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July 30, 2025 • 30 mins
🌪️ We’re Not Ready for What’s Coming | Karel Cast Ep. 25-105
A volcano in Russia could trigger a tsunami. A rare derecho tears through the plains. After watching The Eye of the Storm, one thing is clear: we are completely unprepared for what Mother Nature is throwing at us — and it’s only getting worse.
Tornadoes, hurricanes, deadly heat waves… they’re increasing. But our readiness? Crumbling. Why aren’t we adapting? Why are insurance companies collapsing under the pressure of disasters we knew were coming?
Plus: a shocking new Gen Alpha survey (ages 12–15) shows we’re failing the future generation, too. From climate to culture — we are NOT ready.
🎙️ Uncensored. Unfiltered. Unhinged. It’s The Karel Cast.
📺 Watch, like, and subscribe: youtube.com/reallykarel
🎧 Stream on all platforms | Support at patreon.com/reallykarel
#ClimateCrisis, #ExtremeWeather, #GlobalWarming, #StormWatch, #DisasterPreparedness, #GenAlpha, #VolcanoAlert, #Derecho, #ClimateAction, #TsunamiWarning, #InsuranceCrisis, #MotherNature, #KarelCast, #PodcastNews, #ClimateReality, #HurricaneSeason, #HeatWave, #EmergencyPrep, #KarelLive, #LasVegasPodcaster
https://youtube.com/live/-xy7FsfldKA


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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Show Time is here.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
No time to fear. Corilla is so near because showtime
is here.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.
Carrilla is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Now.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
It's show side.

Speaker 4 (00:20):
All right in just sixty seconds. The most fabulous I mean,
he's really something. The best, most fabulous host will be here.
He just tells the truth all the time, bigly. And
he's funny, this guy. Have you heard him? Yeah, he's
funny and smart, smart and funny, not like those nasty

(00:41):
people on lamestream media. So don't go anywhere.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
He's almost here.

Speaker 4 (00:46):
I know he doesn't speak well of me, and that's
okay because I mean, he's really quite fabulous.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
Show time.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
A tsunami warning across the Pacific. Then of course we
have a volcano erupting, and then there's a diretto. Are
we ready for what Mother Nature is going to throw
at us? I don't think. So we're gonna talk about that.
And what do young people want to be today?

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
It's the cuel Cast.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 1 (01:34):
It is the crew Cast. I am Carrel so very
glad you are joining me on this Whirlwind Cavalcade Wednesday,
July thirtieth. We got a lot to talk about today,
and I hope you'll join me in the chatroom at
YouTube dot com forward slash really Carrel, you know. And
I got got some interesting personal news at the end
of the of the show today, so stick around for that.

(01:57):
So often my topics into what's going on in my
personal life or something that I just you know, happened
to be into at the moment, and then suddenly, bam,
there's a topic now. I don't want to talk about
Donald Trump today on the twenty five percent tariffs that
he's putting on India, which you're gonna cost us more money,

(02:18):
or the fifteen percent tariffs. I don't want to. I
don't want to talk about that stuff today. I really don't.
But what I do want to talk about is last
night I binge watched a show that I adore. It's
called in the Eye of the Storm, and it's called
it's on HBO Max, uh, and it is this really
well produced show about tornadoes, blizzards, all kinds of you know,

(02:44):
weather disasters or wildfires that sort of thing.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
And in watching it, I have to tell you Uh,
it was surreal that I was watching it against the
backdrop of a tsunami warning in California, and you know,
Japan and Hawaii from an eight point eight magnitude earthquake

(03:09):
off the coast of Russia. This morning, a volcano on
that same fault line in Russia is erupting. It's almost
like goodbye Russia. So, you know, as I'm watching this
show about dead Echo's, there's a great episode about a
durecho on in the eye of the storm, something I
didn't even know what one was. It's basically a wall

(03:32):
of wind from a thunderstorm that is on the ground
instead of being up in the clouds, and it's hugely destructive.
I mean one hundred and fifty mile an hour winds.
It's hugely destructive. And there was one last night right
here in the United States, in the Plain States, there
was this good etcho. So it's amazing that up until

(03:55):
a month ago, I didn't even know what one was.
And now not only do I know, and I've watched
a show about one, but one just happened last night.
And then of course there's a show about tornadoes and
the increase in tornadoes, and there's one about a blizzard, Snowmageddon.
It was called in Buffalo, New York, where they had

(04:15):
a blizzard for two days a few years back, or
three days. People died in their cars, people died in
their homes. And so I'm watching this show in the
eye of the storm, and I realize something that always
comes up when there's a natural disaster. Now this is
relevant because you've got to remember, just yesterday, Donald Trump

