It is urgent that this type of context is consistently incorporated into the major networks’ extreme weather coverage. Notably, Al Roker made the connection between climate change and tornadoes during the May 1 episode of NBC’s Today, while correspondent Maggie Vespa made the connection during the May 8 episode of NBC Nightly News.
Cover climate-driven extreme weather year round
To effectively address the severity of the climate crisis, corporate broadcast networks must extend their focus beyond moments of acute disaster and cover climate links to extreme weather events throughout the year. Media Matters' annual review of 2023 broadcast climate coverage found that coverage of extreme weather peaked in July with climate change mentioned in 54 segments, or 34% of the year's total. This coverage needs to be continuous and integrated into the daily news cycle, however, and not just highlighted during peak incidents.
Since 2021, Media Matters has urged national TV news to present extreme weather as part of an ongoing, interconnected climate narrative. Broadcast networks play a critical role in making these connections clear to the public, demonstrating how the increasing frequency and severity of these events are manifestations of broader global warming trends. By more consistently linking individual weather events to climate change, news media can enhance public understanding of the crisis' scale and urgency, encouraging collective action to mitigate its impacts.
Report on global extreme weather events
Corporate broadcast networks’ coverage of global extreme weather events often does not adequately reflect the severity of these catastrophes. For example, broadcast networks covered the devastating 2022 monsoon season in Pakistan for only 7 minutes across 9 segments after months of rains killed more than 1,000 people and displaced more than 30 million, while the record-breaking Asian heat wave in April 2023, described as the worst in the continent's history, also received scant attention from national TV news.
This lack of coverage devoted to extreme weather events outside the U.S. risks downplaying the global scope of the climate crisis. As The Associated Press reports: