Hot MessPBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Climate change is affecting lots of living things, including the fluffy, cute ones. What can the adorable pika teach humans about adapting to global warming?
Host/Writer: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.
How the Pika Adapts to Climate Change | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-05-31 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Climate change is affecting lots of living things, including the fluffy, cute ones. What can the adorable pika teach humans about adapting to global warming?
Host/Writer: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.Why Voting Local is the #1 Way You Can Fight Climate ChangeHot Mess2020-10-27 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
If you’re in the United States and you turn on the TV, accidentally open twitter, or start to read a newspaper app, chances are you’ll see a bunch of people talking about the upcoming federal election.
But what you might not see much of - coverage of the local elections where you live. Let alone, information about those policy makers’ climate ideas.
Which is frustrating because, I’m going to let you in on a little secret now: a lot of climate policy happens at the state and local level.
Compared to the federal government, local and state lawmakers are typically more efficient - they get more done in less time. They’re often easier to get in contact with and just physically closer than your federal lawmakers working in DC. Plus, local laws tend to have a lot more direct impact on your life and how your community responds to the climate crisis. For example, a lot of your local tax money probably goes to fund education. Your locally elected school board is in charge of how that funding is used, and they get to decide if your local school district buys electric busses, or adds a climate change section to the curriculum.
But why is that? Why is your local government so much better set up for implementing climate solutions than the federal government?
---------- Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Editor in Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Matt Donaldson
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMWhy Climate Change Keeps Failing at the Ballot BoxHot Mess2020-10-14 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
More Americans than ever believe climate change is happening. Two in three registered voters say they’re worried about it. Four in ten say it’s a “very important” factor in their vote in the 2020 presidential election. And 49% say that they’d be more likely to vote for a candidate who “Strongly Supports Taking Action to Reduce Global Warming” vs 16% who say they’d be less likely.
But that popular support for action hasn’t been translated into actual bold steps to reduce America’s reliance on fossil fuels. And the greenhouse gases those fuels cause are a big reason that the planet is on course to exceed the 2 degrees of global warming scientists say would mean permanent, dangerous climate change.
So why’s there this big discrepancy? Meet the biggest obstacle to US action on climate change: the Attitude-Behavior gap.
----------- Host: Joe Hanson, Ph.D Writer: Eli Kintisch Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Matt Donaldson, Sara Roma
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMHow Different Generations Talk About Climate Change | Hot MessHot Mess2020-09-24 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: pbs.org/perilandpromise Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub
Over the last few years it feels like young people have taken over the climate movement. They’re out striking, suing national governments, occupying congressional offices, and taking to the streets. And according to polls, they care more, with 70% of young adults saying they worry about global warming compared to 56% of people over 55.
But of course - climate action isn’t new - people have been marching, protesting, and demanding change since the 60s and 70s. People who were grandparents today were fighting for the climate when they were young people, and many are still at it today.
It made us wonder: What’s changed since the early days of the environmental movement? How are the stakes different today? And what’s the best way to speak up about climate change?
----------- Host: Joe Hanson, Ph.D Writer: Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Matt Donaldson
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM
Climate activists, youth activists, generations, old people, young leaders, sunrise movement, zero hour, jamie margolin, grete thundberg, elders for climate actionHow We Make Energy | Essentials of Environmental ScienceHot Mess2020-07-09 | Welcome to our new special series about the essentials of environmental science Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub More info below…
When I first took an environmental science class, I didn’t quite get why energy got its own section. Because in a lot of ways, energy feels so detached from the environment. In order to produce and move energy, we dig deep into the ground for fuel, we burn that fuel to create electricity, and we clear trees to make room for power lines. It all seemed in opposition to the environment. And in a lot of ways, it is, most energy production is entirely extractive. The extraction, and the resulting pollution from most energy sources has an immense impact on the environment, and that’s why we’ve got to talk about energy in the context of environmental science.
Welcome to our Learning series about the essentials of environmental science. We’ll have more from this series in the following videos, so stay tuned!
----------- Host: Joe Hanson Writer: Miriam Nielsen Co-Writer: Scott Sowell, Ph.D. http://www.sowellscience.com Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMThe Basics of Climate Science | Essentials of Environmental ScienceHot Mess2020-07-06 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Welcome to our new special series about the essentials of environmental science
A series on this channel talking about the environment without focusing on the era-defining change happening to our planet right now wouldn’t make any sense. Climate Change is after all, the hot mess we all find ourselves in.
