News You Do Not Need
This is your News You do not Need podcast So, I was doomscrolling the news, like any responsible adult avoiding actual responsibility, and I stumbled on a story that absolutely no one needs in their brain, yet here we are together. Somewhere near Cottonport, Louisiana, the sky apparently decided to empty its entire emotional backlog in one go. In the past 24 hours, meteorologists estimate about 26 inches of rain fell there. Twenty-six. As in, more than two feet. That is not “a shower,” that is the atmosphere accidentally hitting “select all” and “download” at the same time. To put it in perspective, that’s the kind of rain you expect in a disaster movie right before someone yells, “The dam’s gonna blow!” and a scientist in glasses says, “My God…” It has been described as at least a 1-in-200-year flood event, which means that by the time this happens again, your great-great-grandkids will also not need to know this information. Imagine waking up in Cottonport, looking outside, and realizing your lawn has been promoted to “small lake.” You go to check your mailbox and discover it now has waterfront property. Somewhere, realtors are already drafting a listing: “Charming three-bedroom home, open concept, now with optional canoe parking.” The rain was so intense they declared a flash flood emergency. That’s when officials basically say, “Hello, yes, water has stopped obeying the usual rules.” Streets become rivers, parking lots become ponds, and that one person with the giant pickup truck finally has a reason for owning it beyond compensating for their personality. Now, this is the kind of thing meteorologists get very excited about, scientifically. They start saying things like “return period” and “precipitation anomalies,” and you’re just sitting there thinking, “My return period is when I return this weather to the manufacturer because it is clearly defective.” Somewhere in a weather office, there’s a radar image that looks like the storm just circled Cottonport, shrugged, and said, “You. It’s your turn.” Meanwhile, people nearby are checking the forecast like, “Partly cloudy, slight chance of apocalypse.” Of course, we don’t really need to know this. Your daily life is almost completely unchanged by the fact that a specific town just tried out for the role of Atlantis. Yet now your brain is stuck with a new fun fact: a place called Cottonport just got more rain in one day than some places get all year. You will remember this at exactly the wrong time, like during a serious meeting, when someone says “flood of information” and your brain goes, “Speaking of floods…” Some local somewhere is probably saying, “I’ve lived here my whole life and I ain’t never seen anything like it,” which is scientifically how you confirm the 1-in-200-year thing without needing math. When the old guy on the porch is impressed, the event is officially historic. So yes, while you’re listening to this, living your perfectly normal life, far away from Cottonport, Louisiana, your mind is now burdened with the knowledge that 26 inches of rain fell there in a day. You did not ask for this. You did not need this. But if it ever comes up at trivia night, you’re welcome. And somewhere, as the water slowly recedes, one person is looking at their car, half-submerged, thinking the same thing we all are: “At least this will make a really weird story.” For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
240 episodes
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