Dallas, Texas. This isn't even the worst part of Texas though. Houston makes the Amazon piss itself... through pores.
It only happens on blacktop though. The majority of the roads are white concrete.... which means an entirely different problem set (they reflect all the light so you get toasted instead of tires melting).
As a native Houstonian, I can totally agrees with this. It's like living in Hells sauna. Going outside is like getting slapped in the face with a hot wet wash cloth, then getting swarmed by mosquitos the size if humming birds. I currently live in a desert where it's been 110+ regularly for the last 2 months and is supposed to reach 117+ this week. I STILL find it more tolerable than Houston.
Australia?
Edit:
To whoever I've offended this time:
Sorry, but I'm up in Canada. Our traffic lights don't melt here, neither do our ceiling fans. Or our traffic cones or our candles or our roads or anything else for that matter. I was genuinely wanting to know if this took place in the land down under, since they seem to be the usual suspect when things start liquefying due to heat.
Glad I could somehow make your day a little worse with curiosity <.<
It only happens on blacktop though. The majority of the roads are white concrete.... which means an entirely different problem set (they reflect all the light so you get toasted instead of tires melting).
Edit:
To whoever I've offended this time:
Sorry, but I'm up in Canada. Our traffic lights don't melt here, neither do our ceiling fans. Or our traffic cones or our candles or our roads or anything else for that matter. I was genuinely wanting to know if this took place in the land down under, since they seem to be the usual suspect when things start liquefying due to heat.
Glad I could somehow make your day a little worse with curiosity <.<