News for Saturday, August 18th, 2018
- A certain Facebook
page related to a certain member of the news operation for WALA-TV
named Kati Weis appeared to have had received a certain video and a
certain message related to the member involving the word "birthday" on
the Thursday of the sixteenth day of this August.
- The local news program that appeared on the main broadcast channel for
WALA-TV during the hour of 5:00 p.m. on the Friday of the seventeenth
day of the month of August for the calendar year 2018 ("FOX 10 News at
5:00 p.m.") appeared to have had one of its news presenters (Lenise Ligon and Byron Day) questioning the other immediately after presenting one of its reports at least once (hyperlink to transcript of what appeared to had occurred at least once).
- The local news program that appeared on the main broadcast channel for
WKRG-TV during the first half of the hour of 10:00 p.m. on the Friday of
the seventeenth
day of this August ("WKRG News 5 at 10") appeared to have had a part of
it related to sports immediately after after appearing to have had a
part of it related to weather unlike those of its previous appearances on the channel in that period of time before this Friday in recent times (note:
those previous appearances usually appeared to have had breaks in
between such parts).
- A certain local TV program dedicated to entertainment and lifestyles
that appeared on the main broadcast channel for WALA-TV during the hour
of 9:00 a.m. on the Friday of the seventeenth day of this August ("Studio 10") appeared to have had one of its hosts (Chasity Byrd) saying, "Chef
didn't know about your skills -- singing" and the other one (Joe Emer) saying, "Well yeah, well, well we're going to fire it up, party
style, with Rouses in here. He said he cooks, uh, with the New Orleans
TV stations. A lot happening to have him here with us in Mobile throwing
down. Can't wait to get that started" immediately afterwards for a
certain part of it involving a certain guest of theirs (note #1: at least one of those parts appeared to have
had some digital graphics with texts of "Nino Thibodaux" and "Rouses Markets" over the guest (note #2: a certain World Wide Web site related to WALA-TV appeared to have had what might or might not had been recordings of parts of the program involving the guest)).
- The local news program mentioned in the second paragraph from the top of this report appeared to have had one
of its news presenters (Lenise Ligon) saying, "It's been forty-nine
years since Hurricane Camille made landfall -- a cat-five storm came
ashore alone the Mississippi coast, killed two hundred fifty six people
and caused one point five million dollars' worth of damage" and the
other one (Byron Day) saying, "I remember it well -- because
all wind measuring instruments were destroyed by the storm. Researchers
estimate Camille's sustained winds at more than a hundred eighty-miles
an hour with wind gusts at more than two hundred miles an hour. The
storm surge alone was over twenty-four feet when it blasted ashore near
Pass Christian and Bay Saint Louis" immediately afterwards (note: the program appeared to have had a certain video with some digital graphics involving texts of "49 YEARS SINCE CAMILLE" and "WIND SPEEDS PEAKED AT 175
MPH" for much of what it appeared to have had
the news presenters saying).
- The local news program that appeared on the main broadcast channel for
WKRG-TV during the first half of the hour of 12:00 p.m. on the Friday of
the seventeenth day of this August ("WKRG News 5 at Noon") appeared to
have had its news presenter (Bill Riales) saying, "Still to come, it's
been forty-nine years since Camille struck the gulf coast -- we look
back at the deadly hurricane when we return" and, "Well today is the
forty-ninth anniversary of Hurricane Camille -- the monster category five
storm made landfall in the Mississippi coast, but battered areas of the
Mobile coast as well. This is file video of that damage. The storm hit
in nineteen sixty-nine. Camille is one of three hurricanes in the United
States to hit as a category five. Roads were flooded out in Bayou La
Batre -- a tornado reported even in Pensacola. Two hundred fifty-six
people lost their lives in the storm. According to the National Weather Service, Camille's estimated land fall winds were two miles per hour.
Camille also had the second lowest pressure on record for a land-falling
hurricane in the U-S" (note: the program appeared to have had a certain video with some some digital
graphics involving texts of "MORNING HEADLINES", "TODAY MARKS THE 49TH
ANNIVERSARY OF HURRICANE CAMILLE", and "ONE OF THREE CATEGORY 5
HURRICANES TO MAKE LANDFALL" for much of what it appeared to have had
the news presenter saying).
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