I think there are sometimes the weather is hyped up to get ratings. It probably happens more in the winter, but sometimes in the spring. Sometimes they mignt day something is a moderate risk using their own terminology compared to what the NWS says is a slight risk.
Yesterday was not one of those days. The NWS used as strong of language as they ever have. The only other time it was used a massive tornado broke out that was historical in proportions. The signals also continued to get worse all the way up to the early afternoon.
I think the overhype comes from the people. We saw what happened six years ago and don’t want to be out when it happens again. So we heed warnings more than we would have before. That overhype isn’t a bad thing.
As an employer, it's hard to know what to do.
I was worried going into the morning but Mondays are big days at the Gazette; we have to put the paper to bed by the afternoon so it can be delivered on Wednesday.
So, we really didn't have the option of not being open or closing by noon. In the end, we were able to get out of there by 3 PM and of course, we didn't even get rain until much later. I would have felt really foolish if we had canceled the whole workday, however. And it would have been a full day of wasted productivity.
One very good thing about our workplace: We have a full basement that would be a fantastic storm shelter. In fact, I live close enough that I'll be heading there with my animals if my house is ever under immediate threat.
With social media, there is no way to accurately describe yesterday's conditions without people magnifying things to hype conditions. People are looking for the doom and gloom reports just to post. The local TV guys are making up a smaller and smaller portion of the sources of information year by year.
^
Yeah, I was monitoring that closely.
We have a couple of people who live a relatively good distance away and we sent them home around 2.
Which is why I simply cut out the middleman (local TV weather dudes and dudettes) and just pull up the NWS data on my smart device and avoid the talking fear mongering meteorologists. You can tell your audience that this is looking serious and it's a PDS or whatever, but the local news goes much further than that an it's ridiculous.
I think you had so much convection in that cold region north of the front that it basically, for lack of a better term, sucked the energy out of the region everyone was most concerned about. The atmosphere was changing so rapidly that the few storms that tried to go up in SC OK in the 1pm-2pm time frame would go away almost as quickly as they started, as if they just never had time to get organized before the broader convection north just forced the issue away from the area that was seemingly primed to "pop."
Even doing that though this looked pretty dire. The language from the SPC was probably as high-end as I've seen since 5/31/13 if not above that. It was a very scary day. And the thing is, had conditions been a little more favorable then it could have been the storm of the century.
This is another example of how easy it is for a high-end setup to go bust if just one thing doesn't fall into place like predicted. And by bust, I wouldn't call yesterday a total bust but it wasn't near as high-end as predicted.
i would say that yesterday was a pretty big win for OKC.
huge F5s are just bad PR all the way around, unless you are drinking them at COOP Ale Works, of course.
The one thing I did see that gave me pause even within the SPC forecasts was the note that soundings were showing MLCAPE's in the 3500-4000 range, which is high, but I remember a lot more attention being drawn in situations with values more in the 5-6K (and up) range. I think the consensus was that the overall environment was so primed that the storms would be able to leverage that amount of energy. Had the actual values been more in that range, I think we would have seen more of the storms everyone expected.
This is exactly what I did for the first time with this event. I stopped watching local news after last Friday night and went with NWS Norman Twitter feed exclusively Sat., Sun., and all day yesterday. It was very freeing not to be tied to wall-to-wall coverage and hyperbole. Had the weather radio for the overnight warnings and just checked the NWS Norman Twitter feed when it went off for more info. It was great. Less stressful.
yes, and sometimes the only way to get this info... i didn't turn on the tv at 4am this morning when the sirens went off in norman, i just got on the NWS pages... but i have heard from several at work today that the local media stations failed to really have much about what was going on then... that i guess one had a crew out and was just talking but not showing radar, and the other two just had a scroll, no radar and didn't even interrupt the programming... again, this is all second hand, i did not witness, so please provide info to prove this not to be true, because it's actually really scary if true.
Thats a whole separate situation:
1. There is preplanning warnings to alert public of chances of storms
2. There is actual storm taking place and people giving advice what to do that exact moment
That tv station was wrong to ask people to leave. At that point it was too late, if people didn’t already leave they were better off in house. I personally feel that person caused deaths by telling people to leave.
The main discussion is about yesterdays “predictions” way before any storms popped. Not the same scenario. I feel they were correct in overhyping yesterday based on the info they had.
Can't speak for the other stations, but Emily Sutton on Channel 4 was specifically speaking about the tornado right after I tuned in after being awoken by the alert from my phone. Within a minute of the alert I was able to get live information about the situation and determine that I was safe where I was.
In general, I don't watch the local news or the regular weather reports. Any "hype" I get comes from here, for the most part. I don't feel that this event was "overhyped".
Channel 9 was live and called the TW in Norman before the sirens sounded. I was watching it live when it happened. Jed Castles was completely on the ball and basically running the show on his own (all the other mets were gone by then). I think he was also having to cover for the KOTV 6 side in Tulsa because he covered a TW just east of Tulsa at nearly the same time this morning.
So there was definitely local TV coverage of the Norman event this morning. It was unfortunate that they blew the sirens in apparently ALL of Cleveland County, which stretches up well into the OKC city limits....but that's a separate issue.
awesome... this all makes me much happier to hear. like i said, it was something i overheard, so it was all second hand info.
Excellent point and spot-on regarding yesterday's forecasts: If you give the NWS and the SPC folks in particular the same parameters we had yesterday, they'll issue the same PDS every time. *ALL* the parameters were right there. I mean, IIRC, you had p(.95) of hail *AND* wind *and* tornadoes.
I think what happened yesterday just goes to highlight the fact that there are *so* many variables in play that, sometimes, you're very best information can still not work out exactly as might be predicted. Lost amid this discussion is the fact that SPC had this storm situation identified in long-range forecasts as much as (if not more than) a week ago. Perhaps the broader takeaway is that the more *micro* the forecast becomes, the greater the risk for departures from expectations.
This wasn't an abnormal hype situation. You had tornado chasers from all over the *country* here yesterday because of the atmospheric setup. The tornadoes in Mangum and east of Tulsa late last night were indicative of what they expected all over the state yesterday, so it wasn't like it was a total miss. I think OKC/central Oklahoma truly dodged a bullet.
Saw this don’t shoot the messenger. Will be curious to see NOAA forecast later tonight. Most weather people are likely sleeping right now from being up all night
—-
Aaron Tuttle
@AaronTuttleOK
Tomorrow could be an interesting supercell surprise event over C OK. Join me tonight at 9:30 to discuss the possibility of tornadoes returning. #okwx #tornadoes #Oklahoma #okc #tulsa
12:51 PM · May 21, 2019 · Twitter for Android
I think tomorrow has capping issues which why only a few people are latching onto it. But we will see.
.I also saw Shelby Hays on KOCO ...she was reporting and had a live report from Michael Armstrong in the field.awesome... this all makes me much happier to hear. like i said, it was something i overheard, so it was all second hand info
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