As Irma’s Winds Rise, So Does a Debate Over TV Storm Reporting

  • 7 years ago
As Irma’s Winds Rise, So Does a Debate Over TV Storm Reporting
Even Mr. Cuomo acknowledged the criticism: “There is a strong argument to be made that standing in a storm is not a smart thing to do.”
>> @ChrisCuomo on CNN just now: "There is a strong argument to be made that standing in a storm is not a smart thing to do."
“I think it’s a fair question: Why would you have reporters standing potentially in harm’s way who are telling people to do exactly the opposite?” Mark Strassmann,
a CBS News correspondent who has covered hurricanes for 25 years, said in an interview shortly after taking part in a live special from Miami.
“Everyone says, ‘Well, look, if you’re standing out in the storm, Sam, then how come I can’t stand out in the storm?’ ” Mr. Champion said.
Working for KHOU in Houston, he broadcast the first live radar image of a hurricane — Hurricane Carla — on television
and took to the streets to show the conditions firsthand.
Early Sunday morning, Bill Weir, a veteran CNN correspondent, was talking to the anchor Chris Cuomo in the middle of a live shot in Key Largo, Fla.
And around noon, Kyung Lah, a reporter for CNN, said on the air from Miami Beach, “If I didn’t have this steel railing, I’d be flying.”
"Possibly twice my height coming up here ... everywhere you go here in Naples are communities like this."

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