Fernando Valley and Bakersfield). Similar story, rationalized by the news
value of a highway being impacted, but always the same interviews with
stranded motorists and truckers, CHP spokespersons.
Of course, Easterners are totally amused at this.
(The day my then-soon-to-be-wife and I left Baltimore for her to meet my
family in Albany, the Balto. radio announcers were exclaiming about a whole
inch of snow, then reading all the school closures. As we passed through
Harrisburg, PA, the radio was saying, "Well, turned out to be not much snow,
only about five inches." No closures. Mind you, in Balto., weather is such
they never plow the side streets [it'll melt by tomorrow], but in Harrisburg
it actually snows in the winter. [By the time we got into NY's Catskills,
the plows were great big things with wing plows as well.])
----- Original Message -----
From: "Vic" <sactovic@yahoo.com>
To: <californiadisasters@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2011 9:14 AM
Subject: [californiadisasters] Re: Batten Down The Hatches!
Every TV market has its unique local characteristics. One that stands out in
Sacramento is the way the local stations report winter weather. It almost
never snows in Sacramento, but as Grams knows, when it starts snowing in the
Sierra, they all send remote trucks with reporters and cameras up to a spot
off I-80 about halfway between here and Reno called Blue Canyon. The reason
they all go to the same spot is it's the farthest distance that the trucks
can broadcast and get a signal back to the stations. It's a regular ritual,
which is almost painful to watch: Reporters bundled up like Eskimos and
looking absolutely miserable reporting on how cold and miserable it is. Part
of the misery is that they have to stay there for a couple of hours to do
repeated live shots throughout the news broadcasts. And they've been doing
it for so many years that there are absolutely no new ideas to make the next
report a little more interesting or creative than the last one. I know at
least one reporter who quit some years ago and went to work for the state
largely because he couldn't stand another trip to Blue Canyon.
--- In californiadisasters@yahoogroups.com, Carlos L-M <laremasters@...>
wrote:
>
>
> Just heard scuttle that there is a tornado "warning" in the bay area. I
have seen no official word, so treat it as such.
>
> Carlos
>
>
>
> To: californiadisasters@yahoogroups.com
> From: sactovic@...
> Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2011 16:30:29 +0000
> Subject: [californiadisasters] Re: Batten Down The Hatches!
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Raining steadily in Sacramento. Hail and thunder yesterday.
>
> Vic
>
> --- In californiadisasters@yahoogroups.com, grams46@ wrote:
> >
> > we are in el dorado county - northern california - 2100 feet. we have
> > had 1.81 inches of rain in the last three days and about ten minutes of
rock
> > salt sized hail yesterday. freezing temps in the night.
> > we could get another inch of rain today. raining now.
> > peace from kathy
> >
>
------------------------------------
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