Hurricane Irene has brought out the big news guns, with reporters from all the networks sending people out into the field, sometimes from the most unlikely places. CNN's Jeanne Meserve got up close and personal with powerful waves in Ocean City. In the middle of her live report, CNN interrupted it because of some technical difficulties and went right back to the studio. Fox News' Doug McKelway also reported from Ocean City, in front of waves that he said were bigger than any other he's ever seen in the region.
- 8/27/2011
- by Josh Feldman
- Mediaite - TV
Want to know what Mediaite and CNN have in common? Both outlets filed original reports covering the G20 conference in Toronto today via modern telephonic technology. Of course CNN is a part of a billion dollar conglomerate that can easily afford a local Eng shoot cover the protests in Canada's largest city. But for some reason, the following video appears to have been filed by Jeanne Meserve via the sort of satellite phone technology usually reserved for the outer reaches of war torn Afghanistan.
- 6/25/2010
- by Colby Hall
- Mediaite - TV
New York -- With the second big hurricane in two weeks set to hit the Gulf Coast, the networks are sending a number of correspondents and producers to Texas to cover Hurricane Ike.
So far there's no move to send the Big Three anchors, who left the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minn., for New Orleans when it looked like Hurricane Gustav was going to inflict massive damage on a region that was just getting its footing three years after Katrina.
Gustav didn't.
ABC's Charles Gibson is in Alaska, spending Thursday and Friday interviewing vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin. There's no word on NBC's Brian Williams or CBS's Katie Couric. CNN's Anderson Cooper was to anchor "AC 360" beginning Thursday night. Fox News said anchor Shepard Smith, who was in the Gulf for Hurricane Gustav as well as Katrina, would stay in New York but anchor late-night coverage Friday.
ABC...
So far there's no move to send the Big Three anchors, who left the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minn., for New Orleans when it looked like Hurricane Gustav was going to inflict massive damage on a region that was just getting its footing three years after Katrina.
Gustav didn't.
ABC's Charles Gibson is in Alaska, spending Thursday and Friday interviewing vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin. There's no word on NBC's Brian Williams or CBS's Katie Couric. CNN's Anderson Cooper was to anchor "AC 360" beginning Thursday night. Fox News said anchor Shepard Smith, who was in the Gulf for Hurricane Gustav as well as Katrina, would stay in New York but anchor late-night coverage Friday.
ABC...
- 9/12/2008
- by By Paul J. Gough
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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