First of all, nearly all news outlets have done a laudable job of connecting TV viewers with many heart-wrenching stories in Joplin, Oklahoma, and in Tuscaloosa last month. But with those stories so close in our rear view mirrors, news directors appear, now, to be engaged in their own form of storm chasing, which in turn, has revealed that key lack of understanding about how ubiquitous tornado warnings are this time of year.
I was mostly raised in the heart of “tornado alley” in Hutchinson, Kansas, a smallish city of about 40,000 people that’s just a half-hour outside of Wichita. It just so happened that the alert siren – the actual yellow device pictured above – stood at the end of the block where we lived, so as a little boy, I was terrified by its portentous blare (not just during the time of a tornado warning, but also the first Tuesday of every month, when the sirens were tested).
Have you ever heard a tornado siren? Its like an air raid drill; but the flat Midwestern landscape (combined with a sparse population and lack of buildings) seem to only amplify the frightening and thundering blare. It seemed to me that tornado sirens were designed with one goal in mind: to cause panic. For me, it always worked, like a terrifying charm. So as a kid I got quite used to running down to basement with my family, and riding out the storm, after hearing the siren sound of tornado alerts that too-often marked the late spring and early summer tornado season.
My parents always remained calm, and I’m not sure in hindsight if they really weren’t bothered by the alarm, or just
Living in the Midwest, you eventually get used to this. And that’
But the constant blaring also serves as an excellent reminder that at any given time, a tornado could sweep through your neighborhood and render it rubble within scant seconds. The knowledge of living on that existential edge develops a character that, frankly, is what makes Midwestern people so unique. Yes, those in the Midwest often hold traditional values dear, and I am not speaking strictly about politics, but about old school characteristics like valuing education, hard work, and saving money. Talk to most people from the Great Plains, and they will tell you that these have long been hallmarks of Midwestern character. They form a foundation that can’t be ripped away by a capricious funnel cloud.
Which flies in stark relief compared to the anxious and alarming tone that we are now seeing in live shots of impending storms. Yes, the past few days and weeks have seen awful devastation, the likes of which I haven’t personally witnessed ever before. But the current tone of impending doom reveals that the New York based anchors don’t understand that the threat of tornadoes is simply a way of life.
In many ways, it’s the classic news media pitfall: overreacting to a recent news event with out of proportion coverage of what may come (and very rarely does). In some cases an alarming tone is