The Mountain Erupts (1980): A Mount St. Helens Special

A KING 5 special report from 1980 following the eruption of Mount St. Helens.
Find more coverage of the eruption as we commemorate the 40th anniversary of this historic event: www.king5.com/mount-st-helens

Пікірлер: 159

  • @lethrbear32
    @lethrbear32 Жыл бұрын

    I'll never forget how beautiful it was before 1980. The most pristine forests, crystal clear lakes, and streams, the deer, elk, and chipmunks that would eat right out of your hand, even going up to the timberline turnaround on the mountain to innertube down the snowy slopes. The drive up from Kelso was just as beautiful. I remember a small community named St. Helens on the bank of the Toutle on the way up. The bridge you see mangled and buried in mud used to sit there. It was moved at least 2 miles downstream...and that was just the beginning.

  • @marked4death076

    @marked4death076

    2 ай бұрын

    I wish I got to see it before, but born in 83.... although I'm still mesmerized by the area even now, it has a peaceful but odd feel to it that I've never experienced anywhere else, other then maybe around Mt shasta

  • @lethrbear32

    @lethrbear32

    2 ай бұрын

    @@marked4death076 Mt Rainier is very similar to the way St Helens was.

  • @marked4death076

    @marked4death076

    2 ай бұрын

    @@lethrbear32 I could see that, I grew up in seattle so Rainer is more familiar to me then St Helen's even though I have been to the foot of st Helen's around 6 times, I have never went up close to Rainer.

  • @marked4death076

    @marked4death076

    2 ай бұрын

    @@lethrbear32 I just can't imagine the vibe St Helen's had prior to the 1980 eruption, because unlike Rainer, it's kind of out in the sticks, even from Portlands perspective people see Mt Hood first, and in Seattle they see Rainer you know, but St Helen's was the wild one

  • @boomernoname3032

    @boomernoname3032

    Ай бұрын

    Wear i live longview Kelso are we 17 18 wood drive up that road late at night its pretty up there i was born 81 it blow win my mom was pregnant

  • @jerryloufretz1797
    @jerryloufretz179711 ай бұрын

    I worked for the USGS at that time. For the Puget Sound Earth Sciences Application Project. Our geologists had been monitoring the mountain for months. The eruption was more violent than anyone expected.

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke13 күн бұрын

    RIP To the 57 people and thousands of animals who were killed in the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens

  • @annaksfrog
    @annaksfrog4 жыл бұрын

    40 years ago. I remember the horror, lives lost, science learned, and the light cover of ash waking one morning in my sleeping bag in Puyallup. Honeymooned on that mountain too, and, recently seen life come back to the moonscape. It remains part of my life.

  • @pon2oon

    @pon2oon

    3 жыл бұрын

    I remember the deep red sky sunsets in Indianapolis that year.

  • @deadfreightwest5956
    @deadfreightwest59564 жыл бұрын

    It really pisses me off when people shame Harry Truman for the choice he made. He made his life there on the mountain. It was all he needed or wanted.He took nothing from nobody. I guess some of you aren't old enough to know his generation, what I call "old growth folk". These people had nothing to start with, and faced everything that would take that away. They had to survive, to build, to overcome. He wasn't selfish, how could he be? He asked for nothing, he noted the efforts on his behalf as misguided, yet honest and true. His life was the mountain. And so was his death. You should applaud him for that. May you have such a fitting exit. As Frank Sinatra sang, "I did it my way." Better that than death by vegetation to the enrichment of the "care providers".

  • @aprilrichards762

    @aprilrichards762

    4 жыл бұрын

    Harry Truman stated that "Mt. St. Helens is a part of Truman and I'm a part of it." He died as he wished. We should all be so lucky.

  • @IARRCSim

    @IARRCSim

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@aprilrichards762 if Harry Truman was lucky, I hope to be unlucky.

  • @user-mv9tt4st9k

    @user-mv9tt4st9k

    4 жыл бұрын

    I remember reading about Mr. Truman. I believe he knew what was coming and he chose to face whatever it brought.

