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Reading: For TV reporters masking fires in L.A., the tragedy will get private
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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > For TV reporters masking fires in L.A., the tragedy will get private
For TV reporters masking fires in L.A., the tragedy will get private
Entertainment

For TV reporters masking fires in L.A., the tragedy will get private

Last updated: January 11, 2025 12:56 pm
Editorial Board Published January 11, 2025
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This week, Soboroff visited the location of a close-by playground the place he romped as a toddler. His father, longtime civic chief Steve Soboroff, had led the trouble to renovate the recreation facility after it fell into disrepair. It was gone. The house of his pregnant sister’s in-laws, the place she was staying throughout her own residence’s renovation, was additionally leveled.

Soboroff not lives in Pacific Palisades. However he is aware of its now-unrecognizable streets in addition to if he had a Google map in his head, he informed The Instances.

“The pictures don’t match the muscle memories,” he stated. “I grew up here and we’d do … drills in school for an earthquake. It looks like what the city would look like after the Big One, not after a wildfire.”

These emotions are actually all too acquainted. The world watched as massive elements of the Los Angeles space burned this week, giving ample TV time to the nationwide correspondents primarily based within the metropolis.

Typically the largest problem for the L.A.-based journalists, who labored across the clock because the blazes broke out, was dealing with their very own feelings, fears and emotions of loss as they reported on their dwelling metropolis’s transformation into scenes that resembled struggle zones.

Fox Information Senior Correspondent Jonathan Hunt reporting on the wildfires that leveled Pacific Palisades.

(Fox Information)

Hunt was relieved that the college “was largely OK,” however native landmarks the place he hung out together with his youngsters have been worn out.

“I was just wandering around the village area just now and much of the retail is gone,” he stated. “The Starbucks we used to stop at so many days after school is just gone.”

Longtime CNN correspondent Nick Watt informed viewers on Wednesday how after he completed his reporting he was headed to his dwelling in Santa Monica to hose it down, hoping it might deter embers from beginning a blaze.

“It’s extraordinary to cover something like this in your own community,” he stated. “I’ve been covering fires for a long time. You have sympathy for people. Now I have empathy.”

Correspondents stated they have been deluged by West Coast-based colleagues, pals and strangers asking them to verify if their properties have been nonetheless standing.

Kennedy, who was in New York, requested Hunt to enter her Palisades dwelling, positioned lower than 100 yards from constructions that have been gutted by the flames. She needed him to assemble sure framed household images and drawings made by her youngsters. Hunt entered the undamaged construction, the place he additionally retrieved a sword one among Kennedy’s family saved from World Conflict I.

“I was dreading the idea of going to this friend’s house and having to send a photo of rubble,” Hunt stated. “Thank God that I didn’t.”

NewsNation's Nancy Loo covering the wildfires in Pacific Palisades.

NewsNation’s Nancy Bathroom masking the wildfires in Pacific Palisades.

(NewsNation)

Bathroom made her bones as an area New York anchor who reported for eight hours straight through the 1993 bombing of the World Commerce Middle. She moved on to grow to be a reporter on Chicago’s WGN, the place she incessantly began her day masking a murder that occurred in a single day.

The destruction of Pacific Palisades is yet one more traumatic scene she has to course of, one among many over an extended profession.

“I’ve learned to compartmentalize because it does take an emotional toll,” Bathroom stated.

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TAGGED:coveringfiresL.APersonalreporterstragedy
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