BBC worker carrying cups of tea walks across screen during live report
It never rains but it pours! BBC’s weather woes continue as crew member carrying cups of tea walks across screen during middle of live report – after glitch forecast wintry 7C chill across Britain
- Users reported issues with the website and app which have still not been fixed
The BBC’s weather woes continued today as a crew member carrying cups of tea walked across the screen in the middle of a live report – just moments after a glitch forecast a wintry 7C chill across Britain.
Viewers of the corporation’s flagship Breakfast programme were quick to spot the worker, who was balancing two mugs on a clipboard and walking towards presenters Charlie Stayt and Naga Munchetty.
The hosts had just introduced Matt Taylor – who was standing in for Carol Kirkwood – for a weather bulletin.
But the camera unexpectedly cut back towards the presenters, awkwardly catching their colleague delivering refreshments.
It comes after a ‘glitch’ left the BBC’s app and website predicting chilly conditions across the UK and Europe through to next Thursday – and weather presenters accompanied by the wrong forecasts.
The BBC’s weather woes continued today as a crew member carrying cups of tea walked across the screen in the middle of a live report
Viewers of the corporation’s flagship Breakfast programme were quick to spot the worker, who was balancing two mugs on a clipboard and walking towards presenters Charlie Stayt and Naga Munchetty
The hosts had just introduced Matt Taylor – who was standing in for Carol Kirkwood – for a weather bulletin
The issue emerged on Thursday night as users took to social media to point out the glaring error, which came just days after the Met Office announced the UK is on track for its hottest June on record.
The BBC’s site currently shows a map of Europe covered with a sea of pessimistic forecasts for the next week, including top temperatures of 7C in London, 8C in Paris and 12C in Rome.
But Met Office forecasts show temperatures are set to peak at 24C in London over the weekend, with minimum overnight temperatures of 13C over the next week.
One user joked: ‘Go home BBC weather, you’re drunk’, with another adding: ‘Are you serious BBC? New Ice Age?’
The BBC has issued an apology after the ‘glitch’, saying they were working to fix it as soon as possible.
Seeing the funny side, social media users poked fun at the BBC, with some joking that those in charge must be ‘having a laugh’.
One user alluded to the HBO series Game of Thrones as they said: ‘Winter is coming. Next week, according to BBC Weather.’
A second added: ‘According to BBC Weather it’s going to be warmer, sunnier, fresher, brighter, damper, cooler, drier and humid!’
A third quipped: ‘Maybe June 2023 won’t be the warmest June on record after all if tomorrow’s BBC forecast is true.’
A fourth said: ‘Cold snap on the way @bbcweather?!’
And another added: ‘@bbcweather Someone is having a laugh! A constant 7 degrees for the next week?!’
The pessimistic forecasts continue through until next Thursday, with the BBC apologising over the ‘glitch’
Many users shared memes and gifs to poke fun at the situation
With the UK actually bracing itself for temperatures of up to 18C today, according to the Met Office, it’s no surprise Britons are seeing the funny side.
On Radio 4’s Today programme on Friday, presenters again apologised to listeners over the issue, and joked that their in-studio forecaster would definitely give their audience ‘the correct’ forecast.
Weather presenter Simon King addressed the glitch, saying: ‘Temperatures over the next few days are about 16 to 23C by day and about nine to 12C overnight, about the average really for the time of year.
‘Not the seven or 8C you are currently seeing on our website or app – so apologies. There is still a technical glitch in that respect.’
Viewers of the BBC’s news channels meanwhile pointed out that forecasters appeared to have the wrong information behind them as they predicted temperatures of up to 24C over the weekend.
Responding to the reports last night, a statement on BBC Weather’s social media accounts said: ‘Our apologies for the incorrect temperatures appearing on the website and app.
‘We are working with our data suppliers to fix this fault.’
BBC forecaster Abbie Dewhurst told her followers on Friday: ‘Apologies if you’re seeing incorrect temperatures on the BBC Weather website and app.
‘It’s not going to be 8 degrees next week don’t worry, we are working with our data suppliers to resolve the problem. For now, a good old fashioned human forecast will have to do…’
After learning about the glitch, some were left relieved that they would not need to get their winter coat out the closet.
Upon discovering the glitch, one woman said: ‘Thank christ for that. The panic that my week in majorca was going to be 18° and drizzly nearly sent me under this morning!’
Another user said: ‘I know I am cursed with bad weather whenever I book time off work but this can’t be right.’
A third joked they would be giving the weather app ‘the cold shoulder’ until the issue was resolved.
Meanwhile, countries in Europe such as France and Germany are predicted to have soaring temperatures of 24C.
Some cities, such as Madrid, have been given a more generous forecast of 15C by the BBC – but it is still some way off the 34C heatwave predicted in the Spanish capital this weekend.
Amid the 7C prediction in the UK, provisional figures suggest the average temperature for the month is already set to beat the previous record of 14.9C, reached in both June 1940 and June 1976.
Four of the current top ten warmest June have occurred this century: 14.8 C in 2018, 14.5C in 2003, 14.5C in 2006 and 14.4C in 2017. Met Office temperature data begins in 1884.
Sevens above: The forecast in the UK was no more accurate with chilly temperatures predicted
Social media erupted after the BBC Weather app originally predicted it will be 7C across Europe for the next two days
However, it also emerged that it wasn’t just the website that was suffering from technical issues.
Footage from BBC News showed forecasters presenting the weather with what appeared to be an incorrect map displayed behind them.
One frustrated viewer at home tweeted: ‘Not just the website and the app [which is wrong]. These things happen but it was the lack of acknowledgment [sic] from the presenters that disappointed.’
Again, there were multiple 7C forecasts shown on the map, while separate footage showed another presenter speaking with day-by-day predictions of 8C from Monday to Thursday across the UK next week.
Social media users also pointed out that the BBC appeared to be showing the wrong forecasts on TV too
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