Quiet Weekend… The Coolest Feature On My Site (I think… scroll down)
Quick Update: The low level circulation has disappeared on the East Coast, and now the only concern for NHC forecasters is the wave off the coast of Africa. Long term models do not bring it close to the US.
The tropics are quiet, the wildfires in California are no longer threatening homes and about 50% contained, and we are entering what is supposed to be the busiest part of hurricane season. This is a great Labor Day Weekend.
Taking a look at the infrared satellite imagery (courtesy NOAA) off the coast of Africa, there is one area of disturbed weather the National Hurricane Center has deemed 95L, but it doesn’t look to develop. (The forums are active with chatter, so check out MYL Forums to get in on the discussion.) There’s a second tropical wave right on the coast (see the blow up of reds and yellows right near the coastline?). Computer models have this wave developing in the long term outlook, but then turning north in the middle of the Atlantic. As I say this, computer models have huge problems with forecasting not only a storm’s development, but it’s intensity, especially if the storm hasn’t formed a low level circulation.
Meanwhile, take a little time to get to know myweatherlady.com. In the navigation bar above, there is a section about me, my bookmark links (I save my bookmarks at a website called delicious.com. Not all of my web links are there yet, but it will have a complete list of all the weather websites I use eventually.) Just to the right of the bookmarks, I have contact info. Currently, the only way to contact me is through this website or at my email: dawn@myweatherlady.com.
On the left hand side, there is a list of all my blogs organized by categories. Currently, the categories I have are HOME (listing all the blogs), FORECAST TODAY! (to help forecasters who move around the country adjust to their new gig), FORUMS, and TV WEATHER (my blogging about the business of TV Weather, etc.). I want to add a category for KIDS as well as for Freqently Asked Questions. I’m working on those as well as continuing to add links and blogs to the categories I just listed. Below the categories, you will find links to the best hurricane blogs from around the country (My favorites are Jeff Masters from Weather Underground, and Surfline.com forecasters–but all are extremely valuable so you don’t miss something in your forecasting), as well as other weather bloggers below that.
Meanwhile, on the right hand side, you can keep up with me through twitter, check out the latest comments on my website, go visit my t-shirt shop(there’s stuff for kids, pets and people there). Scroll down to the GET YOUR LOCAL TV FORECAST! link. I think this is the COOLEST feature on my website. When you go to this link, you will find a list of all the TV stations across the country listed by state and town. Click on the town you live in or the town you are visiting, and you will find the local weather guy or gal giving the forecast. I love it! Check out David Bernard at the CBS in Miami, Jackie Johnson at KCAL in LA, or Steven Douglas in Fairbanks, Alaska. (I just randomly chose him.)
I will be gone for the next 36 hours on a scuba diving trip, so I will not update on Monday. To track hurricanes while I’m gone, visit the hurricane blogs, or go to the weblinks I’ve set up under Tracking Hurricanes.
-Dawn Brown
TV Forecasting in the Bay Area
If you go to my t-shirt shop, you’ll see a couple of shirts I made to represent San Francisco weather. My niece loves “The Horror! The Fog!”, because if you’re on the inland side of the coastal ranges, and you start to see the fog roll in, it can feel like a winter snow storm hitting on a summer day. San Francisco experiences heavy rains, thunderstorms, even snow on nearby mountaintops. During the summertime, forecasting high temperatures can be extremely difficult. You can forecast a high of 80 degrees, and the marine layer will move in, and your forecast high will be blown by 15 degrees! My friend Billy Poon, meteorologist at KPIX in San Francisco, helped me with this blog.
NWS Office San Francisco/Monterey Bay (I use this to check out the weather changes in the last 24 hours, surface pressure very important for forecasting shifts in winds. Wind shifts are not only important for marine forecasts in the Pacific and San Francisco Bay, but for fog forecasting as well.)
