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September 29, 2024, 08:29:18 am
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Author Topic: Ugly storms tonight....  (Read 7339 times)
mrhaskellok
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« on: May 01, 2008, 08:16:55 pm »

Too bad more coming tonight...I hear though they wont have the tornado potential like these ones do.  

Hope everyone here is safe tonight and not in the path of those two storms.
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buzz words
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« Reply #1 on: May 01, 2008, 08:45:38 pm »

Channel 6 has the storm chaser's I think that is cool.  Why doesn't channel 2 have storm chaser's?
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CoffeeBean
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« Reply #2 on: May 01, 2008, 09:19:03 pm »

Apparently the level of danger presented by the weather is entirely dependent upon the ten o'clock news.  

Channel 8 preemptes programming all night because of the weather UNTIL ten o'clock when Diana Zoga has a story about firearm safety.  

What a crock of ****.
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yldchyld
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« Reply #3 on: May 02, 2008, 12:01:33 am »

Was sitting at O'Brien Park watching my son's baseball game and lots of lightning was just to the north of us. Someone said a tornado was down near Pawhuska. People stood up like they were going to leave til a dad said, 'hey we're south of Pawhuska, sit back down you're all right." Funny, why can't our local weathermen say that to us.
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YoungTulsan
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« Reply #4 on: May 02, 2008, 01:46:03 am »

quote:
Originally posted by CoffeeBean

Apparently the level of danger presented by the weather is entirely dependent upon the ten o'clock news.  

Channel 8 preemptes programming all night because of the weather UNTIL ten o'clock when Diana Zoga has a story about firearm safety.  

What a crock of ****.



The threat to populated areas died shortly before 10.  There was no BS.
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JoeMommaBlake
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« Reply #5 on: May 02, 2008, 10:20:50 am »

All I care about is LOST...and I missed it. My DVR recorded an hour of weather.

Now my productivity will go down today as I watch it on ABC.com.

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« Reply #6 on: May 02, 2008, 10:21:06 am »

quote:
Originally posted by yldchyld

Was sitting at O'Brien Park watching my son's baseball game and lots of lightning was just to the north of us. Someone said a tornado was down near Pawhuska. People stood up like they were going to leave til a dad said, 'hey we're south of Pawhuska, sit back down you're all right." Funny, why can't our local weathermen say that to us.

I bet the folks North of Pawhuska did not sit back down.[xx(]
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« Reply #7 on: May 02, 2008, 11:25:41 am »

quote:
Originally posted by JoeMommaBlake

All I care about is LOST...and I missed it. My DVR recorded an hour of weather.

Now my productivity will go down today as I watch it on ABC.com.





+1

They could just as well not show the weather and let viewers go to those stations.

The sad thing is that weather drives ratings in Oklahoma.

That said, advertisers HATE getting preempted for weather, particularly if it is a special show like a sporting event.
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yldchyld
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« Reply #8 on: May 02, 2008, 12:34:39 pm »

No doubt north of Pawhuska took shelter hopefully. My point was, if there is no immediate danger in my area then let me watch my son's baseball game without running for cover when there is no danger. I miss the good old days when we didn't need weathermen to remind us its raining outside. Tornadoes - yep that's serious, but thunderstorms- come on, get real.
« Last Edit: May 02, 2008, 12:37:56 pm by yldchyld » Logged
TUalum0982
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« Reply #9 on: May 02, 2008, 12:39:56 pm »

quote:
Originally posted by JoeMommaBlake

All I care about is LOST...and I missed it. My DVR recorded an hour of weather.

Now my productivity will go down today as I watch it on ABC.com.





they typically will rebroadcast these shows when they do breaking weather.  here is the article, apparently they have decided what times to reair the shows.


http://www.ktul.com/news/stories/0508/516214.html
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CoffeeBean
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« Reply #10 on: May 03, 2008, 10:09:46 am »

quote:
Originally posted by YoungTulsan

quote:
Originally posted by CoffeeBean

Apparently the level of danger presented by the weather is entirely dependent upon the ten o'clock news.  

Channel 8 preemptes programming all night because of the weather UNTIL ten o'clock when Diana Zoga has a story about firearm safety.  

What a crock of ****.



The threat to populated areas died shortly before 10.  There was no BS.



Maybe I'm wrong, but Northeast Oklahoma and Southeast Kansas are both "populated" areas.  This isn't the middle of Nevada.  

