One of the weirdest routines in television news over the years is sending into hurricanes stand-up reporters with microphones in hands, braving heavy winds and downpours, and sometimes pounding surf.
Grumpy Editor asks: Why?
The same, or better video, can be seen with a reporter in a dry, safe studio or in a nearby TV van utilizing a securely-mounted remote on-scene camera to capture the same, or better, footage.
Over the past few days with Hurricane Florence, TV viewers saw familiar faces --- including anchors --- bending with the wind and getting splashed with water as swaying trees and wild breakers are seen in the background.
Does this enhance coverage?
Sometimes the shots are exaggerated.
A prime example, Weather Channel 's Mike Seidel, reporting live from Wilmington, N.C., is seen struggling against a heavy wind in the rain. “This is about as nasty as it’s been,” voices Seidel, leaning with the wind ---- as the camera also captures two young men in shorts walking normally without wind problems behind him.
The Weather Channel, in defending Seidel, says its reporter was "trying to maintain his footing on wet grass” while the two people in the background were walking on concrete.
IN CASE YOUR FAVORITE NEWS OUTLETS MISSED THESE...
HOUSEHOLD INCOME UP. Median household income grows to $61,372 last year, up 1.8 percent when adjusted for inflation, while people working full time year round increase by 2.4 million, according to latest census figures .
iPHONE MORE COSTLY IF U.S. MADE. If produced in the U.S., as President Donald Trump is urging, an iPhone would cost 20 percent more, tallies an analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
CALIFORNIA TO GO CARBON-FREE ROUTE. California’s Gov. Jerry Brown signs into law for the Golden State to use only carbon-free electricity sources by 2045. Thus, it joins Hawaii, the first state to go that route.
BURGLARY SHAKES UP ISLAND. Gigha, a small island off the west coast of Scotland, sees its peace and tranquility broken by a $2,600 hotel storeroom burglary --- the first serious crime in two decades.
HIGHER PRICES SEEN CURBING SPENDING. A Kiplinger Letter forecast notes business and consumer spending “could slow because of higher prices and heftier borrowing costs.”
BIG BOOK-BUYING DAY. Veteran newsman-author Bob Woodward’s latest book, “Fear,” sells 750,000 copies the day after the book arrived in stores, reports Simon & Schuster. The book deals with a dysfunctional White House.
FICTION READING SAGS. The percentage of adults reading fiction drops to 41.8 percent last year from 45.2 percent in 2012, while poetry reading jumps to 11.7 percent from 6.7 percent, reports the National Endowment for the Arts.
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