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Coverage of the Northern California Storm



Note there are reported Floods in the Sacramento area and landslide risk in the San Francisco Bay Area due to the recent storm coverage. Yes leading up to this there were concerns of another year of Drought in Northern California prior to this.
 


Bay Area and Sacramento News outlets issue warnings for the next rounds of rains and winds in the area.
 
The "Bomb" Cyclone was no such thing. This b.s. naming storms is, well, b.s..
Happened to be up 3~5 am MST, tuned into KFBK and caught their news. Nothing but fluff stories and traffic report consisting of CALTRANS road closures for construction.
No mention of 99 under water..
 
The "Bomb" Cyclone was no such thing. This b.s. naming storms is, well, b.s..
Happened to be up 3~5 am MST, tuned into KFBK and caught their news. Nothing but fluff stories and traffic report consisting of CALTRANS road closures for construction.
No mention of 99 under water..
That phrase Bomb Cyclone sounded more associated with Hurricanes on the east coast from August-November than rain and snowstorm in California from December to February.
 
The "Bomb" Cyclone was no such thing. This b.s. naming storms is, well, b.s..
Happened to be up 3~5 am MST, tuned into KFBK and caught their news. Nothing but fluff stories and traffic report consisting of CALTRANS road closures for construction.
No mention of 99 under water..
Bomb Cyclone is what my uncle used to say when he ate a bad plate or food or a bad taco.
 
Bomb Cyclone is what my uncle used to say when he ate a bad plate or food or a bad taco.
True Bomb Cyclone sounds more like it was meant for the East Coast and Gulf Coast.




 








Heres more fallout from across California over the landslide threats and flood threats surrounding the storms.
 

Montecito is getting international attention over the latest landslide in Santa Barbara County.This is while local news outlets are focusing on Floods and landslides and avalanche warnings in other parts of the state in relation to current rescue operations.






 
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Update Former Fox News Reporter Rick Leventhal is reportedly a car accident victim when he was driving in Palm Desert, CA during the state being hit by storms.

Rick Leventhal, the former Fox News correspondent and husband of former The Real Housewives of Orange County star Kelly Dodd, was involved in a car accident. The journalist shared a video from the hospital where he provided an update to his fans.

“So lucky to be alive & grateful for the well wishes & care I’m getting. 4 broken ribs, fractured bone right foot, wounded pride. So far that’s it,” he captioned the Instagram post.

Leventhal detailed that he was traveling on the I-10, just outside of Palm Desert, California during rainy conditions, when he “hit, what felt like a patch of ice.”
 

Note some of the Santa Barbara Area Stations are back on the air after they went off the air due to storms in the state.


Several stations along the Southern California coast temporarily went dark due to the heavy storms that ravaged the area last week.

Last Wednesday (Jan. 11), rain storms knocked down power poles leading to a transmitter site on Gibraltar Road in Santa Barbara. As a result of the power outage, KDRW Santa Barbara (88.7) – which simulcasts Santa Monica College news/talk KCRW Los Angeles (89.9) – and a translator signal of California Lutheran University news/talk KCLU-AM/FM (1340/88.3) Santa Barbara, were knocked off the air. Two more Santa Barbara stations – James Evans modern rock KJEE (92.9) and KDB (93.7), which simulcasts University of Southern California classical KUSC Los Angeles (91.5) – were also reported by NoozHawk to have been affected by the power outage.

“The problem has been that rain caused two telephone poles to fall down, so we’re going to be on a diesel generator for some time,” tower operator John Franklin told NoozHawk. “The road is badly, badly undermined.”
 

Note some of the Santa Barbara Area Stations are back on the air after they went off the air due to storms in the state.


Several stations along the Southern California coast temporarily went dark due to the heavy storms that ravaged the area last week.

Last Wednesday (Jan. 11), rain storms knocked down power poles leading to a transmitter site on Gibraltar Road in Santa Barbara. As a result of the power outage, KDRW Santa Barbara (88.7) – which simulcasts Santa Monica College news/talk KCRW Los Angeles (89.9) – and a translator signal of California Lutheran University news/talk KCLU-AM/FM (1340/88.3) Santa Barbara, were knocked off the air. Two more Santa Barbara stations – James Evans modern rock KJEE (92.9) and KDB (93.7), which simulcasts University of Southern California classical KUSC Los Angeles (91.5) – were also reported by NoozHawk to have been affected by the power outage.

“The problem has been that rain caused two telephone poles to fall down, so we’re going to be on a diesel generator for some time,” tower operator John Franklin told NoozHawk. “The road is badly, badly undermined.”
 
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