• Health Literacy Lab & Library

Weathermen, You Clownin’

Weathermen, You Clownin’

Originally posted 12/9/17
Reposted 9/13/18
Hurricane Florence in about to make ground fall and as I watch Jim Cantore of the Weather Channel and just about every other recognizable network reporter beginning to get blown around, I’m reposting a discussion my students at Hunter initiated in 2017.  —————————————————————–
This Blog Written By
John Drabos 


Professor Zarcadoolas posed a question asking why television weather reporters go out into the thick of dangerous storms. She had a very reasonable point suggesting there shouldn’t be a problem having mounted cameras to show the activity of the storm. With such technology available to us, why are weather reporters going out into these storms and why are the television networks compelled to put those reporters in hazardous situations when it appears it may be unnecessary?




I did a bit of light research on the origins of the television weather reporter and came across some interesting information, defiantly not telling the definitive story, but still bringing me to a speculative inference I think is worth putting out there (also linking to language).

According to Tom Moore, TV weatherman for thirty years on The Weather Channel, most early television meteorologists of the 1950s had professional backgrounds from the military or as college professors. This military connection makes sense to me, consider that was post World War II, we do recall a moment of the war as “storming” the beaches at Normandy. Moore says the station directors felt these meteorologists made weather segments too dull. 

Consider the communication style, in general, of the military. I would characterize most military communication to disseminate information in a style designed to be direct, effective, and efficient. Now consider this military style of communication added with the communication style of a scientist. I am suggesting, even though scientific method is extremely useful, the scientific method is boring. 

We have now built a character to tell us about the weather who approaches such a task with the precision and efficiency of a military operation combined with the rote mechanicalness of the scientific method. I would imagine a 1950s college professor would manage the classroom in a similar fashion. How many minutes of that would you like to sit through? Nothing about our generic 1950s ex-military meteorologist screams entertainment. There would be no use of dramatic adjectives or outlandish physical displays to accent the language describing the weather because it just doesn’t fit the style of people in the community of meteorologists of the 1950s.

Toward the end of the 1950s, stations began to add to the weather forecast to make it more entertaining. Those additions included cartoon characters, very famous characters were Wooly Lamb and Gusty. Cartoons are generally silly things meant for humorous entertainment, which makes very interesting the evolution of the weatherman as seen through these first cartoon characters.




Enter Willard Scott. Willard Scott is a famous television personality from the 1950s, he is known for being on the Today Show, being Bozo the Clown, and was the original clown mascot for the fast food chain McDonalds as Ronald McDonald. Willard Scott was very successful as a television weatherman by bringing his clown act to the weather broadcast. Willard Scott and his weather broadcasts were a novelty but quickly became parodied by other stations all over the country. People tuned in to a more entertaining personality delivering them the weather.

The television stations, through Willard Scott’s example, built somewhat of an archetype for the weatherman. This archetype mimicked the clown, a comical joker using exaggerated antics to entertain others. In the name of television ratings the purpose of the weather broadcast was no longer simply to deliver a report about the weather but to perform the weather report. 

To tie this to linguistics, best I can, why didn’t the original format of weather reporting work? Certainly the original meteorologists of the 1950s were qualified to analyze and report the weather, and certainly their ability to communicate was sufficient to the point they could educate in colleges and perform the duties required of our military. However their style of communication wasn’t sufficient to the television audience they were tasked with reaching. Style of communication would have a wide range of implications from particular word choice, to how that choice resonated with the target audience, and the effect those decisions on communication had on the actions taken by those who received it.

If there is a serious weather storm approaching what bigger stage is there to send our clown to? The consideration is not, “this place is dangerous and people should be informed to evacuate”, the consideration is, “send the clown!” I am partially suggesting this is about humor, but there is also the observation our professor posed in her own post:

“Has our emersion in reality TV raised the bar so high that we’re no longer engaged enough nor satisfied enough until the weatherman is torn limb from limb as we gaze snacking at our viewing devices –  our own private Roman Colosseums?”

Within danger there is the primal element required for entertainment. Our clown does so with a humorous foolishness that keeps us on the edge of elation while not quite crossing that line into a morbid reality. College professors or military personnel would not typically be considered to perform in this way, and this may be due to the type of communication style required of his/her discipline. However, the clown, can be equally qualified to disseminate this information, but have a style of communication that is bettered tailored for the realm of television. I think this raises an important note on the role language plays in our expectations on the actions and behaviors of others.



Sources:
Moore, T., Haby, J. A Brief History of Broadcast Meteorology: From the Past to the Future. iWeathernet. March 26, 2017

http://www.iweathernet.com/educational/history-broadcast-meteorology

Laskin, David. Television A Change in the Weather. NY Times, Arts Section. February 18, 2017. 

http://www.nytimes.com/1996/02/18/arts/television-a-change-in-the-weather.html




Media Paywalls During Emergencies!

Congratulations to the #CharlotteObserver. 
They dropped their paywall – any fees consumers need to pay to access their site in anticipation of Hurricane Florence.  They, along with a small group of other local media, understand the role they play in emergency preparedness and response.

“As a local paper with unique stakes and interests in the communities we cover, we are invaluably positioned to bring you the most reliable and up-to-date news about Hurricane Florence and how it might affect you. While we still believe that our challenging work is important and worth paying for, the core of our mission is to support our readers with information that matters most during major news events such as these.”

