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Twitter abuzz after Russia`s meteor shower
Twitter was abuzz with comments and reactions after Russia`s meteor shower and feeds kept pouring in.
"Everybody cleared out from our office except one dude. Asked why, he said, I need me some coffee first," Twitter user @ma1ice_ma1ice wrote an hour after the celestial body streaked the sky over the region`s eponymous capital, Chelyabinsk, a city of 1.1 million in the southern Ural Mountains.
Such stories jostled for online space with messages full of words like "fear", "panic" and "scared sh*tless", as well as numerous other expletives, which also abounded in most eyewitness videos posted on YouTube. > "Blinding flash of light, then a blast like we`re being bombed. Lord, surviving this is unreal. I thought a war`d begun," wrote user @DANISHPRINCIPLE.
No deaths were reported as a consequence of the meteorite, but police said by early evening that nearly 1,000 people had been hurt, the majority of them injured by glass shattered by the shock wave.
"Yes, I`m home, shaking all over. Horrible panic here, everybody`s leaving the city," wrote @DashkaBulanova.
The panic, however, was far from universal: "I was asleep, heard the blast and went back to sleep," tweeted @Nastyayas.
"That`s some original wake-up call right there, when your door gets blown away by the blast wave," wrote the less lucky user @R_T_S_.
Some took it better than others. "We were dancing, suddenly a flash of light and a horrible blast, we run up on stage in a panic, and the teacher`s all calm: `Don`t worry, it`s just a meteorite`," reported @caxapoook.
The people of Chelyabinsk, an industrial city plagued by dismal environmental pollution and high crime rates, became Russia`s new token tough guys after a television skit show called "Our Russia" went viral in the mid-2000s: It extolled their numerous implausible virtues and over-the-top skills, not unlike the US-born "Chuck Norris facts" phenomenon, praising the hyper-tough action hero.
The meteorite also spawned a dozen Russian-language Twitter accounts of its own, all offering more lowbrow humor, with lines like, "Looking to meet earthlings. No Bruce Willises" - a reference to the Hollywood star`s crusade against space debris in "Armageddon".
IANS