Stations deliver with storm coverage

All of the area media outlets did an outstanding job with coverage of Friday’s deadly tornadoes. They alerted viewers overnight about the tornado warnings and then went wall to wall with more than 12 hours of coverage of the storms’ destruction.

Even before their regularly scheduled 5 a.m. newscasts Friday, the meteorologists at WESH, WKMG and WFTV were providing weather cut-ins before and after midnight. All those stations stayed with coverage from 5 a.m. through 6:30 p.m. WOFL-Fox 35 was also in storm-coverage mode, but returned to regular programming long before the other Big 3 did. CFN 13 also did well providing coverage during its regular 24-hour news schedule.

WESH not only pre-empted programming on Channel 2 for storm coverage, but also ran its news for hours on sister station WKCF-CW 18. Much of WESH’s coverage was also broadcast on MSNBC, and CNN was taking feeds from WESH, WFTV and WKMG. WESH and WKMG closed out Friday night with extended editions of their 11 p.m. newscasts.

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Smith Engineers Exit from Channel 9

WFTV morning meteorologist Joe Smith is getting out of the weather biz … and the TV biz, too. According to NewsBlues.com, Smith has decided to enter the graduate engineering program at Cal-Berkeley this fall.

After graduating from the FSU meteorology program, he started out at Tallahassee’s ABC affiliate before jumping up to Channel 9 in May 2003.

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All You Wanted to Know About Wolf

As we mentioned awhile back, former Channel 6 meteorologist Reynolds Wolf has joined CNN. His hometown newspaper, the Clanton (Ala.) Advertiser, profiles the local boy who’s done pretty good and chronicles the big break he got to jump start his on-air career.

"I’ve always been interested in weather, but the big turning point for me was in 1993 – there was a tornado outbreak in Northeast Alabama. They were Palm Sunday tornados," he said.

Here’s the link to the full story.

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Local 6 Puts Forecast First

 

 

How important is the weather in Central Florida? That’s like asking if Disney World is a popular tourist spot.

The local importance — even perhaps obsession — with weather here hasn’t gone unnoticed by the folks at WKMG. I noticed this week the station now starts its 5 p.m. newscast with "Forecast First" — a complete weather report from chief meteorologist Tom Sorrells before the news even begins. And if you turn to Local 6 to watch Forecast First, the thinking is you might hang around for the newscast, too.

Of course, weather is important to WKMG. They still devote more than half of the Wednesday night newscast to "Big Picture Weather Wednesday."

So, what’s the long-range forecast for Forecast First on WKMG? Consult your nearest Nielsen Doppler.

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