Comedy | January 28, 2012 | 23 comments

Weatherman Gone Wild

coolplanet
WNEP weathercaster Joe Snedeker stopped his morning forecast Wednesday to respond to a couple of angry emailers who apparently wanted colder weather. Snedeker informed viewers that he, personally, enjoyed warm weather, before launching into a disjointed monologue that included the admission that he maybe doesn’t like all of his co-workers.

“I like it warm, I don't like snow. That’s just my stupid opinion,” Snedeker told viewers, before referring to his morning colleague, anchor Mindi Ramsey. “I’m a person. I like Mindi. Maybe off-screen I don’t. Maybe I have other colleagues here that I don’t like."
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23 comments // Weatherman Gone Wild

  • Mojorising
    • 0
      Mojorising  
    • He is not melting down. If you watch the forecast on a regular basis you would realize what he is talking about and his personality. Snedeker is a Meteorologist. Most of you have none. WNEP 16 in Northeastern, Pa for more on Snedker.

    • 3 months ago
  • JohnA
  • Leen61
  • Tayllerand
    • 0
      Tayllerand  
    • There is a documentary about a group called ( the weather underground ) , I think people should see this and see the similarities of those days with what its happening now. For me, what its happening in this country right now its a re-do all over again of the 60s and the 70s.

    • 4 months ago
  • northernexpat
    • +2
      northernexpat  
    • What was he smoking? In all seriousness though, he obviously doesn't understand or want to question why it is so warm this winter all over and why it has been getting warmer each year. It is changing the environment and habitat and not in a good way.

    • 4 months ago
  • coolplanet
    • +2
      coolplanet  
    • northernexpat:

      Must have been the local AK48 variety.....
      It blows my mind how many people are like this guy in my area.
      Last night my close friend went crazy when I told her about the new USDA plant zones.
      "They can't know what the temperature was 100 years ago!" she blurted out.
      I explained how they can and do with tree rings, ice cores, sea sediment and coral.
      But her eyes glazed over and I could tell she didn't want to know.
      I've come to the conclusion that it's too disturbing for most people to contemplate.
      Denial is a psychological self-defense mechanism.

    • 4 months ago
  • northernexpat
  • coolplanet
    • +1
      coolplanet  
    • northernexpat:

      How do I ask my friend to stop leaving her two big screen TVs on all day, even when no one is home? I mentioned what energy hogs they are and she said "I know" and left them on anyway. It's not like she's rich and can afford to flush money down the toilet. I don't get any of it.

    • 4 months ago
  • BKsaysAction
  • northernexpat
    • 0
      northernexpat  
    • coolplanet:

      I don't get it either. Why would you want to pay extra to keep your TV on when your not home. It's the same as leaving the lights on when you leave a room. I cured my kids of that when they were little by charging them a nickel for every time they left the light on when they left a room. That was a lot of money when they were little. It's a good way to teach kids conservation. Maybe you could explain to her what it is costing her and what she could do with the money she saved.

    • 4 months ago
  • coolplanet
    • 0
      coolplanet  
    • northernexpat:

      It was Jimmy Carter who convinced me to turn off lights when I leave a room. It saves a lot of money in electricity and light bulbs. And it reduced greenhouse gasses!
      My house is usually so dark from the street that I've had people ask if we've been out of town.
      But all my neighbors make up for it by leaving thousands of watts on all night.
      It must be nice to have money (and a planet) to burn.

    • 4 months ago
  • circlesquared
    • +1
      circlesquared  
    • he has lost it from not being able to actually tell people what the heck is really going on with the weather...you can't watch the radar for any amount of time and think it looks natural.

    • 4 months ago
  • coolplanet
  • circlesquared
  • KB723
    • +2
      KB723  
    • Ha!!! Cool as Hell, Sadly I don't like anyone I work with and three of them don't speak English so I am sure they could care less...

    • 4 months ago
  • coolplanet
  • KB723
  • The_Wanderer_Kansas
  • coolplanet
  • coolplanet
  • coolplanet
    • +3
      coolplanet  
    • coolplanet:

      Forecast The Facts Responds To Criticism: Dialogue With Denier Weathermen Isn’t Enough

      The Forecast the Facts campaign is already gaining attention, and as is to be expected, not everyone is applauding our efforts. On the far right, well known climate change deniers Anthony Watts and Michael Lewis accuse us of “laying the ground work for society controlled by corporate-government-military oligarchies,” while leading denier weathermen like John Ghiorse and John Coleman dust off tired canards that the planet is actually cooling and that CO2 does not cause global warming. While those criticisms don’t warrant a response, there is another line of analysis that does. Writing for Washington Post’s Capital Weather Gang, Jason Samenow labels our efforts a “smear campaign” and a “colossal waste of energy,” saying that we should be “establishing common ground with the unconvinced.”

