Report: Heat Wave So Intense The French Are Considering Wearing Deodorant

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Report: Heat Wave So Intense The French Are Considering Wearing Deodorant​

World·Jun 26, 2026 · BabylonBee.com

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PARIS — According to locals, the current heat wave in France had become so severe that French citizens began considering wearing deodorant.

Though deeply resistant to all measures of personal hygiene, the stench of armpit sweat had reportedly become so overwhelming that the French were beginning to waver.

"The smell! Oh la la! Maybe it is time we break down and get the, how do you say, Old Spice," said local man Antoine Fournier. "I draw the line at air conditioning, but perhaps the deodorant is not so bad. I am choking on the odor, it is almost becoming a solid at this point. I am afraid I may have no choice."

Witnesses reported that a number of Frenchmen had cautiously approached the antiperspirant aisle in the pharmacy, weighing their options. A few citizens even attempted a trial deodorant out of desperation, though they did not know how to apply the product. There have already been multiple reports at nearby hospitals of intractable vomiting due to Frenchmen eating an entire deodorant stick.

Government officials urged calm, insisting that France's cherished tradition of smelling awful would survive the heat wave. "We are asking citizens not to panic," said one spokesman. "Please, hold your noses, and keep a level head. Do not give in to the temptation of deodorant. Once autumn arrives, we may all unplug our noses and safely return to the smell of damp, moldy baguettes wrapped in gym socks."

At publishing time, the crisis had reportedly become so dire that a handful of Parisians were even seen taking two showers in the same week.
 
Europeans think anything over 80 F is a heat wave. I'm from South Alabama during summer the heat and humidity is so bad it's like being waterboarded with boiling water.
 
Europeans think anything over 80 F is a heat wave. I'm from South Alabama during summer the heat and humidity is so bad it's like being waterboarded with boiling water.
.

I live in SE South Dakota, in the midst of thousands of acres that farmers alternate between field corn and soybeans, and the corn actually creates a kind of humidity of its own, called, by the locals, "corn sweat". I never even knew what humidity was when I lived in Western Washington State. It's really hard to breathe when the corn sweat starts up.

Even though the closest field to my home is in soybeans this year, it's almost as miserable as when it's in corn.

 
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