so much faster if we both do this.
01:04:10 We can get out of here.
01:04:11 Alright.
01:04:13 Helmet, gloves.
01:04:14 Thank you.
01:04:15 Okay, it's over here somewhere.
01:04:22 Here!
01:04:24 Okay.
01:04:26 Dig around the sides so we can get the bloody thing out of here.
01:04:30 A little more. That's it. Come on.
01:04:37 Okay.
01:04:38 Okay.
01:04:39 Alright, we need the second one. Have a look around.
01:04:41 Okay.
01:04:42 There.
01:04:46 Okay, okay. Look at me. Hey, look away.
01:04:53 I know, I know.
01:04:55 But there's thousands around here.
01:04:57 McCain, if we don't get our butts into gear, there's gonna be millions.
01:05:00 [Loud noise]
01:05:02 [Grunting]
01:05:06 Senator, I've done everything you've asked, alright?
01:05:12 Are we still looking good?
01:05:14 Yes, we have a deal, Dr. Diaz.
01:05:17 I've made all the arrangements.
01:05:20 You're gonna be a hero.
01:05:21 Certainly.
01:05:23 But I still want a cabinet post when this is over.
01:05:29 [Squeaking]
01:05:30 Senator, Senator, are you there?
01:05:32 Senator Carlson? Can you hear me?
01:05:36 No, I'm in a condition.
01:05:40 Griffin? What happened?
01:05:47 It's broken.
01:05:49 One of the rocket propellant cylinders fell over on him.
01:05:51 We gotta get him to a hospital or something.
01:05:55 Where? The storm shut everything down.
01:05:58 Tessie, go get the medical bag.
01:05:59 [Speaking Spanish]
01:06:01 Griffin, I know you're in pain.
01:06:02 One half of the split vortex has already moved over mainland Europe.
01:06:07 Millions are gonna die there at sunset tonight.
01:06:10 Which means we only have about five hours, five hours maximum, before the vortices meet and we're at absolute zero.
01:06:18 He's right, dammit.
01:06:20 Marquette has to get up in the air or we failed and that's not an option.
01:06:24 Well then who's gonna take her up there?
01:06:27 Molly has the coordinates.
01:06:28 She has to go.
01:06:30 I certainly can't fly this thing right now.
01:06:32 Eric, you go.
01:06:34 You have military training.
01:06:37 It's essentially like a fancy jet.
01:06:41 The rocket propellant cylinders are in the mobile command center. They're really heavy.
01:06:45 Oh, Mom, Dad, we better get going.
01:06:47 We don't have the luxury of a launch window or a long goodbye.
01:06:50 Of course, they're right behind you.
01:06:51 Molly's on comms, Eric.
01:06:52 You're flying this thing right now.
01:06:56 There's really, oh God, really nothing to it.
01:06:59 Like a glider strapped to a rocket with 92,000 pounds of thrust.
01:07:04 Lifting off will be your biggest challenge.
01:07:07 You make it through the weather, you might just get through this.
01:07:13 You have a parachute.
01:07:15 You come back down, crunch the chute, drift back to Earth.
01:07:20 Oh great, that sounds easy.
01:07:22 Let's quickly go through the launch sequence.
01:07:24 [Music]
01:07:34 [Launch sound]
01:07:35 [Music]
01:07:59 Okay, Griffin, we're in pre-flight. What next?
01:08:04 If you've done everything I told you, you're ready for liftoff.
01:08:06 As ready as we'll ever be.
01:08:08 David, Yolanda, go for liftoff.
01:08:12 [Music]
01:08:19 You ready for this?
01:08:20 Sure, ready to do it.
01:08:22 Hey, Chrissy, we love you. We'll see you soon.
01:08:31 We love you, too.
01:08:33 Love you, too.
01:08:34 [Music]
01:08:48 Uh, that's not good. What is that?
01:08:50 Stabilizer and heat shield is damaged.
01:08:53 You're lucky the whole thing didn't fall apart.
01:08:55 We have to tell them.
01:08:57 Let's just get them stabilized and in position first.
01:09:01 [Music]
01:09:07 Okay, we're at suborbital altitude.
01:09:10 Time to go to work.
01:09:12 [Music]
01:09:16 Molly, you're on me.
01:09:18 Okay.
01:09:20 Getting the satellites into position.
01:09:24 We need to be aimed at the mesopheres and target the highest air levels of the storm for the microwaves to have any effect at all.
01:09:32 [Music]
01:09:41 The vortices are almost touching.
01:09:43 There's just a sliver over the Atlantic Rim.
01:09:48 The Atlantic Rim?
