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Talk Earthy To Me

Podcast de Isabelle Frazier

inglés

Tecnología y ciencia

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Talk Earthy to Me is a bold, engaging podcast that brings clarity, curiosity, and a touch of sarcasm to the climate conversation. Hosted by environmentalist Isabelle, each episode breaks down complex issues—like wildfires, food systems, and fast fashion—into accessible, actionable insights. No guilt, no jargon—just honest dialogue, real solutions, and a fresh take on how we can live lighter on the planet without losing ourselves in the process.

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39 episodios

episode On the List: The Endangered Species Act artwork

On the List: The Endangered Species Act

You scrolled past the headline. So did I. But when I finally stopped to understand what the Endangered Species Act actually does — and what's quietly changing right now — I couldn't look away. This episode breaks down the ESA from the ground up: how the listing process works, why critical habitat designation is the law's most powerful tool, what recent rule changes have scientists genuinely alarmed, and what a 99% survival rate for listed species actually tells us. This one will change how you read wildlife headlines.  Works Cited Corn, M. Lynne, Kristina Alexander, and Betsy A. Cody. Endangered Species Act (ESA): The Exemption Process. Congressional Research Service, Report No. R40787, updated 2017. Defenders of Wildlife, Center for Conservation Innovation. "Overexploitation and Endangered Species." Defenders-CCI, n.d. (Fact sheet — cited twice in your list; appears once here) Demuth, Bathsheba. Floating Coast: An Environmental History of the Bering Strait. W. W. Norton & Company, 2019. "Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants: Regulations for Designating Critical Habitat." Federal Register, vol. 90, no. 225, 21 Nov. 2025. IUCN. "Conservation Successes Overshadowed by More Species Declines — IUCN Red List Update." IUCN, n.d. IUCN. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN, n.d. Kareiva, Peter, et al. "Observed Impacts of Climate Change on Species' Range Shifts." Biological Conservation, vol. 190, 2015, pp. 1–9.  Marine Mammal Commission. The Effects of Noise on Marine Mammals. MMC, n.d. National Zoological Park, Smithsonian Institution. "Black-Footed Ferrets: Top Milestones for a Species Once Presumed Extinct." NationalZoo.si.edu, n.d. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries. "Endangered Species Conservation." Fisheries.NOAA.gov, NOAA, n.d. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries. "Section 7 Types of Endangered Species Act Consultations: Greater Atlantic Region." Fisheries.NOAA.gov, NOAA, n.d. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries. Technical Memorandum: Guidance v3.0. NOAA, Oct. 2024. Nature Conservancy, The. "Flint Hills Initiative." Nature.org, The Nature Conservancy, n.d. Oregon Wild. Climate Change and Oregon's Wildlands: A Global Warming Report. Oregon Wild, 2024. Phys.org. "Climate a Growing Threat to Imperiled Species, Study Finds." Phys.org, Apr. 2025. Thomas, Chris D., et al. "Extinction Risk from Climate Change." PMC / Nature, 2004.  United States Department of the Interior. "America's Bald Eagle Population Continues to Soar." DOI.gov, n.d. United States Environmental Protection Agency. "DDT: A Brief History and Status." EPA.gov, EPA, n.d. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. "Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus)." FWS.gov, USFWS, n.d. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. "California Condor Recovery Program." FWS.gov, USFWS, n.d. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Endangered Species Act Basics. USFWS, Feb. 2023. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Endangered Species Act Consultation Handbook. USFWS, n.d. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. "ESA Section 7 Consultation." FWS.gov, USFWS, n.d. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. "Recovery Planning: 3-Part Recovery Planning Framework." FWS.gov, USFWS, n.d. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. "Section 4: Listing and Recovery." FWS.gov, USFWS, n.d. United States Government Publishing Office. "Endangered Species Act — 50th Anniversary." GovInfo.gov, GPO, n.d. United States Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service. The Endangered Species Act: Overview and Implementation. Report No. R46677, updated 2021. Wildlife Society, The. "Endangered Species Rules Rollback to 2019." Wildlife.org, The Wildlife Society, n.d. World Wildlife Fund. "Habitat Loss and Degradation." WWF Panda, WWF, n.d. Zipkin, Elise F., et al. "Impacts of Overexploitation on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services." (PMC9796953) PLOS ONE / Conservation Biology, 2022–2023.

