The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - How to Re-Make the Climate-Change Horror Movie as a Rom-Com
Episode Date: October 4, 2024Dirty lobster sex! Shirtless Glen Powell! Emily in Compost! Do we have your attention yet? If Hurricane Helene, a litany of facts and general guilt about global warming were enough, then we would've d...one something by now. Enter the climate culture war. Dr. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson — co-founder of Urban Ocean Lab, marine biologist and author of "What if We Get It Right?" — envisions the future of planet Earth as a group project for 8 billion people, in which we deploy solutions, not dystopianism. How close to paradise can we get? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Pablo Torre Finds Out. I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
How can we expect African elephants to effectively erect and artfully insert their 50 pound penises
in the conditions of chronic drought that we've created for them?
Right after this ad.
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I was taking my notes in the audience at the Brooklyn Museum at this big kickoff event for you and your new book.
And I looked back at it this morning, the morning after,
and I was like, lobster plus golden showers.
Can you explain why I'm not the perv for just unilaterally demanding
that we talk about this for a sec?
There is no better place to start this conversation.
So, Perrin Ireland is this incredible illustrator, writer,
but on Instagram, what she's known for is explaining
the sex lives of different species while hula hooping
in like graphic detail.
And like nature is freaky.
Today on Thirsty Science, the magical sea cucumber anus.
Sea cucumbers use their buttholes when they're reproducing
and they need more oxygen
because they're consuming a lot of energy,
they use their butthole to breathe.
When I was trying to put together this variety show,
I was like, I really need you to do
like a climate version of this.
Right, red dress, hula hoop.
Explain to us how climate change
is f***ing up the sex lives of other species and how it's our
job to address the climate crisis so they can just all f***ing piece.
Right, right.
How are we f***ing up their f***ing?
And exactly.
When a lady lobster is interested in a male lobster for reproductive purposes, she lingers
outside his den and urinates all over her out of her face.
If he's interested in the pheromones she's producing, she invites him inside.
She sheds her exoskeleton, offers him her tender flesh.
He clambers atop her, inseminates her, and they go their very separate ways.
But the Gulf of Maine, where these lobsters live live is warming 99% faster than most of the
world's oceans now, isn't it?
So Brooklyn, how do you expect lobsters to find love?
When lady lobsters are in deep channels further and further off the coast and male lobsters
are staying in the Gulf of Maine?
How shall the sacred ancient rite of the golden shower persist? This is not what I think people expect when they show up at an event
about the future of the climate.
Well, it was called Climate Variety Show and I take variety, like, very seriously.
How can we expect African elephants to effectively erect and artfully insert their 50 pound penises
in the conditions of chronic drought
that we've created for them.
You know, whatever motivates us to get it together
and act on climate, I'm here for it.
Yeah, for me it turned out, uh, an NC17,
as it was framed, climate event,
is right up the alley of Poblatory 5,000.
There we go. We got you in. [♪ music playing.
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All right. So it has been one hell of a week for the climate here on planet Earth.
Hurricane Helene just carved a terrifying 500-mile path from Florida's Gulf Coast up
to the Appalachian Mountains in Virginia and into the top of Tuesday's vice presidential
debate.
Let's turn now to Hurricane Helene. top of Tuesday's vice presidential debate. deadly because of the historic rainfall. Senator Vance, according to CBS News
polling, seven in ten Americans and more than 60% of Republicans under the age of
45 favor the US taking steps to try and reduce climate change. Senator, what
responsibility would the Trump administration have to try and reduce
the impact of climate change? I'll give you two minutes.
Sure, so first of all, let's start with the hurricane.
The reality of this kind of climate change discussion,
the hush tones, the appropriate seriousness,
and the futility is that we have all seen this movie before.
We have, and nothing's really changed.
And so what I wanted to do here was talk to an expert who believes that we absolutely
should take climate change seriously, but also take ourselves somewhat less so.
Dr. Ayanna Elizabeth Johnson was the co-host of the aforementioned Brooklyn Climate Variety
Show, the co-founder of the Urban Ocean Lab, a non-profit think tank, a marine biologist, a policy expert, and the author of the New New York Times bestseller,
What If We Get It Right? – Visions of Climate Futures.
But maybe most importantly, for our purposes, Ayanna is also that person that people tend
to approach while they're out late at a party, maybe a little
drunk with a burning question.
So it's like late at night at a party and people come up and they're like, so how are
we?
And I'm like, oh, oh, hi.
You've had a few drinks and now you're worried about the future of life on earth.
Yes.
And I'm just like, I don't know, are you going to help or not?
This is like the absolute curse of the group project, you know?
You can only carry so many people along with you on a group project.
And like eight billion humans, like no one can carry that, right?
I mean, we're pretty f***ed.
But we do still have this range of possible futures,
and wouldn't it be great to have one of the better ones?
And can we stop, please, pretending that it's this binary
between apocalypse and paradise?
Yes.
When did it become clear that the implicit guilt of reality
was not gonna be enough of a prod to action here?
Well, I mean, we've had the science on climate change
for decades, right?
So like, if the facts were enough,
if the sort of like guilt and concern were enough,
we would have dealt with this, right?
But to overcome the intense, you know,
lobbying power of the fossil fuel industry
and all the politicians they have in their pockets
and the banks that are financing it all, right?
We're going to need to win the culture war.
Culture war being the preferred terrain for climate science denialists. It raised a parallel
thought for me as somebody who covers sports and thinks about culture war because there
are only so many, I call them like, you know, big tents left in American life. Sports being
a monocultural one, the NFL, Taylor Swift, I talk about this stuff ad nauseam on the show.
It occurred to me that an even bigger tent is the actual planet.
Also, like, we shouldn't be fighting about this.
We should be collaborating about this, you know?
