Chicago Weatherman question


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Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: Vern H ()
Date: July 27, 2012 12:49AM

Does anyone remember a weatherman who would either tear away part of the background or "paint" it away and it would show pictures and/or video? This would have been late 60's, maybe early 70's?

Thanks!

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: Mornac ()
Date: July 27, 2012 03:25AM

I remember a guy named PJ Hoff who was something of a cartoonist. He would "illustrate" the weather (with drawings of icicles, snowmen, people sunning or swimming, etc.) on a large paper pad that he would either tear away or flip over. I don't know what channel he was on.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: Lance Grey ()
Date: July 27, 2012 06:49AM

dunno if its your man but when Green Screen/Chroma Key/Genlocks first came out,
ABC's Jim Coleman played Green Screen tricks & antics for a solid week.

To show the audience how it all worked, he wore the same color tie.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: Chipast ()
Date: July 27, 2012 08:24PM

Lance Grey Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> dunno if its your man but when Green Screen/Chroma
> Key/Genlocks first came out,
> ABC's Jim Coleman played Green Screen tricks &
> antics for a solid week.
>
> To show the audience how it all worked, he wore
> the same color tie.


You mean John Coleman????.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: gglow ()
Date: July 28, 2012 01:17AM

I believe it was P J Hoff he was on WBBM channel 2 .

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: johnhammond1 ()
Date: November 24, 2012 12:19AM

PJ Hoff was on channel 2--CBS, and was teamed with Fahey Flynn in the mid-late 50's and early 60's. The original post/question described him perfectly!

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: Lance Grey ()
Date: November 24, 2012 12:39AM

Chipast Wrote:

> You mean John Coleman????.

I meant the Coleman weather guy on ABC who often tried to be funny. (But I'm not sayin' he wasn't)

He went out of his way to show the audience how a Green-Screen functioned.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: mishadoc ()
Date: December 16, 2014 12:28PM

John Coleman! Sure, Mr. Superboonies and Thunderboomers. Yea, I met him at Old Chicago back in the 70s. He went on to found the Weather Channel. I just learned that a day or two earlier. How cool is that?

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Date: February 12, 2015 01:47AM

definitely was John Coleman, what a character

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: Longford ()
Date: February 12, 2015 02:16AM

Fahey Flynn. PJ Hoff. Channel 2. He wasn't much of a watherman, but, rather, a good illustrator.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: Chipast ()
Date: March 17, 2015 02:33AM

I wonder who was the weatherman before John Coleman?, When it was WBKB-TV?????

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: SWEDE ()
Date: March 18, 2015 09:09PM

Didn't poor John Coleman almost lose his job for a bad prediction of the great snow storm in 1967? He said a chance of little snow. He was funny.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: thimmaker ()
Date: April 16, 2015 06:25PM

P J Hoff always used the same line. " the vice president in charge of looking out the window says its going to" xxx tomorrow.
Watched him and Fahey every night on that little black and white tv.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: tomcat630 ()
Date: May 09, 2015 04:40AM

John Coleman predicted 100 inches of snow for the winter of 79-80, one year after the Blizzard of '79 and Jane Byrne election, etc. When it turned out to be one of the mildest, he said "well I told people what they wanted to hear..." Shortly after was gone from Ch. 7, but went to cable.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: G. O. Mancer ()
Date: July 19, 2015 09:26PM

There was a weatherman who had these "icons" he would stick to the map magneticly, and a spinning Polaroid filter on the camera would animate them - blazing Sun, flashing lightning, falling snow, etc.

Coleman's star rose because he was the only weatherman who predicted more than a couple of inches in '67. He continued to play this tune for years. It did get him to a gig on "Good Morning America".

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: gman ()
Date: July 20, 2015 12:13AM

G. O. Mancer Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------


> Coleman's star rose because he was the only
> weatherman who predicted more than a couple of
> inches in '67. He continued to play this tune for
> years. It did get him to a gig on "Good Morning
> America".


Coleman started The Weather Channel and did very well for himself.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: EricV ()
Date: July 20, 2015 10:43AM

Coleman was forced out at the Weather Channel about a year after it started.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: chicagorootsgal ()
Date: August 08, 2015 03:19AM

You know you're from Chicago when the first thought that came to mind were the radical Weathermen from the 60's...

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: Mornac ()
Date: August 08, 2015 02:22PM

chicagorootsgal Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> You know you're from Chicago when the first
> thought that came to mind were the radical
> Weathermen from the 60's...


--Yep.

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Re: Chicago Weatherman question
Posted by: WayOutWardell ()
Date: August 21, 2015 01:05AM

Harry Volkman has died at 89.

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