John Coleman (meteorologist): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Reverted 2 edits by 70.111.234.141. (TW))
m (Robot - Removing category Global warming skeptics per CFD at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2008 August 7.)
Line 55: Line 55:
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Coleman, John}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Coleman, John}}
 
[[Category:American television personalities]]
 
[[Category:American television personalities]]
  +
[[Category:Global warming skeptics]]
 
 
[[Category:Living people]]
 
[[Category:Living people]]
 
[[Category:New York television meteorologists]]
 
[[Category:New York television meteorologists]]

Revision as of 07:23, 16 August 2008

John Coleman
John Chroma key 1.jpg
John Coleman, KUSI News Weathercaster
Born
John Coleman

(1934-10-15) October 15, 1934 (age 86)
StatusMarried
OccupationTelevision Weathercaster
Spouse(s)Linda Coleman
RelativesParents: Claude & Hazel Coleman
Websitehttp://www.kusi.com/about/bios/weather/1838191.html

John Coleman is an American news weathercaster. He founded The Weather Channel (but is no longer affiliated with it), and presently works as an on-camera weathercaster at KUSI-TV in San Diego.

Professional career

Coleman started his career at WCIA (TV) in Champaign, Illinois, doing the early evening weathercast and a local bandstand show called At The Hop while he was a student at University of Illinois. After receiving his degree in 1957, he became the weather anchor for WCIA's sister station WMBD-TV in Peoria, Illinois. Coleman was also a weather anchor for KETV in Omaha, WISN-TV in Milwaukee and then WBBM-TV and WLS-TV in Chicago.[1]

At WLS, Coleman was teamed with Fahey Flynn, Joel Daly and Bill Frink to form the Eyewitness News Team, creating a news brand name and establishing a highly successful new local news format dubbed "happy talk" by a local television columnist. This style of local news has been widely copied. The team dominated Chicago television news ratings for more than a decade. During his time at Chicago's WLS-TV, Coleman was one of Chicago's most popular weathercasters, famous for his amusing and irreverent style. It was then that Coleman became the original weathercaster on what was then the brand-new ABC network morning program, Good Morning America. He stayed seven years with this top-rated program anchored by David Hartman and Joan Lunden. [2] He would describe Thunderstorms and thundery showers as "Thorms" and "Thowers" respectively.[citation needed]

He then founded The Weather Channel, serving as its CEO and President during the startup and its first year of operation. After being forced out at TWC, Coleman became weather anchor at WCBS-TV in New York and then at WMAQ-TV in Chicago, before moving to Southern California to join the independent television station, KUSI-TV in San Diego, in what Coleman fondly calls, "his retirement job".[2]

Views on global warming

In fall of 2007 Coleman described the current concern over global warming "a fictional, manufactured crisis, and a total scam." [3] His postings assessing the science behind global warming can be read at www.kusi.com. In 2008 he gave a speech of the same tone, before the San Diego Chamber of Commerce, blaming the "global warming scam" and environmentalist lobby, for rising gas and food prices. He also declared the scam "a threat to our economy and our civilization." [4]

Personal life

Coleman was born in 1934 in Alpine, Texas, the fifth child of a college professor and his math teacher wife, Claude and Hazel Coleman. He is married to Linda Coleman, and lives in a retirement community in the San Diego suburb of Rancho Bernardo.

References

External links