HEATED

Wildfire season doesn't have to be like this

33 min · 18. kesä 2026
jakson Wildfire season doesn't have to be like this kansikuva

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Last year, the Eaton Fire devastated Altadena, California, killing 19 people, destroying more than 9,000 structures, and leaving an entire community trying to rebuild. Now, as Altadena is still recovering, another wildfire season is already underway. In this episode of HEATED, we speak with Savannah Bradley, co-founder of A Resilient Tomorrow, a community-led disaster recovery organization launched after the Eaton Fire by Black women with deep roots in Altadena. They discuss what it means to recover from one climate-fueled disaster while preparing for the next one, and what communities actually need to rebuild safely and justly. Then we head to Capitol Hill to speak with Rep. Judy Chu about the fight for federal disaster aid, climate resilience funding, and who should pay as climate disasters become more destructive and more expensive. HEATED is 100% reader-funded journalism. No ads. No sponsors. No fossil fuel money. Support our work: heated.world [http://heated.world] This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit heated.world/subscribe [https://heated.world/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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jakson Wildfire season doesn't have to be like this kansikuva

Wildfire season doesn't have to be like this

Last year, the Eaton Fire devastated Altadena, California, killing 19 people, destroying more than 9,000 structures, and leaving an entire community trying to rebuild. Now, as Altadena is still recovering, another wildfire season is already underway. In this episode of HEATED, we speak with Savannah Bradley, co-founder of A Resilient Tomorrow, a community-led disaster recovery organization launched after the Eaton Fire by Black women with deep roots in Altadena. They discuss what it means to recover from one climate-fueled disaster while preparing for the next one, and what communities actually need to rebuild safely and justly. Then we head to Capitol Hill to speak with Rep. Judy Chu about the fight for federal disaster aid, climate resilience funding, and who should pay as climate disasters become more destructive and more expensive. HEATED is 100% reader-funded journalism. No ads. No sponsors. No fossil fuel money. Support our work: heated.world [http://heated.world] This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit heated.world/subscribe [https://heated.world/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

18. kesä 202633 min
jakson Why Sheldon Whitehouse keeps calling out Big Oil kansikuva

Why Sheldon Whitehouse keeps calling out Big Oil

For years, Senator Sheldon has been one of Congress’s most relentless climate voices, delivering more than 300 “Time to Wake Up” speeches [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLhyg5hj7I21jr7tP--id5EmMTmpTbdlw1] on the Senate floor about climate change and the fossil fuel industry’s political power. Lately, that persistence has taken a more targeted form: pressing the Trump administration over its extraordinary new favors to the oil and gas industry; investigating its decision to exempt Gulf drilling from endangered species protections [https://www.epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/2026/4/whitehouse-investigates-trump-s-god-squad-waiving-endangered-species-protections-to-expand-oil-drilling]; and pushing a windfall profits tax [https://www.epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/2026/3/as-trump-s-war-surges-gas-prices-whitehouse-and-khanna-reintroduce-big-oil-profits-clawback-to-provide-relief-at-the-pump]on oil companies at a time when Republicans control Congress and the White House. Whitehouse knows none of it is likely to move through Washington right now. So why does this gentleman from Rhode Island continue this brutal exercise of self-flagellation in the Senate? What is he trying to accomplish? And does he really think that if Democrats were in power, things would be any different? That’s what we wanted to know, and what Emily asked him. So let’s hear from Senator Sheldon Whitehouse. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit heated.world/subscribe [https://heated.world/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

4. kesä 202630 min
jakson Why Kate Marvel left NASA kansikuva

Why Kate Marvel left NASA

This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit heated.world [https://heated.world?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_7] Kate Marvel spent more than a decade at NASA studying the future of life on Earth. Then the Trump administration made that job feel impossible. Marvel, a prominent climate scientist, resigned from NASA last month amid the Trump administration’s sweeping attacks on federal science. Since Trump’s second term started, more than 10,000 federal employees with STEM Ph.D.s have left the government—mostly through layoffs, firings and buyouts—and more than 7,800 research grants were terminated or frozen. In her resignation letter—a masterclass in principled dissent [https://grist.nyc3.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/docs/kate-marvel-resignation-letter.pdf]—Marvel wrote that she never expected to voluntarily leave her dream job. However, she wrote, "I’m leaving because I want to tell the truth." In our conversation today, Marvel tells the truth about what’s happening to federal science under the Trump administration. We talk about the work she was doing at NASA before Trump, and why the administration would want to make that work difficult to accomplish. We also talk about one side-effect of Trump’s attack on science that no one is talking about: The loss of nerd culture, and why that culture is important to democracy. Then, for paid subscribers, we keep going into one of the most controversial questions in climate science: geoengineering. We talk about what it means to study technologies that could intentionally alter the climate system, and why the collapse of trusted public science makes those future decisions even more dangerous. We also get into our feelings about the state of federal science, and the strategies we’re deploying to not just cope, but fight back.

28. touko 202629 min
jakson Hantavirus is a climate story kansikuva

Hantavirus is a climate story

What is coming when it comes to hantaviruses and climate change? How are they connected? And how could the rapidly approaching Super El Nino [https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/climate-change/once-in-a-century-super-el-nino-in-the-cards-as-ocean-temperatures-reach-near-record-highs-in-april]—a phenomenon worsened by climate change—affect the spread of hantavirus and other infectious diseases? That’s what we’re going to explore today. Special thanks to Drs. Kirk Osmond Douglas [https://sciprofiles.com/profile/1560636], James Shepherd [https://medicine.yale.edu/profile/james-shepherd/], and Angel Desai [https://health.ucdavis.edu/internal-medicine/team/42806/angel-desai-infectious-diseases-sacramento-sacramento] for sharing their expertise that informed this story. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit heated.world/subscribe [https://heated.world/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

14. touko 202614 min