  • @aprilrichards762

    @aprilrichards762

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@IARRCSim We all die. Harry Truman was able to choose his death. It would have been quick. Of all the deaths, I'd consider dying due to Mt. St. Helens

  • @allewis4008

    @allewis4008

    4 жыл бұрын

    He was a WW1 vet, he was 83, so he didn't have a lot of time anyways and his wife was buried there. That lodge was his paradise and was fine staying.

  • @johnchedsey1306
    @johnchedsey13064 жыл бұрын

    Gotta love that early 80s synth music and graphics. Thanks for digging this up! I visited the area last week and it's amazing how green and back to life the area is after just four decades.

  • @aaronjhill

    @aaronjhill

    4 жыл бұрын

    The music is overbearing and terrible. The director is a talentless hack.

  • @SirKolass

    @SirKolass

    4 жыл бұрын

    The whole place still a wreck, grass and bushes don't need decades to grow, but most of the affected area is dead.

  • @TheLittlered1961

    @TheLittlered1961

    4 жыл бұрын

    I could not agree more with aaronjhill. I could only make it 8 minutes before I shut it off. The music sucks, narration sucks and the editing sucks. Then again I would not expect more from King 5 or NBC. Seen far better videos on Mt St Helens.

  • @johnhpalmer6098

    @johnhpalmer6098

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheLittlered1961 Two year old comment, I know, but this is for everyone else that stumbles on this documentary, It was actually shot prior to the eruption, and the day of the eruption, then footage after the eruption and then assembled into this piece later that same year, yes, 1980. So this is what/how things were back then on the local level in broadcast history then. Not defending it but taking into account WHEN it was done. Yes, there is likely other footage that may be better but all of the footage used here was from news footage, and some of that may be from film still (16mm), but a lot of that was early ENG (Electronic News Gathering) video footage, using 3/4" tape, and shot in standard def, but this documentary was also upscaled to 1080 (1920x1080) resolution for YT from the standard def 480 4:3 aspect ratio material so the footage has softened some. Again, take it for what it was, in 1980 and appreciate it for that, a documentary of a huge volcanic eruption.

  • @TheLittlered1961

    @TheLittlered1961

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnhpalmer6098 Your name sounds familiar. You work/worked for a Seattle tv station? I am not a spring chicken. St Helens went when I was in College. My favorite shows on tv today where taped in the 70's or earlier. You talk about the tech/quality of the video. I was talking about the quality of the production. Two completely different things. Editing has nothing to do with the quality of the video. Narration has nothing to do with the quality of the video. Music has nothing to do with the quality of the video. King 5 News is a garbage station. I have watched many of their docs. Living in their broadcast area for the last 20 some years you can not convince me otherwise. This is not saying that the other stations here are much better.

  • @motionsick
    @motionsick7 ай бұрын

    Been watching Helen's docs for weeks and thos has the best during and aftermath footage.

  • @CC-te5zf
    @CC-te5zf3 жыл бұрын

    Such a compelling reminder of how fragile life is and how our time on this magnificent planet is but a flash. This certainly stirs the emotions. Thanks for sharing.

  • @nandep2149
    @nandep21494 жыл бұрын

    I remember the day well; my family had been camping and left the area before the explosion. Our house and everything was covered in ash. It's incredible that it's already been 40 years. ⛰ Thank you for sharing this great documentary. 😀

  • @j.hawkins7282
    @j.hawkins72823 жыл бұрын

    All we could think of at the time, as fellow woodsmen on the N coast of Oregon, was how lucky for all the crews working in those forests it didn't hit on a Monday.

  • @marked4death076

    @marked4death076

    2 ай бұрын

    Would of been hundreds if not thousand more dead. GOD works in mysterious ways

  • @beafreeall7953
    @beafreeall79534 жыл бұрын

    we were south of spokane at friends when we first noticed the odd looking 'cloud', we went in and turned on the tv. yep the mt. blew..so we got in our car and tried to out race it back to town...it over took us and others on the freeway...dark as night, ash coming down like crazy it looked like a blizzard...we limped back to our house....ended up in lock down for 3 days, vacuuming our pets after each time they went out to potty...shoveled ash off the sidewalks...wore masks...there was no getting thru to the west side on the phone..all circuits were 'busy' , so we couldn't check on our families...finally after 3 days we got a hold of a few air filters for the car and headed north up to highway 2 to get across...when we got to the west side it didn't look like any ash had touched them, until we saw the toutle river highway crossing and the downed trees and sludge...we made it to our families house to find them just fine ...then the next day...we woke up to find that the mt. had poofed up again and this time dropped ash on us again....in longview...my heart still breaks when I see footage of the mt. blowing up and the devastation left behind...loss of life, loss of way of life...

