📻🔥Listen To LIVE KNX News coverage HERE.
📻🔥Listen To LIVE KFI News Coverage: HERE.
Fires also broke out elsewhere in the region, most notably in Eaton Canyon, north of Altadena, where early Tuesday evening, hillside flames were visible from nearby Pasadena. Evacuations are under way closer to the fire though the number of affected residents is not currently known. A third fire erupted in Sylmar around 10:15 p.m., burning through at least 50 acres and spreading.
Flames and smoke choked the Southern California sky with eerie red light and smoke that drifted out to sea. Numerous state and local agencies scrambled firefighters, airplanes and helicopters to battle the blaze, but there was no indication that it was even partially contained.
Outstanding local TV coverage
When the fires are at their worst, southern California's TV stations are at their best. The hyperlocal live coverage alerts residents to evacuation warnings; gives real-time info about shelters and other resources; and shows exactly where and how the fires are spreading.
From CNN, here are a few observations from watching hours of local coverage:
- Journalists earn trust and respect by being neighbors first. One KTLA reporter grabbed a garden hose and tried to protect a nearby house during a live shot overnight. Another reporter said "a couple of residents took shelter in our news van" after evacuating.
- Local connections make a big difference. KABC's Josh Haskell grew up in the neighborhood where one fire started, and he brought that local expertise to his live shots. "It's honestly made me sick to my stomach," he said, seeing beloved local landmarks on fire.
- L.A. stations are known for their helicopters, but the intense winds mean that virtually all the live shots are coming from the ground, not the air, making it difficult to see the full scope of the emergency. Live shots have been occasionally interrupted due to the brutal conditions, and some stations have relied on backup generators due to power outages.
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