Share live photos and videos of weather events happening around the world — built for storm chasers, weather enthusiasts, and curious observers
We're building the social platform weather enthusiasts have been waiting for — get on the waitlist
Weather is one of the most visually spectacular natural phenomena, but weather content on general social media gets lost in algorithms tuned for celebrities and brand content. Weather enthusiasts — storm chasers, severe weather spotters, weather photographers, aurora hunters, snow chasers, and everyday observers — deserve a platform built around weather events. Our upcoming weather social network ties every post to a geographic location and a moment in time, so when you post a tornado video, viewers see the radar image, the warnings in effect, the wind reports from the nearest stations, and the storm's path overlaid with your video. It's social media designed by people who care about meteorology, for people who care about meteorology.
Going live during severe weather is the most direct way to share what's happening. Our platform's live streaming feature will let you broadcast video to thousands of viewers with simultaneous overlay of the live weather data — wind speed at the nearest station, the radar reflectivity of the storm cell you're watching, lightning strike counts, and any active warnings or watches. Storm chasers will be able to tag their position to a vehicle so viewers can track the chase in real time. Live streams are archived to your profile after the event for later viewing and analysis.
Storm chasers and severe weather spotters operate as the eyes-on-ground network that the National Weather Service depends on for ground-truth reports during severe events. Our platform will offer verified profiles for active chasers and SKYWARN spotters, with chase logs, archived storm reports, and tools to coordinate field observations during outbreaks. The chaser community has historically connected through forums and Twitter, but lacked a platform built around the workflow of severe weather observation. We're building exactly that.
Some of the most iconic photography is weather photography — lightning bolts mid-strike, supercell mesocyclones backlit by sunset, aurora curtains over Arctic landscapes, fog rolling through valleys at dawn. Our photography section will give serious weather photographers a home with proper EXIF metadata, location and weather context preserved, and high-resolution upload support. Time-lapse video uploads will be a first-class content type — perfect for sharing cloud development, sunset progression through a storm, and aurora curtains over a full night.
Unlike general social media where searching for past content is nearly impossible, our platform indexes posts by location, date, time, weather event, and meteorological conditions. Want to see all videos from a specific tornado outbreak last week? Filter by date and storm system. Want to see lightning photography from your region this summer? Filter by your area and #lightning. This geographic-temporal search transforms posts from disposable timeline content into a searchable archive of weather observations.
Severe weather observation carries real risk. Our platform will promote responsible storm chasing practices and connect new spotters with experienced mentors. Content moderation will balance free expression with safety messaging — we'll never encourage dangerous behavior like flooding-zone driving or tornado-chasing without preparation. Verified weather professionals (meteorologists, NWS spotters, emergency managers) will be flagged so users know when they're seeing authoritative content versus enthusiast content.
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