"On snow forecasts, they like to make you really push it, and make people realize just how terrible it is, and sometimes it's not so terrible." Miller backed up a theory I (and no doubt many others) have about local-weather forecasting anywhere: Some forecasters give you a worst-case scenario, so that if things are bad, you're prepared, and if they're not, you're grateful. "I am so thankful to not be there when it's snowing," she says. Isn't that something a meteorologist would love to sink her teeth into? Actually, it turns out that Miller is glad she missed it. Today, naturally, it's nasty, with rain and ice around us, and as I look up at another TV station, I see snow as well. The day Miller left NBC-5, the weather was pleasant. That's been going on for a while, so I knew something was up." (Tully declined to comment, citing a station policy against commenting on personnel matters.) 'I just don't understand what the forecast is going to be when I watch you'. For a long time has criticized my work, and she says things like. "But I wasn't completely surprised, to be honest with you. "I think a lot of people at Channel 5 were surprised, too," Miller says. Comments on this blog and on Ed Bark's Uncle Barky blog indicate that viewers were surprised by Miller's dismissal. Just got off the phone will Rebeca Miller, who as you may know by now was let go from KXAS/Channel 5 on Wednesday after nearly 17 years with the station as a meteorologist.
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