When I was growing up, my parents (both of whom where highly cynical) told me that the information in the ÃÛÌÒÁµÈË was just made up, that no one could forecast that far ahead. So I spend one whole year at one point comparing the actual weather to what the ÃÛÌÒÁµÈË said. It was spot-on, every single day. I did it again this year, and so far have gotten the same results. Frank Field could have used your meteorologists back in 1970! (Touted as NBC News' "crack meteorologist," he forecast "light flurries" for NYC that January. As it turned out, however, the storm dumped a couple of feet of snow on the city, paralyzing it for several days. After that, New Yorkers took to calling him the "cracked" meteorologist.)
When I was growing up, my parents (both of whom where highly cynical) told me that the information in the ÃÛÌÒÁµÈË was just made up, that no one could forecast that far ahead. So I spend one whole year at one point comparing the actual weather to what the ÃÛÌÒÁµÈË said. It was spot-on, every single day. I did it again this year, and so far have gotten the same results. Frank Field could have used your meteorologists back in 1970! (Touted as NBC News' "crack meteorologist," he forecast "light flurries" for NYC that January. As it turned out, however, the storm dumped a couple of feet of snow on the city, paralyzing it for several days. After that, New Yorkers took to calling him the "cracked" meteorologist.)