  • @mikel917

    @mikel917

    4 жыл бұрын

    Wow. Obviously very traumatic for you and yours. Thanks for sharing.

  • @SirKolass

    @SirKolass

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@mikel917 No, it was sure one of the great times for him

  • @nomad4k

    @nomad4k

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing that tragic yet somehow, in a non weird way (I hope), incredible experience. That’s a once in a few centuries event you described there, and it happened in your lifetime. I was born approximately 4 years and a month after this event occurred, on 14 June 1984.

  • @benscoles5085
    @benscoles5085 Жыл бұрын

    I was a senior in high school, one month to graduation, when I heard that the mountian blew up all I could think of there was some big money to make cleaning up that mess, I wanted to go out with a logging crew, and see those big trees, 40 and a few years later watching this and other vids, I am glad I did not go.

  • @dawnwelch6579
    @dawnwelch65794 жыл бұрын

    I was 11 years old, living in Des Moines WA (top of our hill on S. 216th St. very close to Hwy 99), a sunny morning watching television that morning when the channels broke for the sudden news. I think one big thing that stuck out was how the news were saying the ash was traveling massive distances and was getting onto people’s cars. I went outside to look at our green Buick station wagon - and it already had a thin covering of ash! I hollered for my brothers and our mom! Later that afternoon, we heard that the eruption was visible from the Kent Valley, so mom took us kids and a couple neighbor kids (they were our friends) over the hill and down into the valley. Everyone else had the same idea - all their cars were parked everywhere and just staring at the south...and sure enough, there was a GIANT smoke plume! The sun was still out where we were at up north, but down there? Oh man...

  • @deadfreightwest5956

    @deadfreightwest5956

    4 жыл бұрын

    It's weird, you and others around the valley report of ash, but honestly, in Tacoma, I recall none at all.

  • @nerdaterp
    @nerdaterp4 жыл бұрын

    I was living in SSE Portland at the time. I will never forget the scene

  • @deadfreightwest5956
    @deadfreightwest59564 жыл бұрын

    19:06 - Good grief, Jeff Renner! Jeebus, I feel old now.

  • @m.woodsrobinson9244
    @m.woodsrobinson92444 жыл бұрын

    Hard to believe forty years have come and gone. The eruption of Mt. St. Helens was the first news story I clearly remember.

  • @StandedInUtah
    @StandedInUtah4 жыл бұрын

    I remember watching the floods on TV and having school canceled for days. I was in North Central Montana on the eastside of the Rockies and ash crossed over the Mountains and dumped on us. We had to wear face masks to go outside. We knew something was going to happen but my ten year old self was fascinated by the size and scale of the eruption.

  • @marked4death076

    @marked4death076

    Жыл бұрын

    So you got the ash bad, much worse then people west of st helens or south, i love when i meet someome who was in portland and they talk about the ash haha litereally people on east coast got more ashfall then just south.....esp compared to eastern washington and idaho or montana

  • @StandedInUtah

    @StandedInUtah

    Жыл бұрын

    @@marked4death076 I was 10 when it happened but I can still picture it. It "snowed for 3 or 4 days". Once the ash cloud passed the wind blew it all away. The Rockies protected us a little so we got less on the Eastside of Montana than those on the Westside of Montana. The prevailing wind is from West to East. The ash went East with the wind. It would have been a rare winter wind that blew North to South. I lived in Salem as an adult and winds from the North happened occasionally in January not May. Portland wouldn't have gotten much ash due to wind and distance.