Climate is the long-term, average weather over a particular region. It’s the typical patterns of temperature, precipitation, wind and how those change seasonally throughout the year.
But what does that actually mean? Let’s take a trip to a few biomes and compare what climate looks like around the world. We’re going to the tropical rainforest of Brazil, the savanna of Mozambique, the desert in Saudi Arabia, and the tundra of Canada.
Welcome to our Learning series about the essentials of environmental science. We’ll have more from this series in the following videos, so stay tuned!
----------- Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Co-Writer: Scott Sowell, Ph.D. http://www.sowellscience.com Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMThe Importance of Soil | Essentials of Environmental ScienceHot Mess2020-06-25 | Welcome to our new special series about the essentials of environmental science Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub More info below…
Let me make something super clear. If you take nothing else away, remember this: Soil is NOT dirt. Soil is productive, it’s useful. It’s fundamental to life as we know. It is an essential natural resource, a major component of most ecosystems, and has been celebrated in art and song for millenia. Dirt is just soil in the wrong place.
Soil is the thin layer of inorganic and organic material wrapping the earth like a cozy blanket. It is where the abiotic lithosphere (that is, the upper mantle and crust of the Earth, the airless, unmoving underground stuff) meets all the living things in the biosphere.
Welcome to our Learning series about the essentials of environmental science. We’ll have more from this series in the following videos, so stay tuned!
----------- Host: Miriam Nielsen Writer: Miriam Nielsen Co-Writer: Scott Sowell, Ph.D. http://www.sowellscience.com Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMThe Water Cycle and Water Pollution | Essentials of Environmental ScienceHot Mess2020-06-19 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Welcome to our new special series about the essentials of environmental science Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub More info below…
I imagine you’re familiar with the concept of water. Maybe you’ve gotten caught unprepared in a rainstorm, watched ducks hang out in a pond, had a snowball fight, or swam in the ocean. If so, you were witnessing part of the water cycle. But the water cycle, or the hydrologic cycle, if you want to get multi-syllabic about it, is more than just what we can see. The hydrologic cycle links together the atmosphere, the soil, and all the living and nonliving parts of this planet.
Welcome to our Learning series about the essentials of environmental science. We’ll have more from this series in the following videos, so stay tuned!
----------- Host: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Writer: Miriam Nielsen Co-Writer: Scott Sowell, Ph.D. http://www.sowellscience.com Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMUnderstanding the Atmosphere | Essentials of Environmental ScienceHot Mess2020-06-11 | Welcome to our new special series about the essentials of environmental science Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub More info below…
The air we breathe is this extremely precious thing. Especially, because there is so little of it - the atmosphere is really thin, it’s like if you wrapped a single layer of plastic wrap around a basketball. That thin sheet is what makes this tiny little planet in the vast solar system, and as far as we know - universe - able to sustain life. In this episode of the Essentials of Environmental Science, we’re going to look at some ways in which human beings have negatively affected the thin layer of earth’s atmosphere by filling it with pollutants, how we study the atmosphere, and how we can protect it.
Hey, we messed up at 2:24. UVC has a shorter wavelength (higher energy) than UVB and UVA. Thanks for keeping us on our toes!
Welcome to our Learning series about the essentials of environmental science. We’ll have more from this series in the following videos, so stay tuned!
----------- Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Co-Writer: Scott Sowell, Ph.D. http://www.sowellscience.com Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMHumans and the Environment | Essentials of Environmental ScienceHot Mess2020-06-05 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Welcome to our new special series about the essentials of environmental science Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub More info below…
What is “the environment”? Well, it’s everything, and it’s everywhere, including you and me. Just about every part of human civilization depends on a healthy and stable environment. Yet, human activity is causing pollution, climate change, and species loss, all of which disrupt that health and stability. So how do we study our environment in order to understand these changes and how we might fix them? That’s the purpose of environmental science.
Welcome to our new Learning series about the essentials of environmental science. We’ll have more from this series in the following videos, so stay tuned!