01:09:50 What?
01:09:53 The Pacific Rim.
01:09:54 No. The Atlantic Rim, while often overlooked, is going to play a far more significant role in all of this than the Pacific Rim.
01:10:00 The Atlantic Rim. I'll have to check that out.
01:10:03 But I thought we didn't have any data sources.
01:10:06 No, this is NASA Air's infrared system. We can still see the vortices and their temperatures. We just don't have any other data.
01:10:12 Alright, I've established uplink.
01:10:14 Communicating with the orbiters. Maneuvering each into position now.
01:10:20 [Music]
01:10:28 Satellites at 3919 and 10999.
01:10:35 In control of the onboard directionals, preparing to open solar mirror extensions on our primaries.
01:10:41 Angle metrics intact.
01:10:44 Griffin, I got an alarm blaring at me. What do I do?
01:10:49 Stabilizers damaged. Wingtips shot to hell.
01:10:51 If any of these satellites are even a half an inch off trajectory, we'll miss the target point and split at the vortices.
01:10:57 Griffin, how do I fix this?
01:10:59 You don't. You might want to start the re-entry process. It might be your only chance to get back alive.
01:11:06 Eric, two of our primary satellites just dropped off the screen. Their coordinates are nil. I've completely lost contact with them.
01:11:16 Can you find another one?
01:11:18 Eric, I can't. We've lost our main heat source and satellite.
01:11:21 All the other ones, they're just sitting there waiting for a heat source to reflect into the storm.
01:11:26 Eric, I just lost another one. I mean, they're just like falling off my radar. I don't know why we keep losing them.
01:11:35 Alright, if we can talk to the others, then the satellites that are nil must have been destroyed. Frozen.
01:11:43 If we lose any more, this is not going to work. Okay, well, we just don't have enough satellites positioned over the target of the storm.
01:11:51 We've already lost our primary heat source units.
01:11:54 The re-entry parachute, it's huge. It's silver-lined and it reflects heat and light. If we can position it correctly, it can become the heat source.
01:12:04 Then we become the primary.
01:12:06 If we do this, then we probably don't go home.
01:12:11 You sure you want to do this?
01:12:12 Yeah, because I know you will.
01:12:16 What about the kids?
01:12:23 That's why we're doing it.
01:12:36 Good luck.
01:12:37 Get us into position.
01:12:39 I'll tell you when the satellites are in sync.
01:12:44 They aren't initiating re-entry.
01:12:54 What does that mean?
01:12:56 Mom, Dad, come in, over.
01:13:01 Mom, Dad.
01:13:03 Please, please.
01:13:05 Can you hear us?
01:13:07 I can't hear the voice. I need to concentrate.
01:13:10 Okay.
01:13:12 Okay, we're in position.
01:13:19 Time to shoot.
01:13:22 Okay.
01:13:27 Okay.
01:13:28 The coms are out. They're not reading us.
01:13:43 The vortices, they're no longer purple extreme temperature levels.
01:13:47 They're turning blue.
01:13:49 What does that mean?
01:13:51 Molly's plan worked. The vortices are receding.
01:13:55 Okay.
01:13:56 Are you sure you know what we're doing?
01:14:05 No. Hold on, okay? This is going to be bumpy.
01:14:08 Okay.
01:14:10 Beginning our controlled descent. Let's hope this chute can still hold out.
01:14:14 Something's wrong. Something's really wrong.
01:14:23 [dramatic music]
01:14:25 The chute is gone.
01:14:32 What do we do?
01:14:34 What are you doing?
01:14:37 We're going to have to jump for it.
01:14:39 What?
01:14:41 The plane is going to break up.
01:14:43 If we stay on board, we don't have a chance. But if we jump, maybe.
01:14:48 They would jump by how much?
01:14:51 By how much?
01:14:52 The world record for high altitude skydiving is 42,000 feet.
01:14:58 We're at 44 and dropping.
01:15:01 There's a chance, alright?
01:15:04 I know you don't have much reason to trust me, okay?
01:15:08 But I'm telling you now.
01:15:10 Trust me and I'll spend the rest of my life earning it.
01:15:14 Okay.
01:15:17 [whimpering]
01:15:18 Our EV suits will deploy parachutes at 10,000 feet.
01:15:24 Just try to maintain a level descent until then.
01:15:27 Got it.
01:15:29 [whimpering]
01:15:37 Oh, thank you.
