The Most Outstanding Weather Forecasters In The United States

Published on 06/21/2020
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Dylan Dreyer

Dylan Marie Dreyer was born in Manalapan, New Jersey, and graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Meteorology from Rutgers University in 2003. She is an American television meteorologist, reporting for NBC News. On February 9, 2013, while on her way to covering a blizzard for The Today Show, Dreyer was in a car accident, suffering a mild concussion. She rotates on weekends alongside Sheinelle Jones in Weekend Today and MSNBC ‘s Orange Space. On Today weekdays, Dreyer appears regularly as a weather analyst, and as a fill-in for Al Roker and Carson Daly. She works on both NBC Nightly News and The Weather Channel. In Erie, Pennsylvania, WJAR in Providence, Rhode Island, and WHDH in Boston, Massachusetts, WICU has employed Dreyer. In addition to her meteorological responsibilities, Dreyer is the host of the NBC Earth Odyssey educational nature program with Dylan Dreyer broadcasted on the NBC block The More You Know.

Dylan Dreyer

Dylan Dreyer

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Elita Loresca

Elita A. Loresca was born on 28 June 1977 and is a Filipino-American newscaster. KGET-TV, the Bakersfield, California NBC affiliate, WSVN 7 in Miami , Florida, and KNBC in Los Angeles, California have previously been identified. Loresca currently operates on KTRK-TV in Houston , Texas. Loresca began her career at KCBS-TV in Los Angeles as a news associate, where she was in charge of assembling scripts and operating teleprompters during the newscasts. From January 2001 until August 2002, she was the Noon weather anchor and assignment editor for KGET-TV in Bakersfield , California. In 2002, she moved to KGPE-TV in Fresno, California, where she was weather anchor in the morning and afternoon. She had covered two of the most destructive seasons in the recent hurricane history. Starting from her first day at WSVN Miami in 2004, she began predicting the 2004 hurricane season with Hurricane Frances. She has contributed reports for her station from the National Hurricane Center after Hurricane Katrina, Hurricane Rita, and Hurricane Wilma in 2005.

Elita Loresca

Elita Loresca

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