Herald on Sunday

DAN’S THE MAN TO DEAL WITH BIG UGLIES

Alex Casey meets TVNZ1’s weather star.

-

The good thing about listening to Daniel Corbett is that you don’t know if he’s talking about the weather, or if he’s tracing the movements of a Cockney gangster on the run. “Here comes the mean geezer,” he sternly warns down the barrel, “he’ll be here on Thursday, even though he’s lost most of his juice by now.” Crikey. The geezer’s not alone either. In the colourful stories Dan the Weatherman paints on the TVNZ1 news every night, he’s frequently joined by “little grandmas”, “nasty pancakes” and “big uglies”.

On this particular day, there’s going to be a “freight train” southerly barrelling up country. It’s 4.30pm and I’m sitting at Dan’s desk in the TVNZ newsroom, running through some of his choice phrases. It’s a pretty normal office environmen­t, if your version of normal is Mike Hosking glowering while holding an orange highlighte­r and Simon Dallow gliding around as if he’s on an invisible Segway. A cooing tour group, all tote bags and capri pants, comes in and fusses over Toni Street. She bounces out of her seat and greets them. Hosking’s glower deepens.

“Some people think I’m nutty!” chirps Dan, as I momentaril­y steal a glance at the sizeable glad bag of mixed nuts sitting on his desk. Luckily, he doesn’t let the haters dull his shine. All Dan wants to do with his nightly weather gig is to tell people a good story, and do whatever it takes to stop them “falling asleep and tipping their tea tray on to the floor”. But does he have a favourite phrase to use? He furrows his brow for a moment. “It’s raining so hard that even the ducks will be hiding under the deck.”

There’s so much more beyond the Nosferatu fingers you see every night at the tail end of the news. For example, Dan puts together everything you see on screen himself. For each of his roughly 4 minute 15 second live segments, he spends a whole day assembling the data, imagery, titles and animations. Staring at them cross-eyed, his computer screens are a swirling Magic Eye of mesmerisin­g, technicolo­ur weather patterns. “Notice how that front is dropping away?” I could only see a 3D dolphin, jumping through a hoop and coming straight for me.

Dan draws data from three main computeris­ed weather models, as well as several smaller subsets throughout the day. There looked to be about 9000 tabs open across two screens. “There’s too much informatio­n to look at, really,” he says, staring into the eye of what was most probably a big mean ugly. One of the many tabs was Twitter. “I’ll just share this out on social media,” Dan says, mechanical­ly screen-grabbing a photo from his latest video. I couldn’t help but notice he only followed 15 people. Later I would investigat­e: all meteorolog­ists, of course.

Having cut his breaking-weather-news teeth during a stint in the heart of Texas’ tornado alley, Dan is well-versed in going off the cuff. This why he never uses an auto cue or even writes a script — a highly unusual decision that someone in the control room would later describe as “completely crazy”. I watch in awe as Dan copy and pastes ‘DAN AD-LIB’ into the news rundown again and again and again. Regardless of technical difficulty, breaking news or whatever other big ugly pancakes get thrown at him, Dan has never run under or over his allocated time. Nobody seemed able to explain it, not even him.

As six o’clock approaches, Dan hurries off to the makeup room and returns 15 minutes later, eyes rimmed with kohl and face contoured to rival a Kardashian. I sit in the best seat in the house — Hosking’s

Seven Sharp chair — to watch the master at work. Dan sways with complete focus until his countdown, coming alive in a blaze of finger guns and freight trains, the wild-eyed puppeteer of our atmosphere. Later in the control room, Toni Street would assure me that Dan is the most profession­al person in the building, before sprinting back to her desk because she had forgotten to bring a pen with her.

The clock strikes seven and Dan retires his special weather clicker to its nook behind the green screen, pacing back to his desk to check up on his weather maps. I still don’t know if he takes that much time away from the weather — certainly not on Twitter — but I finally got to ask what other interests he pursued before we parted. He and his wife like travelling, picnics and gardening, but it sounds as if he never actually leaves his office. “Truthfully, if I have a day off, I’ll often just sit there watching the sky.”

 ??  ?? Daniel Corbett
Daniel Corbett
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand