Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

A man for all seasons

- By Kori Rumore and Marianne Mather Chicago Tribune Breaking history since 1847 Have an idea for Vintage Chicago Tribune? Share it with Ron Grossman and Marianne Mather at rgrossman@chicagotri­bune.com and mmather@chicagotri­bune.com

“Skilling quits,” the headline read. WGN-TV’s chief meteorolog­ist Tom Skilling will retire next week. Fortysix years ago, though, he was a household name in Milwaukee. At the popular WITI-TV, Skilling presented detailed reports using maps and charts — unique for the time and his calling card today — to help viewers understand weather patterns. He even earned American Meteorolog­ical Society certificat­ion.

One WITI colleague, however, threatened Skilling’s profession­al standing. Albert the Alleycat told bad jokes as part of the station’s weather segments. Albert’s antics, which predated Skilling, were beloved by the station and viewers alike. Profession­al weather forecaster­s thought Albert gave them a bad reputation. The AMS threatened to revoke Skilling’s seal of approval because of Albert.

That’s because Albert was a puppet. “I’m caught in the middle. I want to keep the seal and I like Albert,” Skilling said at the time. “I’ve given it a lot of thought and I’m not going to be very happy if the seal is lifted. I’d really be disappoint­ed.”

The decision to leave WITI became easier after Skilling’s airtime decreased and management limited the number of graphics he could use in a broadcast.

“Those maps are my trademark,” he said. “A move like this might ruin my career, but at least I know I stood up for something I believed in.”

Milwaukee’s loss was Chicago’s gain. Skilling took the place of another beloved meteorolog­ist — Harry Volkman — who left WGN-TV to join WBBM-TV. Here’s a look back at highlights in Skilling’s unmatched career.

JAN. 4, 1968 Tribune profiles 15-year-old ‘Accurate Auroran’

The oldest of four children, Tom had an “inherent” interest in meteorolog­y growing up. Instead of spending his paper route money on baseball cards, young Skilling subscribed to a daily weather map service. Unable to continue receiving the weather maps in a timely fashion, Skilling wrote an eight-page letter to Aurora radio station WKKD to see if they could provide him with an alternativ­e. Intrigued, the station’s then-program director, Rusty Tym, set up a meeting with the 14-year-old Skilling.

“I told them, if they can get me some weather maps, I had the audacity to suggest that I’d do a better forecast for Aurora than they were getting from Chicago,” Skilling said.

The pair visited the National Weather Service office in Chicago and somehow convinced the staff to print an extra weather map each day and mail it to Skilling.

After getting his radio operator’s permit from the Federal Communicat­ions Commission office in Chicago, the weather wunderkind was soon delivering forecasts on WKKD — while still attending West Aurora High School.

JULY 27, 1978 Heads to WGN-TV

A brief in the Tribune announced Skilling’s hiring at the station and on Aug. 13, 1978, the eager 26-year-old meteorolog­ist appeared on WGN-TV for the first time. Cracking into the Chicago market, Skilling was welcomed into the TV weathercas­ting fraternity he had idolized growing up, notably by Harry Volkman and John Coleman.

1980s-ONWARD Educates community about weather and climate change

Skilling would lead a variety of initiative­s to help people learn about the weather.

From 1982 through 2018, Skilling hosted a free annual weather seminar at Fermilab, the physics and accelerato­r laboratory in Batavia, which would attract thousands. With presentati­ons packed with electrifyi­ng videos, slides and lectures by experts in the severe weather field, organizers told the Tribune in 1993 that the event had no equal.

“People start calling the station as early as January to ask about the next seminar. Someone called from Iowa to ask about hotels. It’s really amazing. People are absolutely fascinated by this subject,” Skilling said.

Skilling shared his expertise and interest with a broader audience by putting together specials dedicated to a variety of weather phenomenon. “It Sounded Like a Freight Train,” which aired in 1991, gave an overview of tornado warning systems and safety tips. “When Lightning Strikes,” followed in 1992 with an explanatio­n on how it works and how people could protect themselves. The three-part series, “Hurricane: The Greatest Storm on Earth,” aired in 1994.

Skilling also participat­ed in “Weather Day” with the Chicago White Sox and in 1995 he became the first local TV news personalit­y to go on Chicago Online and “chat” with viewers in real time during a broadcast.

After a half century of meteorolog­ical study, and firsthand experience between second homes in Hawaii and Alaska, Skilling is convinced that climate change is an undeniably real danger. In 2022, he produced the two-part series, “Forecast — A Fragile Climate,” about climate change in his beloved Alaska and other parts of the world.

He cited the increased frequency of destructiv­e weather events, such as major storms, heat waves and droughts, as evidence of “profound” man-made climate change.

“The speed at which it’s occurring is what’s dramatic,” Skilling said. “Climate is changing 10 times faster than at any point in 300,000 years or so that humans are believed to have walked the planet.”

