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Rob Marciano raises the temperature in ways most meteorologists don't. The 40-year-old CNN weather anchor's matinee-idol looks have won the Connecticut
native a hot-and-bothered online fan base, while his comments last fall about the
"inaccuracies" perpetuated by Al Gore's Oscar-winning documentary An
Inconvenient Truth made environmentally minded bloggers' blood boil. But for
all his star power, Marciano, who also serves as a correspondent for CNN's
American Morning, is refreshingly down to earth when discussing issues
such as the global-warming debate, or the personal storms he's encountered—including Hurricane Katrina, which he covered from the front lines, and the
havoc a bad weather call can wreak (at outdoor weddings, especially). Of course,
there will always be some viewers who couldn't care less whether Marciano is
calling for rain or shine. Who said a weatherman can't be a sex symbol? Darrell
Hartman
How did you get into meteorology?
I've been a lifelong weather geek. I would drive my parents crazy. I knew exactly
when every weather guy was on every channel, and I would switch back and forth
trying to get them all. I learned early on that meteorology isn't an exact science—telling your teacher you didn't do your homework because the weatherman said it
was going to snow doesn't really work.
Do you consider yourself more of a scientist or a journalist?
I studied meteorology in college at Cornell and struggled through all the math
and physics prerequisites. When I'm not reporting on stories now, I'm getting the
facts right, making sure everything is triple- and quadruple-checked. But in the
end, we're telling stories on TV. I wouldn't go so far as to call it an art, but it's
definitely a craft.
How did you decide you wanted to do weather in front of the camera? I did a cost-benefit analysis—no, kidding. What I get to do, which my colleagues
in science and governmental agencies don't, is have fun. It is fun to get on TV.
You covered Hurricane Katrina from the ground. What was that like?
For weather events, there's been nothing like it in modern history. After it hit, I
thought I knew what to expect. But what was different about Katrina was that you
didn't see how big it was until it was over.
Which images stick in your mind?
Every few minutes someone would wander up, sunburned and raggedy, looking
for a friend or a loved one, or some water, or just some direction. They'd lost
everything. It's a gut check, because I get excited about storms—the bigger and
badder, the better. But you have to control your emotions and remember that
people are affected.
You had a moment of notoriety after you questioned certain claims in
An Inconvenient Truth on air. Was that a surprise to you?
I knew as soon as I said it that there was going to be a backlash. In the end, it
created a buzz of viewer interest, and we did an hour-long special on the myths
about global warming. I think Al Gore's message is a great message. I just want
the facts to be accurate, and fact is that global warming did not cause Katrina.
Are there a lot of misconceptions about the role of the weatherman?
People think we always get it wrong, but for 24-hour forecasts we have at least an
eighty percent accuracy rate. The problem is, people only remember the time it
rained on their daughter's wedding. Because the atmosphere is always in motion,
we'll never have enough numbers to put into a computer and make a hundred percent
forecast. That's good for me—it's job security.
Millions of people make weekend plans based on your predictions. Does that ever stress you out?
I think it's a greater responsibility at the local level. I worked on local TV for ten
years. You think a little bit harder about the weekend forecast, for sure. There are
times you don't sleep at night. But if you fess up and say you're sorry, viewers will
forgive you.
You have an Internet fan club. Did you know that?
There's a Yahoo group. The women who run the site are very protective of me.
They'll e-mail and say, "Someone said something about you—is it true? We're
going to reprimand them." They're my first line of defense.
Is it possible for a journalist to be a sex symbol?
I don't see why not. Presidential candidates have been called sex symbols. I don't
think the label is exclusive to movie stars. |
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