Yet again, so easy to spend other people’s money. To pretend to know staffing considerations. And to get so indignant someone didn’t do it the way a minority of vocal complainers wanted.
The Weather Channel could of been on with live coverage in areas been hit by Tornado's at the time and didn't feel the need to cover it national live at that time.
I was also amazed at how there were no 'officials' to speak with on the situation on the ground. I suppose everyone was on site and I think either the police or fire station was destroyed in Mayfield although I might be wrong about that. Usually there is someone, say outside the community, that could give reporters an idea of the destruction.
Actually the feed I was watching was showing a 3.5 mile wide debris ball reflecting on doppler radar as the tornado was about 5 to 10 minutes away from Mayfield.
Correlation Coefficient, it shows up on radar as an unnatural signal. Usually debris.Correct. I saw the same thing. It was shown in a different color from the wind and rain. It may have been orange. The meteorologists described it as taking debris from the ground and lifting it into the air. But that was the only indication they had that anything had happened. No one had any on-site reporters because it was dangerous and everyone was told to stay inside. The same meteorologists were tracking NWS alerts and they were being issued less than an hour before impact. Some with less than 30 minutes warning. This was a fast moving storm. They said it was traveling at 70 miles an hour. And yes, the warnings covered huge blocks, and the tornadoes were hit in very narrow, targeted areas. It wasn't until the next day that they were able to confirm what they had seen on radar.
TWC quit at Midnight, Eastern time. The affected communities are in Central time. So they quit just after the tornado rolled through Dawson Springs, KY.If so, then The Weather Channel was still broadcasting live. The above linked story said they stayed live until midnight.
The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, OK nailed this forecast, starting with their Day 3 outlook on Wednesday at 4am, calling for "a few tornadoes" originating over Arkansas or Mississippi. By Thursday at 1am, they said, bluntly: "Some of these nocturnal tornadoes may be strong."From all that I have read, the atmospheric conditions were not expected to be so favorable for tornadoes. At first it was a slight risk, then moderate risk about 48 hours out but the atmosphere primed in a matter of hours to support this severe weather outbreak.
Bowling Green, KY is under five hours drive from TWC and CNN in Atlanta, and Jonesboro, AR is just over six hours. Totally possible, even if they didn't start until Noon on Friday.Literally any crew wanting to be in the area would have had to be in route the moment the atmosphere primed. The few storm chasers on the storm is an indication of how quickly things developed. One chaser that I saw being interviewed said he left at noon on a gut feeling it might turn really bad in that area. And some seasoned storm chasers simply deemed night chasing in the south was too dangerous.
I didn't see this dearth of interviews. I went to bed at 1am (central), just after the threat ended, and heard from several communities where there was damage. The basic message was "it's real bad". I suppose there's not much more to say for two more hours after that.I was also amazed at how there were no 'officials' to speak with on the situation on the ground. I suppose everyone was on site and I think either the police or fire station was destroyed in Mayfield although I might be wrong about that. Usually there is someone, say outside the community, that could give reporters an idea of the destruction.
National Weather Service bulletins state otherwise. The first bulletin from NWS Paducah, just before the storm crossed into their territory said (sorry for the ALL CAPS, that's how the NWS writes their bulletins):It was dark. No one knew for a fact that tornados had hit. The people in the affected areas said that even they didn't know what happened until daylight the next morning. The live coverage at the time was mainly showing weather radar that gave indication of "rotation" in certain areas. Those on the air were warning people not to go outside, but rather stay inside in their "safe place," which was identified as the lowest area in the house.
It's a jerk move to suggest they should cover tornadoes on Long Island a couple of Saturdays ago, but that providing coverage of Kentucky on a Friday would be going above and beyond the call of duty.Once again, it was a Friday night, and this was an isolated rural area.
TWC quit at Midnight, Eastern time. The affected communities are in Central time. So they quit just after the tornado rolled through Dawson Springs, KY.
It's a jerk move to suggest they should cover tornadoes on Long Island a couple of Saturdays ago, but that providing coverage of Kentucky on a Friday would be going above and beyond the call of duty.
The Weather Channel has a staff of dozens of on-camera meteorologists. They had a couple of days to shuffle the deck chairs to prepare, for a very well forecast event as I noted above.Once again, I have no reason to believe the decision was made because of where the tornado was. This appeared to be a staffing issue. I've seen the same thing happen at big networks. When there's no one available, you switch to the back-up.
Yeah, after the event occurred. It is easy to go into a disaster area after the disaster has happened. Much harder to report on the the threat.They covered it all day Saturday.
So if they didn't have appropriate staffing arranged, it was their own fault.
Yeah, after the event occurred. It is easy to go into a disaster area after the disaster has happened. Much harder to report on the the threat
Bottom line is cable networks are experiencing the same thing as most businesses these days. They are short-staffed. Covid has been much the blame here, but come on, let's get it back together.
Going way back to the death of Lady Diana, when that news broke the CBS newsroom that late Saturday night was unstaffed and no one was available to do coverage. CBS picked up an ITV feed and went with that until CBS Sunday Morning went on the air.
This complaint against the Weather Channel not covering Tornadoes live reminds me of when CBS News had call on the KCAL-TV News staff to make a national announcement that Former President George H.W. Bush was deceased in 2018 given that KCAL-TV was doing an active newscast at the time of announcement and CBS News later went to the KHOU-TV feed in the announcement.
Or when CBS News had to close their New York offices during the early days of COVID-19 because of safety concerns. This was when other CBS O&O's had to take over WCBS Newscasts, the weekend CBS Evening News, CBSN and where the Washington DC offices of CBS News took control of News operations due to their Broadcast Center offices shutdown until New York City and New York State gave the clearance for CBS to return to their New York offices.