Are they now naming winter storms?
mrschimpf said:There was one local station I used to get that named winter storms. It was beyond silly, but at least it made sense because the name only applies to ONE market area and the region's criteria for snowstorms, so an inch in Minnesota isn't a nameable storm in a market like that.
Nationally though? This "Caesar" was a storm that only applied to grassy areas where I am because the concrete was too warm. It did literally nothing to us.
azumanga said:mrschimpf said:There was one local station I used to get that named winter storms. It was beyond silly, but at least it made sense because the name only applies to ONE market area and the region's criteria for snowstorms, so an inch in Minnesota isn't a nameable storm in a market like that.
Nationally though? This "Caesar" was a storm that only applied to grassy areas where I am because the concrete was too warm. It did literally nothing to us.
I believe that it's WFSB in Hartford that has named winter storms, a tradition that started back when the station was the original WTIC-TV.
That being said, there definitely will be some confusion when there's a winter storm bearing down on New England, and TWC and WFSB have different names for it.
raptusregaliter said:Not surprisingly, whoever came up with the stupid "Wizometer" name got to see his/her idea excoriated on-line for days and days and days. As you might imagine, urine-themed jokes were extremely popular. Go figure...