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Instead we - and I mean architects and planners - need to think Mediterranean, and plunder the architectural tradition of cultures that have adapted to hot weather - internal courtyards, for instance, with shady interiors. Modern buildings designed with expanses of glass on the exterior (seen the hideous Nine Elms development?) are not propitious for hot weather - think greenhouses. This sounds good right now, without the Doomsday scenario. It wants the Government to require landlords to adapt buildings with things like window shades. It seems pretty tendentious to me, but what did catch my attention was its warning that homes, especially flats, aren’t built to accommodate higher temperatures. There was a report today from the Climate Change Committee pressure group, warning about the unpreparedness of the UK for increases in temperature above the predicted 1.5 degrees by 2050 to a possible four per cent over present levels by 2080. Some of us are just not cut out for hot weather. Sad cases hang around the chiller cabinets in the supermarkets. It gives the lie to the notion that working from home is the better option for worker productivity - au contraire. I can see the attraction of running pictures of girls with crop tops and sunglasses, but that still doesn’t make a heatwave good news.įor some of us, it’s a cue to get into the office and to wallow in the shade and the air conditioning. In hot weather the heat rises and the only way to keep the sun out is to keep the curtains drawn. I occupy the top floor of a mansion block. Memo to broadcasters and my fellow journalists: most of us living in London don’t have gardens. But that’s not the condition of most Londoners. If I’m somewhere with a garden, I like being out in it, perhaps in the dappled shade. When I say I can’t stand the heat, I mean I can handle a nice warm day. (Apparently, that’s due to happen tonight, thank God.) What’s wrong with them? Do they not realise that they are effectively discriminating against that large, vulnerable and marginalised group, those of us who can’t stand the heat? The degrees,” said one TikToker.What is it about weather forecasters? When there’s a heatwave and temperatures head for 25 degrees, or 30 in the shade, they adopt the bright note of people with good news to share, dropping their voices only when they’re warning about the humidity breaking with a thunderstorm. Of course, some find her beauty distracting. It’s no worries,’” he once narrated over a montage of Garcia’s reports. “Even if I did know Spanish, and she told me that a freak tidal wave approaches, I’d be like, ‘So what? I’ll live. Others - namely the Australian YouTuber Ozzy Man Reviews - said they love how comfortable she makes them feel in her presence. “Nobody can turn left like Yanet Garcia,” one commenter wrote on a recent Instagram post of hers.
#BEAUTIFUL WEATHER FORECASTERS TV#
As well as raising the temperature while predicting it, she’s dabbled in acting, hosting, fitness and health coaching and OnlyFans modeling (all of which might explain her $3 million net worth).Īlthough she’s no longer a weather girl for the Mexican TV station Televisa Monterrey, Garcia is still renowned for her reporting - particularly for how, er, chic she looked while doing it.
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The 31-year-old Mexican meteorologist has been dubbed the “ world’s sexiest weather girl” by global tabloids, and, in the six years since Playboy declared that she “makes every forecast worth watching,” Garcia has amassed an eye-watering 14.6 million followers on Instagram. You’d be hard-pressed to find a weather girl more famous than Yanet Garcia.