Earthbound
YOUR BRAIN IS THE ALGORITHM A conversation with David Beckemeyer We are a storytelling species. Long before we had data, we had narrative. But in a media environment engineered to trigger our most primitive threat responses, even the most compelling story struggles to find its audience. The amygdala doesn’t care about nuance. It cares about survival. So how do we talk about climate change to people who aren’t already in the room? David Beckemeyer has spent years studying that question, not from a climate angle, but from within the outrage machine itself. As host of Outrage Overload [https://outrageoverload.net/] and a researcher with the Connors Institute [https://www.ship.edu/academics/cas/sociology/conners-institute/], David brings together scientists, psychologists, and civic thinkers to examine why we get so worked up, and what we can actually do about it. In this conversation, we get into the psychology behind why facts so often fail to move people, even when the stakes couldn’t be higher. We talk about naive realism, the quiet assumption that because you’ve looked at the evidence and reached a conclusion, everyone else should too. We talk about solution aversion, how people unconsciously shift their position on a problem based on whether the proposed solutions feel ideologically threatening. And we talk about the movable middle, the people who aren’t loud, aren’t on your feed, but are out there, and listening. The conversation also moves into territory that surprised me. Deliberation versus debate, and why one almost never works. The role of storytelling in reaching people across tribal lines. And a genuinely hopeful data point from Texas, of all places, about what’s possible when people engage with trade-offs honestly rather than defensively. This is not a climate episode in the conventional sense. It’s a conversation about the human wiring that shapes every climate conversation we try to have. And if you’ve ever felt like you were talking and not being heard, I think you’ll find something useful here. In this episode: * Naive realism and why clarity isn’t enough * Solution aversion and the tribal brain * The movable middle: who they are and how to reach them * Deliberation versus debate * Storytelling as the path past the amygdala * Finding agency in an algorithmic media landscape * The Texas wind power story Links: * Outrage Overload: https://outrageoverload.netoutrageoverload.net [https://outrageoverload.net] * Earthbound listener survey [https://www.earthboundpodcast.com/survey/2026/] * Earthbound on the web: https://earthboundpodcast.comearthboundpodcast.com [http://earthboundpodcast.com] * GlobalWarmingisReal.com [https://globalwarmingisreal.com]
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