(04:36):
has decided to drop all the science that has to
do with climate change and allow the legislation that has
to do with climate change to be removed. So he
doesn't the United States is not going to have any
kind of climate policy under Donald Trump period. There's no

(04:56):
climate policy. He thinks climate change is myth, and he
doesn't want any kind of legislation or anything getting in
the way of business. So that's that, you know, That's
that's the way that is. And so as we have
this backdrop of an administration that is moving away from

(05:17):
trying to mitigate climate change, we have the climate reminding
us in full force. A heat dome over the eastern
seaboard and the Midwest. We have a didechio over the planes.
So as as this happens, we are not prepared, and

(05:40):
we are not preparing ourselves for the future. And I
was watching these shows and wondering why in twenty twenty,
twenty twenty two, twenty twenty five, why are we not
ready for what only is coming, but what's already he

(06:01):
You know, we've had since the dawn of mankind to
deal with the weather, and we don't. For instance, we
don't in California, where there's tons of earthquakes, and there's
going to be a big one all along the West
coast where the Cascadia subduction zone, if it gives way,
is going to literally move the entire West coast up

(06:24):
or down by feet in under two minutes, and we'll
be devastating. And is going to happen. That's the one
thing on this show that they all say, you never
think it's gonna happen to you, and then it does. So,
as Russia is reminding us this morning, earthquakes and volcanic

(06:44):
eruptions happen. Yosemite is a super volcano waiting to kill
us all, and it really is. And so you have
to wonder why, if you have a home in a
place where there's hurricanes, is your house not hurricane proof.
Why if you have a home where there's tornadoes or

(07:06):
dead echos, is your home not built to withstand that
and minimally? Why don't you have some sort of shelter
that will protect you from it. Some people have basements,
some people don't. If you live in a region where
there's snow like Buffalo, why aren't there roads that are

(07:27):
able to handle it, that melt the snow. Why aren't
there cars being sold that could withstand being stuck for
twenty four or forty eight hours. I watched a woman
in real time because they have the footage where she
fell asleep in her car with it running because she
couldn't go anywhere in the blizzard, and her tailpipe solidified

(07:47):
the snow her exhaust. Heated exhaust solidified the snow around
her tailpipe like an ice block, and it killed her.
Why Why aren't cars smarter than that? Why don't cars
have a CO two sensor to where if there's too
much CO two build up inside the car, it shuts
off the car. So I was watching these shows thinking

(08:11):
to myself, we have done nothing in twoenty and twenty
five years of modern human existence. We've done nothing to
survive the very one thing that we've had to deal
with this entire time, the weather. Nothing here in Nevada.
We are not building homes that are going to be

(08:32):
able to withstand the heat. We are not building roadways
that reflect the sun, that absorb the sun instead of
you know, when I say absorbed, I mean as energy,
solar roads, sidewalks. We're not doing any of that. In fact,
very few people are doing anything to prepare themselves for

(08:55):
the weather, and businesses certainly aren't, and airports certainly aren't
and certainly aren't, and cars certainly aren't. And we're not
doing it on our roads. And so a weather storm
comes along and grounds us, ruins economies, kills people. Why
why is it such a low priority to make us

(09:16):
ready for a natural disaster? In California, most people don't
even have an emergency kit. Now. They need an earthquake
kit and a fire kit, but they don't have it.
Do you? How many of you right now have at
least three days of food, three days of water, three
days of pet food. You're supposed to have seven So

(09:39):
how many of you right now have seven days of medication,
seven days of food, seven days of everything? You would need? Money, cash,
money because ATMs are going to go down. How many
raise your hands? How many of you? Very few hands
are up. If you're telling the truth of you have

(10:01):
what you would need to survive and I mean really
survive in a crisis that lasts longer than twelve hours.
Why not? Why not? I I know the end, I
actually know the E and I'm gonna tell you. I'm

(10:21):
gonna tell you. And then next second we're going to
talk about a survey which make me pride, which means
our future is doomed. Anyway, if we're talking about kid
be in our future, we're doomed. Want to support the
Corell cast, then like and subscribe the YouTube videos at
the really Corel channel. Just go to YouTube dot com
forward slash really Correll, that's k R e L and

(10:44):
subscribe to the most exciting YouTube stream available today.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
If you're not visiting really corell dot com daily, you're
missing out. Get the podcast videos and the blug including
recipes at reallycorrell dot com.

