Weather Channel Wades Into Climate Debate

The hour-long special, scheduled to debut Nov. 7, interviews candidates at various sites chosen to illustrate the impact of climate change. Sen. Bernie Sanders, for example, speaks at the site of a devastating California wildfire and Sen. Kamala Harris along a flood-prone area of the Mississippi River.

NEW YORK (AP) — The Weather Channel is moving beyond cold fronts and heat waves to wade into the politics of climate change, with a special planned for early next month that includes interviews with nine presidential candidates on the topic.

The campaign’s most prominent climate change skeptic — President Donald Trump — declined an invitation to participate.

The hour-long special, scheduled to debut Nov. 7, interviews candidates at various sites chosen to illustrate the impact of climate change. Sen. Bernie Sanders, for example, speaks at the site of a devastating California wildfire and Sen. Kamala Harris along a flood-prone area of the Mississippi River.

The Weather Channel has done specials on the impact of climate change in Alaska and along the Louisiana coast, for example, but this is the first time the network has gotten involved directly in a political campaign.

“It gets the conversation going in a big way,” said Rick Knabb, the network’s on-air hurricane expert and former director of the National Hurricane Center. He and meteorologist Stephanie Abrams traded off on the interviews.

The Weather Channel wanted to do the special through its own scientific lens, said Nora Zimmett, the network’s senior vice president for content and programming. Although other networks inquired about joining and doing a town hall-style event, TWC turned them down.

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“We didn’t want to have a food fight about whose plan is better,” she said.

While the special is something new for the network, Zimmett said executives weren’t concerned about turning off weather fans who view it as a refuge from politics, or people like the president who see less urgency in addressing the issue. Despite a “vocal minority,” surveys show most viewers want to learn more about the issue and potential solutions, she said.

Trump may not be there, but the special won’t ignore him or what his administration has been doing, Knabb said.

Trump recently mocked Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg on Twitter for a United Nations speech to world leaders and skipped a UN meeting on the issue.

All three announced Republican challengers to Trump — Joe Walsh, former Illinois congressman, Bill Weld, former Massachusetts governor, and Mark Sanford, former South Carolina governor and congressman — are interviewed. For time reasons, organizers chose the top seven Democrats in the polls: in addition to Sanders and Harris, Sen. Cory Booker, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, former Rep. Beto O’Rourke and Mayor Pete Buttigieg. Former Vice President Joe Biden was not interviewed; his campaign said it was a scheduling issue.

Knabb said the interviews have taught him a lot about the complexities of proposed solutions.

“The public is going to learn a lot from this,” he said.

The Weather Channel’s show is separate from the Covering Climate Now initiative, which encouraged news organizations to do more stories on climate change. There’s been some criticism that the issue hasn’t received enough attention during the presidential debates.

“We’ve been lonely here on these issues,” Zimmett said, “and all we can do is hope that our friends at other media outlets join us.”


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RustbeltAlumnus2 says:

October 21, 2019 at 3:35 pm

The story does not mention that famed climate-change skeptic John Coleman co-founded The Weather Channel — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Coleman_(meteorologist)

RIDGELINE-TV says:

October 21, 2019 at 5:05 pm

I’m fairly sure John Coleman did believe in climate change (as the climate of the world has always been changing over millennia…) However, he might have been a man-made climate change skeptic. (Yes, words actually matter.)

As for President Trump – as the story suggests – he probably is dumb enough to be a “climate change skeptic,” but then again, Cheeto man believes windmills cause cancer…

LPTVCoalition says:

October 21, 2019 at 7:12 pm

from Wikipedia…
Coleman spoke out as a “rejectionis[t]” of global warming in 2007 after watching NBC’s “Green is Universal” week, where the studio lights were cut for portions of Sunday Night Football’s pre-game and half-time shows. He called the concept of climate change the “greatest scam in history”, and said that “the polar ice is increasing, not melting away. Polar bears are increasing in number.” Critics have pointed out that each of these claims was wrong or misleading, questioned his credibility due to his lack of relevant academic credentials, and said that he had not conducted any scientific research in the area of climate change. These views contributed to Coleman dropping out of the American Meteorological Society.

[email protected] says:

October 21, 2019 at 11:25 pm

Ridgeline believes in the green new deal which would cost too much and is an alarmist as well that it is the end of the world in 10 to 12 years which is a joke the world isn’t going to end at that time I don’t believe that for a second. As for Climate Change, I just believe in the little things that help I don’t believe you have to go big plus those that talk about Climate Change is do as I say not as I do Al Gore, AOC, Greta etc.