  • @rogermolina1244
    @rogermolina12444 жыл бұрын

    First time ever seen this video 😲. I remember when Mount St Helens erupted, I was in the 6th grade here in California and since then have fallen in love with volcanology. I never got to be an volcanologist but thanks to Mount saint Helens my love for volcanology as a hobby is a permanent part of my life even though I've never been to see St Helens in person but I've have had the privilege to visit the Yellowstone volcano in Wyoming many times!

  • @antonraterman2281

    @antonraterman2281

    Жыл бұрын

    I was a junior in HS. I walked in the house and immediately saw the coverage on TV. My Dad had to told me what had happened. Tragic but also nature has no boundaries

  • @antonraterman2281

    @antonraterman2281

    Жыл бұрын

    Tell

  • @BushyHairedStranger
    @BushyHairedStranger4 жыл бұрын

    The tree planting crew on St.Helens that morning took some unreal photos. Images no human being would expect to take and survive. Absolutely awesome unsafe close up shots. Webfoot Forestry was up there contracting for Weyco(Weyerhaeuser)

  • @marked4death076

    @marked4death076

    Жыл бұрын

    They did an amazing job, been up there maybe 8 times from 1990 to 2021 and those trees are looking amazing.....almost looks back to normal

  • @emiliaganchorre
    @emiliaganchorre4 жыл бұрын

    Loved watching this, good reporting. The film should be rescanned.

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer304 жыл бұрын

    The eruption was inevitable. The bulge was moving out at 6-10 feet per day ( a insane amount considering how slow geology usually is). It was only a matter of time before it " gravitationally failed" (landslide) and when that happens, it unloads the magma dome underneath the slope which is like take a cork out of a shook up wine bottle.

  • @THEdjpluto
    @THEdjpluto4 жыл бұрын

    0:32 probably the first time I’ve ever seen it erupting in realtime

  • @RDog4484

    @RDog4484

    3 жыл бұрын

    THEdjpluto Me too! I’ve been studying this since I was a kid in the 90’s. Here I am in my 30’s, shocked at finally seeing some real-time footage.

  • @marked4death076

    @marked4death076

    2 ай бұрын

    And that's from a good distance away, imagine 6 miles away must of looked like 1000mph

  • @user-mv9tt4st9k
    @user-mv9tt4st9k4 жыл бұрын

    In Southern California the ash from the eruption rendered the sky a sickly yellow-orange and dropped in tiny bits. It seemed like a long way for the wind to carry it.

  • @oshimad
    @oshimad4 жыл бұрын

    NES RPG boss fight music

  • @gustavopacheco919
    @gustavopacheco9194 жыл бұрын

    The synthesizer music reminds of Apocalypse now.

  • @Nippertrain

    @Nippertrain

    4 жыл бұрын

    I had fun helping Cliff Lenz put that together. The organ was recorded at St. Marks cathedral, a good old Arp String synth, myself on percussion, and Vern Nicodemus on flugel. Fond memories of cramming all that into a broom closet of a booth at the old KING building.

  • @LieuCifer

    @LieuCifer

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Nippertrain siiiiiick!!!!

  • @aaronjhill

    @aaronjhill

    4 жыл бұрын

    Not even close. An insult.

  • @josephastier7421

    @josephastier7421

    4 жыл бұрын

    Reminded me of 1970's porn movies.

  • @GrahameGould

    @GrahameGould

    3 жыл бұрын

    Definitely a horror movie feel to the music. Quite appropriate.

  • @solmma
    @solmma4 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful music!

  • @aaronjhill

    @aaronjhill

    4 жыл бұрын

    Are you drunk?

  • @GojiKaichou
    @GojiKaichou4 ай бұрын

    I love the use of Claudio Simonetti and Goblin's music from the St. Helens movie soundtrack in this...

  • @marked4death076
    @marked4death0762 ай бұрын

    The fact nobody listened to david johnston who basically was watching the mountain move 6 feet a day out the side, is wild to me.... but its not like we had social media to infiltrate everyones mind

  • @SpaceKruezer
    @SpaceKruezer3 жыл бұрын

    Amazing footage

  • @alexandermichael117
    @alexandermichael1174 жыл бұрын

    The mighty power of nature,no one can stop it,or predict it.

