
Chapter 05 - Coverage during a hurricane
Today we discovered we work when we cover hurricanes
Have you ever boarded an airplane and suddenly it shakes so much that you can't let go of the armrest? This is how it starts Atmospheric Turbulencethe new Canal Meteo podcast hosted by meteorologist and geographer Albert MartinezThe program, which invites us to discover the best kept secrets of meteorology, with a special focus on hurricanes.
In this special episode of Atmospheric TurbulenceIn this edition, meteorologist and presenter Albert Martínez invites us to fasten our seat belts to take a trip to the heart of hurricanes. But this time, from a very intimate and close perspective: that of those who make possible the news coverage from the field. Along with him, Erika Camarena, Puerto Rican journalist and producer, shares anecdotes and reflections on what it means to live -literally- inside the news.
Erika and Albert have worked together on storm and hurricane coverage for national television in the U.S., from Puerto Rico to California, including places like Tampa and Los Angeles. Erika confesses that, beyond the technical equipment, the essential thing is passion. "If you are not passionate about it, you can't do this job. Because there are no schedules, no rest, no guarantees. Just the need to tell what is happening," she says.

Hurricane coverage begins days before impact: hotel reservations, safe routes, contingency plans and, above all, improvisation. Because, as they explain, systems change direction, roads are flooded and signs are down. Sleeping becomes a luxury and eating a race against the clock.
Again and again, Erika stresses the importance of the cell phone as a key tool in the digital era: recording, transmitting, sharing. And not only in image quality, but also in immediacy and proximity. Reporting no longer needs a big camera to be effective. Today, what the public is looking for is authenticity.

Kamila Daza also joins the episode to take a historical look at how weather has been communicated on television, from the first cardboard maps to the age of social media, where meteorologists like Albert have been able to connect with new audiences through multimedia content.
Among anecdotes about coverage in torrential rain, confusion with time zones and the effort to report from remote places, this chapter is a tribute to weather journalists. To those who not only predict storms, but also live through them so that the rest of the population can prepare and protect themselves.
Because covering a hurricane is not just a technical matter: it is a mission of public service, of personal dedication and, above all, of passion.

In this episode:
- 02:00 What do we need to cover a hurricane?
- 03:33 How should we prepare?
- 05:30 What does a field producer do?
- 09:15 Anecdotes of our coverage
- 18:20 This is how the television weather segment was born
- 21:15 What should a field producer have?
- 24:50 Hurricanes that have marked you
🎧 First audio episode now available at buzzsprout.
Follow us on social networks: @AlbertElTiempo | @CanalMeteo