Hurricane Irene TV news reports – a bridge too far?

I just got done watching about 30 minutes of the special “Hurricane Irene Information” Channel 259 on DirecTV where they are carrying live reports from ABC7 out of New York City. I’ve watched many TV channels tonight like it.

I had to laugh, because they had some kid with a goofy smile on his face named Scott Goldberg in Times Square who looked like “Fez” from That 70’s Show prattling on about the wind and rain while meanwhile in the background the mega-signage of Times Square flashing in the background and cabbies going along the street in a business as usual mode along with some Saturday night revelers heckling the camera from behind him. The lower third super says “Irene Arrives”.

Then they switched to a live report from Ocean City, MD, with some guy standing in what looked like the city park pointing out waving trees in the background, but he himself had no trouble standing up to do the report. Some B-roll showed some guy mugging for the camera elsewhere trying to “hold up” a tree. Of course the tree wasn’t falling over at all and he was just doing the usual silly things people do on camera sometimes.

Now we have a reporter in a  red windbreaker who’s standing just off some rip-rap on the beach in New Jersey knee deep in some muddy water, holding a mic and adjusting his hip waders. He doesn’t realize he’s on camera and neither does the camera operator, who reveals when he pulls back just how “staged” the shot actually is.

Then we get treated to more shots of reporters around the area, standing in wind and rain, with idle commentary, basically waiting for something significant to report. B-roll footage used in live shots is now on repeats, so it appears they are out of fresh video. So they pop back to the weather center to report on wind gusts from 57-70 mph in the Maryland beach areas.

The weather Channel has some guy doing standup reports in Virgina Beach Virgina, and they ran a collage of various standups he did during the day, in various poses and weather attire against the wind and rain. Meanwhile motorists in the background downtown area seem to be going about there business as usual.

Then we had the report of Obama “taking command” in the emergency bunker…for a Category 1 storm no less. I don’t ever recall a president doing this. It seemed more like a campaign photo op than anything else.

On other channels I’ve seen tonight: footage of wind, rain, boats, rocking in the marina, some tree and limbs down, and some roof and building damages that are all consistent with a strong storm like a Nor’easter, but what I don’t see is anything beyond that. Now that just may be they don’t have access to the “hardest hit” areas or it may mean there’s just not a lot happening. There’s lots of hand waving and graphical bling though.

First let me say that forecasters of this storm have done an admirable job of forecasting the track of this storm, our friend Joe Bastardi has done a great job at getting the word out and NOAA’s NHC has done a good job at keeping the country updated. Information is flowing smoothly, and there seems to be no hiccups at all there.

It is not a problem that officials have erred somewhat on the side of caution. It is better to occasionally overreact to potential disasters than be caught flat-footed and under prepared when more severe disasters strike. It would be arrogant to play “Monday morning quarterback”, literally Monday in this case, and to berate officials who had to make a judgement call and put public safety first.

But while the track forecasts and warnings were spot on, the intensity forecast however hasn’t been as accurate. Yes there are 70+ mph wind gusts, storm surge, widespread power outages, and reports of general damage, but as this storm moves in the Washington-Baltimore and NYC areas, it just doesn’t seem all that bad as it was advertised to be.

I certainly don’t want to make light of anyone who has suffered because of the storm, that’s not my intent at all. I’m only focusing on the state of news reporting.

I recall images of “The Perfect Storm” from 1991 which wasn’t a hurricane, and it seemed to produce damages far worse than this storm. Here it is below on satellite:

The "Perfect Storm" 1991
Hurricane Irene 2011

Irene, except for being closer to land in in this shot, doesn’t look all that different from “The Perfect Storm” of 1991.

In summary, it seems to me that much of the news coverage is just a bit “over the top” to me, mostly because they’ve committed themselves to round the clock coverage, but really have little to report on. They have to fill time somehow.

And where oh where is the AGW fueled intensity forecast by wild eyed activist turned arrestee Bill McKibben who said ocean temperatures were “bizarrely high”? He said:

“These warm ocean temperatures will also make Irene a much wetter hurricane than is typical, since much more water vapor can evaporate into the air from record-warm ocean surfaces.”

Sure it dumped a lot of rain, but no more than most other storms. For a hurricane that supposedly “has global warming as a middle name“, it sure doesn’t act like it. People should stop listening to this arrogant activist, he hyped the storm worse than the worst TV news reports.

Our own Charles the Moderator passed on a piece of video a few days ago that captures the essence of the state of TV news reporting on weather from 14 years ago. How little has changed. Here it is:

If you have similar examples of TV news excess, post them below.

UPDATE: This morning we are being treated to lots of imagery of down trees and branches, street flooding, and people gawking at waves along boardwalks in Long Island. It seems Irene wasn’t really much worse than a strong Nor’easter. Places with aged stormwater systems like Philadelphia couldn’t handle the combination of storm surge and heavy rain so there is a lot of flooding there.

