Cantore arithmetic at the weather to the storm reading is still based on eyesight and with the computer the blink has been replaced by the camera and the satellite dish. To this matter more information for Cantore arithmetic makes a safer environment as Jim Cantore is an anchor on The Weather Channel. The following information is a program that will allow more information to be collected and as the program is able to cease a still photograph than Kodak shall lead the black and white to the ice and rain as the sky is not falling as that is a season to be reserved for the sediment of the science in the Cantore arithmetic.
A falling rain from the cloud of formation to the disturbance of a collection forming the vortex to the hurricane is the early information that can be studied in the interim of what may in perhaps be of assistance to the weather programming as engagement to more than a ring of ice on the glacier as the berg is of greater relevance to the forming of clouds as lakes, oceans and waves creating such clouds has already been studied, this is for the falling rain in a category to the wheat.
To understand the verse to the language it is the matrix that has the advanced ability to understand laterally speaking as the rain is in the fall however in Cantore arithmetic the actual to the ice is in size does matter. This photograph to the formation of ice to the falling snow is following the study of ice in the rain as that would produce in photography the lateral speaking a sky is talking as the frame of Kodak to the script of known as the screen to the laboratory is an able body at the keyboard to the printed word with size and speed as the cloud to the storm activity by degree. Fringe science is an avenue of approach as this picture is very advanced for the current thinking system and may only find advancement on the as needed basis of available interest to the person, place, or, thing, that brings to the forefront a concern for the massive storms that plague the United States of America.
As global warming is a client to the attention of now this post and program element will remain as the core photograph to what lateral speaking can deliver as Hollywood has by demonstration shown the conscious thinking to how a person can already see the storm. A screen in letter to number is not scrabble as ice is impacted by what is now known as climate change.
This can be held at President Abraham Lincoln with the saying, as much cents as a penny. As the sixteenth president of the United States of America the following information can return to more in sayings than in quotes. As a rally Pony Club of America is the best manual to follow as the San Francisco Pony Club a member of the chapter of the United States Pony Club, a real bit piece.
Jim Cantore
Jim Cantore | |
---|---|
Born | James D. Cantore February 16, 1964 |
Alma mater | Lyndon State College (Northern Vermont University - Lyndon, B.S., Meteorology, 1986)[1] |
Occupation(s) | Meteorologist, The Weather Channel |
Years active | 1986–present |
Known for | Meteorologist on the Weather Channel |
Spouse | Tamra Zinn (m. 1990; div. 2009) |
Children | 2 |
James D. Cantore (born February 16, 1964) is an American meteorologist. He is best known as an on-air personality for The Weather Channel.
Career[edit]
A native of Beacon Falls, Connecticut, who was raised in White River Junction, Vermont, Cantore graduated from Lyndon State College in 1986. The Weather Channel gave him his first job out of college in July of that year and he has worked there ever since. Cantore has become one of the best-known meteorologists on television.[2] Algis Laukaitis of the Lincoln (Nebraska) Journal Star referred to Cantore as the "rock star of meteorologists".[3]
Cantore has been lauded for his ability to "break down" complicated weather events into terms the average viewer can understand. Cantore is often selected to go to report on severe weather events. Since the ratings for the Weather Channel increase during these events, Cantore has become a recognizable figure.[4][5] In particular, viewers' association of Cantore's presence with incoming or in-progress severe weather events became so strong that the Weather Channel lampooned it in a one-minute 2011 commercial spot in which Cantore goes on a beach vacation, panicking nearby beachgoers and locals who take his presence as an ominous sign.[6]
Though he is best known for his live field coverage of major weather events (such as Hurricanes Ike, Gustav, Katrina, Isabel, Rita, Andrew, Floyd, Mitch, Bonnie, Irene, Sandy, Matthew, Irma, Dorian, Isaias, Laura, and Ian), his contributions go well beyond severe weather field reporting. His early work at TWC included developing the audience favorite Fall Foliage Forecast. He has reported on events such as the Space Shuttle Discovery launch, the "Winter X Games," PGA tournaments, NFL games and more.[7] Jim is a member of both the National Weather Association and the American Meteorological Society. He holds the AMS Television Seal of Approval. He also received the NOAA-David S. Johnson Award in 2003 for his innovative use of environmental satellite technology.[8]
Aside from live reporting for TWC, Cantore also serves as the narrator on the TWC series Storm Stories. He also narrates Local On The 8s (excluding the national version).
He was featured in the beginning of the ECHL's Stockton Thunder entrance video saying "Hello, this is meteorologist Jim Cantore from the Weather Channel; a special weather advisory has been issued for the Central Valley—a 100% chance of thunder."
After NBCUniversal's acquisition of The Weather Channel in 2008, Cantore has occasionally filled in for Al Roker on The Today Show. He was also in London hosting weather segments for NBC during the 2012 Summer Olympics.
Viral videos[edit]
On January 28, 2014, while doing a live on-location report at the College of Charleston in Charleston, South Carolina, Cantore was charged by a student named Colin Marcelli. Cantore noticed the charge, and kneed Marcelli in the groin. Marcelli immediately ran off. Cantore never broke his train of thought nor appeared frazzled during the incident. A recording of the shot has gained upwards of two million views on YouTube.[9]
On February 14, 2015, while covering the impacts of Winter Storm Neptune along the South Shore of Massachusetts, an intense band of thundersnowstruck the area, causing Cantore to react excitedly to the presence of the ultra-rare phenomenon. The video of his reaction now has over 5,000,000 views on YouTube.[10][11]
On October 10, 2018, while covering landfall of Hurricane Michael in Panama City Beach, Florida, Cantore was forced to quickly dodge a flying piece of lumber while reporting live. Video of the incident was viewed on Twitter more than 500,000 times in the hour after its occurrence.[12][13]
On September 28, 2022, while covering Category 4 Hurricane Ian, Cantore was hit by a flying tree branch in the eyewall of the storm at Punta Gorda, Florida. The video went viral on Twitter and garnered millions of views in under 24 hours.[14]
Personal life[edit]
Cantore's children have Fragile X syndrome. Cantore does charitable work for FRAXA,[15] the Fragile X Research Foundation, and the Parkinson’s Unity Walk. He also contributes his time to Make-a-Wish Foundation events around the country and he has also served as a celebrity cabinet member with the American Red Cross.
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