  • @uncletacosupreme7023
    @uncletacosupreme70236 ай бұрын

    Its crazy because on the scale of what we know is possible for stratovolcanos, st Helens wasnt even that big.

  • @martharetallick204
    @martharetallick2044 жыл бұрын

    I was living and working in Michigan. A few days after the eruption, the ash blotted out the sun.

  • @MarsHock
    @MarsHock10 ай бұрын

    How can I get the soundtrack to this? Love these 80s synths.

  • @budg8522
    @budg85224 жыл бұрын

    From that Sunday morning through the next 72 hours very few of us at KREM 2 News in Spokane...or any other of the print or broadcast journalists in the Northwest...got much sleep. Simpler times then...no demands to take down roadblocks...no constitutional rights debates over wearing masks... the ash was neither red or blue....just seemingly endless, depressing gray.

  • @aaronjhill

    @aaronjhill

    4 жыл бұрын

    How long did the roadblocks last? Three months? Of course not.

  • @deadfreightwest5956

    @deadfreightwest5956

    4 жыл бұрын

    Too right, Bud. Carter certainly didn't declare St Helen a hoax or complain about inheriting a disaster from the previous administration, nor did he say it was the fault of the governor of Washington who lacked foresight... then again, it was Dixie Lee Ray, so I suppose that would've been reasonable. We were adults back then, even us kids at the time. smh

  • @aaronjhill

    @aaronjhill

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@deadfreightwest5956 Harry was not forced from his home. He was allowed to stay. Today, now we are forced to stay home, which is basically house arrest. We have the Bill of Rights for a reason. You cannot just suspend the 4th Amendment because someone declares an emergency.

  • @quietone748

    @quietone748

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@aaronjhill Forced? Hardly. Asked to stay home? Yes.

  • @maryjones6039
    @maryjones60392 жыл бұрын

    These documentaries about 1980 Mt St Helens are so interesting but omg the soundtrack is just un-listenable.

  • @markthomas6980
    @markthomas698010 ай бұрын

    Boy, the background music is beyond weird. I know it’s 40 years old but this is so different..

  • @kamchatka-wb2xr
    @kamchatka-wb2xr11 ай бұрын

    Cool documentary, but the aspect ratio here is wrong. It was clearly originally 4:3 ratio, and here it has been stretched to fill the widescreen format. So the mountain and people all look unnaturally wide and stretched out.

  • @BudSchnelker
    @BudSchnelker2 жыл бұрын

    Imagine the footage we'd have if everyone had a phone with a 4K camera.

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer304 жыл бұрын

    I can only imagine how current tech would have handled that eruption. Webcams broadcasring 24 hours a day. Twitter tracking every hiccup. Satellites being able to measure the bulsve from space. Automatic stations that would not require direct human monitoring (No Coldwater II basecamp looking right into the shotgun). Better seismic stations. In a nutshell, BETTER data and no need to risk lives.

  • @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044

    @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044

    2 ай бұрын

    Lives would still be at risk but people could be better warned part of the problem was that nothing as powerful had happened in the area in living memory and hence people find it hard to comprehend. In it's way despite the prelude being freely reported on so many people in Europe thought Russia wasn't going to invade Ukraine because that hadn't happened in Europe for effectively living memory for most people

  • @Saltynutz333
    @Saltynutz3334 жыл бұрын

    Mount Saint Helens eruption 🌋 on May 18th, 1980 was awesome to see but sad it took the lives along the way. I am sure this sleeping giant isn’t done from erupting again. 🌋 I wonder if they will ever find Harry Truman remains when he was swept away. I don’t know why he didn’t evacuate as “Mother Nature” always wins.

  • @deadfreightwest5956

    @deadfreightwest5956

    4 жыл бұрын

    He made it clear: This was his home, his way of life. What the mountain gave, it might take away. So be it. He was a true man, hence his name.

  • @allewis4008

    @allewis4008

    4 жыл бұрын

    He's just microscopic pieces of bone now, at rest under 300 feet of stone and the water of new Spirit Lake. Scientists estimate he had 30 seconds warning before the landslide bulldozed it's way through his lodge.

