I guess the storm tracked a little farther East than expected. TV reports look worse than what Atlanta had. Hope everyone is safe
I didn't see this until just now, so I commented on an existing post.From Knoxville I can get WMIT and WKSF. I listened briefly to each. WMIT had a jock on the air who put a Haywood County official on. In the few minutes I listened to WKSF I only heard regular format. I imagine a lot of stations are off the airI guess the storm tracked a little farther East than expected. TV reports look worse than what Atlanta had. Hope everyone is safe
There's also WQNS. What are they doing?WKSF, WWNC and WQNQ have all been simulcasting coverage pooled by their staff since Friday morning.
They are part of the simulcast too... I didn't hear them IDed at first, but the entire cluster is now being IDed on the TOH.There's also WQNS. What are they doing?
If the paper publishes a "weekend edition" rather than separate Saturday and Sunday papers, the deadline for the print edition was probably sometime early Friday evening, well before the storm started to impact Asheville.There's also WQNS. What are they doing?
I was amazed by the articles in the actual newspaper. You'd never know anything happened. The web site for the newspaper tells a very different story.
Listening this morning (we have family affected) on the iHeart app, they mentioned 99.9's transmitter was running low on fuel and should it go off the air before it can be replenished, to tune to one of the other signals. They are doing a herculean effort, and other markets are helping. iHeart gets and often deserves a lot of the brickbats it gets, but situations like this, they shine.They are part of the simulcast too... I didn't hear them IDed at first, but the entire cluster is now being IDed on the TOH.
The last place I even thought of looking for info was the newspaper website. Brad Panovich, meteorologist from WCNC, Charlotte on his social media feeds was the first. He pointed people to other informative Facebook pages. Also WLOS.If the paper publishes a "weekend edition" rather than separate Saturday and Sunday papers, the deadline for the print edition was probably sometime early Friday evening, well before the storm started to impact Asheville.
There is an eEdition on Saturday, but I think they knew what was coming and should have had something in the real Sunday paper.If the paper publishes a "weekend edition" rather than separate Saturday and Sunday papers, the deadline for the print edition was probably sometime early Friday evening, well before the storm started to impact Asheville.
I hadn't thought of that.I assume that like most Gannett papers these days, the print editions are printed hundreds of miles away and trucked in. And since there's no highway access in and out of Asheville and no way to deliver papers around town even if there were, I assume they're simply not printing actual papers right now.
You don't report on events that haven't happened yet. All they had to go with was a storm making its way up from Florida, still off to the southeast of western North Carolina. Again, we don't have the deadlines for that dead-tree Sunday paper. For all we know, page 1 could have been sent to the presses Friday afternoon.There is an eEdition on Saturday, but I think they knew what was coming and should have had something in the real Sunday paper.
I'm going to the text articles for today any minute.
I'm surprised the paper hasn't lifted the paywall during this emergency. I've seen several papers do that in similar situations.Two Citizen-Times articles on the storm appeared where I can get to them for free guaranteed.
I was going to mention this.I'm surprised the paper hasn't lifted the paywall during this emergency. I've seen several papers do that in similar situations.