Weather Underground Bay Area Weather Sites (This map from Weather Underground shows all the personal weather stations available, much more than the local National Weather Service Office provides. Each station has a record of weather information.)
Unisys Weather Upper Air Models (Place I go to start on my 7-day forecast.)
GFS MOS Guidance (GFS MOS forecast guidance for temperatures around the Bay.)
NAM MOS Guidance (NAM MOS forecast guidance for temperatures.)
Raw FOUS Data (The FOUS… Billy uses this to check out the Relative Humidity at 3 levels, for Low, Mid & Highs clouds & rainfall over 60 hours.)
NWS San Francisco/Monterey Bay Weather Tables (This is a clickable map that will show 7-day model based weather forecast.)
Air Quality (Check the air quality for the day—big concern in the summertime.)
Airport Delays (Check for airport delays, especially San Francisco!)
Rainfall Forecast (Rainfall forecast broken down over 3 days, very fine detail. Billy says it’s a great tool during rainy season.)
California Department of Transportation – Road Conditions (Knowing the actual road conditions, can help you determine if you blew the rain/snow elevation on the roads leading up to Lake Tahoe!)
USGS Earthquake Map (And, of course in California, you will need this earthquake map from the USGS.)
Thanks Billy!
-Dawn Brown, Billy Poon, KPIX Meteorologist
Tips for the Gulf South TV Forecaster
Moving to a new TV market is tough. I’m putting together some of the most important websites you’ll need to hit the ground running. Good Luck! Since the Gulf South is driven in a large part by the tropics during the summertime, you will have many days of frustation before you begin to learn the patterns and the different small scale boundaries that can develop. Severe weather develops rapidly, especially in the fall, winter and spring. Even a summertime thunderstorm can cause flooding in the streets. Of course snow is not a common occurence, but if you get all the right ingredients, you will have a miracle snow day during a cold winter.
Looking at the radar and satellite, (if your shop doesn’t have what you need, go to the National Weather Service Eastern Region Headquarters and Aviation Weather) to get a general idea of the weather pattern.
Use your synoptic scale models (large scale models) to get storm placement, flow patterns, and 850 mb temperatures, and precipitation amounts (this is available at Unisys Weather), and make a short-term forecast. Look at atmospheric forecast soundings site, especially if thunderstorms are expected, to determine severity. Make sure you visit the Storm Prediction Center to see if you are in a risk category for thunderstorms.
Generally, your local NWS office can give you the risk of inland flooding due to repeated storms, but here’s a link to the Hydrometeorological Prediction Center – Inland Flooding in case that is a concern during repeated storm events or a tropical storm has moved inland.
Tides are extremely important for coastal communities, here’s a link to Tide Predictions for Gulf States. Marine and boating forecasters also generally use buoy data. NOAA Buoys Gulf of Mexico
Make an extended 7-day forecast using the latest and most complete suite of extended model runs (e.g. the GFS), available at NCEP Model Analyses and Forecasts.
Also, you’ll need a temperature forecast to compare all of your graphical data against for a highs/lows forecast. The best place to find MOS (Model Output Statistics) is Current NWS MOS Forecast Products.
When it comes to tropical weather, which can also often be a player, things can get even more interesting, here’s a link to my blog on Tracking Hurricanes.
Oh! One added note, sea fog can develop in the wintertime along the Gulf South. The NWS Office in New Orleans has a decision tree Sea Fog Forecasting to help you forecast a sea fog event in the wintertime. It’s fascinating!
Meet Dr. William Gray, Hurricane Forecaster
I met Dr. William Gray when he was in New Orleans for the American Meteorological Society annual meeting in January 2008. While we were walking along the infamous site of the 17th Street Canal levee break in Lakeview, a tour bus stopped to point him out. He waved, getting quite a chuckle out of his renown here along the Gulf South for his yearly seasonal hurricane outlooks. In Fort Collins, Colorado, where he lives and does his research, he was always known as the Mayor’s husband. His wife Nancy (now deceased) was the one people were stopping to greet.
