Why 5 Million People Live in America’s Hottest City

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2024-02-28に共有
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コメント (21)
  • Went to phoenix, it was less of a question to me as to why it existed, rather why it was built like every other city in America instead of a truly desert adapted one.
  • As a german i sometimes forget that there so huge countries with multiple climate zones while we are united in grey and rainy days
  • @elenickv
    I live in the Phoenix area and last summer year during our "heat wave" I went to visit my sister in Houston during their heat wave of 90+ degrees. I have never sweated so quickly and thoroughly through my clothes than when I was there. Just the walk from the front door was taking me down. The humidity was horrible and it quickly impacted my asthma. I will happily take 115+ degree desert southwest days over the humid days in Texas.
  • @wyattbiker
    I love Phoenix. It gets nice and quiet in the summer when all the snowbirds hightail it outa here.
  • I live in Arizona and still prefer 115 degree dry heat then 95 degrees with 100% humidity
  • "Where the temperature is routinely higher than 100F" Bro, 100F is a NICE day in summer PHX. Should've said above 110F.
  • @DadsOP
    Arizona resident, easy to tell you why. No hurricanes, earthquakes are a joke, no tornadoes, occasional dust storm and rain, great weather for 8 months a year, and obviously cooking an egg on the sidewalk
  • The highest temperature ever recorded in Phoenix Arizona is 122 degrees Fahrenheit. This was set in June of 1990. I remember that day very well because our air conditioner broke.
  • @AgmaSchwa
    As a lifelong Phoenix resident; I concur that “Phoenix is a monument to man’s arrogance.” -Peggy Hill
  • 20% of comments: Man, I love living in Phoenix 80% of comments: Phoenix is too darn hot
  • I love these types of videos. Anything that gets people to stop moving here has my full support.
  • As someone who has only lived in the valley my whole life, I am thoroughly surprised at how often we got rain in the last few weeks. I am less surprised at the heat following the next day despite it all.
  • @Brambrew
    The Urban Heat Island Effect. If you take an already hot desert and build a city on it, it's gonna get even hotter.
  • @Sumguyinavan_
    It just blows my mind how much of human history is "this place is inhospitable, so we are flocking to it because the easy to live places are too crowded"
  • Phx isn't as inhospitable as people make it out to be. I would ask people in NY, PA, MN, NE, and almost any other state... how often do you have to run heat or a/c in your home? Bc the weather in PHX is fantastic for at least 7 or 8 months a year. I haven't had my HVAC system on for at least the last 2 months, and only run it on the coldest of winter days. So we have to use heating or cooling FAR less than most areas of the country do. Summer is uncomfortable, but so is Fargo in January. And the dryness in AZ means that you can get in the pool on a 100⁰F day, and come out of the water shivering. So it's easier to work around the difficult weather months in AZ, compared to most areas. And you don't have to shovel sunshine!
  • I moved here cuz I got sick of the rain in Washington. I feel it was a fair trade off. Plus I can run around half naked in the summers and nobody bats an eye.
  • @pringlized
    I'm from San Francisco. Spent 5 weeks in India where it was just over 100 degrees and 100% humidity. So miserable. My friend and I flew back into Phoenix where it was like 112 with no humidity. Ohh how nice the blazing hot dry weather without the humidity was.
  • @Reisen_Inaba
    Got off a plane in Phoenix at 9PM once, and that's when I learned it was possible for it to be hot when the sun isn't even out
  • I moved to Phoenix the first day of 2000 from Los Angeles. I could no longer afford to live in my home town. The reasons were simple. 1. I was able to purchase a larger house for the profit I'd made from the LA house. 2. The cost of living was much lower and with a little less income I was able for the first time to begin saving for retirement. Our house was built in the 1950's and has flood irrigation and was built on an old carrot farm. We pay $120 a year to have our 1/3 acre flooded three inches deep once a month in the Fall and Spring and twice a month in the Summer. We have peach, plumb, apple, tangelo, fig, orange trees and grape vines. In Monsoon season we get 5 gallons of water per day for the plants from our AC unit. Most people let that drain into their yard or sewer system. In 2006 we adopted rooftop solar that paid for itself in 5 years. Out total annual cost for electricity is what our neighbors (who don't have solar} pay in a month. Living in Phoenix is all about adapting to the environment and not wasting energy on stupid things.
  • @Sister509
    I live in Missouri until aprx 30 yrs old. Only girl so followed mom, to CA, in 1988, she followed baby bro to CA(hated it. ). Exactly 1 yr later me & hubby, kids, decided to move to AZ where he has family. 36 yrs later best decision for kids and career. I tell people I just go from my AC home to AC car, to AC job then reverse. Now retired and traveling back to Midwest for weeks or moths ar a time, but still loving AZ.❤