Tone turns ominous at The Weather Channel

NEW YORK (AP) - The Weather Channel had its third straight day of a round-the-clock vigil for the approaching superstorm, and the tone of its meteorologists turned more ominous Sunday with evidence building that their forecasts would come true.
The network is planning to live-stream its television coverage online so people in the eastern United States who lose power can keep up with the news on their mobile devices. The storm is expected to affect some 50 million people.
"We want you to know we are not hyping this storm, OK?" on-air meteorologist Vivian Brown said. "We don't do that at The Weather Channel because we want you to be alert and aware."
Other television networks mixed news of Hurricane Sandy with stories like the presidential campaign. In New York, the local CBS outlet ran a split screen with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie delivering a storm briefing Sunday afternoon and the New York Jets' game against the Miami Dolphins.
But Hurricane Sandy, which is mixing with other weather systems to create a storm of unprecedented strength in the region, kept the undivided attention of The Weather Channel.
The network's Julie Martin, stationed on a beach in Nags Head, N.C., looked increasingly weary of the wind and rain as she described the storm's staying power in a series of live reports.
Meteorologist Jim Cantore, the network's most visible personality, said it was unlike anything he'd ever seen or covered. He had to take a brief break from his live reports from New York's Battery Park City to move his belongings because his hotel had been evacuated; his publicist's apartment was also in the evacuation zone.
Bryan Norcross, the network's senior hurricane specialist, explained in an interview that the network tries to keep its tone serious yet urgent. The network's computer models have been consistent in their forecasts of the storm and it has been acting as anticipated, perhaps with even more strength.
"Our goal has been to get people to appreciate the magnitude of the storm and try to prove to them that, based on everything we know, that this is going to be a system that is outside of their experience," Norcross said.
The Weather Channel sent a message via Twitter calling it "an extraordinary storm, an extremely serious threat" and urged followers to re-tweet it. The storm "will occupy a place in the annals of weather history as one of the most extraordinary to have affected the United States," the network tweeted.
Quickly, the Business Insider tweeted: "WHOA. The Weather Channel meteorologist just completely freaked out."
Twitter filled with messages of concern for people in its path, as well as a few oddities. Comic Ricky Gervais made an unprintable suggestion as a joke, while media mogul Rupert Murdoch tweeted: "Eerie feeling, but kids getting ready to celebrate no school."
ABC News posted a blog of storm-related news, while another Twitter message contained links to live webcams where computer users could track the storm's progress.
Cosmopolitan magazine tweeted advice for "how to cut your bangs at home (because if you're going to be house-bound for Sandy, why not?)." ''Sesame Street" offered a hurricane toolkit to help children understand what's going on.
Judging by The Weather Channel, there were also people who saw a business opportunity. There were frequent commercials from companies that make generators for people to keep electricity going in their homes if the power lines go down.
Partly to underline the seriousness of the situation, The Weather Channel has refrained from using the "Frankenstorm" nickname coined by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration last week when the storm was a model on its computer forecasts.
"Being cute about this storm is not the right idea," Norcross said.
The network is planning to live-stream its television coverage online so people in the eastern United States who lose power can keep up with the news on their mobile devices. The storm is expected to affect some 50 million people.
"We want you to know we are not hyping this storm, OK?" on-air meteorologist Vivian Brown said. "We don't do that at The Weather Channel because we want you to be alert and aware."
Other television networks mixed news of Hurricane Sandy with stories like the presidential campaign. In New York, the local CBS outlet ran a split screen with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie delivering a storm briefing Sunday afternoon and the New York Jets' game against the Miami Dolphins.
But Hurricane Sandy, which is mixing with other weather systems to create a storm of unprecedented strength in the region, kept the undivided attention of The Weather Channel.
The network's Julie Martin, stationed on a beach in Nags Head, N.C., looked increasingly weary of the wind and rain as she described the storm's staying power in a series of live reports.
Meteorologist Jim Cantore, the network's most visible personality, said it was unlike anything he'd ever seen or covered. He had to take a brief break from his live reports from New York's Battery Park City to move his belongings because his hotel had been evacuated; his publicist's apartment was also in the evacuation zone.
Bryan Norcross, the network's senior hurricane specialist, explained in an interview that the network tries to keep its tone serious yet urgent. The network's computer models have been consistent in their forecasts of the storm and it has been acting as anticipated, perhaps with even more strength.
"Our goal has been to get people to appreciate the magnitude of the storm and try to prove to them that, based on everything we know, that this is going to be a system that is outside of their experience," Norcross said.