He wanted to be famous when he was young, but for slinging a baseball. “I wanted to be a pitcher,” Gray said.
His baseball dreams stunted by a knee injury, Gray graduated from George Washington University with a degree in geography. He was working on his masters when World War II intervened. Like other meteorologists of his generation, he was trained to forecast weather during the war. Gray was stationed in the middle of the Atlantic on the Azores, an island chain 900 miles off the coast of Portugal, providing forecasts for the Trans-Atlantic flights. At that time, there were no satellites and no computers. “I got a lot of good weather experience.”
At the end of the war, Gray decided to continue his career in meteorology under the tutelage of Dr. Herbert Riehl in Chicago, whom Gray calls the most prominent tropical meteorologist of his time. “The new National Hurricane Research Project had just been formed,” and so in 1958, Riehl and Gray began flying into the center of hurricanes. Dr. Gray wrote his Master/PhD thesis from the flight data gathered during these flights into the center of the storms, describing the internal structure of these storms.
In 1961, Dr. Herbert Riehl moved to Chicago, and offered Gray a job in his department at Colorado State University. Still based far from hurricane country, Gray began spending every summer in Florida, chasing hurricanes. But, there was one big problem. “We would go to Florida every year and wonder was this going to be an active season?”
Dr. Gray states the Atlantic Ocean Basin has the largest year to year variability when it comes to tropical cyclones. “Some years there just weren’t many storms, other years a whole lot of storms and the question is we couldn’t tell before the season. It was completely random.” Gray told me.
In the early part of the 1980s, after Dr. Gray had been flying into storms for 3 decades, he noticed a parallel between two data sets he had collected: the formation of El Nino in the Pacific Ocean and the lack of tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean Basin. During an El Nino year, there would be less tropical cyclone activity in the Atlantic Ocean. The term El Nino refers to the periodic warming of the Pacific Ocean off the coast of South America. For years, it’s mainly been the bane of the Western United States, because it can lead to flooding rains and mudslides. But, in the Atlantic, it leads to wind shear, and wind shear is bad for hurricanes. (Wind shear is a change in wind direction or speed with height.)
When Dr. Gray made the discovery back in the 1980s, it didn’t receive much attention because there weren’t very many storms. But in the last 15 years, the Southeastern United States has been hit by one devastating storm after another. And populations across the Eastern United States and Gulf of Mexico began waiting for his predictions and whether it spelled another active year, or a relatively quiet season. Nowadays, most of his research is done by Dr. Phil Klotzbach, the main author on the seasonal outlooks. Their research and outlook forecasts are much more complicated, based on worldwide weather patterns, and ocean temperatures around the globe.
And, he’s got competition. Forecasters at North Carolina State, the Weather Research Center in Houston, and European forecasters all put out a seasonal hurricane forecast, among others.
However, the official hurricane outlook published by NOAA at the beginning of hurricane season still most resembles the forecast parameters discovered by Dr. Gray.
Tips for the TV Forecaster in the Northeast
Moving to a new TV market is tough. I’m putting together some of the most important websites you’ll need to hit the ground running. Good Luck!
Forecasting in the Northeast can be overwhelming, especially if you start in the middle of winter! You could be dealing with lake effect snow, ice storms, sleet, freezing rain and blizzards! Here are some of the best web links to get your forecast off the computer and on the air.
After looking at the radar and satellite, (if your shop doesn’t have what you need, go to the National Weather Service Eastern Region Headquarters and Aviation Weather), follow these steps to make a forecast:
Take a look at Unisys Weather at your synoptic scale models to get storm placement, flow patterns, and 850 mb temperatures (this is available at Unisys Weather). Unisys also has the local Skew-T’s, but forecast soundings are also available here.
After you’ve figured out what’s going on in the larger scale, you can get down to the more nitty-gritty mesoscale (especially for lake-effect and even rain/snow lines). What I typically use for this is a tool called BUFKIT which is available at Buffalo, NY National Weather Service for download along with the required data sets.
