Whether it is used as an icebreaker in conversation or as the subject of serious inquiry, “the weather” is one of the few subjects that everyone talks about. And though we recognize the faces that bring us the weather on television, how government meteorologists and forecasters go about their jobs is rarely scrutinized. Given recent weather-related disasters, it is time we find out more. This book offers an inside look at how meteorologists and forecasters predict the weather. Based on field observation and interviews at the Storm Prediction Center in Oklahoma, the National Weather Service in Washington, D.C., and a handful of midwestern outlets, the book finds a supremely hard-working, insular clique of professionals who often refer to themselves as a “band of brothers.” In this book, we learn their lingo, how they “read” weather conditions, how forecasts are written, and, of course, how those messages are conveyed to the public. Weather forecasts, the book shows, are often shaped as much by social and cultural factors inside local offices as they are by approaching cumulus clouds. By opening up this world to us, the book offers a glimpse of a crucial profession.
Author(s): Gary Alan Fine
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Year: 2007
Language: English
Pages: 280
Contents......Page 8
Preface......Page 10
Introduction......Page 14
1 On the Floor......Page 32
2 A Cult of “Science”......Page 70
3 Futurework......Page 112
4 Writing on the Winds......Page 148
5 Ground Truth......Page 186
6 A Public Science......Page 222
7 Weather Wise......Page 250
Notes......Page 264
Index......Page 300