| By Drew Olson Senior Editor E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Drew Olson |
| Published June 2, 2009 at 11:22 a.m. |
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(page 2)
OMC: I imagine, like everyone else who has been in the media over the past 15 years, that technology has changed a lot.
MB: It's night and day. When I started at the college station I worked for, we were still drawing on the maps -- hand drawing. Then, we moved to a rudimentary computer system that sort of put a show on. The Internet does everything now.
We used to have these gigantic fax machines that would send down about 25 weather maps a day and that's how we did our forecasts. Now, I probably look at close to 300-400 different maps a day. That doesn't necessarily meant that the forecast is going to be more accurate, but I have a lot more to look at.
As computer technology and the speed of computers increases, it does make forecasting for things like the lake breeze and the lake effect snows much better. Of course, let's not remember what happened at the airport when they had 14 1/2 inches of snow, and I forecast two.
OMC: Just a minor mistake ...
MB: It was just a little apostrophe. One to two inches, one to two feet.
OMC: What kind of relationship do you have with your competitors at the other stations around town?
MB: It's fisticuffs. It's terrible (laughs). It's actually very nice to be in a market where everybody gets along. I don't have any stories. I was just at a conference with John Malan (from Channel 4). We get along really well. (Former Channel 4 veterans) Paul Joseph and Jim Ott were really nice to me, too. I still talk to Jim once in awhile. I was the kid when I came in here. There are so many guys that have a lot more experience. I just need to move those guys along and just go in a nice retirement plan.
OMC: Do you check out the competition and scoff and say, "I said chance of rain 75 percent; he only had 60?"
MB: Not on a daily basis, but (once in a while), especially for snow. Snow is always the thing that really differentiates you from anyone because that forecast is usually different on every station. It's the hardest forecast that we have -- a snow forecast.
OMC: Hopefully, it won't snow on the golf outing that you and Channel 12 sports director Dan Needles are hosting next week at Tripoli Country Club. Can you tell me about that?
MB: The Neighborhood House has been around 75 or 80 years. It started as a transitional living facility for people coming in from other countries. Right now, it has really changed more into helping disadvantaged people in the inner city with day care. They are on Richardson Place, right off of 27th Street. It's an interesting place and they're doing great work there. I hope it continues to get bigger and better every years.
OMC: Do you and Dan get to play?
MB: Dan and I stay on one hole the whole day, a little par-3 over the water. We donate a lot of balls to the water, but that's the only way to host a golf outing. If anybody has a better idea how to host an outing and make sure you get to interact with everyone, they should give us a call.
OMC: Do you have any hobbies besides golf?
MB: My favorite hobby is my collection of antique thermometers and barometers. This is geeky, I know. I was really into it for a while. We'd go to a lot of antique stores.
OMC: I've heard that people on the street will thank you when the weather is good and blame you when it's not. Is that true?
MB: It's God when the weather is good. It's me when the it's bad.
Occasionally, people do thank you for the nice weather, as though I had anything to do with it. And, you get really nasty e-mails when the weather is bad, like I'm actually controlling it. Like I can put anything I want in the seven-day (forecast), and I'm sure that's exactly what's going to happen.
OMC: Does that ever get old?
MB: It's fun. People always ask me, "Does that ever get tiring? Do you get tired of hearing that?" It hasn't happened yet. If it ever does, I guess it's time for me to change occupations.
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3 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by TosaJimBob on June 3, 2009 at 9:00 a.m. (report)
Mark is a great Meteorologist. And he's a nice guy too....I played softball with the Channel 12 team in a couple of tournaments and he was genuinely nice and a decent player too. Mark, good luck with your future in Milwaukee...I'm glad you are here....now bring us some sunshine.
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Posted by curlyboy1978 on June 3, 2009 at 8:05 a.m. (report)
Nice interview! People who blame meterologists for bad weather or wrong forecasts - going as far as sending nasty emails- really really need to get a life.
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Posted by brunocarlson on June 2, 2009 at 11:50 a.m. (report)
Mark Baden is one of the better meteorologists in this market. I especially like it when he gets it wrong, he will apologize on the air (the afore mentioned snowfall issue) and where there is severe weather, he will pop on with his sleeves rolled up and tie undone to give the up-to-date reports or you can see him in the background while Lance Hill does the reports. Regardless of good or bad weather, thanks for giving me the facts and not the fluff. Mark Baden and Lance Hill are great.
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