Showing posts with label tornado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tornado. Show all posts

3.01.2012

Wednesday happenings

I just submitted another graduate paper. Six done for the semester, four to go.

For reasons I can’t quite pin down, I’d like to think the quality and depth of my papers has increased in recent weeks; I think that’s a tribute to the content we’re studying -- the history of higher education in America -- along with the fact that I enjoy history and drawing connections to current trends.

But that isn’t decreasing the stress and effort that goes into writing these papers each week.

I spent Monday night and last night fighting off sleep to finish my reading. Tonight, I somehow managed to handle my media relations duties at a lecture on campus and still write my paper in less than three hours to get it posted before our midnight deadline.

Some day I’ll look back at these days and smile, right?

* * *

The big news of the day around these parts was the damage caused by a tornado that passed through Branson overnight.

As I finished my reading last night, the wind gusts outside our house were so loud and ferocious-sounding that all I could think about was that freight train sound that people describe when they experience a tornado. … This morning we had a few branches down in our yard, but there were no reports of tornadoes or heavy damage near The 'Ville.

At one point last night, with all the wind outside, I turned on the TV to check the weather. The Kansas City stations already were reporting the damage in Harveyville, Kan., and projections showed the storm was heading for Branson and Springfield -- the area where my brother and his family live -- next.

This morning when we heard the news that a tornado hit Branson, my heart sank. Fortunately, my brother and his family are ok, and their home sustained no damage.

The reports and pictures coming out of Branson are impressive. It seems a person living in this region, after the devastation in Joplin and other parts of the region last year, can only think, Here we go again.

* * *

Monday it was Jan Berenstain. Today, another beloved piece of my childhood died with the passing of Davy Jones.

When I think about my childhood and how my love for music developed, the Monkees were right in the thick of it. From playing a 45-inch record of “Pleasant Valley Sunday,” one of my all-time favorite songs to this day -- and its B-side “Words -- over and over again to watching reruns of The Monkees television show to the cassette tape of Monkees records my dad helped me record.

Since I started collecting vinyl records a few years ago, I’ve proudly added a few Monkees albums to my collection. And I was just spinning them Sunday night.

Davy will be missed. The memories will live on.

A lot of music mags are now publishing their top Davy Jones performances. My list would have to include “A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You,” “Look Out (Here Comes Tomorrow),” and, of course, “Daydream Believer.”

(Updated 08.16.2012) Good reads ...
a EW: The Ultimate Davy Jones playlist
a Rolling Stone: Readers' Poll: The Best Monkees Songs of All Time
a Rolling Stone: In Memory of the Cute One: Davy Jones' Greatest Musical Moments
a Rolling Stone: Michael Nesmith Remembers Davy Jones
a Micky Dolenz on the Monkees' Reunion With Michael Nesmith

* * *

The talks have been ongoing for months, but it appears Major League Baseball is following through on plans to expand its playoffs and will add a Wild Card team to each league for the 2012 playoffs.

Initially, I hated the idea and fell on the side that it diluted the competition of the playoffs. But if it’s only a one-game playoff, as proposed, I can handle that -- and I’ll admit that scenarios for one-and-done playoff games for Wild Card teams actually do sound exciting.

Still, there’s the little part of me that wishes Major League Baseball would just. stop. tinkering.

That said, as a diehard baseball fan, I found a series of tweets on the subject today by a local sports reporter  to be pretty amusing, and with merit …
Really psyched to see MLB embracing the YMCA mentality that makes sports unbearable these days. #EveryonePlaysEveryoneGetsATrophy


Why even call it the playoffs? Let's just set up a bracket where everyone qualifies so no one's feelings are hurt


Now maybe the #Royals can make the playoffs and we can hang a 3rd in the AL Central flag in left field. #Priceless


Clearly MLB just needed to find a way to make sure that NYY and Boston make the playoffs EVERY year, not just 9 out of 10


I remember when the reward for winning in baseball was a 7-game series against the other best team in the league for a trip to the WS


Remember when the 2011 MLB season culminated w/ really exciting final day of reg season and gave way to unique thrilling postseason?


Under new system, Boston's collapse would have meant squat. Red Sox would have played Rays again in 1 game with chance to advance
Good reads ...
a Play-in game is just another Selig gimmick
* * *

Remember where Kates and I were four years ago today. Being Leap Day, it’s hard to forget, but here’s the answer.

6.25.2011

Condition Gray: Inside the hospital as the Joplin tornado hit

An episode of Grey's Anatomy, or a movie, is one thing.

This story from The Kansas City Star is another. A great piece of writing and journalism about what happened at the St. John's medical center on the night of the Joplin tornado.

6.13.2011

Coping

I stumbled on this good read today about the 1984 Barneveld tornado.

I'm always fascinated by stories of the Barneveld tornado. Part of it's that I lived not too far from the town in those years and remember reading about it in the newspaper way back then. Part of it's the journalist in me, always being drawn to stories of tragedy and triumph.

