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The weather loophole keeping this city sunny

St. Petersburg claims that it’s always sunny. Is that possible?

Edward Vega
Edward Vega joined the Vox video team as a video producer in 2021. His coverage focuses on all things cinema, from the intricacies of film history to the nuts and bolts of filmmaking.

This video is presented by Visit St. Petersburg. Our sponsor has no editorial influence over how we report our stories, but their support makes videos like these possible. To learn more, click here: visitstpeteclearwater.com

There’s a town in Florida where the sun seems to always shine. Where the clouds almost always blow past before they turn to rain. A city with the Guinness World Record for consecutive sunny days, where the local newspaper was willing to bet against the weather by giving a free paper out whenever the sun didn’t shine. And spoiler alert: They didn’t give out that many.

That city is St. Petersburg, Florida — and, for the most part, it actually lives up to its reputation. In the average year it gets 361 days of sunshine, which sounds impossible in the wet and rainy state of Florida. But St. Pete exists in what we call a meteorological goldilocks zone. So what exactly is it that makes this Florida city so damn sunny? Check out Vox Video’s latest to find out.

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