Also, especially good for lake-effect snow, is the MM5 model, which is available at SUNY Stony Brook MM5 Mesoscale Forecasts.
To wrap this up and get a good idea of the next 7 days of weather, a good standby for the latest and most complete suite of extended model runs (e.g. the GFS) is NCEP Model Analyses and Forecasts.
Of course, you’ll also need a temperature forecast to compare all of your graphical data against for a highs/lows forecast. The best place to find MOS (Model Output Statistics) is Current NWS MOS Forecast Products.
If you’d like to learn more about forecasting lake-effect snow or other winter weather phenomena, check out this website MetEd Home Page and become a member.
Another great option is to check out Haby Hints, developed by meteorologist Jeff Haby from Mississippi State University. You can go to his website and search for pretty much any weather term, and get an easy explanation of how to predict and forecast weather.
Happy forecasting!
Tracking Hurricanes
Okay… I don’t want to overwhelm you with hurricane weather pages. You can visit a million pages, and still come up with the same result—the hurricane is headed in your direction. However, in this day and age, you can track a hurricane as often as the satellite captures its image. I have a few descriptions of these web pages to help you wade through.
Basic Hurricane Data
National Hurricane Center (Has the latest storms, 5-day track forecasts, satellite imagery, analysis and frequently asked questions. It does NOT have computer models-see below.)
Weather Underground Hurricane Page (Dr. Jeff Masters has compiled such a thorough page, it has latest storms, tracks, computer models, and a dozen websites to help you analyze a storm.)
Storm Pulse (Very pretty website with easy to understand track plots of current storms.)
Guide To Hurricanes (Cool website from Scientific American that explains why hurricanes occur.)
Central Florida Hurricane Center (Good website with lots of data.)
Skeetobite Weather ( I like skeetobite’s dropdown menus, easy to find info.)
Crown Weather Services (Crown has a useful blog about the storms’ as well.)
Millennium Weather (Kind of a techy website, not easy to use.)
Unisys Weather Hurricane Page ( I mainly use this for historical information.)
Hurricane Computer Models – for the Weather Expert (and Geek too)
Florida State University Experimental Tropical Cyclone Genesis Page (Forecasters like this one because it shows frame by frame the possible track, and possible intensification.)
Weather Underground’s GFS Model ( I like this one… it shows the Atlantic basin, and has easy to read color contours)
National Weather Service Hurricane Models (NCEP) (Provided by the National Center for Environmental Prediction, this shows the computer models put out by the National Weather Service-most importantly the GFDL (GHM), GFS and HWRF.)
Canadian Model (I look at the GEM to see if it’s in line with the other forecasts.)
ECMWF – European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Model (The ECMWF is one model that the NHC watches to see if it diverges from computer models sponsored by the United States. It’s relied on heavily during hurricane season. If you read the NHC discussions on storms, it will often say ECMWF.)
Colorado State Track Model Guidance (A lot of people like this track model guidance, because it shows you a dozen computer model tracks, and shows whether there is an agreement or disagreement among the hurricane computer models. Take note: it shows some unsophisticated models.)
MIT’s Track & Intensity Guidance (This page isn’t “pretty” but it’s pretty easy to understand. There’s a graph to show the computer model for intensity forecast, and the forecast model tracks.)
WX Forecaster’s Hurricane Page (This is a website put together by a forecaster for forecasters… gotta love this guy!)
The Navy’s Weather Forecasting Website (During hurricane season, everyone wants to know which is better the NOGAPS or the GFDL, especially if they disagree. Both are global models, the GFDL is run and researched by the NHC. As far as statistics, the National Hurricane Center track “bests” all models at most forecast times.)
Explanation of Computer Models
Dr. Jeff Master’s Explanation of Hurricane Models (Dr. Jeff Masters, the Director of Meteorology for Weather Underground has a more detailed description of the hurricane computer models is you would like something else to refer to.)
