- Perfect Disaster
"Perfect Disaster" was a 2006
Discovery Channel mini-series depicting theworst-case scenario major cities could expect in the near future if hit by extreme disaster. A large part of each episode was based around the lives of citizens from each city, with the remainder of the program showing us real-world scientists discussing the very high probabilities of these disasters. The series' trademark logo was "When the conditions are right, it will all go wrong."The series now airs onThe Science Channel .Episodes
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Dallas, Texas : Devastated by what is declared a super-tornado, one exceeding an F5 on theFujita scale . The presentation also describes the fact that the probability of this catastrophe is the highest of all the proposed scenarios.
*New York City : In the year 2011, being subject to a powerfulgeomagnetic storm , causing widespread damage to electronics, and several bizarre extraterrestrial anomalies.
*Sydney : Engulfed in the flames of a largefirestorm that is brewing out of control.
*Hong Kong : The victim of a supertyphoon from the West Pacific.
*London : Deluged by a massiveflood that breaks past the city's levees.
*Montreal : Stricken by a severeice storm , in a manner similar to theNorth American ice storm of 1998 .
*New Orleans, Louisiana : Stricken by a severeHurricane . Canceled after New Orleans was devastated byHurricane Katrina .Though seemingly unrealistic, each disaster was represented as terrifyingly large and powerful, in order to show the worst possible scenario in the case of each city. The Series was Produced by
Impossible Pictures the same people that made the 1999BBC mini-series "Walking with Dinosaurs ", which was screened in theUSA on theDiscovery Channel .The computer graphics were completed by Gareth Edwards (Super Tornado and Solar Storm); Lola (Firestorm and Ice Storm) and Red Vision (Flood and Typhoon)
See also
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Mega Disasters " - an almost exactly similar television show onThe History Channel .
*"It Could Happen Tomorrow " - another worst-case scenario series on The Weather Channel.External links
* [http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/perfectdisaster/perfectdisaster.html "Perfect Disaster" Web Site]
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