"Chad Everett Myers" is an American meteorology/meteorologist and the severe weather expert for CNN. Myers earned a bachelor's degree in Meteorology from the University of Nebraska.

Myers, a native of Buffalo, New York, joined CNN in October 1999, moving up from working as the Morning Meteorologist at WXYZ-TV in Detroit. He has received Peabody Awards for contributing to the Gulf War coverage, and for scientific explanations of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill/BP oil spill and its subsequent capping in the Gulf of Mexico. He recently covered the 2011 T?hoku earthquake and tsunami/2011 Japan tsunami and the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster/nuclear meltdown of the Fukushima Daiichi reactors.

He was spoofed on Late Night with David Letterman after climbing into a mock-up of the Chilean miners' rescue capsule. The producers of the show shot him into the sun after showing him climbing into the mock-up.

His coverage of Hurricane Irene drew compliments from as far away as the Middle East. As most networks focused on New York City, Myers continually addressed the potential of devastating flooding inland from the eye's landfall. Piers Morgan, as well as Wolf Blitzer, called him the best in the business for covering severe weather.

More Chad Myers on Wikipedia.

It was blindingly heavy snow, and visibility was only a quarter mile in some places.

One way or another there are going to be pounding waves on the northeast coast.

We love these things, and this is a really nice get-together.

From one side of our camera to another, from very gray to blue. That's the way a hurricane is.

Let me talk Carol!!

We'll see snow from New York City right on down to Philadelphia by Monday night.

Although it's raining today and it will rain throughout the weekend, Florida is still about two feet short of rain in the last two to three years, ... Many of the lakes in central Florida are still running at 25 percent of capacity.

Computer models are like a model car: Sometimes they're perfect and work well, but some models don't get it right. Forecasting is both an art and a science, just like medicine isn't an exact science.

Wind gusts will approach 35 to 40 mph, creating wind chills to minus 20.