Hurricane Harvey Weather Incident and Media Hype
Hurricane Harvey's impact on Austin, Texas, involves significant rainfall and flooding, with expectations of up to 40 inches in certain areas. Observations from weather stations suggest that media classifications of the storm as a Category 4 were exaggerated compared to recorded wind speeds of 80 to 100 miles per hour. The discrepancy between official reports and local conditions highlights a tendency for news outlets to prioritize sensationalism to maintain viewership.
hurricane harvey· austin· texas· tropical storm· weather reporting· media hype
00:00 We sound like news execs now. Adam Curry, John C. DeVora. And Sunday, August 27th, 2017, this is your award-winning Gitmo Nation Media Assassination, Episode Niner Five Niner! This is no agenda. The world is a good ham shun, right? And coming to you from the darkest corners of the United and downtown Austin, Tejas, Capital of the Drone, Star State, In the Cluedio, In the Morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley, where it's not raining, it's not snowing, there's no wind, it's nice out, I'm John C. DeVore. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill. In the Morning! Yeah, baby.
00:38 I understand you're having a bit of a weather incident. A bit of rain, yes. Yeah, weather incident is correct, yes. Yeah, Texas. Yes, that's right. Yeah, it's been really fun fielding all the text messages and WhatsApp and Facebook. Are you okay? Is everybody okay? Are you safe? Stay safe. Stay safe. Thinking of you and yours. Yeah, it's... It's really quite interesting to be in... we're not really in the hurricane, I have to say. Well, if you watch the Friday news, you guys are part of the... We're dead! We're dead! Three feet of rain. Well, that may be happening, and I think the actual disaster is still ahead of us because of the amount of rainfall that's expected. It's not expected to stop raining until Friday.
01:32 And it is coming down. I think we have... The next five days it's going to keep raining like this? Yeah, in Austin we have, I think we've got like 12 inches now, so almost a foot. Wow. And they're talking about 35, 40 inches of rain in some places. Right. So yeah, it's been very interesting. Tina's been through a couple of hurricanes when she lived in Florida. And when she said, oh my God, it's a cat three, and now it's a cat four, which by the way, I dispute. It's not a cat four anymore. It turned into a tropical storm like last night. I know, John. Thanks for the info. I'm in the middle of it. You'd think I'd know.
02:13 Well, that's what I said. When they, when it was... I was just backing you up. I'm... When it was... I was just backing you up. No, what I'm disputing is it was coming towards shore and then it was, oh, we have incredible intensification. Intensification, is what it's called apparently. Is that when it hits shore? Intensification. And then they said it was a cat 4 and, you know, I am able to monitor weather stations and I was seeing about 80 to 100 knots or miles per hour actually and not 130. And so I don't know exactly, and I tried to look up the classification. It seemed to me like they were a little hypey on the Cat 4, we're all gonna die, and then, oh! We're surprised! We had no idea it would slow down so quickly. How else are they gonna get people to watch these shows? Well, I can do an example of how they get people to watch the shows. Maybe you should go to our reporter on the scene outside there, John. Adam. We got Adam Curry on the scene. He's right there in the middle of the storm.
03:13 Oh my god, that sounds terrible. Adam, stay safe. That's pretty much every report for the past 48 hours.