. . . or do you mean, "people who do not live in the city or in small towns do not count as people."
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inteller
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« Reply #11 on: May 03, 2008, 09:09:04 pm »

quote:
Originally posted by Steve

Like most people, I get very frustrated at the Tulsa TV stations' weather coverage, especially when the threat is not near my home in the City of Tulsa, but a storm down by Sallisaw or up near Kansas.  



oh yes thats right, we should let the television stations in Sallisaw and Coffeyville cover the weather there.[Cool]
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bugo
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« Reply #12 on: May 04, 2008, 12:39:36 am »


quote:
Originally posted by Steve

quote:
Originally posted by inteller

quote:
Originally posted by Steve

Like most people, I get very frustrated at the Tulsa TV stations' weather coverage, especially when the threat is not near my home in the City of Tulsa, but a storm down by Sallisaw or up near Kansas.  



oh yes thats right, we should let the television stations in Sallisaw and Coffeyville cover the weather there.[Cool]



Do Sallisaw and Coffeyville have major network affiliate stations with the weather capabilities that Tulsa TV stations have?  Maybe so, but not to my knowledge.  That is why I give "benefit of the doubt" to Tulsa TV stations during severe weather coverage.  But granted, Tulsa TV carries things to the extreme.  Like I said before, the Tulsa TV weathermen should have to sit and watch a 4 hour tape of their own coverage; they could learn a lot from that.


Sallisaw is closer to Fort Smith than to Tulsa.  Growing up watching KFSM in Fort Smith, I can attest they cover Sequoyah County extremely well (they have to, as much of Fort Smith's weather comes directly from there...)  That being said, I don't have a problem with programming being prempted by a storm in the remote fringes of the viewing area.  I'd rather watch the weather coverage than most of the crap on TV these days anyway.
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bugo
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« Reply #13 on: May 04, 2008, 12:47:48 am »

quote:
Originally posted by yldchyld

No doubt north of Pawhuska took shelter hopefully. My point was, if there is no immediate danger in my area then let me watch my son's baseball game without running for cover when there is no danger. I miss the good old days when we didn't need weathermen to remind us its raining outside. Tornadoes - yep that's serious, but thunderstorms- come on, get real.



A couple of weeks ago we had a round of storms, and a tornado warning was issued for Tulsa County about 2 or 3 AM.  The cell in question was near the Keystone Dam area and tracked towards Skiatook. The tornado sirens went off in Midtown.  In no way was any of the city of Tulsa in danger (except for maybe the northern fringes).  I had some friends call and ask what was going on (they know I'm kind of a weather junkie) and I told them to just go back to sleep.  Later, somebody told me they heard the sirens go off and got in their closet and stayed in there for 20 minutes.  Why do they do this?  Okies are afraid of the weather enough as it is, so why the false alarms?  I'm assuming this happens because tornado warnings are issued for counties instead of cities.  Can't they do any better?
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bugo
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« Reply #14 on: May 04, 2008, 12:55:27 am »

quote:
Originally posted by Steve

Like most people, I get very frustrated at the Tulsa TV stations' weather coverage, especially when the threat is not near my home in the City of Tulsa, but a storm down by Sallisaw or up near Kansas.  But we should also remember that the Tulsa broadcast stations not only serve the City, but a wide geographic area, from southern Kansas to southeast OK.  I try to remind myself of that everytime they preempt.

But I do think their on-air presentation is getting out of hand with all the multi-colored radar screens and displays that mean nothing to the average viewer.  Travis Meyer (and others) should be forced to sit down and watch a 4-hour tape of his incessant babbling and repetition.



I like the multi-colored radars.  They are very simple to read, and even a novice like myself can "forecast" the weather by reading a looped radar image.  One day I was looking at a radar, and a friend called.  I saw what appeared to be a hook echo, and told him that's where the storm probably was.  A minute or so later, they mentioned on the TV that a tornado was on the ground in that exact location.  Point is, I have no weather training, and I can easily read the radars.  I assume the typical viewer who is the least bit weather savvy can do the same.  

I do tend to ignore the babbling, except I do listen to that older gentleman on channel 6, as he seems to really know what he's talking about.  What I do not like is how they have the live remote feeds at night.  A gray screen isn't very informative, and I've seen it rain, so unless you have a remote feed of a tornado on the ground, why bother?

The weirdest thing about Tulsa weather coverage to me is that station that has the radar with the little "pulpit" in the right corner.  That is plain weird.  Reminds me of sitting in church when I was a kid.
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