He was great with the media....I believe Neil Frank did some appearances on tv until the 1980s if I’m remembering right…
He was awesome too. .
He was. He reported the weather and provided accurate commentary, WITHOUT any embellishment or agenda.I believe Neil Frank did some appearances on tv until the 1980s if I’m remembering right…
He was awesome too. .
They’ll pay the appropriate amount for risk involved.After this fiasco will Florida even have homeowners' insurance anymore.
watched him unexpectedly join a professor who’s sky was falling and toss out much of his rhetoric with science …He was. He reported the weather and provided accurate commentary, WITHOUT any embellishment or agenda.
Those days are long gone sadly.
Just look how they tricked the news lady with fake pilot names from the Asiana crash …I talked with a local news anchor in Colorado at a wedding recently.
I asked what she thought on a particular topic that happened to be in the news a lot in Colorado.
Her reply was a shock to me, though it may not shock you.
She said, “I just read the news”.
In other words, none of what she had said on the air had actually sunk in and occupied any space in her memory.
She had no understanding of the topic that I wished to discuss, the topic on which I was interested in her opinion.
She was simply a pretty face, and a mouthpiece for words that somebody else wrote.
It was a fascinating moment, but not in a good way.
I had always suspected that most reporters were similar, simply a pretty face reading the Teleprompter, with no actual comprehension. But this certainly removed any doubt I might’ve had.
I have multiple properties on the upper TX coast. I am strategically dropping insurance as much as possible. For example, I keep flood insurance on one of the lowest elevation homes (but its pretty well protected from wind), and dropped flood insurance but keeping wind on a higher elevation home that does not have much wind protection but very unlikely to flood. I have saved a ton of money. and I put it back for self insurance. Its a good feeling to drop companies that I highly dislike.They’ll pay the appropriate amount for risk involved.
We lost power for 4 days after Irma. Even though it was only a TS when it got to us, the eye passed over our county. The biggest problem was lack of gasoline as the evacuee traffic from South Florida bought it before it could be replenished. The few stations that still had power after the storm had no gas. We had to go well off the beaten path to find gas for our generators. Even then they placed a limit you could buy.
yep, at a certain point if you own the property outright you drop coverage because you will save enough money to pay for your own repairs.. the people with a motgage are screwed, but not the free and clear property owners.I have multiple properties on the upper TX coast. I am strategically dropping insurance as much as possible. For example, I keep flood insurance on one of the lowest elevation homes (but its pretty well protected from wind), and dropped flood insurance but keeping wind on a higher elevation home that does not have much wind protection but very unlikely to flood. I have saved a ton of money. and I put it back for self insurance. Its a good feeling to drop companies that I highly dislike.
Way back when, I remember reading (in an actual printed newspaper) a public interest story about a family that prepped up their house for Hurricane Andrew and then decided to hole up on vacation for three weeks. On Kauai.
After Irma, every year I start buying gas around June/July. Lesson learned. And yeah, last year I ended up putting it in the cars.I go and buy 35 gallons and put it in cans the first time a named storm comes within about 400 miles of my house... and I let it sit in the shed if I dont use it, and then start dumping it in my cars around the start of October.