Chicago Sun-Times

Former Chicago forecaster co- founded Weather Channel

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LAS VEGAS — Former Chicago weather forecaster John Coleman, who co- founded The Weather Channel and was the original meteorolog­ist on ABC’s “Good Morning America” during a six- decade broadcasti­ng career, has died. He was 83.

His wife, Linda Coleman, told The Associated Press her husband died Saturday night at home in Las Vegas. She did not give a cause.

The Texas native got his first TV job while still a student at the University of Illinois. Mr. Coleman worked in Champaign and Peoria; Omaha, Nebraska, and Milwaukee before joining WBBM- Channel 2 in 1967.

He became one of the most colorful and controvers­ial figures in local television, jumping to WLS-Channel 7 in 1968 and playing a leading comedic role in the station’s “happy talk” news operation. He was known for such on- air antics as standing on his head or spritzing seltzer at the news anchors.

His ratings success at Channel 7 led to a six- year run, starting in 1977, as national weatherman for ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Mr. Coleman fulfilled a longtime dream in May 1982 when he launched The Weather Channel, a 24- hour cable weather service, based in Atlanta. In a bitter fight with his partners, Mr. Coleman was forced out the following year.

Mr. Coleman worked briefly for WCBS- TV in New York before returning to Chicago in 1984 to join WMAQ- Channel 5, where he came under fire from critics and colleagues for dire prediction­s of blizzards, deep freezes and other calamities in his forecasts.

Forecaster­s on rival channels took Mr. Coleman to task on the air one day in 1989 for warning that temperatur­es around Chicago would plunge to a record 30 degrees below zero. On the day in question, the temperatur­e actually fell to minus 11.

After leaving Channel 5 in 1990, Mr. Coleman went on to join KUSI-TV in San Diego, where he spent 20 years as weatherman for its morning show before retiring in 2014.

As the science of climate change was promoted by Al Gore and others, Mr. Coleman became a vocal skeptic. “There is no significan­t manmade global warming,” he said in a 2008 speech to the San Diego Chamber of Commerce. “There has not been any in the past, there is none now and there is no reason to fear any in the future. The climate of Earth is changing. It has always changed. But mankind’s activities have not overwhelme­d or significan­tly modified the natural forces.”

 ?? | SUN- TIMES LIBRARY ?? TV weatherman John Coleman for WLS- Channel 7 in Chicago in 1976. A Texas native, he got his first TV job while a student at the University of Illinois.
| SUN- TIMES LIBRARY TV weatherman John Coleman for WLS- Channel 7 in Chicago in 1976. A Texas native, he got his first TV job while a student at the University of Illinois.

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