The Weather Channel sent a message via Twitter calling it "an extraordinary storm, an extremely serious threat" and urged followers to re-tweet it. The storm "will occupy a place in the annals of weather history as one of the most extraordinary to have affected the United States," the network tweeted.
Quickly, the Business Insider tweeted: "WHOA. The Weather Channel meteorologist just completely freaked out."
Twitter filled with messages of concern for people in its path, as well as a few oddities. Comic Ricky Gervais made an unprintable suggestion as a joke, while media mogul Rupert Murdoch tweeted: "Eerie feeling, but kids getting ready to celebrate no school."
ABC News posted a blog of storm-related news, while another Twitter message contained links to live webcams where computer users could track the storm's progress.
Cosmopolitan magazine tweeted advice for "how to cut your bangs at home (because if you're going to be house-bound for Sandy, why not?)." ''Sesame Street" offered a hurricane toolkit to help children understand what's going on.
Judging by The Weather Channel, there were also people who saw a business opportunity. There were frequent commercials from companies that make generators for people to keep electricity going in their homes if the power lines go down.
Partly to underline the seriousness of the situation, The Weather Channel has refrained from using the "Frankenstorm" nickname coined by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration last week when the storm was a model on its computer forecasts.
"Being cute about this storm is not the right idea," Norcross said.
this is such an interesting article. for more see http://www.unn.edu.ng
My aunt's in Braintree, MA...I hope that she and all the other East Coasties stay safe!
I saw on the news that one area that was evacuating people were having those who stayed sign waivers and acknowledgements that they understood that they wouldn't be rescued until after the storm was over.
@jcman that's one of the best ideas I've ever heard. I get tired of reading about first responders risking their lives for people who either didn't take the warnings seriously, or who were just too stubborn to move.
It will be a large and devastating storm, as it appears right now. BUT.. I have to say that Weather Channel should be ashamed of their sensationalism. Â Headlines like "Tens of Millions in Path of Terrifying Storm!" Â All of their headlines use words like "terrifying" and basically instead of offering real news and help they push this meme. Â
 @DT But, from every known measure of the facts of this storm, the potential danger from it IS terrifying! I'd rather have them hype this up a bit than to watch stories about "Tens of Millions trapped by Terrifying Storm!"...
I really don't think any rational person can over hype the danger of this storm.
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OTOH, if they failed to predict the risks, they would probably be sent to prison in Italy...
Just a thought but isn't this an east coast storm.... well.... then enough already with the media onslaught. How about reporting the epic storm after it wreaks havoc now? I think the whole world knows about Frakenweenie now.... :D)
 @Funky-Munky in Italy they now prosecute Emergency Management for under-warning, that may just have scared our ownÂ
@Komo Dragon @Funky-Munky Yeah - I couldn't believe it.Â
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The knuckleheads in L'Aquila, Italy actually convicted 7 seismologists of manslaughter for not predicting a destructive earthquake in 2009 that killed 300 people.  Â
Instead of taking into account their own complicity in the number of deaths by ignoring the need for improved building codes and reinforcing existing structures, they lay blame on scientists.Â
That's like a smoker suing his doctor after getting terminal cancer because the doctor predicted that the patient could get cancer from smoking but didn't say when it would happen.
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For their sake's I'm hoping that someone grows a brain and gets the judgment overturned.
 @Funky-Munky Well, many people in the PNW have family (I do) and friends and even business connections in the target area...I'm sure they want to make sure that the people they know are doing what is needed to be safe.
Do they realize that if there are massive power outages that your cell phone won't work? The towers need power too. Ask the people emergency workers that were handed cell phones as means of communication for Katrina. The only thing that works is Satellite phones.
 @okihusker I think the bigger issue isn't power but that the towers get so overwhelmed that hardly anything gets through.
@okihusker: Sorry, but you are wrong. Cell towers as well as land line switching centers have emergency power generators for just such nasty conditions.
@usnrbb:Â True, as long as those cell towers aren't blown down.
Just a matter of time till the local news casts somehow bring the northwest into this Frankenstorm with some live news from someone's great aunt living on the New York coast...Â
@Windowseat So true! "Local ties with hurricane Sandy, news at 11"
With any luck maybe it will wash Manhattan Island out into the Atlantic.lol
 @Blindman Why? I've got a few friends there. That is a very horrible thing to say.Â
This storm is going to be brutal, if you have loved ones in its path please try and convince them to get out ASAP! (I've called my friends, and my family who could potentially be in its path, the majority are leaving, but I have that one idiot friend who is deciding to stay. I hope he makes it out alive.)
