Are the local news TV people who give weather reports really meteorologists?
I think they used to call themselves weather forecasters, but recently they are introduced as meteorologists. The latter needs at least a BS,and from from the age of some of these people, I doubt whether they have more than a high school education.
Some are real meteorologists and some are not. In Connecticut, for instance, the lead meteorologist at the ABC affiliate (WTNH-TV) is actually a university professor of meteorology (Dr. Mel Goldstein).
Some are, some aren’t. I’ve occasionally seen TV stations bill their weather guy as a “meteorologist”, when I know that he used to be a DJ on the local top-40 station.
I suspect that “meteorologist” isn’t a term which has a specific accreditation associated with it (in other words, you can probably get away with calling yourself one without a degree).
I’ve also seen some stations tout that their meteorologist has the seal of the American Meteorological Society.
Our TV weather people are all meteorologists. They wouldn’t dare not be as Al Roker is the alumni of nearby SUNY Oswego, and a TV station putting a non-pro on the air, under the great shadow of Al, simply isn’t an option!
male people who go into tv (nonsports) are often babyfaced. new tv meteorologists look too young for years on the job.
they will state or have an indication on tv or station website what their accreditations are.
decades ago and depending on the tv market size they were weather casters. their forecast came from others with equipment, forecast skills and networks of information gathering.
now medium sized stations can have a radar of their own, be networked to lots of information gathering including other tv stations, have computers to aid in forecasting.
Adam Berg of the Weather Channel is a great example. I noticed him for the first time during the weekend overnight shift and thought they were letting a high school intern have a bit of fun on air. He’s been on a few years now and he still looks like he gets carded for cigarettes.
BTW, “B.S. in Meteorology, Pennsylvania State University” according to Adam’s Weather Channel bio.
That’s because they used to not be meteorologists, but rather weather reporters, but now due to constant one-upmanship in TV news almost all of them are meterologists.
No, TV weatherpeople are not all meteorologists. In my experience, only a small percentage are. Those who are saying that all the ones in their area are should probably check their resumes.
Mississippi State University has a degree program in “Broadcast Meteorology” which a lot of TV forecasters take remotely, but it is a highly nerfed program as far as the science goes. It their resume says they went to MSU, you can be 99% sure that they took this degree.
Four of the local channels have staffs of weather people. We prefer the team at Channel 2 who seem to have the knack for covering severe weather better that the others although none of the other channels can be considered weak in that regard.
If you click on the faces upper right (or their names) you can get bio info on all of them. It just so happens that Lisa is not an official meteorologist, but her skills and savvy offset that by a great deal. She’s the most effective weather person in the midstate, and when she’s describing the bad weather, you can count on it being right.
Credentials are one thing; smarts and effective delivery styles are another. I go for the latter.
That could be the norm. Lisa’s chest is not so attention gathering, and none of the other females that are on regularly seem to be top-heavy. The hair styles are also middle-of-the-road around here. The TV market here is above average, in my opinion, based on comparisons to other cities I have visited and seen their TV offerings. (I even had a thread on that topic some time back.)
Penn State tends to [del]breed[/del] train TV meteorologists at its [del]research facility[/del] University Park campus. They also have (or had; I haven’t seen it in a while) a show called “Weather World” that leans heavily toward the true science of meteorology. The main anchors are a couple of PhDs with a few students who are presumably there for broadcasting experience.
If they’re from Penn State, they’re most likely legit.
A long time ago when I lived in Chicago, on WGN, I heard Paul Konrad, the popular meteorologist give a talk. He said, he attended Mississippi State University.
I just looked up his biography it says
However the website doesn’t bill him as a meteorologist. Just a weather reporter.
But does one really need a degree?
Before I retired our controller for our company worked his way up from the store room. He spend 30+ years working and learning from companies and now has CPAs under him. He’s knows all the ins and outs of accounting.
He doesn’t have any degree but I’d still call him an accountant.