Speaker 1 (11:13):
You know, northern California is having a mild and wet
summer and there are those that think that's not climate change.
Oh look climate changes. Yes it is climate change. But
your little brains are just too dense to accept that.
And that's the kind of thinking that makes us not prepared.
By the way, Sandy, I agree, a giant jar a

(11:34):
jar of peanut butter. How many of you have a
giant jar of peanut butter in your car? I do? Why?
In case I'm ever trapped somewhere with ember, we could
live on that for a couple of days. It's got protein, carbohydrates.
It's a pretty perfect food, peanut butter and honey, and
you could survive for a long time as long as
you have water. So as all these disasters are unfolding

(11:57):
around us, why aren't we prepared? And the truth is denial.
We're in denial. Most of us do not believe we
will ever be in an emergent situation caused by climate
or earthquake, fire, flood, dead echo, you know whatever. We don't.

(12:18):
We just don't. We just don't believe it's ever gonna happen.
That's the first thing, denial, complacency. We have no leadership, states, cities.
They're not demanding that anything built be built to withstand
the change in the climate. In Florida, hurricanes knock houses down,

(12:43):
they build them exactly the same way that you can
build a hurricane proof house. You can, but in places
like Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, it's not required that you do it.
Oh well, it costs more money and blood of blah
blah blood. And that's it being prepared and shaping our future,

(13:05):
shaping our future cities. You know, here in Vegas they
should be building only covered things. They're spending millions of
dollars to build four baseball diamonds right here by my house,
and they're not covered, so they're going to be useless.
Who's gonna play in one hundred and twenty degrees it's
they're gonna be. They're wasting their money. They're not going

(13:26):
to be used. In Florida, they're building houses right now
that will not withstand the heat and hurricanes. In California,
they're not building homes that will withstand earthquakes and fires. Oh,
they meet the regulations. The regulations are stupid. When an

(13:49):
area like Pacific Palisades can just go up the entire
alta dina and the entire place just burned down, that's
bad building. We won't acknowledge that we can't inhabit every
place that we want to that we can't build homes
because it's so pretty in the canyons or whatever that

(14:11):
we can't live there, because if we do, we're and
and if we're if we're going to if you're going
to build in Malibu, if you're going to build in places,
then you have to build a certain way. We don't
put any rules or restrictions. Why because preparing for the
world that's coming is not making companies money right now.

(14:34):
And the only way that companies will let us actually
do anything that progresses us is if they're making money.
And so we need to redesign all of our cities.
Every city in America needs to be redesigned. All of
our infrastructure needs to be redesigned to deal with the

(14:57):
climate that's here now and the disasters that are coming.
But we won't do it. Back to are you know,
are you prepared well? And I know in the chat
room they're saying, if you think regulations are bad, then
go to a country where you live next to open sewer.
I agree, everyone's like, oh, we have too many regulations.

(15:17):
Go to countries that don't, you know, try to touch
the water, try to go to a river. You know,
in India, you can't swim in any of their water.
It's all filled with feces. I mean, come on, regulations
are not a bad thing. I am plexion. I have
some cash and lots of canned food. Also, get the

(15:38):
non perishables now before the price goes up. I agree.
Bill Wattenberg taught me on his show way back in
the day. At least he did one good thing, that
old angry man. Don't forget bears. Those critters are dangerous.
They can be Absolutely we aren't supposed to live in
hazardous areas, but it still happens. I agree. I fully

(15:59):
agree with my good friend James in the chat room.
We're not supposed to build in certain areas, but we do,
and that's stupid. We are a stupid race, you know.
I just I have to say it out loud. We
are a stupid race. We do not, in any way,

(16:20):
shape or form, want to live. Obviously, humans do not
wish to survive. We are destroying the planet with impunity.
But all we're doing is destroying our ability to live
on it. The rock is still going to be here.
I don't mean the actor, although he might, you know
that the planet's still going to spin around the sun.

(16:41):
Thirty one and a half inches off its axis. Did
you hear about this? The Earth is now tilted thirty
one point two inches off its axis? Why? Because we
keep pumping groundwater out of the ground with impunity and
it has literally changed our axis. That's bad. We've actually

(17:01):
lost a second. So next year they're taking a second
out of the year because our Earth has shifted almost
three feet. That's a fair amount for a planet to shift.
Are we doing anything to either write it back or
to stop it further? No, we're pumping more groundwater, not less.

