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Scorchio! The Story of the Weather Girl

Weather presenters are bombarded with sex toys by fans, insulted and harassed. Why is the stereotype of 'the weather girl' so tenacious and what damage is this term doing?

Within weeks of starting as a weather presenter, Sam Fraser鈥檚 arse had its own online fan club and she featured on a YouTube channel called Babes of Britain.

She hadn鈥檛 imagined that decades after the Fast Show comedy sketch Scorchio, the stereotype of the 'weather girl' still held firm.

Despite degrees in meteorology and physics or Met Office training, female weather presenters were still seen as dizzy sidekicks to the news anchor, legitimate targets to be sexualized by the media and harassed.

Sam puts down her clicker and asks why is the 鈥榳eather girl鈥 one of the most fetishized roles in popular culture.

She hears about the arrival of women into the industry from John Kettley, one of the first weather presenter gods; the role of Bill Giles鈥 belly in gender equality from ITV鈥檚 Sian Lloyd and about the impact on industry of the fun, sexy, flirty and most enticingly Swedish presenter Ulrika Jonsson.

Digging through tabloids she sees they are used as clickbait, portrayed as women deliberately inviting you to look at them 'Sarah Keith-Lucas flaunts curves in skin-tight dress,' 'Laura Tobin distracts ITV viewers as she sizzles in leather mini dress,' 'Carol Kirkwood stuns in busty floral dress鈥.

And Sam discovers how if they do not live up to the 鈥榳eather girl鈥 image, they are shamed for wearing glasses, being too fat, or as one celebrity shamelessly tweeted 鈥淢ASSIVELY too ugly鈥 for the job.

Sarah Leigh Barnett recounts how she was publicly insulted by Boris Johnson when she started presenting; Kate Kinsella the impact of being bombarded with porn on her and her family; and Reham Khan how the term 鈥榳eather girl鈥 is weaponized against her in Pakistan, used to suggest she too ignorant and immoral to be in politics.

Producer: Sarah Bowen

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Fri 5 Jan 2024 23:30

Broadcasts

  • Wed 22 Nov 2023 11:00
  • Fri 5 Jan 2024 16:30
  • Fri 5 Jan 2024 23:30