We too got sent home early today at 2. And it's a good thing too as I just barely made it out with the garage starting to flood
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The OP is really driving his weather schtick into the ground.
quote:quote:quote:I was getting a tour of the Ch. 13 studio and got to chat with one of the meteorologists who told me, "It's amazing how little science actually goes into this."quote:
Flatout -- no hype. I talked to one of our meteorologists directly -- probably our best forecaster. He says the worst stuff will happen late this afternoon and tonight. There could be severe flooding. The reason we haven't seen a lot yet is the fact the storm stalled and that was not anticipated. Because it stalled, it will draw up more moisture from the Gulf. The big question is where the massive rain band is going. It could be west of Houston in Columbus, or it could be pulled up into Houston. We are already seeing high water in low-lying areas. This has potential to be a dangerous situation. But, that is the key word, "potential." It's always a delicate balance for the news media when it comes to properly informing people when it comes to the danger and overhyping it. The truth is, forecasting is not an exact science.
Hmm. Forecasting is like exploration geology. There's typically about a 20 to 30% chance they are right. Biggest difference is there's no penalty if a meteorologist is wrong
For Broadcast meteorology sure, for the NWS/NOAA? No. The reality is that broadcast meteorologists don't have to do ****, they can get everything from the NWS or one of the major forcasting companies. There is zero science to it and anyone with a background in meteorology could do that job. It still amazes me that they hire actual meteorologist for that role rather than someone who just looks good like all of the Spanish channels.
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Flatout -- no hype. I talked to one of our meteorologists directly -- probably our best forecaster. He says the worst stuff will happen late this afternoon and tonight. There could be severe flooding. The reason we haven't seen a lot yet is the fact the storm stalled and that was not anticipated. Because it stalled, it will draw up more moisture from the Gulf. The big question is where the massive rain band is going. It could be west of Houston in Columbus, or it could be pulled up into Houston. We are already seeing high water in low-lying areas. This has potential to be a dangerous situation. But, that is the key word, "potential." It's always a delicate balance for the news media when it comes to properly informing people when it comes to the danger and overhyping it. The truth is, forecasting is not an exact science.
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Sure, they take a lot of products produced from 'scientists' and collect them, decipher them and then make predictions based on that so morons can understand it, but a nice ass and a pair of tits ain't gonna get it done. You guys realize that all of that data has to be parsed, much of which requires an actual science to do...yes? Please tell me you guys aren't that stupid.
quote:Channel 13 had one of their reporters stomping around the neighborhoods in Meyerland getting teary interviews from people in the afternoon worried their houses were going to flood again. There was maybe one puddle in his whole shot.
I don't think the hype was really that bad.
What I think can be confusing for people who don't know local geography is when the news people send cameras out in all directions to find a puddle in Seabrook or a strong breeze in High Island.
In contrast, they never gave us a shot of Braes Bayou and said, "Everything is fine here so far."
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If Bill and the Memorial Day floods would have been reversed, no one would have given two craps about Bill. Houston has just had bad luck with storms coming after high profile events (Rita after Katrina; Bill after Memorial Day).
quote:thanks, channel 2 weather man
I think this last band that is offshore has a real potential to nail Houston.
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Yep.
Too early to laugh off.
quote:I completely understand this as I'm an engineer as well (got a masters in environmental engineering), but as an engineer everything you analyze is a unique event that no one else is doing anything with. That is, no one else is designing or drawing a conclusion based upon that particular set of data. To put it another way, you are the only person who is determining how something is going to be designed or works.
Some of you guys act like in order to be actually doing real meteorology these guys need to be generating all of their own models and predictions from scratch and doing all of the things they learned in school. As an engineer, I can say i have done zero differential equations since graduating and one integral. the bulk of my job is taking models that someone else built and deciding if i think it is correct or not for my particular scenarios. sure sometimes i do a bit more leg work than others, but it is never from scratch and very rarely using the methods I learned in school. School was more about the foundational knowledge so that I know when to believe the model and when not to. as a meteorologist could you simply pull the forecasts generated by noaa, arrange your graphics and parrot them on TV with your only qualifications being that you look good in a mini skirt? sure. are there some that put in a lot of time and effort going through the models and trying to figure out what it is going to do locally in order to deliver the best forecast they can? yes.
also, if you want to blame someone for the hype, blame it on the networks and producers. watching the forecasts, most that I saw were pretty realistic and on par with a normal morning forecast, with little flair or drama, but it seems a lot worse when you see it all day because the producer and network decide to air the weather 24/7 because it is what will get them the viewers and ratings, and therefore advertising money.
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Chita Johnson told us this was nothing.
quote:Couple of hours late, but looks like those bands are pushing through. Received 1.5" in the last hour just outside of Katy. Though we had a lot of radar over us yesterday that looked like that, which produced very little rain.
LOL. Here is the future cast for Wednesday morning commute.
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Unless there's training I'm not expecting these storms to cause widespread, significant flooding in Houston, but they definitely could cause some temporary problems on low-lying roadways.
Bottom line, we'll have to watch how the remaining moisture from Tropical Depression Bill's tail continues to stream into the upper Texas coast today from the Gulf of Mexico.