Épisodes

  • Florida’s Coldest Outbreak in 15 Years: Freeze Warnings, Flurries, and What You Must Do Now
    Jan 29 2026

    Florida is facing one of its coldest weather outbreaks in roughly 15 years, with multiple hard freezes, dangerous wind chills, and conditions many people, homes, and landscapes are not prepared for. This is not just one cold morning. It is a prolonged stretch of cold that increases risk with each passing night.

    In this episode of Meteorology Matters, the podcast explains what makes this Florida cold snap different, why duration matters more than a single temperature, and why even temperatures that may not sound extreme can cause serious problems in Florida. Meteorology Matters is created and produced by meteorologist Rob Jones.

    The episode breaks down what to expect across the state, from north Florida through central Florida, the Tampa Bay area, and into south Florida. This includes why some coastal areas near Tampa Bay could see brief flurries, why confidence remains low, and why snow is not the real story. The real danger is cold exposure, repeated freezes, and wind chills.

    Meteorology Matters focuses on practical, real world guidance for Floridians, including how to protect pipes and plumbing, what homeowners should do before temperatures drop, how cold affects pets, livestock, and outdoor animals, what to know about vehicle issues during extreme cold, and how to protect citrus trees, tropical plants, vegetables, and container plants. The episode also explains why timing matters when covering plants and preparing homes, including what should be done before sunset and what should remain protected overnight.

    The episode places Florida’s cold snap into the broader Arctic outbreak affecting much of the United States, including the very real dangers of hypothermia and carbon monoxide poisoning. Special attention is given to community responsibility, including checking on elderly neighbors, supporting warming shelters, calling 211 for local resources, and helping people experiencing homelessness during hard freezes.

    If you live in Florida, have family in Florida, or know someone who may not be prepared for this kind of cold, this is essential listening.

    Like, follow, comment, rate, and share to help others stay informed and safe.

    Connect with Meteorology Matters

    Follow on Instagram meteorologist, on TikTok TVmeteorologist, and on YouTube RobJonesHurricane, where you can also find the Meteorology Matters podcast playlist.

    #FloridaWeather

    #FloridaFreeze

    #MeteorologyMatters

    #WinterWeather

    #ColdSnap

    #TampaBayWeather

    #FloridaCold

    #FreezeWarning

    #WeatherPodcast

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    #WeatherTok

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    24 min
  • When Florida Freezes: The Cold Snaps That Changed the Sunshine State
    Jan 26 2026

    Florida isn’t supposed to freeze — but history tells a very different story.

    In this episode, we take a deep dive into Florida’s most impactful cold snaps, from historic freezes that reshaped agriculture and infrastructure to modern cold waves that still catch millions off guard. We’ll explain why prolonged cold is so unusual in Florida, how events like the famous 1977 snow and the January 2010 freeze fit into the bigger picture, and why even recent cold Christmases left such a lasting impression.

    While much of the country battles snow and ice, Florida’s version of winter creates unique risks — for people, property, plants, and infrastructure not built for extended cold. This episode connects past and present to explain why cold snaps in the Sunshine State feel different, hit harder, and are remembered longer than almost anywhere else in the U.S.

    Whether you’re living through a Florida cold snap right now or remembering one from years past, this episode puts today’s chill into historical perspective.

    Florida, USA

    Tampa Bay, Florida

    New Port Richey, Florida

    Orlando, Florida

    Ocala, Florida

    Tallahassee, Florida

    Miami, Florida

    Central Florida

    North Florida

    Gulf Coast Florida

    Southeastern United States

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    29 min
  • Historic Winter Storm Threatens Two-Thirds of the U.S.: Snow, Ice, Power Outages & Dangerous Col
    Jan 23 2026

    PODCAST TITLE

    Historic Winter Storm Threatens Two-Thirds of the U.S.: Snow, Ice, Power Outages & Dangerous Cold

    PODCAST SUMMARY / DESCRIPTION

    A massive and unusually widespread winter storm is unfolding across the eastern two-thirds of the United States, bringing heavy snow, crippling ice, and dangerously cold air to more than 200 million people. From the Deep South—where infrastructure is least prepared for ice storms—to the Midwest, Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast, this storm is expected to cause major travel disruptions, power outages, school closures, and prolonged recovery challenges. In this episode, we break down the most critical impacts, the highest-risk regions, and why this event stands out historically—occurring at the same time meteorologists from around the world gather for the American Meteorological Society’s annual meeting in Texas.

