Yeah, it was a Sunday afternoon, and from the sound of it, the met was the only person in the building, LOL. I was surprised he had to pick up the phone, from what I was hearing, to talk to somebody.
You would think the folks at the hub would be working in tandem? Can't they see the met is done and just switch and go back to programming?
So I observed a weather cut-in for my local Nexstar station, WCMH, a few weekends ago. After the meteorologist was done giving the weather warning, you could hear him off camera apparently calling up the 'hub' (Indianapolis, I think?) and verbally say "I'm done with the cut-in" or something to that effect.
Is that the common procedure now, where the meteorologist has to call the hub and have them cue the graphics and all that? I'm sure all the station groups have policies on when to cut in and how often. It was a Sunday and it appeared the met was the only one at the station.
There was that episode back in 2008, IIRC, where they hired another meteorologist to tag team the weather with Jym. It was a huge mistake. He certainly went through ups and downs at WCMH. A great man indeed.
Columbus weather legend Jym Ganahl has passed at 76. He came to WCMH in 1979 from KWWL, one of the youngest TV meteorologists in the nation. He 'retired" from WCMH in 2016. After a year, he returned to the air on WSYX/WTTE, retiring last year.
This is a huge loss. His 'weather lore' was the best. RIP Jym.
The NMSA has ID'd the "WJKS 1977" theme (also used in ABC News promos around the same time) as an Edd Kalehoff production piece called "Important Printout".
From Columbus, it's a WTVN-TV "Action News" cut in with Earl Green from 1978, with a "Bringing It Home to You" ID. News open at 1:59:10. Fun fact: WTVN was using automated cameras at the time.
This set was used by WTSP from Sept. 1994-April 2001. Also used by KCBS, KSTW, KPTV. Mixed opinions: It offered a variety of backdrops and a projection screen behind the sports anchor. The duratrans "10" behind the anchors was eyecatching. I felt like the newsdesk took up too much space. Maybe it was the faux woodgrain? By 2000, it was looking outdated as the other stations had upgraded their news sets.
Always liked this set, used by WTSP from 1988-1992, there was also an interview set that mirrored the look here. Also used by WPBF and WALA, maybe a few others.