Table Listing Computer Models and Summaries by NHC (This link has a summary of the hurricane computer models. You can find out the actual name of the model—it lists the name as well as abbreviation. For example, the GFDL is the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory model, and also has a technical description for you.)
National Hurricane Center FAQ’s – Hurricane Models (And for one more explanation, you can go to the NHC’s Frequently Asked Questions website.)
Interpretation of Hurricane Forecasts (This is a GREAT website to thoroughly understand what the TV weather anchors are talking about when they show you the CONE OF UNCERTAINTY.)
Hurricane Formation – for the Weather Geek!
NCEP Cyclogenesis Tracking Page
Get Your Local TV Forecast
CLICK ON YOUR TOWN TO WATCH YOUR LOCAL FORECAST! Your can watch your local forecast on the internet! Click on the town you live in below, or the town you are visiting to watch the local forecast from the weather anchor. Scroll down the list to find the state and then town. (For a faster search, hit Control F, then type in the name of the town, and hit enter.)
ALABAMA
Birmingham
Dothan
Huntsville-Decatur, GA
Mobile-Pensacola, FL
Montgomery
ALASKA
Anchorage
Fairbanks
Juneau
ARIZONA
Phoenix
Tucson
Yuma-El Centro, CA
ARKANSAS
Ft. Smith
Jonesboro
Little Rock-Pine Bluff
CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles
San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose
NBC San Francisco/San Jose Weather
FOX San Francisco/Oakland Weather
Sacramento-Stockton-Modesto
San Diego
Fresno-Visalia
Monterey-Salinas
CBS/FOX Monterey Weather Live!
Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-San Luis Obispo
ABC Santa Barbara Weather Live!
NBC San Luis Obispo Weather Live!
Bakersfield
Chico-Redding
Palm Springs
ABC Palm Springs Weather Live!
NBC Palm Springs Weather Live!
Eureka
COLORADO
Denver
Colorado Springs-Pueblo
ABC Colorado Springs Weather Live!
NBC Colorado Springs Weather Live!
CBS Colorado Springs Weather Live!
FOX Colorado Springs Weather Live!
Grand Junction-Montrose
ABC Grand Junction Weather Live!
NBC Grand Junction Weather Live!
CONNECTICUT
Hartford & New Haven
DELAWARE *see Philadelphia, D.C.*
D.C. (Washington, DC-Hagerstown)
ABC Washington D.C. Weather Live!
NBC Hagerstown, MD Weather Live!
CBS Washington D.C. Weather Live!
FOX Washington D.C. Weather Live!
FLORIDA
Tampa-St. Petersburg
ABC Tampa-St. Petersburg Weather Live!
NBC Tampa St. Petersburg Weather Live!
CBS Tampa-St. Petersburg Weather Live!
FOX Tampa-St. Petersburg Weather
Miami-Ft. Lauderdale
Orlando-Daytona Beach-Melbourne
West Palm Beach
ABC West Palm Beach Weather Live!
NBC West Palm Beach Weather Live!
CBS West Palm Beach Weather Live!
FOX West Palm Beach Weather Live!
Jacksonville-Brunswick
ABC/NBC Jacksonville Weather Live!
CBS Jacksonville Weather Live!
Mobile-Pensacola, FL
Ft. Myers-Naples
ABC/NBC Ft. Myers-Naples Weather Live!
CBS Ft. Myer-Naples Weather Live!
FOX Ft. Myers-Naples Weather Live!
Tallahassee-Thomasville
Panama City
Gainesville
GEORGIA
Atlanta
Savannah
Augusta
Macon
Columbus
Albany
HAWAII
Honolulu
IDAHO
Boise
Idaho Falls-Pocatello
ABC Idaho Falls-Pocatello Weather Live!
NBC Idaho Falls-Pocatello Weather Live!
