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Have the Weather Channel and rest of media overhyped Irene?

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69 comments

Have the Weather Channel and rest of media overhyped Irene?

POSTED: Friday, August 26, 2011, 8:07 PM

 

Wow. Hurricane Irene -- or maybe Tropical Storm Irene to any New Yorkers reading this -- hasn't hit the Northeast yet. But already -- and yes, I'm mixing my catastrophe metaphors here -- the fallout has begun. News that the sustained winds of what some have billed as "the storm of the century" or "the East Coast's Katrina" have already dipped below 100 mph before the storm even makes its first landfall in North Carolina have sparked what you might call Friday Night Quarterbacking.

Consider what one expert wrote tonight:

The demise of Irene has already begun. There is no visible eye. The storm intensity is down to 99 mph. This would be a low-end category 2 or a strong category 1 storm, while 36 hours ago some predicted a catastrophic category 4 storm. Air Force Reserve aircraft have found that Irene's eyewall has collapsed, and the central pressure has risen -- rising pressure means a weakening storm.

Already on social networks and elsewhere, there's a growing chorus of complainers that the storm has been overhyped, and many are blaming the media -- specifically the Weather Channel, a for-profit venture that flourishes on weather misery  -- for overdramatizing the storm for TV ratings and the dollars that flow with that. It's not just bloggers in pajamas in their mother's basement who are griping; even the Washington Post has joined the crowd of pre-Irene skeptics. It specifically went after the Weather Channel:.

While expressing great admiration for Weather Channel hurricane expert Bryan Norcross, Ryan calls “pretty apocalyptic” his vision for the course of Irene.

Weather watchers with the Washington Post’s Capital Weather Gang pronounce a similar skepticism. Gang member Dan Stillman: “It’s not going to be unprecedented for North Carolina or even the mid-Atlantic. And given that it will probably be no worse than a low-to-mid-end Category 1 when it gets to New York City, it’s not going to be their Katrina — even though significant flooding and damaging winds are possible, both inland and especially toward the coast, in both the mid-Atlantic and the Northeast.”

So...are the skeptics right? Is Irene going to be the hurricane/tropical storm equivalent of all hat and no cattle? My answer is something that seems impossible for anyone living in the 21st Century: Let's just wait and see! It's already clear that Irene won't be the Cat 3 or even Cat 4 monster some were hyping a day or two ago; on the other hand, some otherwise unmemorable, no-name storms have been known to cause lengthy power outages, dangerous downed trees, and basement flooding in my neck of the woods. I'm preparing for those things -- which are pretty bad, "East Coast Katrina" or no "East Coast Katrina" -- to happen again this weekend. So should you.

Still, it will be a big problem, in my opinion, if we wake up Monday morning and learn that Irene was hugely overhyped. Why? Because some day in this century, there really will be "the storm of the century." But if the public officials who ended up looking silly with their hair-trigger evacuations and cancellations of everything from trains to baseball games issue the exact same warnings then, will anyone listen to them -- or the Weather Channel?


Will Bunch @ 8:07 PM  Permalink | 69 comments
69 comments
Comments  (71)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:36 AM, 08/27/2011
    THe media overhypes just about every story,this isa bad storm.But they called this a cat 3 pretty much tuned the media out.it is almost laughable
    jimmyanon
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:48 AM, 08/27/2011
    the news media are just doing their corporate masters' bidding. Make a panicked trip to the supermarket, buy too many thinks you don't need. It's not to say that preparedness isn't important, but you don't need to buy 3 cases of evian, just fill a couple of handy containers with tap water. You don't need a drawer full of backup batteries, one set should suffice.
    Pelti
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:42 AM, 08/27/2011
    This comment has been deleted.
    TyroneShoes
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:12 PM, 08/27/2011
    Nicely done...I bet they poncho people in the mouth
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:48 PM, 08/27/2011
    "Have the Weather Channel and rest of media overhyped Irene?"

    The more I think about it, the more that question reminds me of the question: "Have you stopped beating your wife?"

    There will be less threat to life and property due to the "hype."

    There may well be less threat to life and property than speculated, due to the hype."

    Talking point sleuth
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:05 PM, 08/27/2011
    Making preparation for a disaster and the disaster not happening is a minor annoyance. Adopting your attitude that it's all hype and no substance while making no prepartions for a disaster that does happen is idiotic. No need to wonder much on which side of the formula you just placed yourself, Mr. Bunch!
    DonQ
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:55 PM, 08/27/2011
    I'll bet the folks who made their way out to the Phillies' game today are glad they didn't listen to the meteorologists and government officials. The point that you can't do the necessary precautions for the entire eastern seaboard in an hour or two is apparently lost on the 21st century Aesops.
    lookatitright
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:08 PM, 08/27/2011
    As one who obeyed the mandatory evacuation order, I certainly hope it was "overhyped"...
    AngryWhiteMale
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:11 PM, 08/27/2011
    In my view the Weather Channel has greatly over-hyped Irene. Instead of degreed meteorologists, they are starting to use weather broadcasters who have completed a mini-camp at the Mississippi State University. I think the National Weather Service is the only safe way to get weather related news. The Weather Channel (which is now owned by Comcast) has become weather entertainment.
    BobSG
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:43 PM, 08/27/2011
    8 inches of rain isn't hype
    bobbyd24
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:31 PM, 08/27/2011
    Its bad. I'm almost out of Old Milwaukee Light.
    Morty Seinfeld
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:40 PM, 08/27/2011
    The simple answer is yes, they have over-hyped it for ratings.
    Hemingway
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:59 PM, 08/27/2011
    This comment has been deleted.
    TyroneShoes


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Will Bunch, a senior writer at the Philadelphia Daily News, blogs about his obsessions, including national and local politics and world affairs, the media, pop music, the Philadelphia Phillies, soccer and other sports, not necessarily in that order.

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