Windbags On The Weather Beat
CBS Evening News: When Reporters Brave Hurricanes, Do They Leave All Common Sense Behind?
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Play CBS Video Video Eye On Hurricane Grandstanding TV plays a crucial role broadcasting vital information during natural disasters-- like hurricanes. But some say the reporters who cover them are guilty of grandstanding. Steve Hartman reports.
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In the eye of the storm - but was all common sense swept away? (CBS)
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"It's pelting my face and it hurts," one reporter said.
Seems they're not so much interested in getting the story - as they are getting washed out to sea.
And it gets worse every year, as reporters edge closer and closer to harm's way. Last week, TV news almost lost Geraldo Rivera as he got too close to the storm.
Point is, whenever reporters get up to their knees in a hurricane, they're also up to their necks in hypocrisy.
Some say CBS News actually started this nonsense. After Dan Rather co-anchored with a telephone pole back in 1995, clinging desperately to it, just about every reporter in America started flirting with natural disaster.
Even Hartman once tried doing a dramatic weather live shot - and it had less-than-dramatic results. He nearly electrocuted himself.
Other reporters have been hit by debris. So far, no serious injuries have been sustained, but it's only a matter of time, according to Harold Dow.
"Standing out in a hurricane when everyone knows it's dangerous doesn't make sense to me," he said.
Dow is a CBS News correspondent who covered Hurricane Gloria 23 years ago. Well, kind of covered it.
"They had a picture window showing the beach and I actually stood in front of that and did my stand-up," Dow said.
He never left the hotel room.
CBS News management never asked him to cover another hurricane after that.
Of course, most reporters like covering hurricanes, and will no doubt continue to relish the assignment, no matter how badly they get pelted by wind, rain … and embarrassment.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





It''s the way of the world.
It takes a BIG reporter to cover a hurricane.
Al Roker could''ve done it before his surgery.