Heavy rains from Tropical Storm Lee were falling in southern …
Hurricane Irene floods a street in New York City.
Copyright Getty Images
Posted: 08/29/2011
NEW YORK - Television networks are defending themselves against suggestions they went overboard hyping Hurricane Irene during its march up the East Coast.
For days, The Weather Channel, cable networks and local news stations in affected communities reported on little else.
One New York resident says family members around the country were worried about him all weekend -- and he slept through most of the storm.
Network officials say they took their cues from meteorologists and public officials. They say they would've been wrong not to give big attention to the rare prospect of a hurricane headed directly for New York, the nation's most populous city.
The storm never became the big-city nightmare forecasters and public officials had warned about. But it toppled trees and power lines and washed away roads and bridges.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Twenty-two Red Cross disaster volunteers from northeast Ohio …
Video posted online shows a New York reporter being swept away …
President Barack Obama says it will take time to recover from …
Photos of the damage and flooding left after Hurricane Irene …
Hurricane News
Hurricane Jova has strengthened to a major storm in the Pacific as it heads toward Mexico's coast.
Hurricane Katia has weakened to a Category 3 storm as it moves across the Atlantic Ocean after briefly becoming a Category 4 system.
Interactive Weather
Track stormy weather and chat with the Power of 5 meteorologists.
WEWS weather apps
Make sure to download our WEWS/newsnet5.com Interactive Weather Center free app in Apple's App Store specifically designed for northeast Ohio weather.