A small weather station far out in the Northern wilderness received a call from the National Weather Service:
"Hi, this is from the National Weather Service. We seem to have lost connection to the instruments at your station and would like you to confirm to us what the temperature reads there right now."
"Sure thing, says 61 degrees here."
"Uhh… Are you sure?"
"Hang on, let me check. Yup, 61 degrees."
"That can't be right. It's the middle of winter and nearby stations are reporting temperatures down to -10 degrees. Could your instruments be malfunctioning?"
…
"Oh, you mean outside."
Original Joke:
Weather Service
A small weather station far out in the Northern wilderness received a call from the National Weather Service:
“Hi, this is from the National Weather Service. We seem to have lost connection to the instruments at your station and would like you to confirm to us what the temperature reads there right now.”
“Sure thing, says 61 degrees here.”
“Uhh… Are you sure?”
“Hang on, let me check. Yup, 61 degrees.”
“That can’t be right. It’s the middle of winter and nearby stations are reporting temperatures down to -10 degrees. Could your instruments be malfunctioning?”
…
“Oh, you mean outside.”
Joke Poo: IT Support
A lone programmer working remotely in a small mountain cabin received a call from the IT help desk:
“Hi, this is IT support. We’re showing your computer is offline. Could you confirm that it’s connected to the internet?”
“Yep, everything’s working fine here. Got Reddit open, streaming a movie. No problem at all.”
“Are you absolutely certain? Our system shows a complete disconnect. Other users on your network are reporting no connectivity either.”
…
“Oh, you mean your internet.”
Alright, let’s analyze this frosty gag!
Joke Dissection:
- Setup: A remote weather station loses contact with the National Weather Service (NWS). This establishes a reliance on accurate data and sets a scene of isolated, potentially unreliable, information.
- Key Element 1: Weather Stations & Data Collection: The NWS depends on a network of weather stations to provide comprehensive data on temperature, wind, precipitation, etc. Location is crucial.
- Key Element 2: Misunderstanding/Ambiguity: The core of the joke lies in the ambiguity of “temperature.” The weather station employee is interpreting the question as referring to the indoor temperature, while the NWS is obviously concerned with the outdoor temperature.
- Punchline: “Oh, you mean outside.” This line delivers the final, humorous realization of the miscommunication. It’s funny because it’s absurdly obvious (to everyone but the weather station employee), highlighting the employee’s oblivious nature.
- Humor Type: Situational irony and misunderstanding. The irony comes from the expectation that someone at a weather station would immediately think of the outdoor temperature.
Enrichment & New Humor Generation:
Now, let’s use some real-world facts related to these elements to create a new comedic bit:
Fact-Based Inspiration:
- Remote Weather Stations: Some weather stations are incredibly remote. For instance, some are located in Antarctica and are entirely automated. Imagine a conversation with a weather station in Antarctica!
- Temperature Extremes: The greatest temperature difference ever recorded on Earth within 24 hours was a staggering 103 degrees Fahrenheit (57.2 degrees Celsius) in Loma, Montana.
- NWS humor: In the 1950s, the United States Weather Bureau tried to seed the clouds near Phoenix, Arizona in order to cause rainfall. The effort failed, and they never tried again.
New Joke/Observation:
I saw a job posting for the National Weather Service: “Seeking highly observant individual to report temperatures. Must distinguish between ‘inside’ and ‘outside.’ Antarctica experience a plus.” They must have learned their lesson about remote weather stations! I heard a story about their cloud-seeding experience, though: They asked a cloud if it would prefer to rain. When it said “yes,” they got to work! When it didn’t rain, they asked what went wrong, and the cloud responded: “Oh, you meant on Phoenix?”
Why This Works:
- It plays on the original joke’s theme of misunderstanding and the NWS’s dependence on accurate data.
- It uses the fact of remote weather stations and Antarctica.
- It adds a layer of humor by imagining the cloud’s perspective.
- The observation and joke are short, punchy, and build upon the original joke’s premise, making it more enjoyable for those familiar with the initial setup.