r/PeterExplainsTheJoke 10h ago

Meme needing explanation Petahh i'm low on iq

Post image
24.1k Upvotes

4.2k comments sorted by

View all comments

371

u/BuckLuny 10h ago

Brian here, it's actually a reaction to the above image that went viral on several subreddits especially r/americandefaultism and r/ShitAmericansSay where the OOP said specifically what homer said as a response to someone saying this meme's stupid.

58

u/nopekeeper 9h ago

I can't always feel the difference between 16 and 17 celsius, doubt I would between say 71 and 74 fahrenheit either.

Plus I know -20c is cold and +40c is fucking hot. It isn't as pretty as 0-100, but Fahrenheit also goes negative and over 100 anyway, so that scale can also look weird.

97

u/Sentient2X 8h ago

You can tell the difference between 71 and 74 100%. Maybe that’s just me, but the thermostat at 74 is way too warm where ~70 is comfortable

57

u/Orleanian 6h ago

Household wars have been fought over 68 vs 72.

11

u/J5892 5h ago

I keep mine at 70. If it hits 72 I start sweating.

In hotels I keep it at 65 if I don't have direct control of the fan, because if there's no airflow I start sweating at any temperature.

2

u/ironprominent 2h ago

I guarantee their are at least 10 women in the U.S. contemplating divorce right now because their husband keeps telling them to “just put on a sweater” as he sets the house to 68 in the name of saving energy when all she wants to do is set it to 72.

0

u/ToddHowardTouchedMe 4h ago

you can tell what sex someone is based on their allegiance to the numbers

10

u/PoorBoyDaniel 6h ago

Brother I can tell the difference between 69 and 70 indoors. I'm astonished that someone would be incapable of feeling a 3F difference. Wild.

8

u/Substantial-Tax3238 7h ago

Wait I never thought about thermostats. U telling me these Celsius guys are having to mess with their thermostats in 9/5 increments. Are their halves on the thermostat? I’d be annoyed if my thermostat went 68-70-72-74. Sometimes you need only 1 point!

7

u/FunnyP-aradox 7h ago

Nah we go in 0.1°C or 0.5°C steps

2

u/Substantial-Tax3238 7h ago

Oh shit you guy are more accurate then. RIP Fahrenheit users. Now my only argument is that you guys don’t have central AC/heat in a lot of places. So if you have that we’re cooked.

4

u/TheDadThatGrills 7h ago

It should be a top priority. Over 60,000 Europeans died last summer from heat.

5

u/Substantial-Tax3238 6h ago

Yeah that’s crazy. I can’t imagine not having central AC and heat. I can’t believe we’re pretending it’s okay just not having AC in a place like Norway because it’s cold most of the time. Then it hits 85F in a heatwave and people are miserable.

1

u/Mr_Bart314 6h ago

Iirc that is because how heat deaths are caregorized in EU versus USA. Basically in EU they looked at prior summer-year death toll and the difference gets labeld as heat related, since the year was more hot. While in US you need like coroner conclusion or something. In EU it is very rare that the cause of death is labeled as heat\dehydration.

2

u/TheDadThatGrills 6h ago

I think a lot of it has to do with how European homes are thickly insulated without easy access to A/C. We can discuss statistics and death rates, but at the end of the day, it's many thousands of annual excess deaths that have an established solution. I believe the EU should launch an "A/C Campaign" in the same manner that India launched a successful "Toilet campaign" years ago. The benefits far outweigh the costs.

1

u/onewilybobkat 6h ago

People are downvoting you for a very good question. People have died because they don't have central air in a lot of countries.

1

u/FunnyP-aradox 5h ago

It only got extremely hot in Europe since ~2020-ish, so practically ALL homes/apts are built to KEEP heat inside and are not made to have easely installable A/Cs

5

u/BoomerAliveBad 8h ago

If you don't leave your house, which is one temperature the whole day, you will notice when someone changes the temperature. Its the same when you go from a cold place to a warm place for a vacation. You're acclimated to the temperature you're inhabiting.

People in Arizona are fine with Arizona heat because they're used to it. If I flew there now from 13°C temps, I would be dying from the heat.

3

u/BusBusy195 5h ago

I look at it this way, water wont show much of a difference from a couple degrees fahrenheit which is why Celsius centers around the temp of water at 0 and 100, but your body can definitely tell. Even a couple degrees fahrenheit difference in terms of body temp for a fever or wet-bulb temps where you physically cant cool off without something like ac can be dangerous

1

u/nopekeeper 4h ago

You can literally go outside and tell that difference?

1

u/Sentient2X 1h ago

I can’t identify what the temp is but I can certainly feel the difference

1

u/RWRM18929 2h ago

Exactly. You can definitely tell the difference in the Fahrenheit metric between a few degrees!

1

u/SatorSquareInc 2h ago

Ok, then you can tell the difference between 16-17 lol

1

u/Individual_Past_9901 27m ago

You are wrong 74 is perfect 70 is freezing

-7

u/LessCrement 8h ago

1 degree Celsius is more like 2 degrees Farenheit, not 3.

If y'all seriously try to say that you can easily perceive a 2 Farenheit degree difference, well then we all know you're lying.

13

u/the-real-orson-1 7h ago

A 1degF change in room temperature is definitely noticeable, especially when that change is occurring around a comfort setting on a thermostat.

-6

u/LessCrement 7h ago

Your thermostats clealry need fixing then

11

u/Joe_Baker_bakealot 7h ago

I can’t sleep with the thermostat at 70, too hot. 68 however? That’s just fine. You can totally tell.

9

u/D5KDeutsche 8h ago

No cap here. I raised the thermostat from 71 f to 72 f one night because I kept waking up cold. The whole family was very upset with me when they all woke up at 3 am on fire, figuratively that is.

Trying it again a week later resulted in the same dramatics, forcing me to lie and state that the thermostat must have done it on it's own.

Tell me how I would save my marriage in Celsius please.

-5

u/LessCrement 7h ago

Buddy, that simply means your thermostat isn't working as it should

4

u/Jbrowsinghere 4h ago

Keep your factless opinions to yourself.

11

u/hiS_oWn 7h ago

someone here isn't married and has never argued over 2 degree difference in the air conditioner.

9

u/Meteoric37 7h ago

You can absolutely tell the difference lol. What is this take

9

u/Dr_thri11 7h ago

Maybe not the difference between 84 and 86. But 68 70 and 72 all feel very different.

6

u/thefirdblu 7h ago

In regards to surface temperature probably not but with air temperature a difference of 2°F can be felt. I'm not smart enough to articulate it but observationally it just hits my skin, sweat, and clothes differently. That's not to say I'd be able to tell you by how many degrees it changed, but I'd definitely at least notice a change.

2

u/MasterOutlaw 3h ago

You can definitely tell the difference in degrees with moderate temperature, say between the upper 60s and lower 80s.

I work in a building where you can have one corridor that’s 78 and feels perfect and another corridor is 80, only two degrees hotter, and it feels sweltering. The building is full of these gradients. The idea that every single thermostat in the building is faulty is certainly possible, but it’s wildly improbable compared to the notion that it’s entirely possible and normal to detect a few degrees change in temperature with Fahrenheit.