
Weather Office Denies Negotiating with Clouds
Officials say the forecast was science, not a secret meeting with the sky.
The Central Weather Office released an unusual statement on Tuesday denying rumors that it had begun negotiating directly with clouds.
The rumor started after the office predicted "a 60 percent chance of rain, depending on the clouds' attitude." The phrase was meant as a joke during an online briefing, but several viewers took it literally.
By noon, social media users were asking whether clouds had representatives, whether thunderstorms demanded snacks, and whether citizens could submit requests for sunny weekends.
A spokesperson said the office uses satellite data, atmospheric models, and radar observations. "We do not bargain with clouds," she said. "They are extremely difficult to schedule."
The statement also denied the existence of a Department of Cloud Communication. However, reporters noticed that one meeting room had been renamed Room C, which some people called suspicious.
Meteorologists explained that forecasting is uncertain because the atmosphere is complex, not because clouds are moody negotiators.
Still, the office admitted that Monday's rain stopped five minutes after an employee said, "Please, not now."
The spokesperson called this a coincidence. The employee has not commented, but coworkers say he now speaks more politely near windows.