1:45pm
Details on Black Wednesday parties announced at Liar's Club, Buddha, Lava, darkroom and Bar Deville
Up and at ’em
To be on the air as the Saturday morning meteorologist for NBC5’s newscasts, Ginger Zee wakes up at 1:30am. “I’ll try to go to bed before 10pm, so I can get at least four hours [of sleep],” she says. “But that rarely happens.” She bounces around many of the station’s news programs, so she often finds herself working a double shift on Saturdays, staying until 10:30am and then returning at 2:30pm and finally leaving for the day at 10:30pm. “It’s not a social schedule,” she says. Her routine goes like this: Wake up at 1:30 (“I’m always the sober one out there as I’m heading to work and everyone else is leaving bars”), arrive at the station at 2:30am, get makeup and then prepare her forecast for the day (using four computers and looking at many variables including what the temperature is 7,000 feet in the air) and create the weather graphics to be displayed on air. “That’s the difference between a meteorologist and the anchors. No one’s writing anything for me,” she says.
Storm watch
While she was an undergrad at Valparaiso University in Indiana, Zee was a member of Storm Intercept Team. “It was a club for weather geeks,” she says. The group chased storms on a regular basis. “We’d go to Iowa for a day if we saw that interesting weather was going to be up there,” she says. Her biggest chase happened in 2001, when she followed the same storm more than 5,000 miles (covering Texas, Colorado, Kansas and Iowa). Although it did have some exciting moments, she didn’t see any flying cattle à la Twister. “They blew it a little out of proportion,” she says of the 1996 film. “If you followed us on a real chase, you’d be bored. Half the time, we’re just waiting and waiting.”
Rising temps
Even though weather forecasts are accessible to anyone with a computer or mobile phone, Zee says there is one advantage to getting your weather news from your local television station. “I can add perception,” she says. “People go on what it feels like.” What she means is even though it may technically be 80 degrees one day, it might feel like only 75. “I’ll always say it’s going to be a little lower because in your mind, 80 feels a lot different than 75.” And especially this spring, when the city was coming out of a deep freeze and in serious need of a decent day, Zee slightly lowballed her temp predictions. “If it’s going to be 70 but will feel cooler, I’ll put 69,” she says. “No one is going to be pissed if it’s suddenly 72. But if I tell them 70, especially when they’re dying for a 70-degree day and it turns out to be chilly, they are going to be livid.”
Say what?
Because she’s on TV every day, Zee is recognized on the street. “This one lady recently came up to me and wanted me to call her friend’s husband to wish him a happy Father’s Day,” she says. She also gets odd items in the mail (such as wedding proposals and a portrait of her) . “[The painting is] hanging in my office at Valpo,” Zee says—she teaches one class a week at her alma mater. But the biggest way viewers reach out to Zee is through e-mail. And although many messages are complimentary, some are critical—especially about her clothes. “Recently, I had a [short-sleeve] shirt on, and a woman wrote in and said ‘Ginger Zee looks like a prostitute.’ I’ve also been called a working girl,” she says. “Because I’m not wearing a jacket today, I know someone will write in saying something along those lines.” Even though the e-mails can sometimes be mean-spirited, Zee responds to every single one. “I’ll be nice and will try to be funny, and hopefully that changes their perspective of me,” she says.
Wake-up call
Zee says she sometimes wakes up on days off in a panic, worried she’s overslept. Her fear came true early in her career when she was working at a station in Michigan. She was feeling sick and went to bed around 8pm but didn’t wake up until 7am—when her newscast had just ended. “It was horrible,” she says. “I wanted to die because I thought, Well, I just lost my first job.” She got to keep her job, and the incident also reminded her to have extra wake-up calls. “Ever since then, I set at least eight different alarms.”
I am Ginger's aunt and can tell you that she continues to amaze our family with her dedication to charitable causes (despite an exhausting work schedule). She works tirelessly for these events as well as working past exhaustion to be gracious and respond to the thousands of emails she gets every day. Regardless of her fame, Ginger has remained kind, compassionate and modest. I have personally seen the hard work that went into obtaining her education and our family is very proud of her.
Ginger is my favorite tv person ever! She is gorgeous, has a sense of humor, and is incredible at her job. She makes what she does look easy, even though it is not. I love this woman!
Ginger, It takes guts for a Meteorologist to go live on television and make a 5 day weather forecast. It is a science based on a chaotic paradigm. In other words, so many variables can change the nature of local forecasting for that period. You do it with grace and professional certainty. One can recognise a scientist from a prop reader. You are no prop reader.I do not see you often enough on the news, though I venture to say you feel tasked enough as it is. Our loss
The guys at the Fire Station on Black Shift would love you to have lunch with us if you are ever up in Gurnee, IL. And yes dont worry it will be safe, the Chief I am sure will be there :-) Lt Bill
I graduated from high school with Ginger and must say that she was a kind person and a good friend.
I met Ginger last December at the station with my wife and her Girl Scouts for a tour. Ginger is a very beautiful person inside and out.
Ginger couldnt be more passionate about what she does. Yes she stops traffic with her looks but backs all that up with her astute knowledge and training she has in her field as well as her ability to run with other aspects that shes given at NBC via her green stories and her anchoring of the recent Sat morning show. Not to mention her many visits to schools and charitable events. This is one woman who doesnt know the meaning of slow down.
Chicago is extremely lucky to have someone like Ginger. I'm sure Grand Rapids misses her immensely. I became friends with her on facebook and have seen the unbelievably diverse variety of stories and activities she does; she was even fill-in anchor recently and was top notch. Very impressive; then to read here about her work hours! Ginger you are amazing! You look great, dress great and are an inspiration to all! Keep up the stellar work!
Ginger, I enjoy your forecasts a lot. You have a fresh way of delivering the weather..I think you dress very well...again, professional..in a broadcaster way...and I have also seen you do the broadcast..news and all...Great job by the way...I hope you stay at WMAQ.
Ginger is a young talent that brings her career into perspective into her fileld of television. Some peole need to wake up and see what is going on in TV the days of woman in business suits and men in jacket and tie are going to the wayside. Welcome to the new age of television and young anchors.
When I read that someone called Ginger a prostitute for wearing a short sleeve shirt, I couldn't believe it! Just because she is pretty and keeps in shape, it shouldn't be a cause for other women to be jealous. I went to high school with Ginger and she is one the the sweetest girls that went there! Always caring for others, and always respectful and considerate. She is FAR from a prostitute for wearing a short sleeve shirt - women do it everyday!! She is the future of meteorologists!