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Frank K.
August 28, 2011 7:28 pm

Here comes the next storm (deservedly so)…
The Perfect Storm of Hype

“The images summed up Hurricane Irene – the media and the United States federal government trying to live up to their own doom-laden warnings and predictions while a sizeable number of ordinary Americans just carried on as normal and even made gentle fun of all the fuss.”
“There was almost palpable disappointment among the TV big guns rolled out for the occasion when Irene was downgraded to a mere ‘tropical storm”. In New York city, CNN’s silver-haired Anderson Cooper, more usually seen in a tight t-shirt in a famine or war zone, was clad in what one wag dubbed “disaster casual””

August 28, 2011 7:52 pm

Definitely no worse than Gloria in 1985…Gloria was Cat 2 when it hit NJ. I also can’t believe the drivel going on on Twitter yesterday comparing the Earthquake, hurricane, etc to the Day After Tomorrow! What ignorant d-bags! Does no one think the world existed before they were born!?!

Roger Knights
August 28, 2011 9:04 pm

JFK says:
August 28, 2011 at 4:57 pm
Who pressured nhc to keep calling it a hurricane when it broke up yesterday afternoon and was clearly not a hurricane?
………….
The nhc forecasts yesterday were absurd, showing the storm moving all the way from NC to new england with almost no loss of wind speed.

The NHC also falsely predicted, just before Irene made landfall, that it wouldn’t lose speed from its Category 2 status. And, even while its maximum sustained windspeed was 75 MPH (just above the cutoff for being a hurricane), it claimed that hurricane-force winds extended over 100 miles outward from the center, even though windspeed typically falls off sharply outside the core. I.e., it’s very unlikely that there’d be a very large zone of wind all moving at maximum speed. (And at that point there wasn’t much of a core anyway.)
I suspect the NHC is going to lose credibility among weathermen and the media as a result of this “spin.” (I wonder–is there a journal or website where meteorologists can make criticisms like these?)

Roger Knights
August 28, 2011 9:21 pm

Here’s a quote from Bloomberg News at http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-08-29/u-s-starts-cleanup-as-irene-leaves-trail-of-destruction-across-northeast.html

Irene did not pack the hurricane force winds that were predicted for the [New York] region.
“It could have been a lot worse in terms of storm surge, could have been worse in terms of the actual wind speeds,” [professor] Bediant said. “It did not strengthen like they [who?] originally thought.”

Who was saying it was going to strengthen except McKibben (sp?)?

Roger Knights
August 28, 2011 9:35 pm

If politicians want to be responsible and precautionary, they should make sure that electricity providers trim back overhanging limbs and cut down weak trees alongside their power lines in advance of storm season. Failure to do so is what causes the widespread power outages just seen. (In Cleveland, when a new owner took over the power company, it cut back sharply on this routine maintenance, resulting in a sharp increase in outages a few years later.)
Bloomberg News, and other MSM outlets, are emphasizing the large number of outages as a way of implying that their alarmism was justified, and that the storm was a monster. What these outages really indicate is that politicians and regulators were asleep at the switch. Outages shouldn’t be used as a proxy for a storm’s destructiveness.

Rational Debate
August 28, 2011 10:14 pm

Hark back to Agnes 1972 for some serious rainfall & fkooding,,,,

Susan P
August 28, 2011 10:46 pm

I’m just glad to see how many “regular folks” DIDN’T by into the hype and carried on with their lives with caution. Gives me hope for the average every-day American. Are you sure that “seafoam” guy wasn’t trying to hit it big on YouTube?..I swear that was a SNL skit.

Bern Bray
August 29, 2011 8:59 am

I was struck by the difference in tone of the talking heads from when hurricanes strike “flyover country”. It seemed much more important that it would actually strike New York, because that city is soooo much more important than where everyone else lives. Instead of showing serious flooding in Hatteras NC, they show some minor flooding in Brooklyn, how Times Square is unusually empty, and gosh, Bloomingdale’s is boarded up!
To the news people that reside in New York: pull your heads out and learn that the sewage pit you live in isn’t the center of the universe.

Brian H
August 30, 2011 4:56 pm

Edit: “about there business as usual.” their
Update: 40 dead.
Delayed: major flooding from wide rain bands on pre-soaked ground.
Coming: Katia, about a week
Bastardi: 5-7 US landfalls this year, nothing in the Gulf except local systems.

mydoggiedoesnotyap1
August 31, 2011 8:55 pm

What I love now is all the back peddling by all the major news medias….about how they “did not overeact.” What, did someone tell them they overeacting a bit? Or did they have some kind of conference and go over how they covered this storm…If that were the case can you imagine in hindsite just how stupid they must have felt….
The worse part of the storm for us on the Oregon Coast….was because of all they hyped news I quite worrying about my children who live in NJ who went to Ohio to “be safe.” When in fact they are still stuck in Ohio because of the flood waters in NJ….I quick watching the news because they were so over the top…..and missed the truly devastating effects of Irene….. I wonder how many other’s did the very same…… Crying wolf is not a good thing….