I agree with a lot of what you say regarding lack of quality.
As far as the reason why, I believe I have heard that a local station's newsroom will receive the most calls whenever an anchor gets a new hair style or wears a bad outfit. With viewers like those, why invest in quality :-o
At least several local stations were able to pool resources to get Roberts shot on sportscenter:
http://www.bradleybraves.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=25965&SPID=1498&DB_OEM_ID=3400&ATCLID=3700385
I see your point here. Unfortunately, this is so true. Many viewers tend to be superficial or just plain dumb, for lack of a better word. LOL
BradleyWX, you are obviously a little more sophisticated than the great majority of weather viewers. Most just want to know if they need to wear a sweater or a coat to work the next day, or if it's going to rain.
As I pointed out, Lee is not a meterologist, but neither was Bill Houlihan, and they are (were) extremely popular. I know people who prefer to watch WMBD and Bob Larson for the news, but then switch over to Lee for the weather. Overall, I think we have multiple good options here in Peoria for news, weather, and sports. But times change, and the TV (as well as radio and newspapers) just can't compete with the internet for speed, variety, and thoroughness of news, weather, and sports.
I expect more cutbacks in the future, as us "older" folks are replaced more and more by those who are internet savvy.
Thanks. I've always liked weather, but really got into it in 1986 when I was just 9 years old. I saw some of this areas best lightening displays ever that year in my town of Glasford, back than, our choice was WEEK our for everything including WX w/ Houlli (1923~1994). Where Lee Ranson was the most optimistic of the 3, Bill Houlihan was the most aggressive. I like how he used to spend the entire duration of the severe weather event covering the storms continuously like some of our neighboring stations still do to this day. I pretty-much ignored WMBD until about 1991, when I started watching them because of their superior audio (stereo). As far as newscasts go, WMBD didn't have much over the other stations until 1993 when they began to make the first in a series of aggressive upgrades - both in weather as well as in other areas. It was that same year that Mike McClellen replaced Rollie Kieth and became our first Meteorologist. Mike was almost as aggressive as Houli, and probably even more so than Chuck, who's undoubtedly our area's most aggressive nowadays.
Honestly, I can't say as I really have a beef against any of our local personalities. I've had the opportunity to talk to several, including all the aforementioned except for Bill Houlihan, who died before I got directly involved with stations. I've also talked to some of the local sports and news legends. They all seem very friendly and nice. A couple of them even remembered me later. LOL But since WEEK technically has no weekend weather guy, they could have kept Ric Kearby for weekends. Lee is 68 and could either retire soon, or god forbid, his health could fail and he could be forced to go. Ric Kearby, who's 15 years younger and was still somewhat popular, would have made for the better choice. Familiar faces are what attracts the most viewers. After Lee, will they be able to put a familiar face in Lee's place? Will they be able to coax Ric in to take his place? Frankly, I think they should have kept both, they could have afforded to. For now, Ric seems content just to provide weather on a radio station. That said, I wonder if he'd be open to the idea of becoming a weekend or morning meteorologist on WMBD? Of course, one of those jobs will become open once again in a year or 2. WMBD's only weaknesses are not being able to retain the personalities on their secondary newscasts for very long and the occasional technical error including that annoying cutout of the digital audio.
I'm only 32 years old, but I do believe there's a lot of value in a free & local network station. Having news bureaus in every market, they can cover local events faster and in many ways internet and national cable networks can't. Also, it's free to the viewer and is about the most accessible way to obtain emergency information. With CBS & ABC considering going cable-only, there's no doubt that many local stationary re about to go dark. If this does happen, than it is my fervent hope that at least one station in each market is allowed to survive, if just for means of emergency local broadcasting. A weather radio with an alert feature is currently the best line of defense. I've had one since 1999.
Many people still can't afford Cable/Sat/Internet and I'm about fed up with the cutthroat service and deceptive marketing of DirecTV. Despite the fact that are area is really sprawling, cable still won't run a line to our away. Many people have no business paying the skyrocketing rates for cable/sat because many of them can't even afford their own house payments. In 1984, it was said that cable was to be regulated once it reached 70% of the US market, I do believe that time is now! Kudos to Nextsar for charging retransmission fees for cable companies to carry their HD signals. This alone, has somewhat leveled the playing field.
Ever since I bought into Lee's "Peoria Split" concept of systems from the west, I have been uncannily accurate at predicting the weather myself.
And Chuck has always referred to Peoria as having the urban heat dome effect. I understand why this can break storms apart, but nobody knows exactly why some cities are effected by this and others, not so much. It wasn't like this decades ago, and it may change again someday.
I agree. Being from Decatur, Hometown of WAND, I grew up with the live dopplar. During tornado warnings, a meteorologist is on screen analyzing the radar explaining the situation. Very informative and accurate. Peoria needs to fill this hole.
Yes, they installed their live Dopplar radar in 1993. During severe weather situations, they will oftentimes have not one, but 2 members of their weather team involved in the coverage. With the live Doppler radar, you can actually see tornadoes form right before your eyes! Not to knock the NWS nextrad, but they are much bigger, older, and they keep track of much more than just the weather hence it takes 7 minutes for them to make a complete scan. Than add another 2+ minutes for Accuweather, WSI, WX Central, etc to capture, compress and send the results to the stations for a total of about 10 minutes. Tornadoes will often form and dissipate in this amount of time. A true live dopplar radar will update every 30 seconds. And since it's hooked directly to the station's equipment, I believe the delivery time is almost instant? When they see a tornado, I've heard of them alerting a local NWS.
The key to an strong local presence is to have advantages that the Weather Channel, ESPN or the internet news can't provide. When you got weaker stations such as the Peoria stations, many people stop taking them seriously. Live Dopplar is what can make a station, and yes, Peoria does need to fill the void.
Even though Rockford is now Illinois's 3rd-largest city in comparison to Peoria being the 6th, they are still considered a slightly smaller TV market. We're now #116 while their #132! Yet they have 2 stations that have invested in Live Doppler radar. I've seen a market down in Florida where all of the stations pitched in and share the same one. It would be perfect if ours would do the same, but I can't see that happening. It is likely that WMBD will have to make the first move. And if for some strange reason, WEEK/WHOI beats them to the punch, I'd imagine that WMBD will fire right back with one of their own pretty quickly.
Until than, WMBD is the best weather choice we have. For one, they have to be about due for a graphics upgrade. And when they get something new, they always do it right by getting something creme de la creme that blows the competition away. Their "24/7" weather team works as advertised. This past year, they are the station that was the most consistent at providing emergency cut-ins at odd times such as overnight and weekday mornings. WHOI was second and WEEK was distant last. Their team of 3 actual meteorologists is a step above many other stations in a market this size, where they usually have just 2 and a regular weather caster for the third and/or fourth spot. And they're the only morning news team with 3 dedicated on-air personnel! BTW, Marcus Bailey is probably the area's most sports-minded meteorologist. However, it's hard to beat Sandy in the mornings. I'm just hoping that WEEK never outsources her job to Ft. Wayne.
Meteorologists have caught on big time in Springfield and the QC. Peoria is about 15 years behind. Since WMBD doesn't do, in my opinion, a sufficient job of promoting this, it's up to people like me to help educate this area. And I'll continue to drive the subject of true live Doppler in other blogs until it it reaches the right set of ears.