Twin Falls
ILLINOIS
Chicago
Champaign-Springfield-Decatur
ABC Champaign/Springfield-Decatur Weather Live!
NBC Champaign/Springfield-Decatur Weather Live!
FOX Champaign/Springfield-Decatur Weather
Peoria-Bloomington
ABC/NBC Peoria-Bloomington Weather
CBS/FOX Peoria-Bloomington Weather Live!
Rockford
ABC/FOX Rockford Weather Live!
INDIANA
Indianapolis
ABC Indianapolis Weather Live!
NBC Indianapolis Weather Live!
CBS Indianapolis Weather Live!
South Bend-Elkhart
ABC South Bend-Elkhart Weather Live!
NBC South Bend-Elkhart Weather Live!
CBS South Bend-Elkhart Weather Live!
FOX South Bend-Elkhart Weather Live!
Evansville
Ft. Wayne
Terre Haute
NBC/FOX Terre Haute Weather Live!
Lafayette
IOWA
Des Moines-Ames
ABC Des Moines-Ames Weather Live!
NBC Des Moines-Ames Weather Live!
CBS Des Moines-Ames Weather Live!
Cedar Rapids-Waterloo
ABC Cedar Rapids-Waterloo Weather Live!
NBC Cedar Rapids-Waterloo Weather Live!
CBS/FOX Cedar Rapids-Waterloo Weather Live!
Davenport-Rock Island-Moline
Sioux City
Rochester-Mason City-Austin, MN
NBC Rochester, MN Weather Live!
CBS Mason City, IA Weather Live!
FOX Rochester, MN Weather Live!
Ottumwa-Kirksville
ABC Kirksville, MO Weather Live!
KANSAS
Kansas City
Wichita-Hutchinson Plus
Topeka
KENTUCKY
Louisville
Lexington
Paducah
Bowling Green
ABC Bowling Green Weather Live!
LOUISIANA
New Orleans
Shreveport
Baton Rouge
Lafayette
Monroe-El Dorado
Lake Charles
NBC Lake Charles Weather Live!
Alexandria
MAINE
Portland
Bangor
Presque Isle
MARYLAND
Washington DC (Hagerstown)
ABC Washington D.C. Weather Live!
NBC Hagerstown, MD Weather Live!
CBS Washington D.C. Weather Live!
FOX Washington D.C. Weather Live!
Baltimore
Salisbury
MASSACHUSETTS
Boston
ABC Manchester, NH Weather Live!
Springfield
MICHIGAN
Detroit
Grand Rapids-Kalamazoo
ABC WOTV Grand Rapids Weather Live!
CBS Grand Rapids Weather Live!
Flint-Saginaw-Bay City
Lansing
Traverse City-Cadillac
ABC Traverse City Weather Live!
Marquette
Alpena
MINNESOTA
Minneapolis-St. Paul
ABC KSTP Minneapolis Weather Live!
ABC KSAX Minneapolis Weather Live!
Duluth-Superior
Rochester-Mason City-Austin, MN
NBC Rochester, MN Weather Live!
CBS Mason City, IA Weather Live!
FOX Rochester, MN Weather Live!
Mankato
MISSISSIPPI
Jackson
Columbus-Tupelo-West Point
Biloxi-Gulfport
Hattiesburg-Laurel
Greenwood-Greenville
Meridian
NBC/CBS/FOX Meridian Weather Live!
MISSOURI
St. Louis
Kansas City
Springfield
CBS/FOX Springfield Weather Live!
Paducah-Cape Girardeau, MO
Columbia
Joplin-Pittsburg, KS
Quincy-Hannibal-Keokuk
St. Joseph
MONTANA
Missoula
Billings
ABC/FOX Billings Weather Live!
Great Falls
Butte-Bozeman
Helena
Glendive
*No TV News Stations Listed*
NEBRASKA
Omaha
Lincoln-Hastings
ABC KLKN Lincoln Weather Live!
