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Replies: 8
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National Champion [7261]
TigerPulse: 100%
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Since it's herricun season, a Jim Cantore story.
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Aug 7, 2024, 11:23 AM
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I covered a big hurricane once when I was a broadcast journo. It came off the Yucatan as a 1, slowed down and spun up to a 4? by landfall. It packed quite a punch.
The producers sent me and the photog to a hotel a few miles inland. We set up on a 14th floor balcony. The eye was probably 30 miles? away. Our job was do to live hits from the balcony for our audience back home.
The hotel had those big industrial generators so all the TV crews put themselves up there. Live trucks/sat trucks all over the place.
Between hits, I'd look down to see if the networks (Weather Channel, NBC, ABC, CBS, BBC, etc.) were live or not. You could tell because when someone goes live, the lights go on. When they cut back to the studio, the lights go off again.
I'm watching Cantore down there with his crash helmet do take after take, swaying/bracing in the wind. But between takes, he's got the helmet off and is standing stone still.
We saw maybe 90 mph winds where we were -- on the northwest side of the storm. Street signs would peel off and flail along the main drag, palm fronds would tear off and whip past us on the 14th floor. Rain coming in sideways. All that stuff. The hotel would sway/vibrate.
It was no big deal, really. But Cantore's out there doing the theatrical crap, whipping up the drama.
Now, a few of my colleagues were in the eye of the thing and they feared for their lives for a few hours. It was a long night for us all.
TL;DR:
Take it from me, while hurricanes (big ones, that is) do incomprehensible damage and destruction (depending on where they make landfall), they aren't the earth-killing events the TV folks like Cantore want you to believe they are.
It gets tired, watching them make every storm out to be the apocalypse. They're playing you. Sells ads.
People that survive such things rebuild, bounce back, and get on with living.
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Heisman Winner [83112]
TigerPulse: 100%
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Posts: 122221
Joined: 1998
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Re: Since it's herricun season, a Jim Cantore story.- How did we ever manage
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Aug 7, 2024, 11:26 AM
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to even have then before that bozo got here to tell us about them?
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National Champion [7261]
TigerPulse: 100%
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Re: Since it's herricun season, a Jim Cantore story.- How did we ever manage
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Aug 7, 2024, 11:29 AM
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He's made a good living off of chasing those storms. But ... I lost some respect for him that night.
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All-TigerNet [5940]
TigerPulse: 100%
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Re: Since it's herricun season, a Jim Cantore story.- How did we ever manage
Aug 7, 2024, 2:14 PM
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Wife and I were watching that live when he did the whole parking lot thing with the two dudes strolling past.
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Solid Orange [1312]
TigerPulse: 96%
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Re: Since it's herricun season, a Jim Cantore story.
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Aug 7, 2024, 11:26 AM
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visualizing buckets of water thrown at you while reading
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National Champion [7261]
TigerPulse: 100%
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I stuck my mic into the wind at one point.
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Aug 7, 2024, 11:28 AM
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Producer texted and said "That doesn't really help." LOL.
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Tiger Spirit [9989]
TigerPulse: 100%
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Re: Since it's herricun season, a Jim Cantore story.
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Aug 7, 2024, 11:28 AM
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No doubt they over dramatize it.
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National Champion [7261]
TigerPulse: 100%
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Highly.
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Aug 7, 2024, 11:30 AM
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Last year I watched a young journo in Charleston (or maybe it was the year before) use doomsday language to describe the flooding at the Battery.
Things were going along fine until a couple of HS boys went strolling past her in the half-light, ankle deep in the raging, destructive, globally-warmed flood waters.
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Playmaker [381]
TigerPulse: 100%
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Re: Highly.
Aug 7, 2024, 4:57 PM
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Forget the money. I’ve been through quite a few hurricanes and you have to be a dumb human being to go out on winds over 75 mph.
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