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10-10-2016 12:32 PM
??
This has been and still is in the top 2 news stories (along with that other thing) and reporters made a point today of saying the danger is not over yet.
10-10-2016 12:59 PM
It seems that newscasters are all about "the kodak moment" .....even put reporters on the ground when a storm is coming..........they get their ratings and then it becomes a non-story even though many of us that have friends/relatives living in the impacted areas want to know what's going on (and can't get in touch with them because of power outages and such)....Even Sunday I checked a website for latest and was met with "this is how Matthew was such a unique storm" Yet nothing on current devastation in GA, SC, NC, and VA......Just another example of how poor jouranlism/reporting is these days!
10-10-2016 01:13 PM
@SaRina wrote:??
This has been and still is in the top 2 news stories (along with that other thing) and reporters made a point today of saying the danger is not over yet.
not sure if you are talking local or national. but in any case it was wall to wall last Thursday and Friday, and became a one minute story when the danger was high for Ga, SC and NC on Sat Sun, etc. the depth of coverage dropped off considerably from what i saw when Matthew didn't destroy Fla., and yet the threat was major for 3 states noted.
10-10-2016 01:22 PM
Our friends who live on Hilton Head Island in SC evacuated but their neighbors were able to text them as soon as the storm passed to tell them that everything was fine - roofs were intact and no flooding so they were all ready to return home until they heard some roads were closed due to bridge inspections today. Instead of dealing with detours they are waiting one more day.Their electric is still off though.
10-10-2016 01:35 PM - edited 10-10-2016 01:46 PM
I so agree. The hurricane moved more slowly than predicted, so it got further north before it struck with its full strength. [ETA: I don't mean the wind speed but, due to storm surge, the worst dangers Matthew represented.) The TV media are much to be blamed. And the 24-hour news cycle. And if the body count isn't high, it didn't have much effect. I have had my roof destroyed in H. Wilma 11 years ago, was without power for several months, and there was hardly a word about it even on local media. It is downright weird.
So I listen to NPR. But I can't even find out if Matthew is due to return to the Bahamas and perhaps strike again. And (since I do this stuff myself, living by myself) I am NOT going to take down the darn shutters until I know.
My real oracle are the advisories from the Hurricane center, but since M. is not a hurricane at the moment, they aren't saying anthing, though the path goes back thru the northern Bahamas. So at some point in the next week, it would become a tropical system again. Local news, which was twisting itself into knots with the pre-storm hysteria, has nothing to say now.
When people are doing the really hard work of finding responsible contractors after storm damage, that is not newsworthy. I had to call a FL senator's office (Bill Nelson) back in 2005 about the contractor rip-offs, and I got an intern who was insulting. I called again and got a reasonable intern.
Anyway, I agree that North Carolina, which after all was the hardest hit, got the least coverage. It doesn't even make any sense. The news people in the storm slickers don't "make" the news, the human stories do. That's always where the real story always is, and the media miss it always. It's as if celebrities are the only humans that are newsworthy, not people in their real lives encountering flooding, loss of their homes, looting, no services when they are taxpayers, etc.
I hope your communities do get the help they deserve, Ms Traditional. The 24 hour news cycle meant that "Matthew" had lasted past the sell date, even though there were 10 people killed by this hurricane in NC.
10-10-2016 02:05 PM
@Burnsite leave those shutters up!!! i hope you won't need them. i am in California, but agonized for my nephew in Boca Raton, friends in Charleston and coastal NC. i do remember how quickly the press left the earthquake story here in 1994 when we were dealing with devastation, no power and no potable water. it would have been nice to know that the rest of the nation was mildly interested as we lived through aftershocks, dependent on battery-operated radios for contact with the outside world. sadly i see the death count for Matthew just went up again.
10-10-2016 02:12 PM
I watched many hours of hurricane coverage on The Weather Channel this weekend. I was surprised by the heavy traffic on I-95 yesterday afternoon, of people trying to get home so soon after the storm. I heard nothing from city, county, or state officials saying it was clear for anyone to return yet. The announcement of county offices and schools being closed, should have been enough to let people know the road situations, no power, etc., made conditions unfavorable to come back just yet. The WC employees were interviewing people in their cars, who had been in the slow moving traffic for 3+ hours. They were being detoured off Exit 19 at Lumberton, NC, thru the narrow streets of town to connect to Highway 17. That area had no power, so there were no gas stations open.
I was very shocked that people who were asked to evacuate, did not go farther west into NC to find a place to stay, but stayed in motels close to I-95 where they still encountered many storm related problems. The Quality Inn motel rooms on ground level flooded, and those people had to be rescued. Those people found themselves in the same type of situation, than if they had stayed home. Many had their vehicles flooded and washed away, and were still stranded, waiting to be taken to a shelter.
I was also shocked to hear a 911 call where a daughter was trying to get her parents rescued from their home. The parents had refused to leave, even tho the man is in a wheelchair. As soon as ocean water reached their yard, the woman realized they were in trouble, and called her daughter. I felt really bad for the daughter trying to get her parents rescued, and for the parents who were scared and helpless, but wonder why people can't figure out their risk in advance.
10-10-2016 02:22 PM
@FastDogWalker2 wrote:Things in SE VA are not good either - power out and many roads still impassable.
Was just gonna say - I have cousins in Virginia Beach and they don't have power and many of the roads were still flooded as of last night.
10-10-2016 03:19 PM - edited 10-10-2016 03:20 PM
@ms traditional wrote:
@SaRina wrote:??
This has been and still is in the top 2 news stories (along with that other thing) and reporters made a point today of saying the danger is not over yet.
not sure if you are talking local or national. but in any case it was wall to wall last Thursday and Friday, and became a one minute story when the danger was high for Ga, SC and NC on Sat Sun, etc. the depth of coverage dropped off considerably from what i saw when Matthew didn't destroy Fla., and yet the threat was major for 3 states noted.
NY Tri-state
10-10-2016 03:23 PM
I don't understand your point, if you want local coverage, livestream the local TV coverage on your computer.
Or go to the websites of locat TV coverage in the area you are searching.
So sad to know how many people died in NC despite all the warnings. Tragic.
@ms traditional wrote:it seems to me that the press dropped the magnitude of its coverage of Matthew dramatically after Florida, hardly covering the misery of Georgia, So Carolina and No Carolina where 10 people died alone. it reminds me of how poorly they covered the problems in Louisiana after their dramatic rainstorms.
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