18 de may de 2026 - 32 min
episode The Clock is Ticking artwork

The Clock is Ticking

Utah is at a crossroads — and the deadline is June 2nd. Isabelle sits down with the people behind the Utah Renewable Communities Program (also called the Community Clean Energy Program) to break down what it is, why it matters, and why the next few weeks are critical. From Rocky Mountain Power's fossil fuel dependency to the lowest snowpack ever recorded in Utah's history, the stakes are real — and local. We're talking about what this program actually means for your energy bill, your community, and your mountains. If you live in one of the 19 eligible communities — including Park City, Oakley, Coalville, Ogden, and Salt Lake County — this one's for you. Action links & public comments→ linktr.ee/URCadoption Sources: Miranda, Luis. "Utah Renewable Communities Program." Sierra Club Utah, Sierra Club, sierraclub.org/utah. "Utah Renewable Communities Program." Utah Renewable Communities, utahrenewablecommunities.org. "HEAL Utah." HEAL Utah, healutah.org. "Stewardship Utah." Stewardship Utah, stewardshiputah.org. "URC Adoption Action Toolkit." Linktree, linktr.ee/URCadoption. "Summit County Votes to Join Clean Energy Program." TownLift, Apr. 2026. (Add the direct article URL from TownLift's site.) "Community Renewable Energy Act." Utah State Legislature, 2019. (Find the bill text at le.utah.gov and add the direct link.)

11 de may de 2026 - 38 min
episode Free Living Made Easy (ft. Dana Grinnell) artwork

Free Living Made Easy (ft. Dana Grinnell)

We were sold a toxic life. Today, we're talking about taking it back. This episode covers the science behind everyday chemical exposure — what's in your skincare, your cleaning products, and your household dust — and why "clean" on a label doesn't mean what you think it does. Then you get to meet Talk Eathy To Me's first interview guest, Dana Grinnell, founder of Free Living Co., who built Park City's most trusted non-toxic product store. She is here to tell you the truth: you cannot trust the labels — but that doesn't mean living toxic-free has to be hard. She breaks down the everyday chemical exposures hiding in your favorite products and shows us how clean living can actually be simpler than we've been led to believe. If you are interested in upgrading to vetted non-toxic products, visit: www.freelivingco.co Cited Sources Bozza, Annalisa, et al. "Current Regulatory and Market Frameworks in Green Cosmetics: The Role of Certification." ScienceDirect, vol. 113, 2022. Cropper, Maureen, et al. "The Benefits of Removing Toxic Chemicals from Plastics." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 121, no. 52, 16 Dec. 2024. Endocrine Society. "What EDCs Are: Common EDCs." Endocrine.org, Endocrine Society, n.d. Genuis, Stephen J., et al. "Human Excretion of Bisphenol A: Blood, Urine, and Sweat (BUS) Study." Journal of Environmental and Public Health, vol. 2012, 2012, article 185731. Genuis, Stephen J., et al. "Blood, Urine, and Sweat (BUS) Study: Monitoring and Elimination of Bioaccumulated Toxic Elements." Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, vol. 61, no. 2, 2011, pp. 344–357. Hook, Joshua N., et al. "Minimalism, Voluntary Simplicity, and Well-Being: A Systematic Review of the Empirical Literature." The Journal of Positive Psychology, vol. 18, no. 1, 25 Oct. 2021. Hook, Joshua N. "Why Money Can't Buy Happiness." JoshuaNHook.com, 1 May 2016. Kasser, Tim. "What Psychology Says About Materialism and the Holidays." American Psychological Association, APA, 16 Dec. 2014. Low Dog, Tieraona. DrLowDog.com. Tieraona Low Dog, MD, n.d. Low Dog, Tieraona. Works by Tieraona Low Dog. ThriftBooks.com, ThriftBooks, n.d. Mitro, Susanna D., et al. "Consumer Product Chemicals in Indoor Dust: A Quantitative Meta-Analysis of U.S. Studies." Environmental Science & Technology, vol. 50, no. 19, 4 Oct. 2016, pp. 10661–10672. Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP. "Greenwashing Claims on the Rise: Avoiding Dirty Laundry." QuinnEmanuel.com, Quinn Emanuel, n.d. Srisathan, Wutthiya, and Naruetharadhol. "Perceived Greenwashing and Its Impact on Consumer Behavior in the Cosmetic Industry." Cleaner and Responsible Consumption, vol. 16, 2025. Trasande, Leonardo, et al. "Chemicals Used in Plastic Materials: An Estimate of the Attributable Disease Burden and Costs in the United States." Journal of the Endocrine Society, vol. 8, no. 2, 11 Jan. 2024. United States Environmental Protection Agency. "Overview of Endocrine Disruption." EPA.gov, EPA, n.d. United States Environmental Protection Agency. "Volatile Organic Compounds' Impact on Indoor Air Quality." EPA.gov, EPA, n.d. United States Food and Drug Administration. "Cosmetics Safety Q&A: Prohibited Ingredients." FDA.gov, FDA, n.d. United States National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. "Endocrine Disruptors." NIEHS.gov, NIH, July 2024. World Economic Forum. "Sustainable Resource Consumption Is Urgent, Says the UN." WEForum.org, World Economic Forum, Mar. 2024. Zimmermann, Laura, et al. "Are We Speaking the Same Language? Recommendations for a Definition and Categorization Framework for Plastic Debris." Environmental Science & Technology, 2020.