(17:25):
As a species, we act like we just don't want
to survive. So leave your comment down below. Are you prepared?
Are you prepared for a disaster? You know? Are you?
Are you prepared? Do you have a week's worth of food, pet, food, medications,
an emergency kit, medical supplies you know in a disaster,

(17:51):
pain meds and antibiotics. Come on? Do you have currency?
Do you have cash? Perhaps a gold coin or two?
Do you have anything at all? And if not, why
not because you don't think you're gonna need it, because
you think the government's gonna be there to help you,
not Trump, FEMA is on its way out. There's not

(18:12):
gonna be anybody to help you? Is your house gonna withstand?
Right now? I thought about my condo. I thought, well,
this wouldn't withstand anything. Las Vegas doesn't have hurricanes, tornadoes
and doesn't really feel earthquakes, but it has heat, and
this house isn't made for the heat. Really, all right,

(18:34):
I we gotta move on because I only have a
half hour show. But I saw a survey today of
Jen Alpha. Now Jen Alpha, you might wonder who are
Jen Alpha. Jen Alpha are people that are twelve to
fifteen years of age. Okay, that's that's who Jen Alpha is.
And Jen Alpha was asked, what do you want to

(18:56):
do when you grow up? That's not a difficult question. Now.
Back in our generation, we would say things like doctor, lawyer,
you know, fireman, astronaut, that sort of stuff. What do
you think the Jen Alpha said that they want to
be the top ten things that they want to be.

(19:20):
I'm going to give you those things, and it's going
to make you realize that we're doomed, that we might
as well just use it up and wear it out now,
because if our hands are falling into these kids, we're done.
All right, that'll be next And I want to see
down below at YouTube dot com Forward slash REALLYE Carrell?
Are you prepared? What do you have for an emergency? Now,

(19:44):
you don't have to be full on prepper and you
know have a bunker and all of that, but you
should have something and not just at your home. So
many people get caught in their car. Do you have
anything in your car that would help you in an
emergency at all? What if you have your pet in

(20:04):
your car with you and you get in an emergency,
a water emergency, no fire. Are you prepared? Hey Correll
here and I'd like to take a moment to thank
all the patrons at Patreon. Your support means the absolute
world to me and the show. If you'd like to
show your support for the crazy endeavors of the Corel Cast,

(20:25):
then please go to patreon dot com Forward slash really Corell.
That's patreon dot com Forward slash really Corel, And please
help get those numbers up by subscribing to the YouTube
channel YouTube dot com Forward slash Really Correl. There's so
much great free content there, it's like having a network
on your TV, phone or tablet. All social media is
really Corel, including threads and Instagram and don't forget the

(20:48):
website that's had it all all along, Really Correl dot com.
Without your support, the show simply doesn't work. So please
listen on all streaming services, watch and subscribe on YouTube,
and support the show to Patreon at Patreon dot com forwards. Last,
Really Correl, thanks for almost thirty years of support for
the loudest, craziest, most unhinged gig Eye and his little dog.

(21:09):
And let's keep the party going as long as we can. Oh,
what is it that? Jane Oliver and Whitney Houston then said, I.

Speaker 3 (21:30):
Believe the children are our future. Teach them well and
let them lead the way, Show them all the beauty
they possess inside, give them a sent surf pride to
make it easier. Let the children's leave after remind us

(21:56):
how we you to be well?

Speaker 1 (22:01):
If you believe the children are the future, you're screwed.
They interviewed Jen Alpha. This is twelve to fifteen year
olds about what they wanted to be when they grow up. Now,
two of you in the chat room, Sandy and James
Schnabel already guessed the number one, but I'm going to

(22:22):
go from number ten to number one. Number ten, two four, six. Yes,
number ten to number one. So number ten on the
what do you want to be when you grow up?
It's a teacher. That's a little bit encouraging. At least
it made the top ten. It used to be in
the top three, but at least it made the top ten.

(22:45):
A teacher. Number nine a musician, And they don't mean
they I read the interview. They mean a famous musician,
someone who tours and gets paid and makes a living.
Little do they know, And as a voting member of Grammy,
I will tell you only five percent of all musicians

(23:08):
can make a living at it. I'm very blessed to
be one of the five percent of entertainers that can
make a living at it. Although with my Patreon going
down and not up, well, we'll talk about that in
a minute. Number seven online streamer. Whatever that means, and
how you monetize that, what talent you need for that

(23:31):
doesn't say, but online streamer? So making a living being
famous for fame's sake. Number six a successful sports athlete.
That's not going to happen. It's not one percent of

(23:52):
athletes will be able to make a living at it.
Number five a successful artist, and again they mean Beyonce
Taylor Swift. That's what they mean there. Number four entrepreneur.
What does that mean? A kid twelve to fifteen doesn't

