Friday, June 12, 2015

FLASHBACK: ABC's ’08 Prediction: NYC Under Water from Climate Change By June 2015

FLASHBACK: ABC's ’08 Prediction: NYC Under Water from Climate Change By June 2015:
New York City underwater? 
Gas over $9 a gallon? 
A carton of milk costs almost $13? 
Welcome to June 12,  2015. 
Or at least that was the wildly-inaccurate version of 2015 predicted by ABC News exactly seven years ago. 
Appearing on Good Morning America in 2008, Bob Woodruff hyped Earth 2100, a special that pushed apocalyptic predictions of the then-futuristic 2015. 
The segment included supposedly prophetic videos, such as a teenager declaring, 
"It's June 8th, 2015. One carton of milk is $12.99." (On the actual June 8, 2015, a gallon of milk cost, on average, $3.39.) 
Another clip featured this prediction for the current year: 
"Gas reached over $9 a gallon." (In reality, gas costs an average of $2.75.)  
On June 12, 2008, correspondent Bob Woodruff revealed that the program "puts participants in the future and asks them to report back about what it is like to live in this future world. 
The first stop is the year 2015."  
As one expert warns that in 2015 the sea level will rise quickly, a visual shows New York City being engulfed by water. 
The video montage includes another unidentified person predicting that "flames cover hundreds of miles."  
Then-GMA co-anchor Chris Cuomo appeared frightened by this future world. 
He wondered, "I think we're familiar with some of these issues, but, boy, 2015? 
That's seven years from now. 
Could it really be that bad?"  
Ultimately, ABC delayed the air-date for Earth 2100 and the one-hour show didn't debut until June 2, 2009. 
The program showcased the terrible impact of global warming from 2015 through 2100. 
In the special, a "storm of the century" wiped out Miami. 
Other highlights included a destroyed New York City and an abandoned Las Vegas. 
By 2084, Earth's population will apparently be just 2.7 billion.  
On June 13, 2008, ABCNews.com promoted the special by hyperventilating, "Are we living in the last century of our civilization?" 
Unlike the 2015 predictions, that suggestion hasn't (yet) been proven wrong. 
Seven years later, the network has quietly ignored its horribly inaccurate predictions about 2015. 
When it comes to global warming claims, apparently results don't matter for ABC...
Here's the full video hysteria:

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