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It's something you rarely see - a pre-taped weather forecast that goes completely off the rails.
On Sunday night's CBC local news at 11 PM, the anchor threw to Saphia Khambalia, the Weather Network host, who does the forecast for the Corp. The intro ran, on came Khamballa and started into her spiel about what to expect on Monday, complete with the radar map.
Everything was fine for about the first 30 secs. when she suddenly tripped over the words "moisture laden southerly...." stopped talking, put down the clicker and said, "I'm going to do it again. Sorry." She then reversed the map on the screen, adjusted her wardrobe, moved the poppy on her dress and brushed away her hair.
After that, she said, "OK, ready...", then froze on the set, apparently waiting for the cue for the recording to start again. Viewers who didn't know the weather is pre-taped (dangerous considering a tornado warning was issued just moments before that by Environment Canada for the Niagara Region) found out, but they also never got the forecast at all.
After several very uncomfortable moments, they cut back to the anchor, who said,"We'll get back to Saphia in just a few moments," before moving on to another story. But they never did.
It's the kind of mess you rarely see and why I generally recommend you do everything live if possible. If they roll the wrong take, it can be a disaster on air. And this was definitely a bad spell of weather.
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It's not often you get a severe thunderstorm advisory and a possible tornado warning late on a weekend in November, but it happened on Sunday night. But only 680 News Radio was live and could report on it. This is, of course, one of the problems with leaving radio stations like CFRB and CKTB on autopilot.
While Environment Canada did put out one of their Emergency Alerts, it's not quite the same as having an actual live body on air keeping an eye on what's happening. Even if most people would not be up listening, if something were to happen and the power went out or a twister hit, all those turning on their radios for emergency info would hear is a reroll.
I admit it's rare this kind of thing happens. But in the good old days of radio, they would have had someone in the newsroom who could issue local updates live. Those days, like the winds gusting to 90k, have long been blown away.
Luckily, the tornado warning was cancelled just after midnight.
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I'm attending an outdoor event on Tuesday, so I had the weather radio on tonight to get the forecast. Suddenly the radio started to whoop and announced a sever weather warning for London tonight. There was a short thunderstorm but everything has calmed down now.
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I'm not naive enough to ever believe stations in the present environment would be staffed 24/7, but I was wondering what would have happened in, say, St. Catharines if there was a sudden emergency (like a destructive tornado) late on a Sunday night. With the place on autopilot, it wouldn't exactly be able to serve its community in any real way if there's nobody there.
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The emergency alert system in these situations should be at the last point in the audio chain, and be able to override the normal program audio.
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It did, but that wouldn't be enough to provide vital ongoing information if something catastrophic actually happened.