Dramatic footage captures moment a landslide caused by heavy rainfall in northern India pushes through a town.
— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) July 10, 2023
India is experiencing some of its worst monsoon rainfall in decades and several people have been killed due to floods ⤵️ pic.twitter.com/wcX8CrSw0i
Wettest day in 40 years.
Parts of India have seen their wettest July day in 40 years, as monsoon rains in the country's north trigger deadly flash floods and landslides. pic.twitter.com/Pumd98IJaW
— DW News (@dwnews) July 10, 2023
Monsoon brings mudslides and heavy flooding to northern India. As usual, here’s several highlights #floods #monsoon #india #indiafloods pic.twitter.com/pDfBa141uo
— HELMETCAMTV (@helmetcamtv) July 10, 2023
Today on WION's #ClimateTracker:
— WION (@WIONews) July 10, 2023
+ Monsoon rains wreak havoc in northern India
+ Flash floods ravage Japan
+ Heatwave grips Italy
Time: 4:30pm IST | 11 am GMT
LIVE TV: https://t.co/waIaRZuoQe pic.twitter.com/EMrUeiNXuV

But Joe Bastardi assured me we were going into a cooling phase!
I recall a few years ago San Francisco had a couple of >100°F days, but it got very little coverage compared to the news about the major hurricane threatening the US at the time. I call these locally dominant events news shadows.
It looks like more and more catastrophic climate event news shadows are shadowing other catastrophic climate events, with a few remote social collapses (Sudan went pretty quick) on the side. What did NY media miss while choking on wildfire smoke, or worrying about this recent massive rainfall event?