  • @brandonsavitski

    @brandonsavitski

    11 ай бұрын

    I bet Harry Truman screamed like a little beeyotch when he got blasted by whatever took him out (pyroclastic flow most likely). Probably 💩 on himself hearing the roar coming closer to him. I don't pity him or feel sorry for him. He wasn't brave. Just an old selfish, stubborn quack job who received his deserved fate.

  • @justatrailer7807
    @justatrailer78074 жыл бұрын

    we were loading the car to go fishing and i heard distant thunder, looked up , blue sky . we did go fishing and as the day progressed the sky became hazy,got home and there was a thin coating of ash , it came all the way to the okanagan and beyond

  • @eecforeststewardship640
    @eecforeststewardship6404 жыл бұрын

    wonder how many of those vehicles driving around in the ash were ruined

  • @satanslovechild6458
    @satanslovechild64582 жыл бұрын

    Great movie

  • @Jitzer2
    @Jitzer22 жыл бұрын

    Was the driver still in the blue car in the video?

  • @Brianrockrailfan
    @Brianrockrailfan4 жыл бұрын

    liked video 👍😮🌋

  • @leegoldeneagle9003
    @leegoldeneagle9003Ай бұрын

    I lived in Astoria at the time

  • @unicornsandrainbowsandchic2336
    @unicornsandrainbowsandchic2336 Жыл бұрын

    This soundtrack brought to you by Prog Rock(TM) edit: it is a really good documentary and I still remember this event being so sad even though I was only 5 and in California. But this music is very ELO-ish

  • @debbiebalnaves8660
    @debbiebalnaves86604 жыл бұрын

    i lived out in portland ore when mt st helen. erupted ... i was out of town at the time we were hearing that portlandad a lot of ash fall .. news coming out from surrounding areas was not very good .. called family and friends to get information

  • @motionsick
    @motionsick7 ай бұрын

    13:44 I want to hear that guy's story. Holy smokin teledos.

  • @community1949
    @community1949 Жыл бұрын

    The only things that came from this eruption is that it taught volcanologists that what they found on other eruptions in the past didn't take hundreds of years to cause but maybe just minutes or hours.

  • @michaelmiller6675
    @michaelmiller6675 Жыл бұрын

    Kotal Khan brought me here

  • @davidwalterhughes2258
    @davidwalterhughes22582 жыл бұрын

    They say Rainer is ready to blow any day

  • @cfhcowboy9292
    @cfhcowboy92924 жыл бұрын

    I live in Washington up north by the border

  • @mine_crafting
    @mine_crafting4 жыл бұрын

    People it’s like what just happened right now

  • @pete3050
    @pete3050 Жыл бұрын

    Humans are nothing compared with mother nature

  • @63mlya
    @63mlya2 ай бұрын

    I have a jar of the ash from that eruption...

  • @janaburritt6939
    @janaburritt6939 Жыл бұрын

    Just think how crazy it will be when the cascadia fault freaks out

  • @briane173

    @briane173

    Жыл бұрын

    The PNW isn't ready for that and won't be. My sense among government and the private sector is resignation, because the cost to retrofit every man-made structure to resist an earthquake of that magnitude is prohibitive and probably futile, especially along the immediate coast. I couldn't have picked a more tectonically active and dynamic area in which to life than the Pac NW. It's beautiful and awe-inspiring, but that beauty has manifested itself violently, on a scale we can't comprehend. Not sure I wanna be around for the next Cascadia megaquake or for when Mt. Rainier explodes.

  • @amateuryoutuber
    @amateuryoutuber Жыл бұрын

    0:33

  • @grasshopperfiddler
    @grasshopperfiddler4 жыл бұрын

    Whoever did the music for this ought to do a soundtrack for the Trump administration Press conferences

  • @quietone748

    @quietone748

    4 жыл бұрын

    This comment brightened my day :)

  • @beafreeall7953
    @beafreeall79534 жыл бұрын

    Harry was not a hero, he was a rude and abrasive person that if a guy had his hair touching his collar he called him a 'hippie' and would not rent a row boat to him....until he got all the attention ...meh...

