Two Major Stories Stretch Tampa TV Outlets

UPDATED: On their own, the Republican National Convention (RNC) and
the arrival of severe weather are legitimate headline stories. Put them
together in the same market, and it makes for the type of workdays that Tampa
news staffers will discuss for years to come.

"It was a very interesting weekend," says Richard
Pegram, vice president and general manager of WFTS Tampa. "We had a great
plan on track, then all the sudden Isaac comes along, and presents new
challenges."

The worst of the storm appears to be over for Tampa, but DMA
No. 14 is hardly in the clear. Three tornado warnings were flying about as of
Monday afternoon, with more heavy rain in the near term forecast.

Due to the weather, the RNC trimmed Monday's events from the
agenda, and will kick off in earnest Tuesday, Aug. 28. RNC leaders are keeping an eye on the storm for another reason: to see how its severity affects the message and tone coming out of the party's presentations to the nation this week. "They're figuring out what the message will be," says John Hoffman, news director at WTVT, "based on what happens in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast."

Several Tampa stations were live as of 4 a.m. Monday
morning, following numerous cut-ins with weather updates over the weekend.
Helping the stations deploy is the fact that they are fully staffed, with no
staffers on vacation, for the RNC to begin with. They're getting major assists
from both inside and outside their companies.

Bright House Networks' Bay News 9 is getting help from
Bright House siblings News 13 in Orlando and its sports networks, along with
reporters in town for RNC from Time Warner Cable's news channels. WFTS got at
least 15 people, along with vehicles and equipment, in from sister Scripps
stations as far flung as Denver, Cleveland and Cincinnati.

"Quite frankly, it enabled us to get through it,"
says Pegram. "Our company spared no resources in getting people down
here."

WFLA has three or four sister Media General stations
represented in its massive Tampa news operation, along with a handful of
stations from outside its group paying a modest fee to plug in at the station.

"We're in better shape than some because we already had
a boatload of people set up," says Brad Moses, vice president and general
manager of WFLA. "We cover what goes on in Tampa during the convention,
and Isaac is just one of those things going on."

Both politics and weather play to a 24/7 cable news
channel's strengths, and Elliott Wiser, vice president of news and local
programming at Bright House, says Bay News 9 is staffed to cover weather around
the clock anyway. "We spent a year planning for the RNC," he says.
"In a perfect world, you'd prefer not to have them together. But news
channels are built for times like this."

Some Tampa news staffers will return the favor for station
siblings in the Gulf Coast as the storm tracks west, and may be upgraded to a
hurricane.

Amere two-tenths of a household ratings point separate Tampa's Big Fourbroadcast stations in total day ratings in May. News departments are hungry
to burnish their breaking news credentials at times like this.

Management at Fox-owned WTVT says the focus shifted Monday from the RNC to Isaac. "This morning, we intended to be live at the Forum," says Jeff Maloney, vice president and general manager. "But the story changed and became a local weather story."

Weather leads WTVT's 5 p.m. news Monday, with RNC protests second in the lineup.

With Isaac seemingly downgraded from major news story in
Tampa to merely a news story, the local TV staffers can increasingly focus on
the story they've been prepping for over the past year. News professionals may
not have gotten the rest they anticipated leading up to the RNC, but the mood
in the newsrooms -- chasing breaking news, breaking bread and swapping war
stories with friends from sister stations -- is upbeat.

"This is what they live and breathe for," says
Moses. "The big news stories."

Michael Malone

Michael Malone, senior content producer at B+C/Multichannel News, covers network programming, including entertainment, news and sports on broadcast, cable and streaming; and local broadcast television. He hosts the podcasts Busted Pilot, about what’s new in television, and Series Business, a chat with the creator of a new program, and writes the column “The Watchman.” He joined B+C in 2005. His journalism has also appeared in The New York Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Playboy and New York magazine.