Photo courtesy of Adam Caskey.ĭuring his time in D.C., Caskey reengaged in crafting thermometers. (above) He stands with the Solano family and the thermometers he made from flooring of their damaged home. Giving back Caskey started the “Rubble to Relic” initiative after a line of tornadoes ripped through the San Antonio area. A kid-friendly thermometer making technique helps him teach students about science and where the temperature reading on phone apps really comes from. “He just hit a home run.” Caskey brings hands-on weather experiences to local schools and libraries. Nearing graduation, he attended an industry conference, solo, and shook just the right hands to land a job with WJLA in Washington, D.C., a top ten media market. When I think of people who are leaders in action, Adam is at the top of my list.”Ĭaskey took what he learned to the Fox affiliate in Fargo, N.D., where he gained on-air experience while still a student. “I’m so proud of Adam and what he has accomplished. “When you watched his weathercast, you could not help but feel his enthusiasm and excitement about weather,” Brode said. Some of them were really good – some of them weren’t,” he added with a chuckle.īarry Brode, director of television and radio at the UND Television Center, worked with Caskey during his time with the student-run news program “Studio One.” Brode said Caskey’s personality, charisma and passion made him a standout student anchor. “He was always doing above and beyond,” said Fred Remer, associate atmospheric sciences professor who took over the broadcast meteorology program while Caskey was a student. He got involved with broadcast meteorology opportunities on campus, including the “Weather Update” segment, “River Watch” (a program about rivers, ecology and weather launched after the 1997 flood) and “Studio One.” “But I thought, ‘Oh my goodness – when can I do this again?’”Ĭaskey didn’t want keep his excitement for weather to himself. “I remember so many students, when they finally finished their thermometer, saying, ‘Oh, I’m glad that’s done,’” Caskey recalled. Rinehart imparted an appreciation for the craft – glass blowing, calibration, precision, and all of the factors that go into the simple temperature assessors. He remembers long hours in the Clifford Hall meteorology lab with Professor Ron Rinehart, who came up with a rough procedure to make alcohol thermometers and shared the technique with his students. UND experienceĬaskey’s domination of instrumentation started back at UND as an undergraduate in the atmospheric sciences program. It takes hours and hours of work to make one thermometer, but I love it,” he said Caskey uses much of his free time designing and constructing thermometers that he gives away on air, donates to charity auctions, or crafts for special occasions (his Christmas ornament thermometers have become very popular). “I really geek out on making thermometers from scratch. Measuring heat is what the list compilers found so cool.Ĭaskey is known by his viewers for “ Thermometer Thursday,” a weekly segment during which he talks about making the instruments, shows off his latest designs and announces the winner of a Caskey original from a popular online drawing that, at last count, totaled more than 11,000 entries. “I’m just doing what I love to do, and have made one of my hobbies a part of my job, which is making thermometers, and people have noticed and think it’s cool. But they’ve been congratulatory,” Caskey said with a laugh. “Right away, when it came out, the nicknames started flying. Photo courtesy of Adam Caskey.īroadcast meteorologist Adam Caskey has been getting razzed lately by his colleagues at KSAT in San Antonio, Texas.Īfter landing on the Washington Post’s list of the country’s seven “coolest TV meteorologists,” the UND alum (’02) unexpectedly found himself in the national spotlight. More than 11,000 people have signed up to win one of his coveted thermometers on “Thermometer Thursday.” Every one he makes “is like a snowflake” – no two are identical. His passion for weather and thermometers was stoked at UND, he says. Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences, Provost UND Atmospheric Sciences alum listed among most engaging national weather personalities UND alum Adam Caskey recently made Washington Post’s list of the nation’s “coolest” TV meteorologists.
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