----------- Host: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Writer: Miriam Nielsen Co-Writer: Scott Sowell, Ph.D. (http://www.sowellscience.com) Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMThe Link Between Extreme Weather and Climate ChangeHot Mess2019-11-07 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Climate and weather are not the same thing. But climate change is making extreme weather events even more extreme. How do scientists pick apart how much stronger a storm is or how much hotter a heat wave is due to climate change and global warming? Guest host Adam Levy talks to Dr Fredi Otto to find out. #climate #climatechange #globalwarming
----------- Host: Adam Levy, DPhil Guests: Dr Fredi Otto Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Derek Borsheim Camera: Adam Levy
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMCan These Books Save The Planet? The Rise of Climate Fiction feat. Lindsay Ellis & Amy BradyHot Mess2019-10-04 | Can’t read our way out of this one. Lots of references below! Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub
Climate Fiction comes in all sorts of forms, there’s your Mad Maxes, your Games of Thrones, your Parables of the Sowers, and your WALL-Es. But are all these Cli-Fi books, movies, and TV shows just capitalizing on a hot topic, or do they actually change people’s perceptions of climate change? Lindsay Ellis, of It’s Lit, and Amy Brady, the editor-in-chief of The Chicago Review of Books, help us find out.
----------- Host: Miriam Nielsen Guests: Lindsay Ellis and Amy Brady Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma Camera: Miriam Nielsen
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMOur Food System is Rigged feat. Sheril Kirshenbaum | Hot MessHot Mess2019-08-27 | It’s not as easy as we want it to be. Lots of references below! Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub
The way we eat is unsustainable for the climate. Our food system contributes a massive amount of greenhouse gas emissions and touches basically every facet of our life. Modern diets also contribute to millions of lost lives every year from all the negative health outcomes. The answer is pretty simple on paper: We need to convert more of our diet to plant-based foods, and away from red meat. But in practice? It’s nowhere near that easy. How can something so necessary be so hard? We talked to food policy expert Sheril Kirshenbaum to learn more.
----------- Host: Miriam Nielsen Guest: Sheril Kirshenbaum Writers: Miriam Nielsen and Sheril Kirshenbaum Editor-in-chief: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma Camera: Miriam Nielsen
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMClimate Change: Are You Scared Enough? feat. David Wallace-WellsHot Mess2019-07-18 | Maybe if you're not scared, you're not paying attention… Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub
Climate change is scary, because it will negatively impact just about every part of our lives. But the conventional wisdom on how to talk about climate change and inspire people to do something about it has always been "don't scare people". At least until recently. In the past couple years climate scientists and climate journalists have started talking in scarier and more worst case terms than ever before. Why? And is this a good thing? I talked to author David Wallace-Wells, author of "The Uninhabitable Earth" to learn more. #climate #climatechange #globalwarming
Read more: Wallace-Wells, David. The uninhabitable earth: Life after warming. Tim Duggan Books, 2019.
----------- Host: Joe Hanson Guest: David Wallace-Wells Writers: Joe Hanson Ph.D. Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma Camera: Miriam Nielsen
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMFeeling Guilty About Climate Change? Hank Green is Here to Help | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2019-06-06 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Climate guilt is a common feeling. We’ve all benefited from fossil fuels, and most of the stuff we do in life depends on them. But we also know that we can’t continue down this path if we want to live in a stable world. So how do we overcome this challenge? How do we make a change? We talked to Hank Green to get his thoughts.
References: Obradovich, N., & Guenther, S. M. (2016). Collective responsibility amplifies mitigation behaviors. Climatic change, 137(1-2), 307-319.
Bain, P. G., Hornsey, M. J., Bongiorno, R., & Jeffries, C. (2012). Promoting pro-environmental action in climate change deniers. Nature Climate Change, 2(8), 600.
----------- Host: Joe Hanson Guest: Hank Green Writers: Joe Hanson Ph.D. and Hank Green Creative Director: David Schulte Executive Producer: Amanda Fox Producer: Stephanie Noone Editor/Animator: Sara Roma
----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMClimate Change is Too Big for our Brains feat. Mike Rugnetta | Hot Mess Hot Mess2019-05-23 | Try Audible for 30 days visit audible.com/hotmess or text hotmess to 500 500! Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub
What can a bunch of circles and squares from a 19th century novella tell us about Climate Change? Its metaphor time!