    PODCAST SHOW / SERIES

    Meteorology Matters

    EPISODE TYPE

    Weather Analysis / Breaking Weather Event

    LANGUAGE

    English

    CONTENT RATING

    General / All Audiences

    AUTHOR / HOST

    Rob Jones

    PUBLISHER

    Meteorology Matters

    PODCAST LOCATION (HOST LOCATION)

    Florida, United States

    PRIMARY EVENT LOCATIONS (GEOGRAPHIC FOCUS)

    United States

    DETAILED EVENT REGIONS (OPTIONAL FIELD)

    Deep South (Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee),

    Midwest,

    Appalachians,

    Mid-Atlantic,

    Northeast,

    Southeast United States

    SEASON (OPTIONAL)

    Winter 2025–2026

    EPISODE TIMELINE / DATE RANGE

    Late January 2026

    EPISODE NOTES (OPTIONAL RSS FIELD)

    This episode focuses on the societal impacts of a high-impact winter storm, including snow accumulation, ice accretion, power outages, road closures, aviation disruptions, and extreme cold risks, with special attention to regions unaccustomed to prolonged winter weather.

    WEBSITE / BRAND

    https://meteorologymatters.com

    COPYRIGHT

    © 2026 Meteorology Matters

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    22 min
  • Born in the Eye of the Storm: How the University of Miami Became the Hurricanes
    Jan 17 2026

    As the Miami Hurricanes prepare for the College Football National Championship on MLK Day 2026, their name traces back to the Great Miami Hurricane of 1926 — and a storm-born identity.

    As the Miami Hurricanes take the field in the College Football National Championship on Monday, January 19, 2026 (Martin Luther King Jr. Day), their name carries a deeper meaning than most fans realize.

    The University of Miami was founded in 1925 — just one year before the Great Miami Hurricane of 1926, one of the most destructive storms in U.S. history. That hurricane delayed the opening of the university, reshaped South Florida, and ultimately inspired the Hurricanes nickname itself.

    In this episode of Meteorology Matters, we explore how:

    • A catastrophic hurricane helped define the University of Miami’s identity

    • The ibis became a symbol of resilience and calm in the storm

    • Miami evolved into a global hub for hurricane forecasting and research

    • The National Hurricane Center, Weather Bureau, and NOAA became intertwined with UM history

    • The Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science helped shape modern hurricane science

    • And why a strange historical reference calls the 1926 storm “Hurricane Kate” — a name that may never have officially existed

    This is the story of a university, a city, a storm, and a mystery — told just as the Hurricanes chase a national title on the biggest stage in college football.

    As the college football national championship approaches on Monday, January 19, 2026 (Martin Luther King Jr. Day) in South Florida, it’s worth revisiting how deeply weather—and hurricanes in particular—are woven into the identity of the University of Miami.

    Founded in 1925, the University of Miami’s identity was shaped almost immediately by the Great Miami Hurricane of 1926. From the Hurricanes nickname to the ibis mascot and the university’s long-standing role in hurricane science and forecasting, weather has been part of UM’s DNA from the very beginning.

    #MiamiHurricanes

    #CollegeFootball

    #NationalChampionship

    #HurricaneHistory

    #MeteorologyMatters

    #GreatMiamiHurricane

    #SebastianTheIbis

    #WeatherPodcast

    #HurricaneScience

    #MLKDay

    00:00 Born in the Eye of the Storm

    01:42 The Great Miami Hurricane of 1926

    05:10 How the Hurricanes Got Their Name

    08:24 Why the Ibis Became UM’s Mascot

    12:15 Miami’s Rise as a Hurricane Science Hub

    16:40 The National Hurricane Center & UM

    20:05 The Mystery of “Hurricane Kate”

    24:30 From Catastrophe to Championship

    27:10 Final Thoughts Ahead of MLK Day Kickoff

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    24 min
  • Is the Fog Making People Sick? Science, Weather, and a Viral Winter Myth
    Jan 12 2026

    Fog is back and so are the claims.

    In Florida and across the southern U.S., people are reporting headaches, breathing issues, infections, and other illnesses during foggy weather, with some blaming “toxic fog,” chemical exposure, or government interference.

    So what’s really going on?

    In this episode, meteorologist Rob Jones explains what fog actually does to the human body, why symptoms like sinus pressure and headaches can occur, and why these fears resurface every winter — often lining up with flu season and stagnant air patterns.

    We separate science from speculation, break down what fog can and cannot do, and explain why social media keeps turning normal winter weather into a viral health scare.

    If you’ve ever wondered whether fog made you sick, this episode gives you real answers.

    00:00 Is the fog making people sick?

    02:10 Why fog is more common in winter

    05:15 What fog can do to your sinuses and airways

    08:50 Fog vs viruses and infections

    13:10 Why this myth comes back every year

    18:45 Final takeaway

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    31 min
  • 2025 Weather Forecasting: Hotter Earth, Badder Hurricanes, Smarter Forecasts
    Dec 31 2025

    In 2025, weather forecasting reached a turning point—just as climate extremes pushed storms to new limits.

    ull description:

    In this episode of Meteorology Matters, meteorologist Rob Jones examines how 2025 became a defining year for weather forecasting and climate risk.

