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CNN won the DuPont-Columbia Award for its tsunami coverage, [10] and the George Foster Peabody Award for its coverage of Katrina. [ 11 ] In early 2005, Klein canceled the long-running program Crossfire and replaced it with The Situation Room , saying that he agreed with Jon Stewart 's criticism that the talk show was incendiary and detracting ...
Cooper helped lead CNN's Peabody Award-winning coverage of Hurricane Katrina, and the network's Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award-winning coverage of the 2004 tsunami. He has won 18 Emmy Awards, including two for his coverage of the earthquake in Haiti, and an Edward R. Murrow Award .
And tsunami building codes only went into effect in 2016. “We have bridges, buildings, hospitals, schools, all of this infrastructure that is located in places where a tsunami could go,” Allen ...
Myers was the subject of a segment on Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, HBO's popular satirical news show, entitled "CNN Weatherman Chad Myers Hates His Job, His Life, and Everyone Around Him." The segment was a compilation of clips of Myers acting bitter, disgusted, or otherwise upset while reporting on CNN.
Under Crommett's direction, CNN en Español personnel twice received the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award, in 2001 for Outstanding Investigative Reporting and again in 2006 for Coverage of the Tsunami Disaster. CNN en Español staff were also honored with two Peabody Awards and the Maria Moors Cabot Award, and garnered many prestigious awards in ...
Coastal areas in Northern California began evacuating residents after a 7.0 earthquake off Humboldt County's coast prompted a tsunami warning. Luckily, the worst didn't play out. But emergency ...
CNN selected Blitzer to anchor their coverage of all U.S. presidential elections since 2004. [23] Since August 8, 2005, Blitzer has hosted The Situation Room, a two-hour afternoon/early evening program on CNN. [24] [25] In 2013, he began anchoring the 1pm ET hour of CNN Newsroom; in 2014, the program was renamed to Wolf.
West Coast surfers might snicker at the cause, but the National Weather Service confirms the rare 4-foot (1.2 meter) wave was caused by a kind of tsunami, just not the kind you usually hear about.