Of course, not everybody has cable or satellite, hard as is may seem to believe. But anyway, in the case of a Presidential speech, is it necessary to actually see him speaking -- wouldn't listening to it on the radio be just as enlightening? Why does it need to be on TV at all? I already know what he looks like. It's not like he's going to break into a little softshoe dance at the end of the speech.... :fred flintstone said:Most ridiculous of all is Bush wants to make a speech and ALL the networks have to carry it. What are cable news channels for?
How was it for Hurricane Gloria in September of 1985? I'm a Connecticut native but I was living in southern Maine when that strom hit. Our power went out that night (the night of the much-anticipated "Miami Vice" second season NBC premiere). It was "only" a tropical storm for us.Bill DeFelice said:One that stands out in my mind happened in the middle of a hurricane:It was either 1977 or 1978. Hurricane Belle (?) was beginning to hit the East Coast and most of the Connecticut television stations were covering it. Due to our location the only station we could clearly receive was Channel 8, WTNH. The did moderate coverage during the 11PM newscast ONLY TO SWITCH TO THE NETWORK MOVIE at 11:30pm! Talk about being stupid! I guess this was before "Public Service" meant something. It was about 20 minutes later we lost power.
Any of the Phoenix stations breaking in with 'STORM TEAM!' alerts anytime there's a cloud in the sky during the summertime. We got along quite well without them until 2-3 years ago.Stanislav said:What's the most aggravating "breaking news" interruption of programming you've ever seen, either on the national or local level? Something that was so unnecessary, so low priority, so NOT news that you were close to throwing stuff at the TV??
Thanks for picking my favorite pointless disruption--the snow coverage. I understand expanded coverage during the news time slots, and maybe a crawl or one-minute updates on the top/bottom of the hour, but the endless yakking blowing out regular programming is overkill to the nth degree. Another favorite of mine was a split-screen scenario, but still, the station shrunk the network video to the size of a postage stamp, rendering it useless, all to show a live helicopter shot of a horse being pulled out of a lake. Yes, a bleeping horse rescue.Of course the reason I was so upset was the network feed was of Faith Hill performing in a pair of killer jeans, but no matter what it would have been, it was better than watching a darned horse.adam95 said:But in just the last couple of years, programming is now being interrupted for thunderstorm warnings and my personal favorite: SNOW.