    🔍 This episode covers:

    • How new AI-driven weather models dramatically improved forecast accuracy
    • Why Hurricane Melissa became a real-world test of next-generation forecasting
    • How record global heat is reshaping hurricane intensity and extreme weather risk

    Smarter forecasts are helping save lives—but they can’t stop climate change. Here’s what the data from 2025 tells us about where forecasting is heading next.

    🎧 Subscribe for clear, science-based weather and climate analysis.

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    28 min
  • Weather Risk in America: Brain Drain, Disaster Failure, and Science Under Strain
    Dec 30 2025

    In 2025, weather risk in the United States became about more than storms—it exposed systemic failures in disaster response, science, and preparedness.

    Full description:

    In this episode of Meteorology Matters, meteorologist Rob Jones examines a troubling convergence shaping the United States in 2025—where climate risk, institutional breakdowns, and a growing loss of talent are colliding.

    🔍 This episode explores:

    • Why scientists, professionals, and families are increasingly leaving the U.S.
    • How disaster response failures are amplifying weather and climate risk
    • What political and institutional pressure on science means for forecasting, preparedness, and public safety

    From stalled disaster buyouts to the destabilization of America’s scientific workforce, this is a data-driven look at how weather risk extends far beyond the forecast.

    🎧 Subscribe for clear, science-based weather and climate analysis.

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    14 min
  • A Life of Hurricane Warnings, A Legacy of Lives Saved: Dr. Neil L. Frank (1931–2025)
    Dec 24 2025

    The Life and Legacy of Dr. Neil L. Frank

    Dr. Neil L. Frank (1931-2025) was a transformative figure in meteorology, widely regarded as the nation's foremost authority on hurricanes. His career spanned two distinct, highly influential roles: first as the longest-serving director of the National Hurricane Center (NHC) from 1974 to 1987, and subsequently as the chief meteorologist for KHOU 11 in Houston from 1987 to 2008. Dr. Frank's primary legacy lies in revolutionizing hurricane risk communication, shifting the focus from mere forecasting to aggressive public education and preparedness. He pioneered the use of mass media to deliver clear, urgent, and life-saving information directly to the public, becoming the nationally recognized face of hurricane warnings, or "Mr. Hurricane," in the 1980s. His unwavering philosophy was to prioritize public safety above all, famously stating, "I'd rather be on the safe side," a principle that guided his extensive efforts in education, international coordination, and resilient operational leadership. His contributions are immortalized by the "Neil Frank Award," which recognizes excellence in hurricane preparedness and communication.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Biographical Overview

    Early Life and Education

    Birth and Upbringing: Neil LaVerne Frank was born on September 11, 1931, in Clayton, Kansas, in the heart of "tornado country." He was the grandson of German-American farmers who had migrated from Pennsylvania. His father was a farm machinery mechanic and his mother was a school teacher. He was raised in a strict environment where the family abstained from alcohol, smoking, and swearing.

    Initial Ambitions: His early ambition was to become a basketball player and coach. At six feet tall, he enrolled at Southwestern College in Winfield, Kansas, to play basketball.

    Shift to Science: A professor at Southwestern College persuaded him that studying chemistry would be "good insurance for the future," leading him to earn a bachelor's degree in the subject.

    Military Service and Advanced Studies

    United States Air Force: After graduating from high school, Dr. Frank enlisted in the Air Force, where he was trained as a meteorologist. He was assigned to Okinawa to study typhoons.

    Doctorate in Meteorology: Upon leaving the service in 1957, he pursued advanced studies at Florida State University, where he earned both a master's degree and a Ph.D. in tropical meteorology.

    Career Trajectory and Key Roles

    Dr. Frank's professional life was defined by two major careers, first in public service with the National Weather Service and then in broadcast meteorology.

    Period

    Role

    Organization

    Pre-1957

    Meteorologist

    United States Air Force

    1961 - 1968

    Meteorologist

    National Weather Service

    1968 - 1974

    Hurricane Forecaster

    National Hurricane Center (NHC)

    1974 - 1987

    Director

    National Hurricane Center (NHC)

    June 1987 - June 2008

    Chief Meteorologist

    KHOU 11 (Houston)

    As the longest-serving director in NHC history, Dr. Frank oversaw U.S. hurricane forecasting and warning operations through numerous high-impact seasons. He transformed the role from a purely scientific one to a public-facing mission focused on preparedness and saving lives.

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    11 min