Education
Giddings won a national Emmy Award in 1977 for his work producing an educational program entitled What Makes the Wind Blow.
In 1990, the California State Legislature and then-congresswoman Nancy Pelosi honored Giddings with an official resolution for Weather Fun with Pete Giddings a twenty lesson basic meteorology course for fourth, fifth, and sixth graders. The program ran in more than 200 California schools.
Career
He worked as a local television news meteorologist in Northern California and Northern Nevada. He is best known for his 29 years as a meteorologist at KGO-television in San Francisco. Giddings earned six Emmy Awards during his tenure at KGO. Giddings" weather career began as a Combat Weather Operative in the United States. Air Force from 1959 to 1963.
Giddings" first television job was at WTVT-television in Tampa, Florida where he worked for five years.
After a stop in Nashville, Tennessee, he moved to KGO. He joined Reno, Nevada’s KOLO-television in January 1999. In 2001, he returned to predicting coastal storms in California as he returned to KGO (Department of Administration and Management) and at the same time, Giddings forecast the weather at KION and KCBA in Salinas from 2003-2007.
Giddings began one of the first regional broadcast ski reports in the 1960s. He is now doing web based forecasts for the Bay Area on his own website.
In the film George of the Jungle, Giddings appears as the ABC7 meteorologist George is watching while hyped up on coffee.
Fellow, American Meteorological Society (American Mathematical Society) American Mathematical Society Certified Consulting Meteorologist (CCM) Member, American Mathematical Society Board of Directors of Radio and Television Member, American Mathematical Society Board of School and Popular Meteorological Fellow, Royal Meteorological Society (United Kingdom) Lecturer, University of California Berkeley, Stanford University, Dominican University, and Desert Research Institute In 1990, the American Mathematical Society honored Giddings with the Award for Outstanding Service by a broadcast meteorologist in recognition of his efforts to combat scientific illiteracy among youth. In 1996, Giddings was one of fifty meteorologists from around the world to be invited by the Clinton administration to participate in a summit on Climate Change.