TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Respect the Polygon | Against the Rules with Michael Lewis

32m 50s5,348 mots845 segmentsEnglish

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0:01

what's your biggest fear

0:05

I'd say the biggest fear is some

0:08

something a mistake that I would make

0:11

that would damage my credibility to

0:13

where people would not listen to me when

0:15

there's a tornado down

0:18

James Spann meteorologist maybe

0:20

Alabama's best known person aside from

0:23

some football coaches

0:24

he's all over TV talking about the

0:26

weather especially when the weather

0:28

might kill you this is a tornado

0:30

emergency but the cities of Tuscaloosa

0:32

and Northport and the campus of the

0:34

University of Alabama

0:35

[Music]

0:37

James is one of those people who's never

0:39

really had a job because he found his

0:41

calling

0:42

he once stayed on the air as he watched

0:44

a tornado make straight for his own home

0:46

pleading with people to see the risk if

0:49

you're just joining us this is James

0:51

Spann with Taylor serrallo mainly

0:53

checking on my wife uh we've got she's

0:56

up she's okay and she's in the tornado

0:58

shelter

0:59

okay go ahead Taylor I'm sorry

1:01

I was put on this planet to mitigate

1:03

loss of life when there were tornadoes

1:04

flying around here and I have to be very

1:08

careful in what I say and what I do not

1:12

just on the air but on social media

1:15

and in real life

1:19

to build trust with his audience James

1:21

goes to incredible links he's published

1:24

a children's book called Benny and

1:26

chipper prepared not scared he spends

1:29

time in dollar stores talking to people

1:31

because the people who shop in dollar

1:33

stores are also the people who live in

1:34

trailer homes the sort of homes that

1:37

tornadoes obliterate

1:38

he memorizes the names of alabamians

1:40

who've died in storms

1:42

people he might have saved there's lots

1:45

of them

1:46

on a single day back in April 2011 a

1:49

line of tornadoes in Alabama killed 253

1:52

people

1:53

I know their stories I know they're

1:55

family members I've talked to many of

1:57

them and it's very motivating for me and

2:00

uh that's my main job in life it's to

2:02

make the warning process better with

2:04

severe weather

2:06

he's doing all he can to warn people

2:09

yet people still don't understand what

2:12

he's saying

2:15

I'm Michael Lewis

2:16

welcome back to against the rules where

2:19

we explore unfairness in American Life

2:22

by looking at what's happened to various

2:24

characters in American Life

2:26

this season is all about experts

2:30

today we're going to explore the strange

2:32

thing that's happened to experts not all

2:34

experts a certain percentage of them

2:37

the experts who think and speak in

2:39

probabilities who use data to forecast

2:42

the likelihood of this or that coming to

2:44

pass

2:45

the experts who can never be perfectly

2:47

certain and who risk our wrath because

2:50

we love thinking in absolutes

2:55

thank you

3:03

James Spann has been making and

3:05

explaining weather forecast for the

3:07

better part of half a century

3:09

in that time it's kind of incredible how

3:11

much has changed so so here here's a

3:13

1978 forecast partly sunny tomorrow with

3:16

a chance of showers in the high of 80.

3:19

that's it so today under the same

3:22

circumstances I'd say we'll have a

3:24

pretty good bit of sunshine between nine

3:26

eleven o'clock after 11 o'clock uh rain

3:29

is likely between 11 and 1. the chance

3:31

of any one spot getting wet during that

3:32

two-hour Windows about 75 it's going to

3:35

rain about a half inch in most places

3:36

there could be some Thunder most of that

3:38

should be out of here by 2 30 after

3:40

three o'clock you're good to go the sun

3:41

breaks back out temperatures should Peak

3:43

around 80 at one o'clock and falling

3:45

back into the 70s by four o'clock that's

3:47

the difference in what we can do now

3:49

compared to 1978 it's the difference

3:51

between daylight and darkness if you go

3:53

back to the beginning of your career

3:55

were you encouraged to speak to the

3:57

audience that way like we don't know

3:58

that much about this this could be wrong

4:00

oh no no no they don't want you to say

4:03

that I mean goodness but you know back

4:04

back in the 70s this was when TV news

4:07

was coming of age and Eyewitness News

4:09

you know and they wanted to be this

4:12

god-like figure you know on television I

4:14

I I was scared to communicate

4:16

uncertainty because that wasn't

4:17

encouraged we were the news the Evening

4:20

News the Ron Burgundy newscast

4:23

weather forecasts are inherently

4:24

uncertain

4:26

the where the when the how much

4:28

with the current data we have the best

4:30

you can do is Judge the odds

4:32

but the odds have gotten much more

4:34

accurate over time back when James Spann

4:37

was a young meteorologist he knew very

4:39

little but tried to sound like he knew a

4:42

lot

4:42

now that he knows a lot he works hard to

4:45

explain what he doesn't know

4:47

you're giving the audience more

4:49

information and more nuanced information

4:51

so it's more demanding on the audience

4:54

right it is and you know

4:57

I hear this all the time I just want to

4:59

know if it's going to rain tomorrow

5:01

and they want a yes or no they want that

5:03

deterministic forecast

5:05

deterministic as in perfectly

5:08

predictable which is something the

5:10

weather still isn't

5:11

when James Spann started out the 10-day

5:13

forecast was no better than just

5:15

guessing now it's a lot better

5:18

but maybe the most obvious Improvement

5:19

the one people really should notice has

5:22

been in forecaster's understanding of

5:24

the kind of weather that kills people

5:26

in 1978 we were using 1957 era radar and

5:31

the old black and white printouts of

5:34

radar looked like somebody barfed on a

5:36

piece of paper and so warnings in 1978

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let's say we had a tornado down we

5:41

didn't really know where it was we had

5:42

an idea so warnings were issued by an

5:44

entire County tornadoes even the big

5:47

tornadoes are small and counties are

5:49

huge so here you are warning an entire

5:51

County to get into your safe place and

5:54

do something most people didn't need to

5:56

do anything where today we know

5:59

literally within maybe a few city blocks

6:01

of where the tornadoes located well so

6:03

if I'm a consumer of tornado warnings I

6:07

get a much more precise warning and I do

6:10

I get a more advanced warning am I

6:12

likely to get it get more more time to

6:14

prepare for this thing

6:16

yes they have average lead time here is

6:18

about 12 to 15 minutes and the average

6:20

lead time back in the 70s was zero to

6:23

three minutes uh so we've come a long

6:25

way and we don't use counties anymore we

6:27

use small small segments of counties

6:29

geometric shapes polygons anybody that

6:32

knows James Spann I've said this over

6:33

and over respect the polygon and if

6:35

you're in it you do something respect

6:37

the polygon if you're in the polygon you

6:40

respect the polygon respect the polygon

6:43

every storm today will be in business

6:45

respect a James span Super Fan did a

6:49

remix of his famous phrase

6:51

the polygon

6:53

foreign

6:54

[Music]

6:57

but it also raises a question why

7:01

respect the polygon instead of just

7:03

respect what I say it's weird

7:08

if the James span back in 1978 had been

7:11

as accurate as James span is now

7:14

he'd have endured hail storms of

7:16

gratitude

7:18

hurricanes of appreciation

7:20

tornadoes of all

7:22

but that's not the weather he now lives

7:24

with

7:26

Hello friends this is James Spann it's

7:29

time to read some Mean Tweets and thanks

7:32

to all of you for sending in the Mean

7:33

Tweets I really appreciate them for my

7:35

heart

7:36

you caused the people in the state

7:37

millions of dollars by your

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