Carolina Weather Group
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editora: Podcast
- Duração: 467:19:21
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Sinopse
Discussing weather, science, technology and more for all from the Carolinas. Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather/support
Episódios
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SC Gov. McMaster winter storm briefing - Jan. 24, 2026
24/01/2026 Duração: 43minAn epic winter storm will bring significant ice and snow to North Carolina and South Carolina starting Saturday. Preparations are needed now to protect across prolonged periods of freezing temperatures and extended power outages.Gov. Henry McMaster and other South Carolina leaders are holding another pre-storm briefing to provide updates on their preparations.Now is the time to prepare. Join the Carolina Weather Group as we analyze the latest model guidance, timing, and safety prep for this major winter event.#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast
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24/01/2026 Duração: 43min
Stay Safe, Carolinas! Complete Winter Storm Emergency Briefing & Live Forecast UpdateNorth Carolina Governor Josh Stein, state emergency officials, and the Carolina Weather Group provide critical updates as a major winter storm brings dangerous ice, sleet, and freezing rain to the Carolinas. This video covers official state preparation efforts, a detailed meteorological breakdown by Sam Walker, and localized forecasts for your area.
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NC Gov. Josh Stein winter storm briefing - Jan. 23, 2026
23/01/2026 Duração: 01h17minThe Carolinas are bracing for a severe winter weather event bringing heavy ice, dangerous wind chills, and widespread power outages.Join Carolina Weather Group's Sam Walker for a comprehensive breakdown of the incoming January 23, 2026, ice storm. This special live stream features a press briefing from North Carolina Governor Josh Stein and NC Emergency Management, followed by a detailed look at snowfall and freezing rain maps for both North and South Carolina.In this video, we cover:State of Emergency: NC Governor Josh Stein has declared a state of emergency across North Carolina to mobilize resources in advance of the storm.Hazardous Ice Accumulations: Ice accumulation of a quarter inch or more is likely across much of North Carolina, with some central and western areas reaching or exceeding one inch.Long-Term Impacts: Residents should prepare for multi-day power outages and unsafe travel conditions that will likely extend into next week.Bone-Chilling Cold: Temperatures are expected to fall below freezi
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NC Winter Storm Update: Gov. Josh Stein Briefing (Jan 22, 2026)
22/01/2026 Duração: 49minJoin the Carolina Weather Group for special coverage of the pending winter storm impacting North Carolina and South Carolina this weekend. This video features the full January 22, 2026, press briefing from Raleigh with North Carolina Governor Josh Stein and state officials, followed by a breakdown of the "First Call" forecast maps with Sam Walker.Governor Stein has declared a State of Emergency as the state prepares for significant ice, snow, and freezing rain. Officials warn that power outages and hazardous road conditions are the primary concerns.In This Video:Governor’s Briefing: NC Gov. Josh Stein outlines preparations, including the activation of the National Guard and State Highway Patrol.Emergency Management: Director Will Ray warns of moderate to major impacts, including long-lasting power outages and tree damage.Road Conditions: NCDOT Secretary Daniel Johnson details the deployment of 300,000 gallons of brine and warns of black ice risks through early next week.Forecast Analysis: Sam Walker
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Winter Storm Watch: Ice & Snow Threat for the Carolinas [Ep. 569]
22/01/2026 Duração: 01h37minAn epic winter storm will bring significant ice and snow to North Carolina and South Carolina starting Saturday. Preparations are needed now to protect across prolonged periods of freezing temperatures and extended power outages.The latest winter storm forecast tonight with meteorologists across the Carolinas. Featuring Scotty Powell in Myrtle Beach, Frank Strait in Columbia, James Brierton and Brad Panovich in Charlotte, Jason Boyer in Asheville, Greg Fishel in Raleigh, and Tim Buckley in Greensboro.In this episode, we break down the critical changes in the forecast data:The Trend: Models are trending warmer, shifting the forecast toward lower snow totals but significantly higher ice and sleet accumulations.The Impacts: High confidence in hazardous travel and widespread power outages that could last for days.The Zones: Who sees snow (highest probability north of I-40) vs. who sees a dangerous mix of freezing rain (Upstate SC, NE Georgia, and Southern NC mountains).The Aftermath: A look at the dangerously col