      The smear allegation is disturbing and important to dispense with first. Presumably Samenow is referring to the fact that we have included quotations from climate change-denying meteorologists on our site. As yet, not one of those quoted has suggested that we have misrepresented their views. Indeed, many of these TV meteorologists are openly proud to be considered deniers. They say so on air, online, in emails to us, and in their affiliation with prominent denial sites like Icecap. Compiling a careful count of weather reporters who reject the scientific consensus on climate change hardly qualifies as a smear campaign. In fact, there are many weather reporters we have researched that we believe fall in the denial camp, but we have not quoted on our site because we do not have sufficient evidence.

      That said, Samenow’s other criticism, that our efforts are unproductive, seems almost reasonable, which is why we think it’s important for us to explain clearly why we take the approach we do.

      Samenow backs up his main argument by juxtaposing our campaign with other, more “constructive” approaches that seek to convince climate change denying broadcast meteorologists through dialogue and factual presentations. To be clear, we applaud these efforts and think they should continue and be expanded. But it is totally implausible that these approaches alone will ensure that the American public gets the unvarnished truth about climate change from the nation’s weather reporters.

      How can we be so sure? Because these efforts have been going on for years, and they have yet to turn the tide. Early entreaties to broadcast meteorologists date back as far as 1997, when then-Vice President Gore invited hundreds of weather reporters to a discussion at the White House. Since then, there have been numerous other efforts at dialogue, and they continue today. Again, we’re not saying that such education campaigns should cease. We just don’t think that they, on their own, will solve the problem.

      For one thing, there are many many people in the denialist camp who have no interest in constructive dialogue, such as the meteorologists mentioned above, some of whom refuse to even acknowledge that the Earth is getting warmer (a position that even vaunted skeptic Richard Muller, of the BEST study, has since renounced). For people like this, there is no room for constructive dialogue, only accountability.

      Fine, you might say, but what about those meteorologists who are “on the fence.” Maybe they acknowledge that the globe is warming, and that man “might be responsible,” but they’re “not sure how much.” (We talked to several such broadcasters at the recent American Meteorological Society conference.) Maybe Forecast The Facts will drive them into the opposite camp. Maybe, but let’s remember a few things.

      First, these meteorologists are already getting constant implicit and explicit pressure from climate change deniers. They know that if they talk about climate change on air, the switchboards of their stations will light up. Many of them are also being told by their news directors to avoid anything controversial. There are just so many incentives for them to say nothing or, at best, to “report the debate” even when that has long been indefensible from a scientific point of view. But until now, they have yet to systematically hear from viewers who adamantly want them to do their job and tell them what is going on, not just with their weather but with the broader context in which that weather occurs–the climate. Those viewers deserve to have their voices heard.

      Second, and perhaps most importantly, the stakes of this issue simply do not allow for an exclusive embrace of the patient, conciliatory approach that Samenow advocates. We don’t want to unnecessarily belabor the science here, but when the National Academy of Sciences, the U.S. military, and the insurance industry all agree that humans are a leading cause of climate change, when prediction after prediction of climate models is borne out, when highly trained and incredibly learned professionals tell us that the window for action is closing, and when the effects of inaction are going to negatively impact millions if not billions of lives, it is simply not acceptable for professional journalists (that is, after all, what broadcast meteorologists are) to refuse to inform their viewers of this information, or worse to say that these things that directly contradict these facts.

      Just to bring this point home, let’s imagine a different setting for this conversation. Let’s say these TV meteorologists were a large group of doctors who persisted in telling their patients that smoking does not increase the chance of lung cancer. And let’s say we started an accountability campaign that demanded that these doctors stop giving that advice to their patients, and that the American Medical Association make a clear and unequivocal statement about the links between smoking and lung cancer. Would Mr. Samenow call on us to tone it down? Would he instead argue that we just need to calmly present the doctors denying the smoking-cancer link with the current facts, and politely ask them to reconsider their position? We doubt it.

      This brings us to the role of the AMS, an organization which undoubtedly would prefer to not be in the midst of this conversation. Members of the AMS staff will tell you (as they told me) that the vast majority of their members are not even broadcast meteorologists, but mostly academicians and government employees. The AMS will also tell you that the vast majority of their members fully understand and embrace the science behind global warming. And all of this is true.

      The problem is, the majority of broadcast meteorologists are also members of the AMS. And they also happen to be the members who are by far the most well known, with the widest reach in the public. And almost certainly for this reason, the AMS has actively sought to cultivate and promote their affiliation with these members, creating certification programs that allow broadcast meteorologists to carry the imprimatur of a scientific association. The AMS, quite literally, has given these meteorologists their stamp of approval.....

      By Daniel Souweine, Campaign Director of Forecast The Facts

      http://thinkprogress.org/green/2012/01/27/413745/forecast-the-facts-responds-to-...

    • 4 months ago
  • northernexpat
  • coolplanet
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