No Hong Kong Flood Will Keep This Man From His Starbucks

Priorities, people.

Nothing gets between this man and his newspaper. Not even severe flooding.

Hong Kong has been hit with extreme weather this week, with residents facing two typhoons, flooding and even a black rainstorm.

But the man was unfazed as he sat in a Starbucks in the Hong Kong neighborhood of Chai Wan, peacefully reading his newspaper in a flooding Starbucks.

He’s now an internet sensation after 23-year-old medical worker Kristy Chan snapped the photo of him seemingly unperturbed by the flood, according to the BCC. She posted it to Facebook with the caption, “Huh? The newspaper said that it would be raining today!”

The post went viral when a local broadcaster, TV Most, shared it on Facebook, gaining more than 19,000 reactions. It was only a matter of time before the internet turned the man into a meme, nicknamed him “Starbucks Uncle” and drew comparisons to the woman in Taiwan photographed with a pork bun during Typhoon Megi.

Chan told the BBC that there were other people in the Starbucks at the time, even though it appears as though the man is the only person there. At some point, it appears that another customer joined him, which just made for more memes:

On Wednesday, the same day the photo of “Starbucks Uncle” was posted, the Hong Kong Observatory issued a black rainstorm alert, the most serious of rainstorm warnings that forecasts heavy rain, likely road flooding and traffic congestion.

By Friday morning, Typhoon Haima made its way toward the city with heavy rainfall and 65-mile-per-hour winds. The Hong Kong Observatory issued a Signal No. 8 warning, which shut schools for the day, government services and affected public transportation.

Typhoon Haima churned toward southern China on Friday after smashing into the northern Philippines with ferocious wind and rain, triggering flooding, landslides and power outages.
Typhoon Haima churned toward southern China on Friday after smashing into the northern Philippines with ferocious wind and rain, triggering flooding, landslides and power outages.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A taxi drives past a big wave on a waterfront as Typhoon Haima approaches in Hong Kong.
A taxi drives past a big wave on a waterfront as Typhoon Haima approaches in Hong Kong.
Bobby Yip / Reuters
The usually frenetic streets of Hong Kong were deserted on October 21 as the city went into lockdown for Typhoon Haima, which has killed at least eight people in the Philippines.
The usually frenetic streets of Hong Kong were deserted on October 21 as the city went into lockdown for Typhoon Haima, which has killed at least eight people in the Philippines.
ANTHONY WALLACE via Getty Images

Though the typhoon warning was issued in the morning, heavy rain did not begin falling till around noon. So there’s a chance that somewhere out there, a man is sitting in a Starbucks just reading his newspaper.

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