November 25, 2023

The Remarkable Life of Steve Pool

I am very sad to report the passing of Steve Pool, past chief meteorologist at KOMO TV, and a dear friend for many decades.

Steve was one of the most exceptional and generous individuals I have ever known.

A brilliant communicator.  A kind and generous soul.  A highly intuitive and insightful meteorologist. And someone who gave so much to our community.

I first got to know Steve during the mid-80s, when I got a call from KOMO-TV asking whether I would instruct him in meteorology; he had just taken on weather responsibilities at the station.   

For the next year and a half, Steve and I worked together intensively to cover the essentials of meteorology, Northwest weather, and weather forecasting.  An extraordinarily bright guy, Steve quickly mastered a huge volume of weather knowledge and became a very able local weather analyst and forecaster.   He was determined to get his forecasts right, and we would often talk during the late evening before his 11 PM broadcast.

As I got to know him better it became clear to me that he was a preternaturally talented communicator and that I had a lot to learn from him in that domain.  

And I mean much more than a smooth delivery.  He had the ability to connect with people.  A disarming smile, great empathy, and a personality that was upbeat and sunny.  I don't think I ever heard him talk ill of another.


We would regularly talk about difficult forecasting situations, driven by his strong 
commitment to not only get the forecast right but to get the explanation correct.

But Steve had many other dimensions and none were as noteworthy as his dedication to the community. 

One day he called me, suggesting that some UW students could intern at KOMO. This 
internship was a great success, giving roughly 3-4 students a year a chance to 
assist in developing the daily weather offerings at KOMO, including the use of a complex 
graphics system, preparing forecasts, and even practicing in front of the camera. All under the 
eyes and with the assistance of a master weathercaster. 

Many of Steve's student interns went on to successful careers as TV meteorologists, including Shannon O'Donnel, M. J. McDermott,  Kelley Bayern, Nathan Santo Domingo, Jefferson Davison, Scott Sistek, Brandon Wholey and Matt Leach--to name just a few.  Scott  Sistek worked for Steve for 20 years and together they wrote an excellent, conversational book on Northwest weather that received an impressive 5-star rating--Somewhere I Was Right.


Shannon O'Donnell, a past intern, is now chief meteorologist for KOMO.  And in Steve's 
tradition, she is teaching a course in my department on weather communication,  including a Dawgcast available online to the general public. 

Steve's influence will be very, very long-lived.

Steve was extremely interested in outreach to young people, and a good example of his efforts 
was the annual Weather Education Day at Safeco Field. Before the game, THOUSANDS of 
students would enjoy learning about basic weather principles and local weather, presented by 
Steve and his guests (I even did it one time).


Steve became a mega-local celebrity, but this did not change him, and he used that celebrity 
to assist in fun raisers and other gatherings for local charitable organizations and importantly 
for his alma mater, the University of Washington. He helped raise millions of dollars for a 
whole slew of important causes and was the MC for many public events put on by my 
department.  On the side, Steve built a small enterprise, assisting folks in learning how to be accomplished communicators.

Shannon O'Donnell, myself, Steve, and Scott Sistek

Steve loved his family, always talking about his wife Michelle and their talented daughters,
Lindsey and Marissa.  When I went over to his house he talked with great pride of his father, who served in WWII  and was shot by the Germans in northern France after D-Day. Steve was a history buff and had a whole wall of history books in his study, as well as the many Emmys he had won over the years.

But what impressed me more than all his accomplishments was his sheer bravery when his health failed.   I don't want to say any more about it, except that he stayed positive and hopeful to the end, where many would have surrendered to despair.  

An extraordinary human being that has given so much, to so many.  An individual who has profoundly changed our lives in so many positive ways.  He will be missed.



16 comments:

  1. Thanks Prof. Mass. He will be missed. Well wishes to his family and friends.

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  2. Thank you for that beautiful backstory about a wonderful person.

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  3. I Grew up watching Steve, Jeff and Harry like clockwork in the 1980's, what a big loss.

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  4. Steve Pool was simply the best: vastly knowledgeable but totally natural, with nothing forced or phony about his TV personality. It felt like a family friend was dropping by to chat every evening. I grew up watching him, Kathi Goertzen, and Dan Lewis on KOMO, and the genuine warmth between them was unmistakable. I remember Dan and Kathi joking that Steve never seemed to age a day, which seemed true decade after decade, so it's all the more tragic to have lost two of them so long before their time. Looking out my window at a crystal-clear November sky, I wonder if Steve put in a good word and sent us this rare and precious Thanksgiving sunshine. For his part, I trust the rainclouds have cleared and he's enjoying a perfect endless Seattle summer.

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  5. Very nice tribute Cliff, thank you. He was my all time favorite TV weatherman. RIP Steve Pool.

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  6. Rare these days for an individual in the public eye to be so universally loved as Steve. I dare anyone to find a soul who didn't love him. It simply cannot be done. He was the embodiment of how the power of love and being good to one another can overcome all that is wrong in the world. We all have much to learn from Steve Pool.

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  7. What a wonderful tribute, Cliff. Steve was obviously dear to you. My condolences to you and to the many who loved this remarkable man.

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  8. I've been watching one of his former interns here in Portland, Ms. Bayern at KOIN. She's one of the few weather folks that don't regularly engage in hyperbole in regards to you - know - what. Obviously, she gleaned a lot of valuable insights from her mentorship.

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  9. Thank you Cliff. An excellent tribute to an iconic human being and wonderful weather man. Steve will be missed!!!

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  10. I was shocked and saddened by Steve's passing. He had a certain magic on the screen that is impossible to really define.

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  11. I was curious where Steve got his meteorology credentials. Too often a TV personality gets stuck with the weather job with no knowledge or sense of the subject, so It's great to hear he sought out your expertise. Like his predecessor, Ray Ramsey, he was entertaining and accurate in his weather reporting. I miss them both.

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  12. I'll miss him too. I met him a couple times. Asked him a couple weather questions too when he worked for KOMO. Cancer, I'm guessing; It gets so many people before their time...

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  13. Thank you Cliff for remembering this good man

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  14. This is a wonderful tribute, Cliff. Thank you for offering it and for helping to make Steve the weatherman he came to be.

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Please make sure your comments are civil. Name calling and personal attacks are not appropriate.

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