----------- Host: Miriam Nielsen Featuring: Mike Rugnetta Writer: Mike Rugnetta, Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animator: Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson ----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMThe Best Cars For the Climate | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2019-02-21 | Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Say you’re looking to buy a car. How do you pick the best car for the planet? There’s already a lot to consider when choosing a new ride, and factoring in climate change makes it even trickier. Well we’re here to guide you through it… even if we can’t come to the dealership with you. #climatechange #electricvehicle #cars
----------- Host/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Writer: Maren Hunsberger Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animator: Mark Rodriguez Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich ----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMWhy Climate Change is So Hard To Talk About | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2019-01-31 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Talking about climate change is hard. Not talking about climate change is easy. But if we want to keep our planet livable then we have to do the hard thing and not the easy thing. But how do we do the hard thing? I asked some of my favorite creator friends to help me figure that out.
Hot Mess T-shirts!: store.dftba.com/products/hot-mess-shirt ----------- Host: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Writer: Adam Levy, DPhil Director: David Schulte Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Shot by: Alex Reich and Joe Hanson ----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseMaking Clothes Less Terrible for the Planet | Hot Mess Hot Mess2019-01-10 | Please SUBSCRIBE! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub And support us on Patreon: patreon.com/hotmesspbs
Clothing is something we have to think about every day, but we don't always think about how our clothes impact the planet. Fashion designers like Justine Leconte are transforming the industry by creating sustainable, ethical clothing and showing everyone that fashion can be about more than having the latest trends.
References: http://bit.ly/2Pe0tAk ----------- Host: Miriam Nielsen Writers: Mirjam Guesgen & Miriam Niesen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animator: Sara Roma Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Special Thanks: Justine Leconte ----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise13 Climate Change Stories You Might Have Missed | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-12-20 | Viewers like you help make PBS (Thank you 😃) . Support your local PBS Member Station here: to.pbs.org/DonateMESS
References: bit.ly/2A8d1AA ----------- Host: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Writer: Alex Reich Creative Director: David Schulte Editor/Animator: Sara Roma Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson ----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseCan Mass Carbon Capture Really Work? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-11-29 | Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Carbon dioxide gets a lot of grief these days. It’s the main cause of the global warming that’s already damaging coral reefs, ice caps, and coastlines. But for eons, life survived on Earth because natural processes kept CO2 levels within limits, preventing the planet from getting either too cold or too hot. So, if we want to keep earth from warming more than a few degrees, we probably need to supercharge those natural processes, in a hurry. Or maybe even invent some new methods to suck carbon out of the sky at an even bigger scale. The question is, can we capture all that carbon before earth becomes too hot for us? Can carbon capture on a massive scale really work?
References: http://bit.ly/2J9RVVG ----------- Host/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Writer: Eli Kintisch Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animator: Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich ----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APMLawsuits Crushed Big Tobacco. Can It Work With Oil Companies? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-11-08 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Today, lawsuits are positioning climate change as this generation's smoking: it pollutes the air, it’s caused by burning chemicals we buy from a handful of huge companies, and it’s dangerous to human health. Fossil fuel companies are being taken to court just like tobacco companies were, because of what they knew and when. Should they be forced to pay for damages from climate change? And can you even sue specific companies when we’ve all benefited from the industrialization that oil and coal made possible?
References: http://bit.ly/2CZG9gq ----------- Host: Talia Buford, ProPublica Writer: Ellen Airhart Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animator: Matt Donaldson Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson -----------
Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseWhy One Conservative Texas City Went 100% Renewable | Hot Mess Hot Mess2018-11-01 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Georgetown, TX is a conservative city in the middle of oil and gas country that's committed to 100% renewable energy, and we could learn a lot from them.
Special thanks to the city of Georgetown and Mayor Dale Ross. ----------- Host/Writer/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich ----------- Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comCould Everyone Have Solar Power? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-10-25 | Viewers like you help make PBS (Thank you 😃) . Support your local PBS Member Station here: to.pbs.org/DonateMESS
By the end of 2016, the US was home to over 1 million household and commercial solar energy operations, with 4 times as many solar panels installed that year compared to just four years earlier. But if you don’t own the roof over your head, or can’t afford this kind of upgrade, are you left out of the solar energy revolution?
