Post-Tribune

TV weather gods Tom Skilling, Roger Triemstra in Munster

- Philip Potempa Philip Potempa is a journalist, published author and the director of marketing at Theatre at the Center. He can be reached at pmpotempa@ comhs.org.

Chicagolan­d and Northwest Indiana audiences love their weather and media personalit­ies from the arenas of TV and radio.

Among the “Kings of the Clouds” are Roger Triemstra and Tom Skilling, both the longtime channel fixtures and weather soothsayer­s of WGN.

Triemstra, 91, started at WGN in 1967 forecastin­g and predicting while sharing the same news desk as anchor John Drury. The now-slim and trim Skilling, who is still a broadcasti­ng “weather or not” noted name for WGN TV and radio, he just celebrated his 70th birthday in February.

Skilling will be in Munster this weekend to fete his pal and mentor

Triemstra at a book signing party event open to the public to celebrate the release of Triemstra’s just-published 204-page colorful autobiogra­phy “Cooler By the Lake: A Memoir” (2022 Bantry Bay Media $25). The event is from 1:30-3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Great Room, just off the main lobby of Hartsfield Village, 10000 Columbia Ave in Munster.

For more informatio­n or to call RSVP for the free event, which will include light refreshmen­ts and other great guests, call 219-836-3477. The books will only be available as a cash purchase. For anyone who is unable to attend, I’m told books are also available with a credit card option at www.rogerthewe­atherman. com or by calling 312-9128639 for $33.95, which includes the shipping and handling.

“My longtime WGN colleague, the inimitable Rog Triemstra has written a terrific book which is an autobiogra­phical look at his fascinatin­g career,” Skilling said.

“It’s quite a book, beautifull­y done, with a treasure trove of photos, and I can tell you it’s a fun read. Rog shares fascinatin­g insights into his work with legendary WGN radio personalit­ies, including Wally Phillips, Bob Collins, Max Armstrong and Orion Samuelson, among so many others, and also the account of the love of his wife Gerrie and the Triemstra family.”

Skilling praises Triemstra’s career as both “fascinatin­g and multi-faceted, extending well beyond the broadcast weather work, including years as a chemical engineer and as a military meteorolog­ist, as well has his humble roots raised in a Dutch community in the Chicago suburbs.

“I can tell you I learned things about Rog Triemstra I didn’t know from his book, including his fascinatin­g family background and how the Triemstra family came to settle in South Holland, Illinois,” Skilling said.

Sunday’s book event includes Triemstra’s daughter Cherie, as well as Skilling, and also Eddie Volkman, Chicago area radio personalit­y and the son of late weather great Harry Volkman. Of course, Ed Volkman formerly hosted a long-running morning radio show in Chicago, “Eddie & JoBo,” on WBBM-FM B96. Accordion Maestro Frank Rossi will provide entertainm­ent for Sunday’s book soiree.

Harry Volkman, who died at age 89 in August 2015, wrote and published his own 220-page paperback autobiogra­phy in April 2011 titled “Whatever the Weather: My Life & Times as a TV Weatherman” ($19.95), co-written with author Peter Schroeder.

At one time during his

55 years of forecastin­g weather on TV, Volkman carried the distinctio­n of being affiliated with all of the major TV stations in Chicago, with the exception of ABC Channel 7. But he was most widely associated with his many years on CBS WBBM Channel 2. He joined WBBM in 1978, after two stints each at WMAQ, and yep, also WGN. Volkman is also credited in

meteorolog­y history as the first TV weatherman to issue a “tornado alert” during a broadcast in 1952 when he was doing the weather for a TV station in Tulsa, Okla.

 ?? WGN TV ?? WGN TV personalit­ies Dean Richards, left, Bozo the Clown and Tom Skilling, all on-air Chicago media colleagues of weatherman Roger Triemstra, pose for photos in November 2018 at the Chicago Thanksgivi­ng Parade.
WGN TV WGN TV personalit­ies Dean Richards, left, Bozo the Clown and Tom Skilling, all on-air Chicago media colleagues of weatherman Roger Triemstra, pose for photos in November 2018 at the Chicago Thanksgivi­ng Parade.
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