With more than a foot of snow, sleet, and ice falling over
much of Pennsylvania, the television news teams went into overdrive. This may
be an accurate description of one of those minute-by-minute broadcasts.
“I’m Harry Hansom. co-anchor Polly Prattle just called. Her
car slid into a ditch about eight miles from the studio. Fortunately, she had
her roller-blades, and is skating furiously to get here so she doesn’t lose a
day’s pay. We begin our team weather coverage with chief meteorologist Hugh
Miditty.”
“Based upon detailed computer analysis and extensive
satellite monitoring, available only through our exclusive Poplar Eye-Witless
Weather Watch System, we can trace an upper level atmospheric low-pressure
system that formed just east of Phoenix, traveled north to I-80, then cruised
east where it hit dead-center with another low-pressure system coming north
from spring training in Florida. Or, maybe it began in New Jersey, and then ran
a doughnut of isobars around Pennsylvania. As you know, a lot of bad things
begin in Jersey. Before the storm leaves to drop two feet of hail on Bermuda,
we’ll have anywhere from five inches to three feet of snow and sleet. Or, maybe,
we’ll just have a foot or so of acid rain that’ll burn the paint off every car
in a hundred mile radius.”
“Thanks, Hugh, for a report that got real deep. We continue
our extended and comprehensive team coverage of the snow emergency with Flake
Sepulveda.”
“From high atop our All-News Roof, I can tell you there’s a
heap of snow out here. Let me fight the bruising wind and go to the edge of the
roof and take a closer look. It appears . . .”
“We’ve lost communication with the roof. Let’s check traffic
with Barry Blades in HeliCam 2.”
“It’s real white out here. I can’t see the road, but it
looks like I’m a little south of Manitoba, and up to my rear rotor in snow. I’m
also running out of fuel. Back to you, Harry.”
“For a ground-level view, we go LIVE to Susie Sweetwater.”
“I’m standing in the middle of a large parking lot. It seems
to go on forever. The drivers have kept their motors running, but for some
reason they aren’t moving onto the interstates.”
“Susie, I believe you’re standing in the middle of I-80.
Have you seen any snow plows yet?”
“No, but that white stuff is all around me. As you can see,
only my Gucci snow hat is visible at the moment. If my dumb cameraman hadn’t
broken his leg trying to get 100 pounds of equipment out of the all-weather
WFAD News VW bug, we’d have even better pictures of nothing.”
“Thanks Susie. Now to Bob Covina, LIVE at PennDOT
headquarters. Bob, we understand there are thousands of cars on the
interstates, and PennDOT crews are nowhere to be seen.”
“That’s right, Harry. It’s a matter of safety. It’s
dangerous for the workers to be out in this kind of weather, especially when
there’s all those cars, buses, and trucks they’d have to dodge on the
interstates.”
“Do you have any idea when PennDOT might begin to clear the
roads?”
“It’s past 6 p.m. now, so I guess when management comes to
work around 8 or 9 tomorrow we’ll have a better idea.”
“Thanks, Bob. We have a special satellite link to the
command center of the county’s Emergency Management Agency, deep within the reinforced
bunker of Mount Melmac. Ethel, you’ve been EMA director 20 years, what’s your
county doing to provide emergency assistance?”
“Nothing yet, Harry. We weren’t told to do anything, so we
haven’t done anything. But we’re all here in the command center just waiting to
answer telephones if anyone calls.”
“Thanks, Ethel, keep us posted on the fine work you’ve been
doing. Now, LIVE on Second Street is Kiki Vertigo who’s been interviewing
residents about their response to the snow.”
“With me right now, EXCLUSIVELY on Second Street, is
resident Homer Bigeloo who has a snow shovel. Homer, what are you doing?”
“I’m shoveling snow.”
“Have you been shoveling long?”
“I don’t like snow.”
“How long haven’t you liked snow?”
“A long time.”
“Thanks, Homer. I’m Kiki Vertigo, LIVE on Second Street.
Back to you, Harry.”
“Another great interview, Kiki. Right after this message
from Mendocino Frozen TV Dinners, we’ll be back with an abbreviated ‘World in
60 Seconds’ edition, and special 15-second reports about the nuclear war in the
Middle East and the break-through discovery of a cure for cancer.”
Walter Brasch, a national
award-winning journalist and professor of journalism at Bloomsburg University,
says cabin fever and watching TV newscasts can warp a person’s mind. You may
contact Brasch through his website, www.walterbrasch.com.