(24:13):
even know what an entrepreneur is. They just know that
they see people online that say they're entrepreneurs, and they're
all I want to be that. They don't know what
an entrepreneur is. Someone that starts multiple businesses, has multiple
revenue streams. They don't know that. Okay, number four is
an app or video game developer. Okay, I can see

(24:35):
in modern times that takes some degree of you know,
uh learning. You have to know how to code, you
have to you know. So, Okay, that's a technical thing,
and that's I can see that. Number three a doctor
or nurse. That was encouraging that. The third thing is
doctor or nurse. That's encouraging. Number two tick talk creator,

(25:02):
like that's a thing. Again, only one percent of people
that use social media make enough money at it to survive,
and none of them, none have survived longer than ten years.
So it's a very limited window of success. And the

(25:24):
number one thing by twelve percent, thirty two percent say
they want to be a YouTuber, TikTok creators down at
twenty one, nurse, doctors at twenty but thirty two percent
the number one answer They want to be a YouTuber,

(25:46):
so they want to stand in front of a camera
and do something if they don't care what so long
as it makes money on YouTube. This shows and signifies
how horrible cell phones are. I really wish an EMP

(26:08):
would take out all our cell phones because this shows
these kids are twelve to fifteen. They have grown up
with a phone in their hand and they think their
future lies in their phone. Out of ten things, look
at the answers that relate to their phone. YouTuber, TikTok, creator, entrepreneur,

(26:31):
online streamer, four out of ten or two out of five.
Almost half deal with the phone. They want to have
a career tied to their phone. Only how many of
these careers are not involving a phone? Doctor, app developer,

(26:53):
sports athlete, musician, teacher five five have nothing to do
with the phone. The other five have something to do
with the phone. We are doomed. We're doomed. That's pretty
much it. We're doomed, you know, And I agree with
profit Bradley. I don't know who profit Bradley is, butfit

(27:17):
Bradley in my chat room says worship is not entertainment,
and I agree, these people online are and it's fake.
Someone with two million followers, Oh, I'm beloved by millions. No,
you're not. Ask them for five dollars. They're better yet

(27:38):
ask them to come help you move?

Speaker 3 (27:40):
You know.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Emily Sonde one of my favorite artists of all time.
She has a song that says, I went on the
Internet and got myself a thousand friends, but none of
them ever seemed to call hello. Yes, we're doomed. Thirty
two percent of kids twelve to fifteenumber one answer they
want to be a YouTuber. Their second answer a TikTok creator.

(28:06):
And do you know what isn't in the top ten?
A farmer? A farmer? So where do these kids think
food comes from? Where does anybody think food comes from?
If no one wants to go into farming, how are
we going to eat? And we are not encouraging anybody

(28:29):
to go into farming, no one, Our schools aren't encouraging it. Nobody.
Oh it's tech tech tech tech. People will starve without food,
and tech ain't going to grow food. Robots are not
anywhere near able to grow food yet, so out of
the top ten things that kids want to be. Not

(28:52):
one is a farmer, a laborer, a plumber, an electrician,
a fireman. All right, before we go, I hope I
have time. Do I have time? I've been beating myself
up a lot recently, and I just want to tell
you I've stopped, and let me tell you why. I

(29:13):
realize that I've been correl for a very long time,
and I've been very successful, had people line up to
see me, been friends with celebrities, done things that most
people will never get a chance to do. I, at
sixty two years old, no longer need to hustle. I
just need to live my life and enjoy every day.
That doesn't mean quit. In fact, I think my shows

(29:37):
and my stage shows and my music will get better
if my sole thing every day is worrying about how
to have a good life and not about the hustle
of entertainment. And to that end, my Patreon is going down.
It's now at eight ninety two. It needs to be
above nine hundred. So if enough of you don't care,

(29:58):
if enough of you don't want what I I'm selling,
if you don't want to become a patron at patreon
dot com, forward slash YouTube. I'm sorry, Patreon dot com
forward slash. Really, Carrell, I'm not gonna worry about it.
I'm not gonna stay up at night worrying about it.
If it gets too low, I'll stop the show. If
it gets down to like two hundred or one hundred bucks,

(30:20):
I'm out. I am thrilled. You who you want to be?
I want to hurt you, buddy. We're nowhere near that
point yet. I'm just saying I'm not going to stress anymore.

Speaker 2 (30:29):
It's bloodcasting from a completely different blue view yours. Listen
daily to the Corell cast on your favorite streaming service.
It's broadcasting from a completely different plea of view yours.

(30:50):
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