01:15:38 [dramatic music]
01:15:41 [roaring]
01:15:43 [roaring]
01:15:44 [roaring]
01:15:46 [roaring]
01:15:48 [roaring]
01:15:50 [roaring]
01:15:52 [roaring]
01:15:54 [roaring]
01:15:56 [roaring]
01:15:58 [roaring]
01:16:00 [roaring]
01:16:02 [roaring]
01:16:04 [roaring]
01:16:06 [roaring]
01:16:08 [roaring]
01:16:11 [roaring]
01:16:12 [roaring]
01:16:14 [roaring]
01:16:17 [roaring]
01:16:19 [roaring]
01:16:21 [roaring]
01:16:23 [roaring]
01:16:25 [roaring]
01:16:27 [roaring]
01:16:29 [roaring]
01:16:31 [roaring]
01:16:33 [roaring]
01:16:35 [roaring]
01:16:37 [roaring]
01:16:41 - Eric! - Hey.
01:16:42 - You okay? - Yeah.
01:16:44 - Everything in one piece? - I think so. You okay?
01:16:46 Yeah, yeah, I'm good. I'm good. That was fun, right?
01:16:48 - You do it again? - It was fun.
01:16:50 No, I don't want to do that again.
01:16:52 Oh, my God. Mom! Mom, Dad!
01:16:55 Are you kids okay?
01:16:57 Mom!
01:16:59 - We're good. - We're good.
01:17:01 We're great.
01:17:03 I love you.
01:17:05 I love you to the moon and back.
01:17:09 I love you.
01:17:10 I love you.
01:17:14 I love you.
01:17:16 Hello.
01:17:27 - Good to see you. - Hey.
01:17:29 - Hey. - How are you?
01:17:31 - Good to see you. - Nice.
01:17:33 - How are you? - Good.
01:17:35 - Hey. - Hi.
01:17:38 You look like you've been on a holiday.
01:17:39 You've been on a holiday? Hello, love.
01:17:41 - Here he is. - Good to see you.
01:17:43 - Hey. - Yeah?
01:17:45 - So... - Yeah?
01:17:47 We've had a lot of YOLO moments.
01:17:50 [indistinct chatter]
01:17:53 - A minute? - Yeah, man.
01:17:55 But how did you guys fall 45,000 feet like this?
01:17:57 - Oh! - It's not funny, Dad. It's not funny.
01:18:00 Hey!
01:18:02 Natasha! It's so good to see you again.
01:18:04 - Natasha! - So good to see you.
01:18:07 - Hello, love. How are you? - David!
01:18:08 - Come here. - How are you?
01:18:10 - David. - Eric.
01:18:12 - Good to see you. - Of course.
01:18:14 It's really good to see you all.
01:18:16 But I'm here on business.
01:18:18 Means we get to save the world again.
01:18:20 Not quite.
01:18:22 Folks.
01:18:24 What we did out there was...
01:18:26 amazing.
01:18:28 - Yeah. - Yeah.
01:18:30 Should all be proud of ourselves.
01:18:32 But as new owner of React, I have some changes.
01:18:36 What? Hold on, David.
01:18:37 React is my company.
01:18:39 No, not anymore.
01:18:41 David, you can't take something that doesn't belong to you.
01:18:44 But it is mine.
01:18:46 I signed all of the paperwork.
01:18:48 I did all of the legwork.
01:18:50 Before he died, Senator Carlson made sure that everything was in order.
01:18:53 What?
01:18:55 What?
01:18:57 - Whoa. - David, what's going on?
01:18:59 Griffin, your money was instrumental.
01:19:03 You're under arrest.
01:19:05 Don't move.
01:19:06 What for?
01:19:08 Molly, you can go back to your do-gooder protests.
01:19:11 You and your family are fired.
01:19:13 What?
01:19:15 Yolanda.
01:19:17 I could use you if you want to stay on.
01:19:20 You can't get away with this.
01:19:22 I believe I just did.
01:19:24 Well, I wish I could say it was a pleasure.
01:19:28 That's a goodbye for now.
01:19:31 Let's go.
01:19:34 [thunder]
01:19:35 What are we supposed to do now?
01:19:41 [music]
01:19:43 Mom?
01:19:50 Dad?
01:19:52 What is going on?
01:19:55 [music]
01:19:58 [music]
01:19:59 [music]
01:20:10 [music]
01:20:12 [music]
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01:20:42 (dramatic music)
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01:21:10 (dramatic music)
01:21:22 (dramatic music)
01:21:25 (dramatic music)
01:21:37 (dramatic music)
01:21:40 (dramatic music)
01:22:03 (dramatic music)
01:22:06 (dramatic music)
01:22:09 (dramatic music)
01:22:12 (dramatic music)
01:22:14 (whooshing)

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