Cheyenne,WY-Scottsbluff, NE
ABC Cheyenne-Scottsbluff Weather Live!
CBS Cheyenne-Scottsbluff Weather
North Platte
NBC North Platte Weather Live!
NEVADA
Las Vegas
Reno
NEW HAMPSHIRE
ABC Manchester, NH Weather Live!
NEW JERSEY
*No TV Stations Listed*
(South Jersey-Philadelphia, North Jersey-New York City)
NEW MEXICO
Albuquerque-Santa Fe
ABC Santa Fe-Amarillo Weather Live!
NEW YORK
New York
ABC New York City Weather Live!
CBS New York Weather City Live!
FOX New York City Weather Live!
Buffalo
Albany-Schenectady-Troy
Rochester
Syracuse
NBC/CBS Syracuse Weather Live!
Burlington-Plattsburgh
FOX Colchester VT Weather Live!
Binghamton
Utica
Elmira (Corning)
Watertown
NORTH CAROLINA
Charlotte
Raleigh-Durham
ABC Raleigh-Durham Weather Live!
Greenville-Spartanburg-Asheville-Anderson
CBS WSPA Greenville Weather Live!
CBS WNEG Greenville Weather Live!
Greensboro-High Point-Winston/Salem
Greenville-New Bern-Washington-Jacksonville, FL
Wilmington
NORTH DAKOTA
Fargo-Valley City
Minot-Bismarck-Dickinson
CBS KXMA Bismarck Weather Live!
OHIO
Cleveland-Akron
Cincinnati
Columbus
ABC/FOX Columbus Weather Live!
Dayton
Toledo
Youngstown
ABC/CBS/FOX Youngstown Weather Live!
Steubenville-Wheeling, WV
CBS Wheeling, WV Weather Live!
Lima
Zanesville
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
NBC Oklahoma City Weather Live!
CBS Oklahoma City Weather Live!
FOX Oklahoma City Weather Live!
Tulsa
Wichita Falls-Lawton
ABC Wichita Falls-Lawton Weather Live!
NBC/FOX Wichita Falls-Lawton Weather Live!
CBS Wichita Falls-Lawton Weather Live!
Sherman, TX-Ada, OK
OREGON
Portland
Eugene
Medford-Klamath Falls
Bend
PENNSYLVANIA
Philadelphia
ABC Philadelphia Weather Live!
NBC WMGM Linwood, NJ Weather Live!
CBS Philadelphia Weather Live!
FOX Philadelphia Weather Live!
Pittsburgh
Harrisburg-Lancaster
ABC Harrisburg-Lancaster Weather
CBS Harrisburg-Lancaster Weather Live!
FOX Harrisburg-Lancaster Weather Live!
Wilkes Barre-Scranton
ABC Wilkes Barre-Scranton Weather Live!
NBC/CBS Wilkes Barre-Scranton Weather Live!
FOX Wilkes Barre-Scranton Weather Live!
Johnstown-Altoona
Erie
RHODE ISLAND
Providence-New Bedford
SOUTH CAROLINA
Greenville-Spartanburg-Asheville
CBS WSPA Greenville Weather Live!
CBS WNEG Greenville Weather Live!
Columbia
Charleston
Myrtle Beach-Florence
ABC Myrtle Beach-Florence Weather Live!
NBC Myrtle Beach-Florence Weather Live!
CBS Myrtle Beach-Florence Weather Live!
FOX Myrtle Beach-Florence Weather
SOUTH DAKOTA
Sioux Falls
Minot-Bismarck-Dickinson
CBS KXMA Bismarck Weather Live!
Rapid City
TENNESSEE
Nashville
Memphis
Knoxville
Chattanooga
Tri-Cities
Jackson
TEXAS
Dallas-Ft. Worth
ABC Dallas-Ft. Worth Weather Live!
CBS Dallas-Ft. Worth Weather Live!
FOX Dallas-Ft. Worth Weather Live!