If you’re interested in learning more about how much solar energy costs to install, and what community solar options are available where you live, check out: energysage.com/solar/calculator
----------- Host: Talia Buford, ProPublica Writer: Darcy Gentleman Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animator: Mark Rodriguez Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseCoral Reefs Are Dying. Heres How We Can Save Them | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-10-18 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Coral reefs cover less than one percent of the seafloor, and yet they’re home to a quarter of all marine life, making them some of the most biodiverse places on Earth. But their future looks bleak. Decades of environmental threats like warming waters and ocean acidification have pushed reefs to the brink. Can we use science to bring them back?
----------- Host/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Writer: Dyllan Furness Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comHow A Sticker Kept 3 Billion Tons of CO2 Out of The Air | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-10-04 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Energy efficiency standards have quietly been saving people mountains of money and helping avoid planet-warming emissions at the same time.
----------- Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Writer: Christina Nunez Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D.
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comHow Farms and Forests Can Coexist | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-09-27 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓ Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Deforestation is a big problem for the climate. This kind of land use releases more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than any single country, besides the United States or China. And most of the deforestation in the world today happens because people want to put farms where forests are. So, figuring out how to farm with trees instead of just chopping them down could help us fight climate change.
----------- Host/Writer: Talia Buford, ProPublica Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Matt Donaldson Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D.
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comHow Much Energy Does the Internet Use? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-09-20 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓ And support us on Patreon: patreon.com/hotmesspbs
About half the world has internet access. That’s 3.6 billion people surfing the web. How much energy is that using? And what is our online world doing to our planet’s climate?
----------- Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Dano Johnson Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseIndigenous Communities Are on the Front Lines of Climate Change | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-09-13 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
As the world figures out how to live with a rapidly changing climate, traditional knowledge from indigenous cultures could help us understand just how things are transforming.
References: http://bit.ly/2NvDj7B ----------- Host/Writer: Talia Buford, ProPublica Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D.
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comWill Climate Change Stop If We Stop Emitting Carbon Tomorrow? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-08-30 | Viewers like you help make PBS (Thank you 😃) . Support your local PBS Member Station here: to.pbs.org/DonateMESS
Imagine that aliens landed and gifted us a clean, limitless energy source. And instead of killing each other over this technology, we decided to immediately transform the world into a carbon-free society. This wonderous source would power our homes, industries, cars and planes, and humanity’s annual rate of carbon pollution would almost instantly fall to zero. So if we kicked our carbon addiction tomorrow, what would that mean for global warming?
----------- Host/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Writer: Eli Kintisch Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich -----------
Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseAllergic to MEAT?! Its Happening Thanks to Climate Change | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-08-23 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Thanks to climate change, disease carrying critters are expanding their ranges, and their seasons are getting longer -- meaning they have more space and more time to take a bite out of you or me.
References: http://bit.ly/2N9t0Td ----------- Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D.
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comWhich Greenhouse Gas is Actually the WORST? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-08-16 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Earth’s atmosphere naturally contains greenhouse gases. Without them, the world would be way too cold for humans. But we are adding extra greenhouse gases, which are causing Earth to heat up and disrupting weather patterns worldwide. So which of these many gases is heating Earth the most?
----------- Host/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Writer: Adam Levy DPHIL Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich -----------
Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseClimate Change Will Make MILLIONS Homeless. Where Will They Go? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-08-09 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
In 2017, storms, floods, and droughts displaced 18 million people from their homes worldwide. And by some estimates, over the next three decades, 200 million people may need to leave their homes to escape the same kind of disasters, made worse by climate change. Where in the world will all these people go?
----------- Host/Writer: Talia Buford, ProPublica Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D.
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comIs Climate Change Supercharging Hurricanes? | Hot Mess Hot Mess2018-07-26 | Viewers like you help make PBS (Thank you ) . Support your local PBS Member Station here: to.pbs.org/DonateMESS
It's impossible to say that climate change is responsible for any individual storm or hurricane, but climate change is making these storms stronger. How much stronger? It turns out, Hurricane Harvey is the ideal test case to measure how a warming planet and warming oceans, amplify our worst storms.
----------- Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich -----------
Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseUsing Space Mirrors to Cool the Globe | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-07-19 | Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Humans are running a dangerous experiment on our planet. We're putting more and more carbon dioxide and other gases into the atmosphere, which are trapping the sun's energy, and lo and behold, our planet is heating up in response.
To fix this, we could cut carbon dioxide emissions, but that’s been hard. What if there were a shortcut? What if we could reflect some of the sun’s energy away before it had a chance to get trapped? Like… maybe with space mirrors?!
