The Weather Channel has apologized to outgoing Fort Worth, Texas, City Councilman Joel Burns after a recent Twitter flap.
Burns, an openly gay politician, gained national attention in October of 2010 when he made an impassioned “It Gets Better” speech at a council meeting, decrying the bullying of young LGBT students.
The incident between Burns and The Weather Channel began when Burns tweeted his frustration over pictures of Dallas being displayed by the app when people check the weather for Fort Worth.
When his plea received no response, he followed through on his declaration, deleting the app from his phone.
That’s when the folks behind The Weather Channel’s Twitter feed finally spoke up.
Rather than engage in the throwing of shade on Twitter, Burns took the high road and let the court of public opinion deal with The Weather Channel’s tweet.
“Wow, way to be a d--k in responding to a simple request," one user tweeted at The Weather Channel after the exchange. "You suck, social media intern."
“Fire your social media person. That was an awful response to Joel,” another wrote.
Within a couple hours of the altercation, The Weather Channel had tweeted an apology.
It also issued a statement to The Wrap:
Burns used the attention from the Twitter feud to try and raise a little money and awareness for a cause that he supports. In the video below, he calls on The Weather Channel to donate $100,000 to an anti-bullying project of its choice.
It’s unclear at this time if The Weather Channel will be taking Burns up on his challenge to donate money.
Burns, an openly gay politician, gained national attention in October of 2010 when he made an impassioned “It Gets Better” speech at a council meeting, decrying the bullying of young LGBT students.
The incident between Burns and The Weather Channel began when Burns tweeted his frustration over pictures of Dallas being displayed by the app when people check the weather for Fort Worth.
Dear @weatherchannel I SWEAR I'm deleting your aggravating app if you don't STOP SHOWING DALLAS pics for Fort Worth pic.twitter.com/Rx36gZoI2K
— Councilm. Joel Burns (@JoelBurns) May 12, 2014
When his plea received no response, he followed through on his declaration, deleting the app from his phone.
Hey snoozing @weatherchannel social media team, see anything missing now?
CC @YahooWeather @wfaaweathertoo pic.twitter.com/KxsgAwLLnR
— Councilm. Joel Burns (@JoelBurns) May 12, 2014
That’s when the folks behind The Weather Channel’s Twitter feed finally spoke up.
@JoelBurns Sorry to see you go. Good luck on ending bullying.
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) May 12, 2014
Rather than engage in the throwing of shade on Twitter, Burns took the high road and let the court of public opinion deal with The Weather Channel’s tweet.
Nice jab @weatherchannel
Pls fix the app.
RT“@weatherchannel: @JoelBurns Sorry to see you go. Good luck on ending bullying.”
— Councilm. Joel Burns (@JoelBurns) May 12, 2014
“Wow, way to be a d--k in responding to a simple request," one user tweeted at The Weather Channel after the exchange. "You suck, social media intern."
“Fire your social media person. That was an awful response to Joel,” another wrote.
Within a couple hours of the altercation, The Weather Channel had tweeted an apology.
.@JoelBurns we apologize for our reply this morning. Our response was inappropriate & we're taking steps to ensure it doesn't happen again.
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) May 12, 2014
It also issued a statement to The Wrap:
This morning one of our team members used sarcasm in an unfortunate and unacceptable way on our Twitter account. ... It was not our intention to offend and we are sorry that we did. We have since apologized to Councilman Burns and want to restate that sincere apology and assure him that this tweet does not represent our views. In fact, this is the opposite of how we want to interact with our fans, as we value their input on any occasion. We are taking the necessary steps to be sure something like this does not occur again.
Burns used the attention from the Twitter feud to try and raise a little money and awareness for a cause that he supports. In the video below, he calls on The Weather Channel to donate $100,000 to an anti-bullying project of its choice.
It’s unclear at this time if The Weather Channel will be taking Burns up on his challenge to donate money.