Houston
San Antonio
Austin
Waco-Temple-Bryan
Harlingen-Weslaco-Brownsville-McAllen
El Paso
Tyler-Longview
ABC KLTV Tyler-Longview Weather Live!
ABC KTRE Tyler-Longview Weather Live!
NBC KETK Tyler-Longview Weather Live!
FOX Tyler-Longview Weather Live!
Amarillo
Corpus Christi
ABC Corpus Christi Weather Live!
NBC Corpus Christi Weather Live!
CBS Corpus Christi Weather Live!
Beaumont-Port Arthur
ABC Beaumont-Port Arthur Weather Live!
CBS Beaumont-Port Arthur Weather
FOX Beaumont-Port Arthur Weather
Wichita Falls-Lawton
ABC Wichita Falls-Lawton Weather Live!
NBC/FOX Wichita Falls-Lawton Weather Live!
CBS Wichita Falls-Lawton Weather Live!
Lubbock
Odessa-Midland
NBC Odessa-Midland Weather Live!
CBS Odessa-Midland Weather Live!
Sherman, TX-Ada, OK
Abilene-Sweetwater
ABC Abilene-Sweetwater Weather Live!
NBC/CBS Abilene-Sweetwater Weather Live!
Laredo
San Angelo
Victoria
UTAH
Salt Lake City
ABC Salt Lake City Weather Live!
NBC Salt Lake City Weather Live!
CBS Salt Lake City Weather Live!
FOX Salt Lake City Weather Live!
VERMONT
Burlington-Plattsburgh
FOX Colchester VT Weather Live!
VIRGINIA
Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport News
Richmond-Petersburg
ABC Richmond-Petersburg Weather Live!
NBC Richmond-Petersburg Weather Live!
Roanoke-Lynchburg
ABC Roanoke-Lynchburg Weather Live!
NBC Roanoke-Lynchburg Weather Live!
CBS Roanoke-Lynchburg Weather Live!
Tri-Cities
Harrisonburg
ABC Harrisonburg Weather Live!
Charlottesville
ABC/CBS/FOX Charlottesville Weather Live!
NBC Charlottesville Weather Live!
WASHINGTON
Seattle-Tacoma
ABC Seattle-Tacoma Weather Live!
NBC Seattle-Tacoma Weather Live!
CBS Seattle-Tacoma Weather Live!
FOX Seattle-Tacoma Weather Live!
Spokane
Yakima-Pasco-Richland-Kennewick
ABC Yakima-Pasco Weather Live!
NBC Yakima-Pasco Weather Live!
WEST VIRGINIA
Charleston-Huntington
ABC Charleston-Huntington Weather Live!
NBC Charleston-Huntington Weather Live!
CBS Charleston-Huntington Weather Live!
FOX Charleston-Huntington Weather
Bluefield-Beckley-Oak Hill
NBC Bluefield-Beckley-Oak Hill Weather Live!
CBS Bluefield-Beckley-Oak Hill Weather Live!
Wheeling-Steubenville, OH
CBS Wheeling, WV Weather Live!
Clarksburg-Weston
CBS Clarksburg-Weston Weather Live!
FOX Clarksburg-Weston Weather Live!
Parkersburg
WISCONSIN
Milwaukee
Green Bay-Appleton
ABC Green Bay-Appleton Weather Live!
NBC Green Bay-Appleton Weather Live!
CBS Green Bay-Appleton Weather Live!
FOX Green Bay-Appleton Weather Live!
Madison
La Crosse-Eau Claire
NBC La Crosse-Eau Claire Weather Live!
CBS La Crosse-Eau Claire Weather
FOX La Crosse-Eau Claire Weather
Wassau-Rhinelander
ABC Wassau-Rhinelander Weather Live!
NBC Wassau-Rhinelander Weather Live!
CBS Wassau-Rhinelander Weather Live!
FOX Wassau-Rhinelander Weather
WYOMING
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