Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: WEDNESDAY, December 29, 1993 TAG: 9401040002 SECTION: EXTRA PAGE: 1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: Ben Beagle DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
He can go into the office without fear of having to write a weather story.
When I was a young, semi-hysterical reporter, I rather liked to write weather stories - especially weather stories with snow in them.
It gave me a chance to write like Thomas Wolfe, which couldn't be done, for example, if you were covering a murder trial.
Without the slightest evidence of embarrassment of any kind, I have written lead paragraphs like the following:
``A sudden snowstorm, belying the weather forecasters, slipped into the Roanoke Valley on Friday night, spilling down the mountains and making its statement in a white portrait that spoke of winter's purity.''
Or:
``Old Man Winter harried the Roanoke Valley again Thursday with a snowstorm that wrote its own poetry in the snow and left behind sculptures in white.''
No kidding. Editors in those day were so harried they wrote a head and sent the copy back to the composing room. They didn't have time to get sick about writing like that.
But something happened, and I began to detest weather stories. All the poetry had gone out of me, and I once wrote the following highly analytical sentence about a snowstorm:
``State police said that some of the roads were slippery while others were not.''
I can now admit I stole this idea from another reporter who had earlier written in a weather story:
``Some of the stores were closed while others remained open.''
My sudden dislike for weather stories actually helped me as a writer. It has been 30 years since I used the word ``belying'' or the phrase ``winter's purity.''
I became so cynical I devised the instant weather story for young reporters:
``A winter storm that (a) slipped across the mountains, (b) surprised the forecasters or (c) blew in suddenly from the west descended in the Roanoke Valley on Wednesday.
``State police said roads were (a) slippery, (b) not slippery, (c) blocked or (d) none of the above.''
As for this new generation of weather-story writers, all I have to say is let it snow, baby.
by CNB