I haven't seen a NWS message this serious since Katrina.Â
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1. IF YOU ARE BEING ASKED TO EVACUATE A COASTAL LOCATION BY STATE AND LOCAL OFFICIALS, PLEASE DO SO. 2. IF YOU ARE RELUCTANT TO EVACUATE, AND YOU KNOW SOMEONE WHO RODE OUT THE '62 STORM ON THE BARRIER ISLANDS, ASK THEM IF THEY COULD DO IT AGAIN. 3. IF YOU ARE RELUCTANT, THINK ABOUT YOUR LOVED ONES, THINK ABOUT THE EMERGENCY RESPONDERS WHO WILL BE UNABLE TO REACH YOU WHEN YOU MAKE THE PANICKED PHONE CALL TO BE RESCUED, THINK ABOUT THE RESCUE/RECOVERY TEAMS WHO WILL RESCUE YOU IF YOU ARE INJURED OR RECOVER YOUR REMAINS IF YOU DO NOT SURVIVE. 4. SANDY IS AN EXTREMELY DANGEROUS STORM. THERE WILL BE MAJOR PROPERTY DAMAGE, INJURIES ARE PROBABLY UNAVOIDABLE, BUT THE GOAL IS ZERO FATALITIES. 5. IF YOU THINK THE STORM IS OVER-HYPED AND EXAGGERATED, PLEASE ERR ON THE SIDE OF CAUTION.
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http://kamala.cod.edu/nj/latest.nous41.KPHI.html
 @quidproquo Sadly, as someone who was a search and rescue professional for eight years the amazingly selfish do not think, do not consider, do not even ponder for one second the danger they put others in when they make that, "come rescue me I'm going to die call," if the call is even acknowledged in the first place.
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No one considers the trauma of seeing battered dead bodies, needless deaths in so many cases.
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My advice if you're in a storm surge evacuation area and you're not leaving. Get a Sharpie and write your social security number on your torso, if you're a female at the base of the rib cage just below the breasts, if you're a male, along the sternum and on your pecs. These are the parts of your body least likely to get torn up. It helps search and rescue professionals with rapid identification - that way your family doesn't have to wait days, weeks, or months, wondering if you're alive or not.
@Howard Beale @quidproquo Thank you for your service. Not just physically but emotionally taxing and vital to people and their families who were in the wrong place at the wrong time as well as those who refused to leave.
 @Howard Beale  @quidproquo If you don't mind my asking, did you work during Katrina?  Just curious.  I gotta tell you, I don't think I would be able to do it.
 @stamperzann  @quidproquo No, was done with my duty in '89. But have seen what being battered around in sea debris can do to a body. It's not pretty.
Any storm anywhere will always be exaggerated for ratings. Nothing new here.
 @dorimonsonfan As someone who spent 8 years on a search and rescue team, it is idiots like you that put people like me in harms way to rescue your sorry arse because you didn't heed the "hype."
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We're the ones who have to go out in 80 MPH winds and flooded streets to deal with the frantic come rescue me call because I'm an idiot.
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Spend some time in emergency services and you'll never ignore a get prepared weather warning again. Ya, 80% of the time it isn't as bad, it veers off, moves faster, moves slower, weakens, gets a few degrees warmer changing snow to rain, or a few degrees cooler sucking the life out of a hurricane. But it is those 20% times - when people don't listen.
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The people in Joplin, Missouri had almost 25 minutes warning - but were so numb to the endless tornado warnings of the previous few days, many did nothing. Great result, huh?
@Howard Beale @Sid Vishess @dorimonsonfanÂ
"We're the ones who have to go out in 80 MPH winds and flooded streets". Please don't tell me you work for a news outlet and are one of those people doing the live newscasts.
 @Klondiko Ummm, pretty sure the first sentence of his post said he was involved with search & rescue??Â
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 @dorimonsonfan he actual National Weather Service (not the weather channel) doesn't care about ratings. They seem pretty worried about this storm.
 @dorimonsonfan Check out some of FOX News coverage of this storm.  While I 100% completely understand the seriousness of Hurricane Sandy and the dangers the storm presents to those living in its' path, FOX News still managed to go overboard with dramatic sensationalism that left me laughing out loud as I watched it.
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And no, I don't find this storm funny.
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TWC is jealous that they didn't think of "Frankenstorm" first.
Sorry... Franken-SHTURM, Franken-SHTURM.Â
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(HatTip to "Young FrankenSTEIN")