Other locals I’ve seen doing this in the last day or so.

The Independent Mail 
https://www.independentmail.com/story/news/2018/09/11/hurricane-florence-independent-mail-drops-paywall-storm-coverage/1258368002/

Greenville News 
https://www.greenvilleonline.com/story/news/local/2018/09/11/hurricane-florence-greenville-news-paywall/1258486002/

Public preparedness, public safety and community resilience require getting the information you need to take action.  These media outlets get it.

Will the big media sites follow? 

Hurricane Florence Alerts Should Be Clearer

Hurricane Florence Advisory #44
National Hurricane Center  
Advisory 44
Taken From (9/10/18) http://weather.gov/twitter 
The “primary official Twitter account for the National Hurricane Center, focusing on the Atlantic basin. 
When I unpack the language, focusing on the interested general public as the reader: 
What I come up with: 
The risk to life and property from Hurricane Florence is increasing. The risk comes from damaging hurricane force winds and prolonged (long lasting) rainfall inland.

  •        Storm surge at the coast
  •        Freshwater flooding


It is too soon to determine (know) the exact timing, location and strength of the hurricane.  Everyone at the coast and inland South Carolina into the mid- Atlantic region should closely monitor (watch) Florence’s progress.  Ensure they have their hurricane plan ready and follow any advice local officials give you.   

–>



Any other ideas for a basic language template for these types of alerts? 



















–>

Communicating to Us about Hurricane Florence

For those of us living on the East Coast, this coming week will be filled with lot of public emergency preparedness communications about approaching Hurricane Florence. 

Ever since the catastrophe of Hurricane Katrina  I’ve been part of a small team working on analyzing and improving  public health and emergency management messages intended for non-expert publics (target audiences).  We’ve been analyzing messages including print and maps, usability testing and rewriting/re-designing. Our early work with the NYC’s Hurricane Evacuation Map revealed that a very large number of residents in East Harlem could interpret the map or use it to make decisions to reduce their risk during a hurricane. During the past 5 years Wendy Vaughon and I have been working with the USGS to consumer test and revise information about floods, earthquakes and volcano eruptions. Again we’ve found that messages and maps for hurricanes, floods, earthquakes and volcano eruptions are created by scientists.  Not unlike much health information, the messages and materials assume high levels of science literacy, civic literacy and fundamental reading skill.
Zarcadoolas,C., Boyer, J., A. Krishnaswami, A. & A. Rothenberg, A. (2007). How usable are current GIS maps: communicating emergency preparedness to vulnerable populations? Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management.

USGS (2016) Get your science used—Six guidelines to improve your products
 


3 Things That Make Emergency Information Hard to Read, Interpret and Use

–>

  1. The language is usually highly condensed, complex sentence structure and accompanying visuals.
  2.   The content assumes the reading public understands key concepts related to judging the emergency: Specific to hurricanes – “storm surge”, “cone of hurricane”, “wobble/wiggle”, maximum sustained winds, weakening ridge ….
  3. Statements about uncertainty are most often discussed using probability – consistently difficult for the non-scientist to interpret. 

With Florence bearing down each day this week we will present and unpack ( do a science literacy and readability analysis of the message) and hopefully have an interactive conversation about how to make these messages clearer to the public.

If you’re out there join in on the discussion.

HURRICANE FLORENCE POST #1 coming up next.

–>

On Receiving Doak Health Literacy Award

When Health Literacy Media informed me that I would be receiving this year’s Cecilia and Leonard Doak Health Literacy Champion Award, my first thought came in the form of a long ago memory – an image of listening to Ceci Doak sensitively speak about the lives of individuals who struggle to read and understand the complexity around them.

My second thought image was of me as a young linguistic graduate student tasked with being the moderator of a semiotics talk at Brown.  The speaker and I engaged in this rarefied ( OK, you’re right,  obtuse) exploration of how humans interpret words both syntagmatically and paradigmatically – and wow wasn’t that infinitely fascinating.  I remember the large, patient audience chuckled when we were done.

I was helping out at the conference with my then fellow student and now life-long best friend Debbie Topol.  The conference was the inspired product of my mentor, Dr. Peter Blackwell, then Principal of the RI School for the Deaf and the Co-Director of The Language Awareness Project at Brown, along with Dr. Naomi Baron.

After our session Deb and I trudged off to make sure that the coffee and donuts were readied for the break ( sound familiar). On the way I’m sure the small talk was our familiar riff – what’s the connection between all this complex theory, all this stuff we’re learning and thinking through – and the language acquisition  and literacy problems of deaf young people we’re teaching.  (The fundamental literacy level achieved by deaf adults is far poorer than the general population and many struggle to read at 5th grade level).

It’s 40 something years later and a true surprise and honor (a gift indeed)  of learning that I am receiving the Doak award is that it came at a moment when the question of how to connect theory and practice has been pricking my conscience more than usual. I’ve been writing about perception and action in complex emergencies.  Where’s the theory in the practice?  Is there new theory? The question that I realize has been walking beside me all these years of my work.  At once both vexing and energizing to me.  Often alienating to others. But as Rilke said, if you live the question, perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along into the answers.

To all the questions yet to be answered.

Thank you.

©2021. Health Literacy Lab. All Rights Reserved.