Dan Winters leaving WHO

wxman1

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Not sure where else to really put this. I can't find a news story on it yet but I heard that Allen Broadcasting Group which owns KWWL and KIMT in Iowa will soon no longer have meteorologists at the local stations. Sounds like they announced it to the stations/personnel yesterday.
 

garn91

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Jun 1, 2006
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Ankeny
Not sure where else to really put this. I can't find a news story on it yet but I heard that Allen Broadcasting Group which owns KWWL and KIMT in Iowa will soon no longer have meteorologists at the local stations. Sounds like they announced it to the stations/personnel yesterday.
 
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dmclone

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Not sure where else to really put this. I can't find a news story on it yet but I heard that Allen Broadcasting Group which owns KWWL and KIMT in Iowa will soon no longer have meteorologists at the local stations. Sounds like they announced it to the stations/personnel yesterday.
If KCCI or WHO did this, they would immediately lose a huge number of viewers to their competitor. This reminds me of the sports radio stations dropping all of the local talent.
 

ClonerJams

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If KCCI or WHO did this, they would immediately lose a huge number of viewers to their competitor. This reminds me of the sports radio stations dropping all of the local talent.
Sadly this is becoming a trend with media (just look at KXNO). Local media slowly dying.
 

FarmerCy1

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If KCCI or WHO did this, they would immediately lose a huge number of viewers to their competitor. This reminds me of the sports radio stations dropping all of the local talent.
Give it time and it will happen in the DSM market. The media conglomerates don’t care about local weather/news- just whatever is going to give them the most money in their pockets. If iHeart didn’t care about ruining what was a good local radio station in KXNO, Nexstar and Hearst aren’t going to care about WHO and KCCI
 
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michaelrr1

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Mar 30, 2006
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Brad Edwards retiring from WOI

This article mentioned WOI is planning to do the weather sharing on weekends.

In November, Local 5 told the Register in an email that WOI would be moving to a "weather sharing model" for weekend weather starting in 2025. The station will partner with WQAD in the Quad Cities to produce the weekend weather segments, wrote Anne Bentley, a spokesperson for TEGNA, the parent company of both stations.
 

awd4cy

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Dec 29, 2010
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Have to think this is why CW added Amber to the IE staff. There will be a local market for it sooner rather than later.
Does anyone really watch that? Like everything else, you don’t need to turn your tv on to find out the weather anymore. I guess that does offer viewing it on your social media though.
 

Cyched

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May 8, 2009
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Does anyone really watch that? Like everything else, you don’t need to turn your tv on to find out the weather anymore. I guess that does offer viewing it on your social media though.

I don't, but that's only because I live out of state. If there's still a demand for a local weather broadcast without TV, there's a place for it. It wouldn't overshadow any of IE's premier shows.

On the last 2GNC they mentioned more people view their show on YouTube vs. on a podcast app. If people already subscribe to the IE YT channel they could view Amber's forecast videos without much extra effort.
 

FarmerCy1

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What I am curious about is how KWWL and these other networks are going to handle severe weather. Unless they’re contracting with another station to handle the coverage, I don’t know how meteorologists in Atlanta are going to cover a tornado in eastern Iowa
 
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NWICY

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What I am curious about is how KWWL and these other networks are going to handle severe weather. Unless they’re contracting with another station to handle the coverage, I don’t know how meteorologists in Atlanta are going to cover a tornado in eastern Iowa

It'll sort of get covered but just not well they can read maps and towns but will have no real knowledge of the area.
 
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awd4cy

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Dec 29, 2010
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What I am curious about is how KWWL and these other networks are going to handle severe weather. Unless they’re contracting with another station to handle the coverage, I don’t know how meteorologists in Atlanta are going to cover a tornado in eastern Iowa
It definitely can be done. Even now people watch meteorologists covering storms on YouTube. I watched Max Velocity who lives in Florida.
 

FarmerCy1

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It definitely can be done. Even now people watch meteorologists covering storms on YouTube. I watched Max Velocity who lives in Florida.
Not saying it can’t, and I suppose The Weather Channel has enough meteorologists sitting around to cover a storm that pops up, but I can also see these stations just using generic areas for tracks of storms rather than being hyperlocal like local media can be
 

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