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How much Carolina snow is REALLY forecast? [Ep. 568]
15/01/2026 Duração: 58minIt is the question everyone is asking: Is it finally going to snow in the Carolinas? On this week's edition of the Carolina Weather Group, James Brierson and Meteorologist Frank Strait break down the complicated signal for potential winter weather this weekend.We start with the bitter cold arriving Thursday and Friday, bringing dangerous wind chills and school delays to Western North Carolina. Then, we dive deep into the computer models to see if a developing system on Sunday will bring snow to the Piedmont or just cold rain. Frank explains why the GFS is bullish on snow while the European and Canadian models disagree, and teaches us how to use "ensembles" to cut through social media hype.Plus, we cover breaking space news regarding the first-ever medical evacuation from the International Space Station and track the Buddhist monks' "Walk for Peace" moving through Charlotte.Support the Show: Get your Carolina Weather Group Beanie or Fleece to stay warm during this cold snap! https:/
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NASA Medical Emergency in Space: Why Crew-11 is coming home early
08/01/2026 Duração: 07minBreaking news: NASA is bringing Crew-11 home early from the ISS after a crew member experienced a medical situation. The astronaut is stable, and the return is planned, not an emergency deorbit. #NASA #ISS #Crew11 #SpaceMission #MedicalEmergency
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Panthers vs Rams: NFL wildcard weather trouble [Ep. 567]
08/01/2026 Duração: 52minThis Saturday's Wild Card showdown between the Carolina Panthers and the Los Angeles Rams is facing a formidable opponent: Mother Nature. In this episode, we break down how a passing front bringing rain, wind, and potential lightning could dismantle game plans on both sides.We analyze how a slick field might neutralize the Panthers' run game and why high winds could spell trouble for the Rams' precision passing attack. Plus, we go beyond the sideline to discuss critical fan safety protocols at Bank of America Stadium. Learn about the '8-mile' lightning rule, evacuation procedures, and how the in-stadium WeatherStem station keeps everyone safe. Tune in for the ultimate weather-meets-football preview!#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast
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Christmas Heat Wave? + Rebuilding After Helene at Lake Lure
18/12/2025 Duração: 30minIn this week's episode of the Carolina Weather Group, we look at a wild temperature swing heading into the holidays before revisiting one of the most resilient communities in Western North Carolina.
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PIPE-BUSTING COLD: From 70° to Freezing in 24 Hours!
13/12/2025 Duração: 09minPrepare for a massive temperature drop!
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Carolina Weather: Snow Recap, Monday’s Deep Freeze & The Science of AM Radio [Ep. 566]
11/12/2025 Duração: 01h01minThis week on the Carolina Weather Group, James and Frank recap a busy week of wintry weather in the Carolinas—including the bizarre "man-made" snow flurries generated by steam from local power plants!In this episode:Snow Recap: A look back at the recent snowfall in Maggie Valley, Boone, and the Virginia border."Nuclear Snow": How steam from the Catawba Nuclear Station turned into flurries over Charlotte.The Forecast: Tracking an Alberta Clipper for Friday and a major Arctic cold front arriving Sunday that will drop Monday morning temperatures into the teens and single digits.Christmas Outlook: Early thoughts on whether we will see a White Christmas or a warm-up.Radio History: A deep dive into the legendary WBT 1110 AM moving to the FM dial. Frank and James "nerd out" on the science of radio signal propagation, ground waves vs. sky waves, and the history of clear channel stations.#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast
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Simple Winter Prep Hacks to Protect Your Home (Ep. 565)
04/12/2025 Duração: 32minProtect your home from winter weather! ❄️In this Carolina Weather Group interview, meteorologist Rachel Gauthier from the Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) shares expert advice on how to prepare your house for freezing temperatures, ice, snow, hail, and winter storms in the Carolinas.We cover simple, affordable steps you can take right now to keep warm air inside, protect your roof, avoid frozen pipes, and prevent costly water damage from ice dams and winter precipitation. Whether you’re a homeowner or renting a property, these winter home-safety tips can save you thousands of dollars and hours of stress later.
