Op-Ed: The TV Weather Heat Index Has Become a Climate Propaganda Tool

The article discusses the widespread use and misuse of the “heat index” by TV meteorologists across the United States during summer. The heat index, often called the “feels like” temperature, is not an actual measurement but a calculated estimate combining air temperature and relative humidity to approximate how hot it feels to a typical adult under shaded, low-wind conditions. It was developed based on a 1979 scientific paper and does not take into account factors like sunlight,wind,individual health,or hydration.

The article criticizes how manny TV stations now prominently display the heat index as if it were the real temperature, which can mislead viewers about actual heat risks, affecting public perception and decisions on clothing, outdoor activities, and energy use. The sensationalized reporting exaggerates heat values and sometimes wrongly links high heat index numbers directly to climate change, although the formula only reflects local temperature and humidity at the moment.

Instead, the article argues that urban factors-such as the urban heat island effect (where cities are significantly warmer than surrounding rural areas due to infrastructure and human activity)-play a major role in local heat risk. Increases in local humidity from irrigation and landscaping also raise heat index values over time.

The suggestion is for meteorologists to prioritize reporting the actual air temperature, present heat index figures clearly as estimates, and educate the public on their meaning and limitations. This would provide clearer, more accurate information about heat exposure and personal health risks, rather than promoting misleading inflated temperature readings.


Every summer, TV meteorologists across the United States increasingly trumpet the “heat index” as an important headline number.

But that figure — the infamous “feels like” temperature — is a calculated estimate, not the actual air temperature. Its overuse smacks more of sensationalism than scientific clarity.

For example, in Tampa, Florida, recently announced an all-time record heat index, declaring that “this is the highest heat index ever recorded.”

It wasn’t recorded. It isn’t a measurement. So, that’s false.

The is a formula developed by the U.S. National Weather Service based on Robert G. Steadman’s 1979 paper “.” Prior to that, it didn’t exist.

It combines actual air temperature and relative humidity into an approximate “apparent” temperature — as if the humidity were higher or lower.

The heat index equation predicts human-perceived heat, assuming shaded, low-wind conditions, and a generic adult body type — but ignoring sunlight, wind, individual physiology, hydration, age, weight, health status, and so on.

All individuals experience heat differently. An elderly person or someone with cardiac issues may overheat faster than a young, fit adult. Yet TV reporters happily label heat index values as if they were actual temperatures.

TV Stations Are Using Heat Index Instead of Actual Temperature

The heat index — once a useful cautionary figure in weather warnings — has lately morphed into a marketing tool masquerading as “temperature.” Many stations now forefront the inflated apparent temperature while sidestepping the real air temperature that matters for energy use, infrastructure, and actual thermal load.

You are increasingly likely to hear “today’s high will be 104°F” even when the real thermometer reads 94°F with high humidity. Good Morning America’s Ginger Zee recently showing heat index prominently, saying: “We show heat index because that is what a human feels … if I were forecasting for inanimate objects … I would keep it with temperature.”

While they do include both values, many local affiliates now broadcast the “feels like” temperature as the lead on main weather graphics — leaving viewers believing that artificially elevated number is real.

You can see other examples of this trend from  and a deeper discussion of the issue at Wired.

Why Using the Heat Index Is Misleading
  1. The higher value isn’t real: Heat index readings aren’t measured — they’re estimated — and they can overshoot physical plausibility in extreme humidity. For example, the Chicago heat wave underestimated its own severity when the real feel was much higher.
  2. Misleads public risk perception: Viewers may think it’s actually 10°F or more hotter than actual air temperature, confusing clothing choices, outdoor planning, and understanding of actual heating or cooling needs.
  3. Downplays other factors: Sun exposure, wind, and metabolic heat production are often more relevant than static humidity-based estimates.

In some cases, reporters are trying to link higher heat index values to “climate change.”  and  have attempted this.

But climate change isn’t driving the heat index — city environments are.

There is no causal link between global climate change and the heat index formula itself. That index simply responds to local temperature and humidity at a moment in time. It doesn’t project trends, yet the media frequently implies otherwise.

A far larger factor in urban areas is the effect. Cities are 1 to 7 °F hotter in daytime and 2 to 5 °F warmer at night than surrounding rural zones due to pavement, buildings, reduced vegetation, and anthropogenic heat.

NOAA mapping  have recorded UHI hotspots up to 20°F hotter. The EPA likewise how thermal differences in urban land surfaces amplify heat risk far beyond background climate trends. Further, the EPA’s climate indicators and urban heat island documentation stress that , not global temperature alone, are the leading contributors to heat‑related health events.

Meanwhile, irrigation of lawns, widespread planting of non‑native grasses, and increased humidity from residential watering over the past 50 years has contributed to local humidity rises — boosting heat index values.

TV forecasts should lead with the actual air temperature, then show heat index estimates as supplemental. Display both, and don’t hide the ambient number. Explain that the heat index is a calculated metric, not a thermometer reading. Reinforce that personal risk varies based on health factors and local conditions like shade or wind.

If you’re watching a forecast where the “temperature” is wildly higher than recorded official readings from your National Weather Service office, they’re likely misleading you.

If TV meteorologists truly want to serve public understanding, they need to start labeling the heat index properly, show actual temperature first, and educate viewers on the difference.

Let’s stop pretending calculated “feels like” values are real — and start reporting the actual heat, for real.

The views expressed in this opinion article are those of their author and are not necessarily either d or endorsed by the owners of this website. If you are interested in contributing an Op-Ed to The Western Journal, you can learn about our submission guidelines and process here.




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