Still ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzZZZZZing!
There are no more interesting statements to speak of. Only a nagging feeling. Describing that feeling has a low priority value.
When the river is flooded and the damn gives way, there is always the Tsumani routes to higher ground.
I think it odd that Florida'a Hurricane Denise recieves so much air time when a hurricane comes every year to that region. It is a recurring "normal" event for them. Why is it so news worthy now!
The midwet gets thunder storms, some flooding, tonados, frozen winters (in which a couple people every year are found frozen dead in their homes). The northwest has volcanoes, floods (like everywhere else), earthquakes, and tsunamis (yes, giant waves coming across the pacific ocean; there are special routes to get to high ground). The south has tornados, floods (they're all over), heat waves/droughts, etc.
So how does news decide what is attractive about sensationalizing things? Now that the Hurricane is over, the Idaho kids are found (one alive and other dead), and the Aruba girl disappearance never resolved (heard anything lately?)--now the news should include my favorites such as the 800+ lbs sailfin fish just caught, or the giant wild pig 900+lbs shot last month in the U.S., or gator found waiting in a babis room down south, or any of the more bizarre news. Thses would be more sensation worthy than telling the world for a month of the gruesome details of a family's demise at the hands of a violent sexual predator.
There are no more interesting statements to speak of. Only a nagging feeling. Describing that feeling has a low priority value.
When the river is flooded and the damn gives way, there is always the Tsumani routes to higher ground.
I think it odd that Florida'a Hurricane Denise recieves so much air time when a hurricane comes every year to that region. It is a recurring "normal" event for them. Why is it so news worthy now!
The midwet gets thunder storms, some flooding, tonados, frozen winters (in which a couple people every year are found frozen dead in their homes). The northwest has volcanoes, floods (like everywhere else), earthquakes, and tsunamis (yes, giant waves coming across the pacific ocean; there are special routes to get to high ground). The south has tornados, floods (they're all over), heat waves/droughts, etc.
So how does news decide what is attractive about sensationalizing things? Now that the Hurricane is over, the Idaho kids are found (one alive and other dead), and the Aruba girl disappearance never resolved (heard anything lately?)--now the news should include my favorites such as the 800+ lbs sailfin fish just caught, or the giant wild pig 900+lbs shot last month in the U.S., or gator found waiting in a babis room down south, or any of the more bizarre news. Thses would be more sensation worthy than telling the world for a month of the gruesome details of a family's demise at the hands of a violent sexual predator.