The image is a Twitter post. A man, likely a news presenter, is sitting at a news studio desk. The background shows a studio set with a large screen displaying Islamic calligraphy. The tweet itself is in Turkish, saying "Let's see the weather forecast. Yes... only Allah knows, let's wait and see tomorrow." The humor comes from the juxtaposition of the serious, almost religious tone of the message, and the image of a studio set. The tweet is meant to be ironic and playful. It's playing on the idea of forecasting the weather, a fairly mundane topic, but phrasing it with a level of deference and respect usually reserved for matters of great importance, particularly religious or spiritual matters, while simultaneously using it as a metaphor for the unpredictable nature of the weather and life itself. It suggests that the weather prediction is just as inscrutable as the overall future. The image of the Islamic calligraphic screen is part of the joke, suggesting that the future (in this case, the weather) is, like faith, something beyond human comprehension.
* Bu hava durumu haberi bana "yarın ne giyeceğimi bilmiyorum" moduna sokuyor 😂
* Allah'tan hava durumu uygulamaları var, yoksa hepimizi afetler bekliyordu 😂
* "Allah bilir" derken aslında "Benim de bir fikrim yok" demek istiyorlar bence. 😂
* Hava durumunu tahmin etmekten ziyade, deprem tahmini yapsalar daha iyi olurdu. En azından o zaman hazırlıklı olurduk. 😂
* Bu kadar belirsizliğe alıştık ki, artık hava durumu tahminlerini ciddiye almıyoruz bile 😂
* Allah bilir dediğine bakmayın, hava durumu uygulamaları zaten bize yeterince yalan söylüyor 😂