The Weather Forecast by Leo Vine-Knight (beach read TXT) đ
- Author: Leo Vine-Knight
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The Weather Forecast
The family gathered in the lounge to watch the weather forecast. It was a big event these days and people tended to arrange their commitments around it, often serving Turkish delight, sherry and brandy snaps. The latest HD, digital, wide screen, slimline TV took longer to warm up than their old valve driven Bush, but this didnât prevent a rising tide of euphoria filling the room.
âItâs starting love!â cried Dad.
âIâll be there in a minuteâ replied Mum.
âHey! Thereâs supposed to be two presenters tonightâ said young Ben.
âTwo? What for?â
âWell, itâs like reading the news and presenting childrenâs telly. The jobâs too hard for one person and what with all the spare money weâve got these days the bosses thought it best.â
âRightâ.
First came the sponsorship ads; Rainy Day Umbrellas, Cool Cat Sunglasses, Percy Pig Pork Pate and One-a-Day Vitamin Bricks. For fifteen minutes Mum carefully made notes for the following dayâs shopping and then a trumpet fanfare, followed by two drum solos and a thirty-second recorded firework display, heralded the main event.
âWhoopy!â yelled young Betty.
âQuiet in the cheap seatsâ growled Grandpa, in his corner.
Two searchlights picked out the drawling American impresario.
âLadies and Gentlemen-n-n-n-n-n-n-n. We now come to the highlight of the evening, a super-middleweight forecast for the United Kingdom-m-m-m-m-m-m. Introducing in the blue corner, with five correct predictions out of one hundred attempts â WilliamâŠâŠ(Wet and Windy)âŠâŠ. Wallis-s-s-s-s-s-s.
âHooray! Hooray!â
âPoor blokeâs got a speech impedimentâ said Grandpa
âShush Grandpa!â
And in the red corner, challenging for the UK title and already European performing prima donna of the year, having a perfect record of no correct predictions in a professional career spanning fifteen glorious years â JessyâŠâŠ (Jolly Jumpers)âŠâŠ James-s-s-s-s-s-s.
âHooray! Hooray!â
Then the preliminaries began, the two forecasters twirling and preening for the cameras, their hair extensions shining with good health and their make up applied with Punch and Judy precision. Jessy cleverly attracted the attention of the director to her new engagement ring (why didnât those pesky viewers hurry up with her presents?), while William subtly lifted the tails of his morning suit and wiggled his âbunsâ at the audience.
âThat birdâs got a fat arseâ said Grandpa.
âYou need your glasses changingâ observed Mum.
âAye. Another Brown Ale would go down very nicelyâ.
It was time for the news presenters to get involved now, and Cheshire Cat #1 soon had everyone laughing hysterically about his last perfect score on âStrictly Come Prancingâ, while Cheshire Cat #2 reminisced tearfully about her failure to reach the televised rounds of âCelebrity Hex Factorâ. Unfortunately, viewing figures were finally going down for these shows, because most of the UK population were now starring in reality TV themselves. There were very few ordinary people left to watch. Everybody was a genius (went to university), a celebrity (had their pubic hair shaved off for charity) or a hero (they were too âchallengedâ to do anything but procreate).
âI remember these two newsreaders. Itâs Mork and Mindy isnât it?â
âBe quiet Grandpaâ.
âOr is it Dork and Windy?â
âShut up!â
âLaurel and âŠ..â
By this time there was so much badinage and merriment in the studio that the director had to step in with buckets of cold water to separate the orgiastic foursome before one of them soiled themselves. The grinning Cheshire cats were joined by a tiny sports presenter who leered madly at the cameras, whilst trying to draw attention to his latest c.v., cleverly typed in 26pt Ariel Bold.
âHa, ha, ha, ha. You are a wit William.
âTee hee hee hee hee. But not as funny as you Jessy.
âYou were so good on âStrictlyâ Micky.
âIâm such a liberal tooâ.
âI love youâ.
âI love meâ.
âWe love everybody (as long as somebody else is paying for it)â
A tall man in white flannels then came in with some orange juice and bananas on a tray and the forecast took a commercial break.
* * *
By the following morning the commercial break had finished and it was time for the family to climb out of their sleeping bags to find out what the weather had in store. It was well established meteorological practice by this time to wait for the weather to actually occur before predicting it â the cutting edge conclusion of a three million pound computer technology investment programme, begun in 2011.
âFor those of you interested in the indoor snooker tournament in Hong Kong we have bravely flown out to give you the most accurate information possibleâ said Jessy in her new sequinned bikini. This will be followed by further self-sacrificial flights around the world to ensure we meet our broadcasting obligations to you â the paying public. We will pause only to pick up twenty well known but declining TV celebrities who are currently in need of well deserved free holidaysâŠerâŠ.I mean who are currently filming travelogues.â
âWhatâs the weather going to be like?â said Grandpa, wafting away the overnight fart gas.
âStop distracting us Grandpaâ said young Betty.
After Jessy had thoroughly discussed yesterdayâs weather in Portugal, South Africa, Mexico and the South of France with appropriate personal anecdotes, the forecast moved on to the popular ârecordsâ section. If a new weather record had not been broken, this would in itself be a record event.
âUpper Nether Thornton in Wessex had the most rainfall over a ten minute period since records began last monthâ announced William.
âLower Nether Thornton had more wind from a North by North-West direction since the Middle Agesâ trumped Jessy.
âIâm making a record with Simon Cowellâ gloated William.
Then came the viewersâ photographs, including a wonderful shot of the South Downs in Winter.
âBut itâs August, Williamâ said Jessy.
âI know, but my house is on this oneâ replied William
âWhatâs happened to âEmmerdale Farmâ?â said Grandpa
âTheyâve moved it down to Londonâ advised Mum.
âOh. I was quite enjoying that storyline about the ethnic, dyslexic, gay lovers whoâd just had a car crash.â
âTheyâre getting married in hospital with matching duvetsâ.
âTouchingâ.
âPlenty of that, naturallyâ.
The dramatic conclusion of the forecast was drawing near and the family shuffled forward onto the edge of their seats. The studio lights dimmed and William moved to centre stage looking a bit like Al Jolson singing âMammyâ.
âWell, as for the UK forecast, viewers can get an update on my new blogâŠâŠ..â
âWhat!?â bellowed Grandpa.
ââBye for now. Weâll see you again for the next showâŠerâŠ.forecast in half an hourâ.
The presenters joined hands in a recreation of the famous Tiller Girls Palladium routine and the station went on to itâs default setting.
The Simpsons.
Grandpa went into the kitchen and practised drawing the carving knife across his throat.
It wouldnât be long now.
www.windowsofmadness.co.uk
Publication Date: 01-21-2011
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