4 de may de 2026 - 1 h 10 min
episode One Thing Led to Another: The Hidden Chain Reactions of Disasters artwork

One Thing Led to Another: The Hidden Chain Reactions of Disasters

I've spent a lot of time on natural disasters. This will be our final deep dive, and then I will leave disasters out of your feed for a while. Although I've been sharing a lot about the issues, I have a reason for doing an extensive breakdown of each system. It was to truly show you and prove that we can feel climate change and this climate crisis very differently depending on where we are in this world. So please never forget these disasters are trying to tell us something important, and now it’s our turn to listen. So tune into this week's episode on cascading disasters! Cited Sources "A California Town Wiped Off the Map by Wildfire Is Still Recovering, Five Years On." NPR, 8 Nov. 2023. "After Fire, Rain: Wildfire Burn Scars Can Trigger Deadly Debris Flows." PreventionWeb. Alexander, David, and Gianluca Pescaroli. "What Are Cascading Disasters?" UCL Open Environment, 8 Aug. 2019. "As the Horn of Africa Drought Enters a Sixth Failed Rainy Season, UNHCR Calls for Urgent Assistance." UNHCR, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. "Climate Change and Displacement." UNHCR. "Climate Change Could Force 216 Million People to Migrate Within Their Own Countries by 2050." The World Bank, 13 Sept. 2021. "Deadly Debris Flows in Montecito." NASA Earth Observatory, NASA. "Evacuations Were Botched During the Deadliest Fire in California History. Here's What One Local Sheriff Learned." Los Angeles Times, 25 Feb. 2025. "The Benefit-Cost Analysis Toolkit." Federal Emergency Management Agency. "FEMA Mitigation Saves: 2018 Fact Sheet." Federal Emergency Management Agency, 2018. Fire in Paradise. Directed by Ramona Diaz and Elivia Melodia, WGBH/Frontline, PBS, 2019. "From Billions to Trillions: Flagship UN Report Reveals True Cost of Disasters and How to Reduce Them." UNDRR, 28 May 2025. Global Climate Risk Index 2022. Germanwatch, 2022. Global Hunger Index 2022. Welthungerhilfe and Concern Worldwide, 2022. "Heavy Rains Hit Drought-Stricken Horn of Africa." NASA Earth Observatory, NASA. "Horn of Africa Drought Explained." Concern USA. "Infrastructure: The Hidden Architecture of Disaster." Phys.org, Jan. 2026. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Sixth Assessment Report, Working Group II: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. IPCC, 2022. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate, Chapter 6. IPCC, 2019. "Is Climate Change Increasing the Risk of Disasters?" World Wildlife Fund. Mahul, Olivier, et al. "Pakistan Flood Damages and Economic Losses Over USD 30 Billion and Reconstruction Needs Over USD 16 Billion." The World Bank, 28 Oct. 2022. "Montecito Mudslides: Two Years Later." California Governor's Office of Emergency Services, 2020. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Compound Effects of Floods and Earthquakes, Chapter 3. National Academies Press. "National Climate Assessments." Southeast Climate Adaptation Science Center, NC State University, 14 July 2025. "New Study Finds That 43,000 'Excess Deaths' May Have Occurred in 2022 from the Drought in Somalia." UNICEF, 20 Mar. 2023. Oliver, Thomas H., et al. "Cascading Hazards and Compound Disasters." npj Natural Hazards, Nature Portfolio, 9 Feb. 2026. "Soil Health." Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Department of Agriculture. "Somalia's Humanitarian Crisis Worsening: 6.5 Million People Facing High Levels of Hunger." United Nations Somalia, 2023. Tanoue, Masahiro, et al. "Estimation of Direct and Indirect Economic Losses Caused by a Flood With Long-Lasting Inundation: Application to the 2011 Thailand Flood." Water Resources Research, vol. 56, no. 5, 2020. "Water-Smart Green Roofs and Plazas Are Helping Rotterdam Adapt to Climate Change." Global Center on Adaptation. "Why Are Wetlands Important?" United States Environmental Protection Agency.

