Oldshue worked at
WDBB in
Tuscaloosa as the Chief Meteorologist from 1993 to 1995 and at
WALA in
Mobile as the morning meteorologist from 1995 until January 1997. He joined ABC 33/40 as weekend meteorologist and storm chaser from January 1997 until January 2011. He won an
Emmy Award with
James Spann from the
National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for live coverage of a deadly
tornado in Tuscaloosa on December 16, 2000. (A camera mounted on the transmitter tower of the former Channel 33 captured live images of the tornado as it moved through the community.) The station won an
Edward R. Murrow Award for this coverage. John is a Certified Broadcast Meteorologist by the
American Meteorological Society and has the
National Weather Association Seal of Approval. He was voted best small market weather anchor in Alabama for 1994 and 1995 by the Associated Press. In 2011, he retired from working as a meteorologist in pursuit of several online businesses including LowCards.com, SaveOnPhone.com, and SaveOnInsurance.com. In 2012 John Oldshue and
James Spann sold their weather forecasting business, "The Weather Company" to IBM and The Weather Channel for an undisclosed sum. He later became a fill-in meteorologist for WKRG in Mobile and is currently a fill-in meteorologist at ABC 33/40 in Birmingham. In 2016 he became one of the first FAA approved aerial drone pilots and created SoutheastSky.com for aerial imaging and videography. He has been part of teams winning two Addy awards for his aerial videography work on Alabama tourism commercials. ==References==