The story struck me particularly this week, as I deal with the post traumatic stress of last week, not to mention all the chaos and emotions of the last few weeks and months. Even while I haven't been directly impacted by a lot of it, all of it affects me.

Yesterday I sort of snapped. With all of the responsibilities and pressures I put on myself piling up, I started feeling suffocated. A cartoon I posted for Father's Day last year keeps coming back to me... I went on a cleaning rampage, looking for an escape.

It happens. In my demanding line of work, I've come to recognize the symptoms well over the years. Eventually, something always clicks, I find a reset mechanism, take a deep breath and settle back in.

And life goes on.

5.23.2011

Joplin

One minute last night I was settling in and musing about my tough TV choices -- Game 3 of the Bulls-Heat series or the Cubs-Red Sox game on Sunday Night Baseball.

The next I was scrolling through my social media feeds and struck by the chatter of the deadly tornado that had just wiped out a swath of Joplin. I turned on the Weather Channel and could hardly turn away. ... In those first moments, my thoughts also turned to my brother and his family who live not far from Joplin. Just then he tweeted this.

I was in awe and disbelief. The images and stories coming from Joplin were unbelievable. 

Home with Phoebe today -- she has strep throat again, which is a whole other story -- I spent much of the morning watching the news coverage, clicking through photos popping up online and keeping tabs on the relief efforts our own community is organizing.

The numbers are staggering.
116 dead.
More than 1,150 people injured.
The deadliest tornado since 1947.
It stretched three quarters of a mile wide.
More than 2,000 structures were damaged.
Debris was thrown 20,000 feet into the sky.

Then there's this chilling and horrific video that's making the rounds today depicting people taking cover inside a gas station. ... Here's another one of the storm forming.

* * *
Now for the journalism-critique portion of this post ...

Since I'd been watching the coverage of the local ABC affiliate, and was fairly impressed, I decided to stick with ABC News for the national broadcast tonight.

But I was immediately struck by their over-the-top title for the broadcast: "Direct hit: An American tragedy in Joplin." ... Seriously? It's a terrible situation for sure. But an American tragedy? No. ... 9/11, JFK's assassination -- those are American tragedies. ... The rest of the broadcast seemed thrown together, as if the reporters themselves were so overwhelmed with the devastation that they didn't know where to start. ABC also included video footage and photos that had been circulated and widely viewed on the Internet all day.

Then I watched the NBC Nightly News and was promptly reminded why NBC owns the top network broadcast, and why I thoroughly appreciate that team's journalistic work every single night. The NBC broadcast was far more engaging and heartfelt, hitting the meat of the big story along with fresh bits mixed in. They had numbers, some amazing photography, gripping interviews -- and a chat with the Gov.

ABC capped its broadcast with a piece about the Joplin high school commencement ceremony that played out just before the tornado struck. The story had loads of potential, but it was only a round-up of the broader story laced with some of the inspirational commencement season tidbits. ... NBC instead went to the destroyed high school and included interviews with the principal and freshly-minted graduates, which made for a far more compelling story. 

(5.30.2011 -- Updated to include good reads and more thoughts from the week)

As this week has continued, the severe storm warnings and weather alerts ... just ... keep ... coming. We've been anxiously watching the television and radar updates at night. Another tornado hit Sedalia Wednesday, and the video of this truck being blown apart is the latest to wow us ...

Our university has reached out to the university and colleagues in Joplin. We also have partnerships with that university. My heart broke for one woman as I watched Brian Williams interview her about losing her husband in the storm -- it turns out she was one of our graduate students.

Scanning the list of deceased, and seeing their ages, is saddening.

Stories from the Joplin tornado ...
a Joplin survivors spin tales of dread, loss after tornado
a Storm’s toll shows on the faces of Joplin’s residents
a In TV Crew’s Hunt for Twisters, More Than They Bargained For
a In Storm’s Aftermath, One Family Salvages What It Can
a Joplin storm contained a rare multivortex tornado
a Joplin begins sorting through the big tasks ahead
a Tornadoes dip, dash over an anxious region
a Tornado couldn’t rip away the goodness
a Joplin Faces Sad Task of Clearing the Rubble
a When Everything Is Gone, Including a Sense of Direction
a Once-Stately Trees Tell a Tale of Destruction in Joplin

The Photos ... These are amazing.
a St. Louis Post-Dispatch
a The New York Times: Holding Out Hope in Missouri
a The New York Times: Panoramas of Joplin Before and After the Tornado
a Shocking before and after images reveal how giant tornado ripped apart Joplin's city landmarks
a The New York Times: Aerial Photographs of Joplin Before and After the Tornado
a Los Angeles Times: Satellite images of Joplin, Mo., before and after the tornado

More good reads ...
a Where to Live to Avoid a Natural Disaster ... Looks like we're a lot safer now than we were near Chi-Town.
a Researchers see a pattern in rise of deadly tornadoes
a Storm season on deadly path; Obama to visit Joplin
a The Facts (and Fiction) of Tornadoes