It's been showing up in the Euro ensembles and the operational GFS off and on since 300+ hrs out, but now we are getting into the range where all the main operational globals have the time period in range. We are getting hints between the Euro and GFS, but there is naturally some inconsistencies. The GFS ensembles, Euro ensembles, Canadian ensembles, however, all are consistently showing a large-scale pattern over the CONUS with a low amplitude trough over the middle of the nation and low-latitude/low-amplitude downstream ridging that would
potentially support a significant/large-scale type severe weather threat east of the Plains in the general next Thursday-Friday timeframe. All of that would be dependent on exact shortwave and surface low evolution from the main large-scale trough, as well as quality of the boundary layer moisture. However, this is a large-scale pattern that is typically associated with large-scale/significant severe weather events when those things evolve favorably.
Given what we have already seen this fall, with October being the second most active on record for tornadoes since 1950 (and would've been #1 without the little bit of help that Hurricane Michael gave it in 2018, since this October had no tropical influence), and how that speaks of the background being primed with the strongly negative PDO and the intensifying La Nina in place, it would be prudent to keep all heads on a swivel as this approaches next week, just in case.