  • @davidlafleche1142

    @davidlafleche1142

    4 жыл бұрын

    Harry Truman committed suicide. The state was going to steal his land ("Eminent Domain"), and he could no longer maintain the Spirit Lake Lodge, anyway. So he stayed there, rather than give in.

  • @aaronjhill

    @aaronjhill

    4 жыл бұрын

    Who is calling him a hero?

  • @allewis4008

    @allewis4008

    4 жыл бұрын

    Being an old grumpy war veteran is not a crime. Harry left this world as a man.

  • @seanconnors9912
    @seanconnors99124 жыл бұрын

    1:27 Does the music remind anyone of the Dante's Peak theme?

  • @nathanwebers1221

    @nathanwebers1221

    4 жыл бұрын

    It's an interesting theme spun in different ways throughout the video. According to the credits, the music was done by Cliff Lenz. Cliff Lenz hosted a couple shows on KING-5 including "Seattle Today" and "Music Magic" (of which, I remember the latter).

  • @Nippertrain

    @Nippertrain

    4 жыл бұрын

    It was indeed Cliff on St Marks organ, synth, and guitars. Myself on percussion, and Vern Nicodemus on Flugel, and a broom closet of a booth at the old KING building.

  • @aaronjhill

    @aaronjhill

    4 жыл бұрын

    OMG, people have such poor taste.

  • @deadfreightwest5956

    @deadfreightwest5956

    4 жыл бұрын

    What's Dante's Peak?

  • @markrowe8824

    @markrowe8824

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@deadfreightwest5956 it's a film

  • @cathompson23
    @cathompson234 жыл бұрын

    I mean, seriously: is the music in the background of this video even necessary? The music is too creepy. Watching the historical video footage of Mount St. Helens erupting is terrifying enough without the creepy background music, KING 5. Are you actively trying to give me nightmares?

  • @KING5Seattle

    @KING5Seattle

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sorry, Charles!

  • @reefsroost696

    @reefsroost696

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@KING5Seattle I thought y'all did a pretty good job, all & all.

  • @nandep2149

    @nandep2149

    4 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. The video is great, but the music is distracting, creepy and too loud at some points. Thanks KING 5 for the video, though. :)

  • @McSlobo

    @McSlobo

    4 жыл бұрын

    What? Great 80s vibe sounds.

  • @KING5Seattle

    @KING5Seattle

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@nandep2149 Yeah, I can see that. 1980 editing styles, I guess.

  • @pvtread5207
    @pvtread52072 жыл бұрын

    Am i suddenly playing a zelda game with this music

  • @michaelmiller6675

    @michaelmiller6675

    Жыл бұрын

    Volvagina has been resurrected

  • @beafreeall7953
    @beafreeall79534 жыл бұрын

    you need to adjust your bright mode...that opaque 'haze' over much of the film is terrible...meh

  • @TeachAManToAngle

    @TeachAManToAngle

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bea FreeAll - double meh!

  • @johnnybaughman7593
    @johnnybaughman75934 жыл бұрын

    What's with the creepy vocalizing

  • @robshreds1
    @robshreds14 жыл бұрын

    Why are we watching this 😵

  • @annaksfrog

    @annaksfrog

    4 жыл бұрын

    40 year anniversary.

  • @robshreds1

    @robshreds1

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ok, I was 2 🧸

  • @dawnwelch6579

    @dawnwelch6579

    4 жыл бұрын

    Pretty dang fascinating stuff!

  • @deadfreightwest5956

    @deadfreightwest5956

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@robshreds1 - Amazing! What are you now, five?

  • @zacster311
    @zacster3113 жыл бұрын

    Me in 2019: Crazy that they had to wear masks back then. Me in 2020: Their masks are so plain and boring.

  • @aaronjhill
    @aaronjhill4 жыл бұрын

    What terrible music! Ruins it. Whose decision was that? Like a soap opera from the 1950s! Who directed this?

  • @BushyHairedStranger

    @BushyHairedStranger

    4 жыл бұрын

    Your mother

  • @alvaldez4237

    @alvaldez4237

    3 жыл бұрын

    Cry me a river