27 de abr de 2026 - 35 min
episode How Earth Day Got Its Start artwork

How Earth Day Got Its Start

Okay, quick confession… I’ve celebrated Earth Day for most of my life—picked up trash, planted something, posted something green, and yes… collected more tote bags than I can justify. But here’s the thing: until recently, I couldn’t have told you a single real fact about where Earth Day came from, who started it, or what it was actually meant to do. I just knew the date. April 22nd. And the vibes. In this episode, we’re digging into the real story behind Earth Day—how it started, what it stood for, and how it somehow turned into what it is today. Because if we’re going to celebrate the planet… we should probably know what we’re celebrating. Works Cited Adler, Jonathan H. "The Fable of Federal Environmental Law." Case Western Reserve Law Review, 2002. "Benefits and Costs of the Clean Air Act 1990–2020: Second Prospective Study." United States Environmental Protection Agency, EPA. "The Canopy Project." EarthDay.org, Earth Day Network. "Clean Air Act: Evolution of the Clean Air Act." United States Environmental Protection Agency, EPA. "Corporations Co-Opt Earth Day." Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, IATP. Delmas, Magali A., and Vanessa Cuerel Burbano. "The Drivers of Greenwashing." California Management Review, vol. 54, no. 1, 2011. "Earth Day: A Growing Movement, 1970." National Archives and Records Administration, U.S. National Archives. "Earth Day 1990." EBSCO Research Starters, EBSCO. "Earth Day: 70 — What It Meant." United States Environmental Protection Agency, EPA Archive. "Earth Day: History." EarthDay.org, Earth Day Network. "Endangered Species Act." U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, USFWS. "Endangered Species Success Stories." The Nature Conservancy. "EPA History: Earth Day." United States Environmental Protection Agency, EPA. "Greenwashing: How Industries Lie to You." EarthDay.org, Earth Day Network. "History of the Clean Water Act." US Water Alliance. "45 Years After the Santa Barbara Oil Spill: Looking at a Historic Disaster Through Technology." NOAA Office of Response and Restoration, NOAA. "Gaylord Nelson Promotes the First Earth Day." United States Senate Historical Office, U.S. Senate. "Global Cleanup: Annual Impact Report." EarthDay.org, Earth Day Network, 2023. "The Origins of EPA." United States Environmental Protection Agency, EPA. "The Rio Conventions." United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, UNFCCC. Big Oil's Agenda on Climate Change 2022. InfluenceMap, 2022. The State of Net Zero Greenwash. InfluenceMap. Nelson, Gaylord. EPA Oral History Interview. United States Environmental Protection Agency, 1993. Pirkle, James L., et al. "The Decline in Blood Lead Levels in the United States." JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, vol. 272, no. 4, 1994, pp. 284–291. "Senator Gaylord Nelson and the First Earth Day." NelsonEarthDay.net, Gaylord Nelson Earth Day Foundation. U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates, 1970. United States Census Bureau. "Anti-Vietnam War Teach-In at the University of Michigan." Zinn Education Project.

22 de abr de 2026 - 23 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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