Mark Eubank

Mark Edwin Eubank is a retired Salt Lake City, Utah television broadcasting meteorologist who served as chief meteorologist for the 2002 Winter Olympics.

Mark Eubank
Born
Mark Edwin Eubank

June 10, 1940 (1940-06-10) (age 80)
Redding, California
EducationB.S. in Meteorology - University of Utah
OccupationMeteorologist
Spouse(s)Jean Eubank
Children7 children

Career

Eubank joined the KSL-TV channel 5 Television news team in 1990 as their chief meteorologist. Prior to KSL, he was employed as a meteorologist for KUTV channel 2 in Utah, a position he had held since 1967. Eubank began his meteorology career at age 24 in Redding, California, at KRCR-TV. He attended UCLA and graduated from the University of Utah in 1972 with a Bachelor of Science in Meteorology. Eubank also owned and operated a weather consulting firm, WeatherBank, Inc. for 20 years.

Distinction

  • Eubank was famous for wearing a white sports coat throughout a broadcast preceding or during a snow fall.[1]
  • Indian weather lore such as a Thunder Moon[2] and a Sun dog was often used in his broadcasts.
  • He was known for his extreme enthusiasm for weather that would usually result in a variety of odd sound effects including: Bing, bowg, boink, boing, boiiiiing, bowk, hah, haaah!, (tearing sound), (squashed sound), ohhhh, goooomph, ziiiing, zoooom, (sound of car stopping suddenly), phhhht, eeerrrrrrumble-rumble-rumble, (slurping sound), sheeewhhhh, oh-oh, vooomph, voom, wonk, vooop, whhktw, waawaa, waaaa, waaam, and zeeek.[3]
  • "Never trust a split jet stream" was an often repeated phrase during his weather reports.[4]
  • Eubank also quoted John Ruskin regularly, saying "There is no such thing as bad weather, only different kinds of good weather."[1]

Career highlights

Eubank was the chief meteorologist of the 2002 Winter Olympics.[5]

Retirement

On November 29, 2006, Eubank signed off the air for the final time. He passed his job and white coat to his son Kevin Eubank.[1] Shortly after retiring, he and his wife served two Latter Day Saints missions; first one year in St. George, Utah and then at the Laie Hawaii temple visitors center for three years where Eubank served as the director of the visitors center.[6]

Publications

  • Mark Eubank's Utah Weather (1979)[7]
  • Weather Detectives: Fun-filled Facts, Experiments, And Activities for Kids (2004) Illustrated by Mark A. Hicks[8]
gollark: You can test it by compressing a few million random base 10 digits.
gollark: It should manage, it has an entropy coder thing.
gollark: Yes, you can create custom dictionaries.
gollark: Well, zstandard good. Though I don't know how it copes with bitpacking.
gollark: They are about the same.

See also

References

  1. Beauchamp, Marc (December 3, 2011). "Three past and present Reddingites who inspire". Redding Search-Light. Archived from the original on October 8, 2013. Retrieved October 6, 2013.
  2. Campbell, Joel (July 28, 1988). "Eubank gets no 'Thunder' — so he flashes lightning". Deseret News. Retrieved October 6, 2013.
  3. KSL.com Weather
  4. Robinson, Doug (April 25, 2005). "Rain, fog, life — Eubank loves it all". Deseret News.
  5. "Mark Eubank, Channel 5 Anchors - Utah News from KSL-TV, Salt Lake City, Utah". Web.ksl.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-15. Retrieved 2012-02-15.
  6. "New visitors center directors". Church News. 2008-11-22. Retrieved 2012-02-15.
  7. Mark E. Eubank; Robert Clayton Brough (1979). Mark Eubank's Utah weather. Horizon Publishers.
  8. Mark E. Eubank (1 May 2004). Weather Detectives: Fun-filled Facts, Experiments, And Activities for Kids. Tandem Library. ISBN 978-1-4176-5665-3.
Preceded by
Bob Welti
Broadcasting Meteorologist
1967–2006
Succeeded by
Kevin Eubank
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.