definitely not! Landscaper
riverrataggie said:
Time to start a spring storm thread?
mAgnoliAg said:
Big storms for Thursday?
riverrataggie said:
Did they change the definition of severe Thunderstorm?
It seems recently over the past several year any thunderstorm is now considered severe. I can't recall a day of storms that didn't have a risk of being severe.
Maybe they changed the risk level?
YouBet said:riverrataggie said:
Did they change the definition of severe Thunderstorm?
It seems recently over the past several year any thunderstorm is now considered severe. I can't recall a day of storms that didn't have a risk of being severe.
Maybe they changed the risk level?
We are now naming storms (not hurricanes). Part of this is simply marketing to create drama, eyeballs, and clicks.
GarlandAg2012 said:YouBet said:riverrataggie said:
Did they change the definition of severe Thunderstorm?
It seems recently over the past several year any thunderstorm is now considered severe. I can't recall a day of storms that didn't have a risk of being severe.
Maybe they changed the risk level?
We are now naming storms (not hurricanes). Part of this is simply marketing to create drama, eyeballs, and clicks.
Or to create engagement to get people to pay attention and stay safe. Depends who you ask.
Not sure ratings have anything to do with it when the live breaking coverage interrupts the show or game you are watching.GarlandAg2012 said:
I think it's far from weekly. And if it were truly oversaturating people, it wouldn't get high ratings. It isn't logical to say they're just doing it for ratings AND it's so frequent no one pays attention.
riverrataggie said:GarlandAg2012 said:YouBet said:riverrataggie said:
Did they change the definition of severe Thunderstorm?
It seems recently over the past several year any thunderstorm is now considered severe. I can't recall a day of storms that didn't have a risk of being severe.
Maybe they changed the risk level?
We are now naming storms (not hurricanes). Part of this is simply marketing to create drama, eyeballs, and clicks.
Or to create engagement to get people to pay attention and stay safe. Depends who you ask.
Eh when you classify everything as severe and it's weekly, then nothing is severe.
bert harbinson said:riverrataggie said:GarlandAg2012 said:YouBet said:riverrataggie said:
Did they change the definition of severe Thunderstorm?
It seems recently over the past several year any thunderstorm is now considered severe. I can't recall a day of storms that didn't have a risk of being severe.
Maybe they changed the risk level?
We are now naming storms (not hurricanes). Part of this is simply marketing to create drama, eyeballs, and clicks.
Or to create engagement to get people to pay attention and stay safe. Depends who you ask.
Eh when you classify everything as severe and it's weekly, then nothing is severe.
Everything is severe and we're all going to die. That's how all news is these days.
Hell thats how half of TexAgs is these daysbert harbinson said:riverrataggie said:GarlandAg2012 said:YouBet said:riverrataggie said:
Did they change the definition of severe Thunderstorm?
It seems recently over the past several year any thunderstorm is now considered severe. I can't recall a day of storms that didn't have a risk of being severe.
Maybe they changed the risk level?
We are now naming storms (not hurricanes). Part of this is simply marketing to create drama, eyeballs, and clicks.
Or to create engagement to get people to pay attention and stay safe. Depends who you ask.
Eh when you classify everything as severe and it's weekly, then nothing is severe.
Everything is severe and we're all going to die. That's how all news is these days.
List of storm names to be used this season: Generac, Briggs, Stratton, Champion, HondaYouBet said:riverrataggie said:
Did they change the definition of severe Thunderstorm?
It seems recently over the past several year any thunderstorm is now considered severe. I can't recall a day of storms that didn't have a risk of being severe.
Maybe they changed the risk level?
We are now naming storms (not hurricanes). Part of this is simply marketing to create drama, eyeballs, and clicks.
THURSDAY: Storms likely develop west of Fort Worth early afternoon, form into a line, and moves east through NTX. DFW timing as of now 4-8pm. Main threats with that line will be wind/hail. A higher tornado threat east of DFW. #wfaaweather pic.twitter.com/9sxW2U01l0
— Pete Delkus (@wfaaweather) March 1, 2023
DFW is now included in the Moderate (4 out of 5) Risk for severe weather this afternoon. Widespread severe storms are expected today. Timing hasn't changed. All hazards are still possible including hail up to baseball size, winds up to 75 mph & tornadoes #wfaaweather pic.twitter.com/AYHh44Ud5z
— Pete Delkus (@wfaaweather) March 2, 2023