The myth first gained mainstream attention in 1991, when a video of a
news crew sheltering under a
Kansas Turnpike overpass during
an F2 tornado was spread across the United States, being watched by millions of people during
newscasts and other television outlets. The video led many viewers to believe that overpasses were safe places to take shelter during tornadoes. The news crew survived with only minor injuries, further leading people to believe the myth. In May 1997, several drivers and videographers took shelter under a highway overpass to avoid
a deadly F5 tornado that hit
Jarrell, Texas; the overpass narrowly avoided being struck. One of the deadliest instances of the overpass myth being followed occurred on May 3, 1999, when two people were killed and over a dozen more were injured while sheltering under several overpasses from a violent tornado near
Moore, Oklahoma. As a result, the myth was addressed by the
National Weather Service at that year's
National Weather Association Annual Meeting in
Biloxi, Mississippi. In a February 2024 publication of
First Coast News, Dr. Harold Brooks with the National Weather Service stated in an interview with the channel that "Going under an overpass is just not a good idea for tornado safety. What we really want to think about with what makes something safe in a tornado is we're worried about horizontal winds, and we're not so much worried about debris falling on top of you but worried about stuff blowing sideways at you". == Hazards ==