I was today days old when I learned about Ryan Hall, Y'all — and now I can't believe I ever watched a tornado warning on regular TV.
Here's the deal: Ryan Hall is a Kentucky-born storm chaser who dropped out of broadcast meteorology school because he wanted to actually chase the storms, not just talk about them from a desk. He started posting weather videos on YouTube in January 2021, and now he's at 3.2 million subscribers with over 581 million views. The dude is the Weather Channel for the internet generation.
What makes him different from your local weather person?
- Live storm streams — When severe weather hits, Ryan goes live. We're talking hours-long streams tracking tornadoes, hurricanes, and winter storms in real-time with radar breakdowns, storm chaser feeds, and commentary that's somehow both informative and entertaining. His coverage of the 2023 Mississippi tornadoes had hundreds of thousands of people watching simultaneously.
- Y'all Call — This is wild. You can sign up at yallcall.app and Ryan will literally call you on the phone when severe weather is heading your way. Personal weather alerts from an actual human who's watching the radar. Your local emergency alert system could never.
- The Y'all Squad — This is where it gets real. Ryan runs a non-profit charity called the Y'all Squad that shows up after disasters with supplies, meals, and relief funds. They've raised over $213,000 for tornado victims alone — including $120K+ after the Rolling Fork, Mississippi tornado and $93K after the Greenfield, Iowa EF4. This isn't just content creation. This is community.
- Three YouTube channels — The main channel for forecasts and live coverage, YallBot (843K subscribers) for automated severe weather alerts, and The Y'all Squad channel for charity and community content.
- A full weather website — ryanhallyall.com has live radar, a nationwide severe weather warnings feed, forecasts, and preparedness tips. It's basically a one-stop weather hub.
The thing that sets Ryan apart is the vibe. Weather coverage on TV feels clinical. Ryan's streams feel like you're riding out the storm with a friend who happens to know exactly what's going on. He explains things in plain English, keeps the energy up during tense moments, and genuinely cares about keeping people safe.
Is he a certified meteorologist? No — he'll tell you that himself. But he's built a massive following by being accessible, reliable during severe weather, and putting his money where his mouth is with real disaster relief. In a world where the Weather Channel is behind a cable paywall and local news cuts away for commercials, Ryan Hall just... stays live until the storm is over.
Storm season is here, y'all. Might want to bookmark this one.
Check it out: YouTube: Ryan Hall, Y'all • ryanhallyall.com • Y'all Call App