I actually slept through most of the rain and flooding event overnight, but as soon as I woke up at 7am, there was a lot going on in what the Regional Joint Information Center is calling historic rainfall for the Houston and Harris County area. In fact meteorologist Travis Herzog said on Facebook, "This dwarfs the Memorial Day Flood."
When I flipped on the TV, I saw KTRK abc13 reporter Steve Campion performing a high water rescue near The Heights on Studemont.
Then I realized that KPRC 2 took a power hit and apparently had water coming into the station. That forced the channel off the air. That means you can't watch it over the air with an antenna, on cable or satellite. The station took to Facebook Live to broadcast information.
A quick thinking @KPRC2Sara captured the morning the lights went out at @KPRC2. @conflenti and @KPRCRachel pic.twitter.com/yfIt6VXxNA— Brandon Walker (@KPRCBrandon) April 18, 2016
Flooded at KPRC. @KPRC2 we are off the air but working on it. pic.twitter.com/8xPiamgRFW— Rhonda LaVelle (@rhondaerrer) April 18, 2016
UPDATE
KPRC 2 back on air after power outage; explains what happened
KPRC 2 started broadcasting at its studio in a limited basis around noon. It broadcasted from its transmitter site around 10:30am. This after attempting to get on before going off the air again.
Yay! @KPRC2 now broadcasting from its main studio again. #houwx @mikemcguff pic.twitter.com/sDs8Qjj75T
— Mike (@RadarDude) April 18, 2016
.@KPRC2 back on the air. @KPRCRYAN reporting from Missouri City transmitter. #houwx @mikemcguff pic.twitter.com/KbG7fBJGpK
— Mike (@RadarDude) April 18, 2016
Meanwhile back at KTRK abc13, the station was apparently tricked by a hoax:
Yes, @abc13houston fell for this ... pic.twitter.com/Kgh5YVBGRG
— Joseph Duarte (@Joseph_Duarte) April 18, 2016
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