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Should we mess with nature? | Introducing How We Survive

23 min · 14 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Should we mess with nature? | Introducing How We Survive

Descripción

The climate crisis is escalating. We have to decarbonize our economy, but we’re moving too slowly. So, what’s the backup plan? This season of “How We Survive” is about engineering nature: large-scale interventions that could be our last hope. We’ll explore technology that could alter our weather patterns, transform our planet, and possibly save us all from the worst outcomes of the climate crisis. Or lead to catastrophic, unintended consequences. In this episode, Amy explores one of the wildest climate interventions to date: de-extinction. She takes a tour of Colossal Labs, the $10 billion Dallas startup betting it can reverse-engineer extinction itself, to see how they plan to turn pigeons into dodos and Asian elephants into woolly mammoths. But whether it’s bringing back the woolly mammoth from extinction or shooting sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere, just because we can mess with nature, does that mean we should?  See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

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341 episodios

Portada del episodio Should we mess with nature? | Introducing How We Survive

Should we mess with nature? | Introducing How We Survive

The climate crisis is escalating. We have to decarbonize our economy, but we’re moving too slowly. So, what’s the backup plan? This season of “How We Survive” is about engineering nature: large-scale interventions that could be our last hope. We’ll explore technology that could alter our weather patterns, transform our planet, and possibly save us all from the worst outcomes of the climate crisis. Or lead to catastrophic, unintended consequences. In this episode, Amy explores one of the wildest climate interventions to date: de-extinction. She takes a tour of Colossal Labs, the $10 billion Dallas startup betting it can reverse-engineer extinction itself, to see how they plan to turn pigeons into dodos and Asian elephants into woolly mammoths. But whether it’s bringing back the woolly mammoth from extinction or shooting sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere, just because we can mess with nature, does that mean we should?  See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

14 de jul de 202623 min
Portada del episodio The News | Scene on Radio

The News | Scene on Radio

Scene on Radio is a two-time Peabody-nominated podcast that dares to ask big, hard questions about who we are—really—and how we got this way. Their new season, The News, asks: what’s really wrong with the news? Some have called the news media the oxygen of a functioning democracy. But if that’s true, America’s lungs are in rough shape. Most Americans say they don’t trust the media. The business model for local journalism has all but collapsed. And we all know about the barrage of misinformation that flows from our splintered mediascape. You can’t separate the state of our news media from the other profound crises that America keeps on failing to solve. John Biewen explores the roots of this crises. Here's episode 1. Find The News, from Scene on Radio [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/scene-on-radio/id1036276968], wherever you get podcasts. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

7 de jul de 202642 min
Portada del episodio First America from Critical Frequency

First America from Critical Frequency

Hosted and reported by Indigenous author Rebecca Nagle (with production by Critical Frequency!) and featuring leading Native historians, First America shares the true story of how the United States came to be, and how our current political moment was 250 years in the making.  We’ve all been told the American Revolution was fought over taxation and representation. But that's not what the Declaration of Independence says. According to our founders, in their own words, what they were most upset about was Native Americans. How did we all miss that? Rebecca sits down with historian Ned Blackhawk (Western Shoshone) to talk about how hunger for Indigenous land drove the Revolution. Find more episodes of First America wherever you get podcasts [http://lnk.to/FAPushkin]. Get episodes early and ad-free with a Pushkin+ subscription. Sign up on the First America show page on Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-america/id1464954218] or at pushkin.fm/plus [https://www.pushkin.fm/join-pushkin]. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

30 de jun de 202637 min