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April 27, 2011 Tornado Outbreak: What We Know Now — Including a Newly Identified EF-2
27/11/2025 Duração: 29minIn this week’s episode of the Carolina Weather Group, we revisit one of the most catastrophic weather events in modern U.S. history: the April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak — a generational severe weather disaster that produced more than 60 tornadoes in Alabama alone and altered the course of severe weather communication forever. We’re hear from ABC 33/40 Chief Meteorologist James Spann, who takes us behind the scenes of that day — the forecasting, the wall-to-wall coverage, the failures in communication infrastructure, and the lessons that still shape severe weather messaging today.But this year’s anniversary carries new significance.⭐ Special Segment: A Newly Discovered EF-2 Tornado — Identified 14 Years LaterAs part of ongoing research into the April 27, 2011 outbreak, meteorologists have just confirmed another previously undocumented EF-2 tornado that occurred during the event. This additional tornado — uncovered nearly two decades later — highlights how massive, chaotic, and difficult to analyze the outbreak
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Abnormal Warmth, Snow Hype & Thanksgiving Forecast [Ep. 564]
20/11/2025 Duração: 01h06minThe Carolinas just wrapped up one of the warmest late-November stretches on record — but at the same time, social media has exploded with snow hype ahead of Thanksgiving. So what’s real, and what’s just another single-model-run gone viral?In this week’s Carolina Weather Group episode, James Brierton, Sam Walker, and Frank Strait break down:
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Northern Lights, Surprise Snow, Government Shutdown Ends [Ep. 564]
13/11/2025 Duração: 01h22minThe Northern Lights are back—for the second night in a row—and the Carolina Weather Group is tracking every moment! From a G4 geomagnetic storm to aurora sightings as far south as Charleston and the Florida Panhandle, the team breaks down what’s happening above our heads and why this solar cycle is producing such rare displays for the Carolinas.
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06/11/2025 Duração: 01h52s
We’re celebrating one year since our milestone 500th episode — and for the first time ever, both parts of our on-location special from the Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) are airing together as one extended encore presentation!Join the Carolina Weather Group team — James Brierton, Jared Smith, Dan Whitaker, Candace Jordan, and producer Tim Pounds — as we take you behind the scenes at IBHS in Chester County, South Carolina, where science meets the elements.
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Hurricane Melissa's 185 MPH Winds, OBX Homes Collapse Again, & New Hurricane History Map [Ep. 563]
30/10/2025 Duração: 52minHurricane Melissa has joined the record books with 185 mph winds, devastating Jamaica, Cuba, and The Bahamas before turning toward Bermuda. On this week’s Carolina Weather Group, we discuss Melissa’s Category 5 strength, new video from inside the storm’s eye, and the Outer Banks’ ongoing home collapses — five more this week in Buxton and Avon.Our guest Peter Forister joins to unveil his new “Most Memorable Hurricanes” map, a fascinating look at which storms stand out most in the Carolinas’ collective memory, county by county. Plus, he gives a final fall foliage color update as the leaves peak across the Southeast.Later in the show, we preview the Mid-Atlantic Severe Weather Conference with organizer Chris White, highlighting emergency management topics, storm chasing stories, and meteorology education.
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Destructive Hurricane Melissa making Jamaica landfall [Breaking news update]
28/10/2025 Duração: 11min...EXTREMELY DANGEROUS CATEGORY 5 MELISSA ABOUT TO MAKE LANDFALL IN JAMAICA... ...CATASTROPHIC WINDS, FLASH FLOODING, AND STORM SURGE OCCURRING ONTHE ISLAND...Breaking coverage as Category 5 Hurricane Melissa makes landfall in Jamaica with catastrophic winds near 185 mph, storm surge up to 13 feet, and rainfall totals exceeding 30 inches.Join James Brierton of the Carolina Weather Group and Dr. Michael Brennan, Director of the National Hurricane Center, for the latest official update as the eye of Melissa crosses the island. Brennan details the immediate threats—life-threatening winds, flash flooding, landslides, and complete structural failure near the eyewall—while urging all residents to shelter in place.Inside this video:Real-time analysis of Melissa’s approach and eyewall structureLive update from Dr. Brennan on rainfall, wind, and storm-surge impacts across Jamaica, Cuba, and the BahamasRare NOAA Hurricane Hunter footage from inside Melissa’s eyewall showing the “stadium effect” and near-200 mph windsDi
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Blowing Dust in Charlotte, Hurricane Melissa Forms, and Fall Weather [Podcast Ep. 562]
23/10/2025 Duração: 57minIt’s a wild weather week across the Carolinas!
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Trapped on Hatteras: Storm Chasers Ride Out Outer Banks Nor’easter [Ep. 561]
16/10/2025 Duração: 57minTwo of the South’s most dedicated storm chasers, Brett Adair and Chris Jackson, join the Carolina Weather Group fresh off their trip to North Carolina’s Outer Banks, where a powerful nor’easter battered the coastline.They share what it was like witnessing the crashing surf, coastal flooding, and erosion first-hand — and what happened when NC 12 closed, trapping them on Hatteras Island as the storm raged. From dramatic scenes of homes teetering over the Atlantic to the tense moments wondering which structures might fall next, Brett and Chris recount the raw power of nature and the resilience of coastal communities.