• last year
Despite temperatures over 43 degrees Celsius, tourists in Las Vegas are still willing to wait up to an hour in the sun to get a picture in front of the city entrance sign: "we still enjoy it, but we need to be really careful about not getting dehydrated, we drink a lot of water," says California resident Berth Sanchez.
Transcript
00:00 [ Background noise ]
00:09 >> So you're sucking in hot air.
00:10 It's like being under a hair dryer.
00:12 It's terrible.
00:12 >> The sun just sits on you.
00:14 It's like splat.
00:16 That's it.
00:16 >> I was just telling him, I said it looks like it's raining
00:20 but it's probably drying halfway down.
00:21 So it's not raining.
00:23 [ Background noise ]
00:27 >> Yeah, so I'm from Toronto, Canada.
00:29 So I'm not used to what the normal temperature is here.
00:32 So I wasn't sure if this was out of the ordinary or not.
00:34 But it is really alarming to think
00:35 about how our climate is changing.
00:37 And I think still how much denial there is around it.
00:39 Yet, you know, as you said, we're seeing this trend
00:41 for so long right now.
00:43 And I think it's really alarming.
00:45 [ Background noise ]
00:49 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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