JUNE 17, 1997 Takes over the Tribune’s weather page — and stays there for 9,187 days

The completely redesigned page included more weather maps, informatio­nal graphics, data and a seven-day

forecast — just like Skilling’s popular weather segments on TV. The popular “Ask Tom” column also let readers submit their weather questions to Skilling, who answered one each day.

One reader’s response to the new feature: “The only problem is that Tom Skilling is taking on more work! Please don’t burn him out!”

Skilling’s last weather page for the Tribune published on Aug. 11, 2022.

AUG. 21, 2017 Views a total solar eclipse — ‘Oh, my word!’

“His name is Tom Skilling and anyone who has lived in Chicago for long knows he’s more than a TV meteorolog­ist. He’s a weather evangelist. He loves the clouds, the wind, the sky. He wants you to love them too,” Tribune columnist Mary Schmich wrote. “On Monday, he brought

his infectious exuberance to the eclipse, only this time he cried.”

There he stood as the moon crossed the sun, in front of a camera, microphone in hand, a 65-year-old man, choking up, hugging strangers and exclaiming, “Oh, my word!”

All over the internet, he became the incarnatio­n of eclipse-incited rapture.

“As I was descending into tears, I was thinking, ‘My God, get a hold of yourself,’ ” Skilling said as he drove back from southern Illinois to Chicago with a couple of WGN-TV colleagues. “You’re on a mass medium and you’re about to break down and men aren’t supposed to do this. It was kind of a feeling of terror. Am I going to pull myself together enough to throw it to a commercial break?”

He struggled, and people loved him for it.

“Skilling in tears made the whole eclipse,” a woman posted on my Facebook page, a widely heard refrain. I asked her to explain.

“He was like a child on Christmas morning,” she said, “so full of joy and wonder. It’s just rare and beautiful to see that kind of pure joy in an adult. I think we all hope to taste that feeling from time to time.”

Skilling didn’t know why his tears moved so many people. One reason, he said, may be that it was clear they weren’t staged.

“This was just one lowly human being, with a wonderful group of people, reacting to a wonderful, celestial event,” he said. “I guess rare events lead to rare responses.”

FEB. 29, 2020 Steps away temporaril­y — ‘I hate missing work’

Tom Skilling posts a message on social media stating he will be stepping away from his normal duties for bit as he undergoes a weight-loss procedure.

“Dear friends — Over the next several weeks, beginning Tuesday, I’m stepping away from my weather duties at WGN to undergo gastric bypass surgery,” he said. “I hate missing work. Suddenly you’re not there — and you leave those who follow your work wondering, ‘Where is he? Where did he go?’ I didn’t want anyone wondering for a minute what’s going on without a heads-up and some kind of explanatio­n of what’s happening.”

Skilling returned to work in April 2020, saying he lost 50 pounds since the March 4, 2020, procedure at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital. Doctors also found and repaired a small hernia, he said.

“The outpouring when I put a couple of things up on Facebook was beyond anything I could have imagined. The kind comments from people have been absolutely mind-boggling to me,” Skilling said.

OCT. 12, 2023 Announces his retirement

An always sunny presence, whatever the weather in Chicago, Skilling delivered a stormy fall forecast and then hit loyal viewers with the news that he’s reaching the end of a prodigious weathercas­ting career.

“I’ve watched people do this before and there’s no formula for this,” Skilling said. “I’m going to retire at the end of February, after a marvelous 45 years at this incredible television station.”

In recognitio­n of Skilling’s 45-year career as a meteorolog­ist and personalit­y throughout the Chicago area, U.S. Rep. Bill Foster, D-Naperville, and U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Chicago, submitted a statement just weeks later to the official Congressio­nal Record honoring him.

FEBRUARY 2024 Nears his final forecast

If March comes in like a lion, for the first time in nearly half a century, Skilling will not be on the air to help viewers weather another storm. Demetrius Ivory, 48, who joined WGN in 2013, was named WGN-TV’s new chief meteorolog­ist.

Yet Skilling’s name will live on — the side of one of the city’s snowplows. “Skilling It” was one of six winners in this year’s “You Name a Snowplow” contest.

 ?? CHICAGO TRIBUNE HISTORICAL PHOTO ?? On the air with three daily weather programs, Skilling, a high school sophomore, works at WKKD radio in late 1967.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE HISTORICAL PHOTO On the air with three daily weather programs, Skilling, a high school sophomore, works at WKKD radio in late 1967.
 ?? TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Skilling delivers a weather report at WGN headquarte­rs in Chicago on Jan. 24.
TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Skilling delivers a weather report at WGN headquarte­rs in Chicago on Jan. 24.
 ?? ED WAGNER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Skilling sits in his Channel 9 office on Dec. 23, 1988.
ED WAGNER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Skilling sits in his Channel 9 office on Dec. 23, 1988.
 ?? WGN-TV ?? Tom Skilling at WGN-TV Channel 9 in the late 1970s.
WGN-TV Tom Skilling at WGN-TV Channel 9 in the late 1970s.

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