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Hurricane Ian coverage

Let's not blame climate change for a hurricane that is no stronger than many going back 100 years. It just hit in a place where many lived in low-lying areas.
The water temperature in the Gulf of Mexico is hotter than ever before. That gives these storms the fuel to strengthen rapidly. Ian went from a CAT 1 to almost a 5 quickly. The intensity of thunderstorms, severe heat, the melting of ice shelfs, etc... are all climate related. These "Once in a Thousand" year events are happening at an alarming rate all over the world. Deny at your own peril...
 
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This area (Melbourne-Cocoa) was spared most of the damage seen elsewhere.....

WLZR 1560 Melbourne seems to be on very low power or off (only 3-4 miles away - usually good signal) - may not be hurricane related....

kw - Melbourne FL
 
Highest point in Florida is 345 feet above sea level, just south of the Alabama state line. Overall, Florida averages out to be 100 feet above sea level. That's like 1/3rd of a Football field so not very high. I know where I used to live as a kid I could dig down about 2-2.5 feet and hit the water table.
there is a pretty tall place near me, it is a landfill with all the debris from the last hurricane

One of the tallest places in Florida is also a landfill
 
My dad's house in SW Cape Coral after Ian. At least a foot of water got in and is being cleaned up. It's on a canal.
house on 9TH SW.JPG
 
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Am I being too picky or shouldn't journalists still use correct spelling and grammar?
It depends on what type of news source you're looking at. If it's a major publication or a proper news outlet with actual "journalists", then yes, you'd be right to be picky. If it's a small-budget rag where 1/2 the thing along with the entire back page is filled with ads and they pay people per column to write for them, then the bar is a bit lower. If you're looking at online sources where they may be little more than a website that grabs news items from other sources and repackages them as smaller and simpler articles for their readers to quickly digest, again, correct spelling and grammar may be too much to ask. Their staff are probably earning a pittance and they may not even be located in the US, meaning English may not be their first language.
 
It depends on what type of news source you're looking at. If it's a major publication or a proper news outlet with actual "journalists", then yes, you'd be right to be picky. If it's a small-budget rag where 1/2 the thing along with the entire back page is filled with ads and they pay people per column to write for them, then the bar is a bit lower. If you're looking at online sources where they may be little more than a website that grabs news items from other sources and repackages them as smaller and simpler articles for their readers to quickly digest, again, correct spelling and grammar may be too much to ask. Their staff are probably earning a pittance and they may not even be located in the US, meaning English may not be their first language.
Those folks are writing for search engines and to keep readers on the site to see as many ads as possible---thus long-winded articles where the writer (or bot) talks in circles and may never get to the conclusion.
 
Those folks are writing for search engines and to keep readers on the site to see as many ads as possible---thus long-winded articles where the writer (or bot) talks in circles and may never get to the conclusion.
Those aren't the particular ones I had in mind when I posted my comment above, but yeah, I've seen those too and know exactly what you're referring to. Others that can be annoying are when the headline of a particular article, or the photo they post with it are merely "click bait" to get people to go to their site and that story, only to find that the photo they'd posted had nothing to do with the article, or the headline was way overblown.
 
Those folks are writing for search engines and to keep readers on the site to see as many ads as possible---thus long-winded articles where the writer (or bot) talks in circles and may never get to the conclusion.
Be careful clicking on that bait. Some may try to infect your computer.
 
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It depends on what type of news source you're looking at. If it's a major publication or a proper news outlet with actual "journalists", then yes, you'd be right to be picky. If it's a small-budget rag where 1/2 the thing along with the entire back page is filled with ads and they pay people per column to write for them, then the bar is a bit lower. If you're looking at online sources where they may be little more than a website that grabs news items from other sources and repackages them as smaller and simpler articles for their readers to quickly digest, again, correct spelling and grammar may be too much to ask. Their staff are probably earning a pittance and they may not even be located in the US, meaning English may not be their first language.
I'm talking about actual newspapers.

I can't seem to find an example now. The mistakes were on the newspaper web sites but not where I can see what the actual newspapers look like.


I'm reluctant to click on this one again because it might tell me to pay to see it. But I think that's one of them.
 
Here's why there are power outages and other damage.

"We've called the highway department and they said it's outside of their right of way ...Then we called Duke Power because when it falls, and it will fall, it will knock out our power and our neighbor's and who knows who else because it will depend how many lines it takes from the pole ... But they told us to call them when it falls. We even called our insurance company, and they said the same thing — call us when it falls."
 
I'm talking about actual newspapers.

I can't seem to find an example now. The mistakes were on the newspaper web sites but not where I can see what the actual newspapers look like.


I'm reluctant to click on this one again because it might tell me to pay to see it. But I think that's one of them.
For the past decade or more, the priority for newspapers has been to get the news online first and fastest, often with the reporters posting stories totally unedited. Many reporters are poor spellers. Some are even poor writers. They have their jobs because they can gather facts. In the pre-internet days, their stories would have to pass through at least three editors -- the city editor, a copy editor, and the copy desk chief -- to make it into print. Many papers now don't even have copy editors. The city editor cleans up what he or she can (bear in mind that this person often isn't a good speller or grammarian either) and hopes for the best. The physical newspaper is doomed, anyway, so what you're now seeing on the internet is likely to become the norm. This is becoming a sub-literate world.
 
There are blind guys on the internet who use speech to text. It's not perfect. The GULF might get spelled the golf. Some of us are in media too.
 
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Cellphone service in Cape Coral seems to be getting worse now. My sister's cell no longer has any service. My brother has T-Mobile. His phone has an echo and poor service.

Amazon Alexa is useless as the cable is out. The only power comes from generators.
 
Just in case we forgot, the front page of my Charlotte Observer today has nothing about Ian but says Biden is going to Puerto Rico to see Fiona damage.
 
Just in case we forgot, the front page of my Charlotte Observer today has nothing about Ian but says Biden is going to Puerto Rico to see Fiona damage.
And tomorrow he goes to Florida to see Ian damage. Hopefully, no embarrassing gaffes or perceived or real disorientation, and a civil reception in Florida from Gov. DeSantis.
 
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There are blind guys on the internet who use speech to text. It's not perfect. The GULF might get spelled the golf. Some of us are in media too.
I use speech to text regularly on my Android messenger. It is about 75% correct but doesn't seem to be able to diagnose context (as does normal English). Lots of misspellings as well but it does OK considering the complexity of the English language. I really doubt it will get to 100% though. Especially in a small device such as a smartphone.
 
And tomorrow he goes to Florida to see Ian damage. Hopefully, no embarrassing gaffes or perceived or real disorientation, and a civil reception in Florida from Gov. DeSantis.
I watched the most recent Bill Maher Show. He and his guest Van Jones had a very interesting discussion about Biden's public image and his behind the scenes work on the public's behalf. The summary was that most of the media focuses upon the public image which is not consequential and completely misses the work which is done behind closed doors. Biden's litany of positive bills so far is the best in a bunch of congressional sessions IMHO. Especially given the distracting BS from the Right.
 
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