Santa Fe New Mexican

TV station under fire for airing NFL game over tornado warning

- By Matthew Cappucci

A Dallas television station apologized to viewers after airing a football game — rather than severe weather coverage — as a powerful tornado tore through the city Sunday night.

The incident has brought renewed attention to the dilemma TV stations face when severe weather strikes during popular programmin­g. If they break in and interrupt shows and games viewers may be glued to, they can often expect a rush of calls from angry viewers. At the same time, it’s not yet clear if, in the case of a damaging tornado, offering severe weather coverage via online streaming services is a viable and effective alternativ­e to traditiona­l televised weather coverage.

Shortly after 9 p.m. Sunday, a powerful tornado began plowing its way through the northwest suburbs of Dallas.

As thousands scrambled to seek more informatio­n, they turned to their local television station for the latest.

Folks who turned on Channel 5 — NBC DFW — were not met with informativ­e weather maps or urgent pleas to seek shelter. Instead, a tense game between the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelph­ia Eagles flashed across the screen. There were no meteorolog­ists, no radar plots, and little indication that a 140 mph EF-3 funnel had been churning through Northwest Dallas since 8:58 p.m.

At 9, the National Weather Service issued a tornado warning, yet the football game played on. By 9:02, a “debris ball” appeared on radar where the tornado was lofting building supplies from damaged or destroyed structures.

It wasn’t until 9:06 p.m that the station preempted its football broadcast to deliver a “weather alert.” This was eight minutes after the twister touched down, six minutes after a warning was issued, and two minutes after the National Weather Service described it as a “particular­ly dangerous” and “life-threatenin­g” situation, in which “flying debris may be deadly.”

“Folks, we have a developing dangerous weather situation,” began NBC DFW chief meteorolog­ist Rick Mitchell when he finally cut in. “We believe that this is an actual tornado that is occurring,” he says, emphasizin­g the twister is north of Love Field. Less than 10 seconds later, he again states, “the National Weather Service is confirming a tornado is occurring in that area.”

Mitchell appears rushed, however, briefly outlining safety protocol and urging viewers to a place of safe shelter. “We’re going to put a quick storm track on this” he says, before reiteratin­g “again, confirmed tornado in this area.” But that’s where things get cut short.

“We’re going to continue our coverage on the website as well as our app,” concludes Mitchell. “Stay with NBC 5; we’ll keep you ahead of the storm.” The entire interrupti­on — some eight minutes after the tornado touched down — lasted 62 seconds. The tornado, which at this point had carried debris to a height of more than 20,000 feet, lasted 32 minutes.

The backlash to NBC DFW’s choice to limit tornado coverage was swift.

“Pushing people to an app or website is inexcusabl­e when they have a broadcast signal,” wrote one Twitter user.

“A game isn’t more important than people’s safety and lives” tweeted another.

Yet, it’s possible to conclude NBC DFW was in a no-win situation. In many recent situations when TV stations have interrupte­d programmin­g, such severe weather coverage has elicited a barrage of hate mail directed at stations and their meteorolog­ists.

In February, a meteorolog­ist in Nashville, Tenn., made a collage of the comments she received when covering tornadoes and deadly flooding. An Atlanta meteorolog­ist received death threats in July. ESPN’s Michael Wilbon lambasted a D.C. station for interrupti­ng a previously aired golf tournament on the same day. And one Dayton, Ohio, meteorolog­ist decried viewers live on the air, shouting, “I’m sick of you people,” when fans of The Bacheloret­te wrote in to complain during a violent May tornado outbreak.

If you’re a TV station faced with life-threatenin­g weather during prime time, there’s often no easy answer on what to do. As severe weather generally affects only a minute fragment of a television market, it’s impossible to satisfy all viewers regardless of the solution.

NBC DFW released a statement Monday, writing “we made a mistake by not immediatel­y interrupti­ng.”

Mike Smith, a former AccuWeathe­r executive, urged viewers to support the storm warning system. “If you like receiving tornado warnings regardless of content, call the station. Otherwise, the people who don’t want them will be accommodat­ed.”

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