Host/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Writer: Adam Levy, DPhil Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comRich vs. Poor: Who Should Pay To Fix Climate Change? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-07-12 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Over the past few centuries, a handful of countries reaped the benefits of fossil fuels and developed their economies, emitting a lot of greenhouse gases along the way. We now know these gases have changed the climate. But since the mid-2000s, an interesting shift has occurred. The majority of greenhouse gas emissions are now coming from large developing countries, who are looking for cheap energy sources to drive their own economic growth, just like rich countries before them.
----------- Host: Talia Buford, ProPublica Writer: Rachel Fritts Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich -----------
Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseBeef is Bad for the Climate… But How Bad? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-07-05 | Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Beef production emits more greenhouse gases than basically anything else we eat, so let’s look at the scale and impact of our bovine pals - and importantly, what we can actually do to make beef less bad.
Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comHot Mess Live StreamHot Mess2018-06-29 | ...What If We Burned ALL the Fossil Fuels? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-06-21 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
We have enough fossil fuels to make Earth intolerably hot & wet, so we’ll have to choose to not burn them all.
----------- Host/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Writer: Adam Levy Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich -----------
Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseWhy Don’t We Hear About the Ozone Hole Anymore? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-06-14 | Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
We don’t hear much about the hole in the ozone layer anymore. That’s because we’ve all but fixed it, thanks to consumer choices and a massive international agreement called the Montreal Protocol. Can we learn anything from this environmental success story that will help us fix climate change?
Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comHow To Survive a Climate Disaster | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-06-07 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Climate change is amplifying extreme weather events like hurricanes, heatwaves and other disasters. What’s the first thing that comes to mind when you think of how best to prepare for this stuff? Moving inland? Buying flood insurance? Stockpiling water? Building stronger relationships might not be high on that list, but maybe it should be.
----------- Host/Writer: Talia Buford, ProPublica Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich -----------
Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseThe Best Ways to Reduce Your Carbon Footprint | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-05-17 | Viewers like you help make PBS (Thank you 😃) . Support your local PBS Member Station here: to.pbs.org/DonateMESS
The average carbon footprint of a person in the US is 16.5 tons –TONS. So, what can you actually do decrease this number and make a meaningful difference?
----------- Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich -----------
Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseThe REAL Reason We Confuse Weather and Climate | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-05-10 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info and sources below ↓
Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Weather and climate are very different. But our experience of weather can have a big effect on how we view climate change. Why is that?
Host/Writer: Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comWhy Climate Change is Anti-Justice | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-05-03 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info below ↓
What do you think of when you hear the words “climate change?” Chances are, you might think of sad nature, somewhere far away. But climate change also affects humans, in every corner of the world, including the corner where you live, and where I live. It impacts the people and places we see everyday, and it will impact some of us more than others.
Host/Writer: Talia Buford, ProPublica Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseNuclear Power Was Supposed to Solve Climate Change… What Happened? | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-04-27 | Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promise
Splitting the atom once promised to be the carbon-free energy source of the future. But today, nuclear power plants are aging and retiring worldwide. What happened?
Host/Writer: Miriam Nielsen Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.comWe’ve Ignored Climate Change For More Than a Century | Hot Mess 🌎Hot Mess2018-04-19 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info below ↓
We’ve known about the greenhouse effect for nearly 200 years and about global warming for more than a century, but we’ve had a hard time acting because our brains aren’t a good match for a problem this big.
Host/Writer/Editor-In-Chief: Joe Hanson, Ph.D. Writer/Researcher: Ellen Airhart Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox Story Editor: Alex Reich
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Produced by PBS Digital Studios Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio Music: APM Stock images from http://www.shutterstock.com
Thanks to the funders of Peril & Promise for supporting PBS Digital Studios. Peril & Promise is a national public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/peril-and-promiseWelcome to Hot Mess! A New Show About Earths Changing ClimateHot Mess2018-03-23 | PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateMESS ↓ More info below ↓
Hot Mess is a show about how climate change impacts all of us, and about how we can create a better future for our planet and ourselves. Please SUBSCRIBE! ►► http://bit.ly/hotmess_sub
Hosts: Miriam Nielsen, Talia Buford, & Joe Hanson Writers: Alex Reich & Joe Hanson Creative Director: David Schulte Editors/Animators: Karl Boettcher & Derek Borsheim Producers: Stephanie Noone & Amanda Fox