And I feel like it's only in the last decade or two that we've, this issue has become polarized.
So, so the vocabulary around all of this is also fascinating to me.
Because I try to be a student of when and how we are being spun by very clever people
who know maybe sometimes better than we like to admit how to communicate to a broad audience.
Yeah. who know maybe sometimes better than we like to admit how to communicate to a broad audience.
Yeah.
So even the choice of the word carbon footprint.
The term carbon footprint was actually a marketing campaign that Ogilvy PR firm did for BP.
Ogilvy was the PR company that came up with this campaign to basically say, let's put the blame on individuals
and call it your individual carbon footprint and say it's your responsibility to lower
it while we keep selling you this stuff.
Of course we should all be doing everything we can as individuals.
I don't want to diminish the importance of that.
But so many times we don't have the choices we need as individuals because these things
are things we don't have control over, right?
Like if you live in an apartment in New York City, you don't get to decide where your energy
comes from when you turn on the light switch.
Like this is a collective problem.
So this individualization of it all, instead of thinking about this as like a community,
societal challenge, I think is just like really slowed
us down.
Yeah, the acceptance of the terms of the debate in literal senses has slowed us down.
Again, I think of like the death tax versus the estate tax, this thing that Frank Luntz,
famous pollster helped Newt Gingrich realize. And when people challenge it, I have a simple question.
John, what triggers this tax?
What event triggers this tax when it's applied?
Your death.
Exactly.
And that ends the debate.
Frank Luntz also did the shift from global warming
to climate change.
I was going to ask you about that.
What did that do?
What are we, what should we be framing this as when it comes to those very terms?
So global warming as a term is accurate and climate change is also accurate,
but people are less scared of climate change because it just sounds like,
yeah, shit happens, you know, things change.
We're all changing. Change is good.
But yeah, I mean, that was the shift in that term
based on his, like, focus groups,
that we would have less societal pressure on government
to do something about it if we just called it change
instead of warming.
Right, right. It's a parallel again to, like, pro-life.
As, again, the default.. Like who's anti-life?
It's just amazing to me how effective it is when you have to speak the language
that someone else has set up for you.
I do clearly think constantly about word choice.
And I'm always kind of trying to find new and more welcoming ways to talk about this stuff.
So would be glad for any tips, any sports analogies
or metaphors I could maybe be deploying here.
Oh, that's a good task for me.
I'm really glad to have your help.
Yeah.
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So I love a metaphor.
Everybody who's ever listened to this show knows this.
It's kind of a weakness, honestly.
And it does occur to me that the Earth often feels like a team that is trading away all
of its draft picks, and effectively f***ing over its future, as if the world is ending
anyway.
We're basically the Win Now Phoenix Suns. over its future, as if the world is ending anyway.
We're basically the win now Phoenix Suns,
going all in on Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal,
and losing spectacularly, while, you know,
the actual sun is putting all of us on the hot seat,
as it were.
But there is also another way of seeing our future,
another relevant statistic, which
reading Ayanna's book first opened my eyes to.
Because as of today, about 75% of the infrastructure that's going to be in place here on Earth
in 2050 has yet to be built, meaning that we do still have a real chance to physically
construct a very different kind of home for
ourselves. That future has not yet been decided. We could make it something beautiful, something
artistically inspiring, instead of foregone and dystopian. But what we don't do nearly enough of
as a pop cultural exercise is even begin to imagine what that could look like.
One of the best examples we have in popular culture of climate futurism, of a society
in which we have just deployed the solutions that we have on renewable energy and conserving,
protecting nature and green buildings, etc. is Black Panther.
We are home.
Powered by vibranium, you have green buildings
and trolleys in the city.
Yeah, magnetic trains.
Yeah, you have lush green landscape with forests
and rolling green hills and, you know, herds of animals.
And then, like, wham, you're in the city.
There's no urban sprawl. There's no stupid suburbs, right? hills and, you know, herds of animals. And then like, wham, you're in the city.
There's no urban sprawl.
There's no stupid suburbs, right?
There's not a bunch of like twisty concrete highways.
It's gorgeous.
So how to market this, how to present it to people.
You mentioned already movies and film.
Um, and it, and by the way, it reminds me of a thing that I found out in your book,
which is that Adam McKay, excellent, of course, director of Don't Look Up and The Big Short and Anchorman, all this stuff.
What Adam says is that he is not allowed to talk about climate change at home.
Because you know, you don't want to be Debbie Downer.
And so if the movie guy is like, okay, time to figure out how to how to cinematically
present this stuff.
I think about the ways in which climate has been presented in Hollywood.
The day after tomorrow.
Which I remember watching Stoned in a movie theater.
And being like, oh they're doing the thing where they're anthropomorphizing the cold.
They're running away from the future in the most literalized way. They are presenting it in the most conventional, like, let's make climate into a monster.
And I feel like in your book, what you're talking about is, what about like rom-coms?
How can we expand beyond just the sci-fi horror movie version of this?
So Adam's film, Don't Look Up, I really liked it.
So I'm going to say this, not to critique him at all,
I'm really grateful for his contributions to this work, I adore him.
But because I think others who are listening may be able to relate to this,
that once you're first digging in and learning about climate change,
and you're learning all the terrifying possibilities and the trajectories that we're on,
it's so overwhelming, and you're like,
holy shit, do we even have a chance?
And one of the inflections out of that is a why bother?
And the other one is running around like,
oh my God, did you know about this?
Like we should all be freaking out about this, right?
I feel like when we start to get Hollywood involved in this more and more,
I mean, I don't think we need more documentaries.
I don't think that that's going to help.
But I would love more climate narratives in films,
and I just really hope they're not all apocalyptic
because it doesn't give us something to work towards or for,
or imagine being a part of and rolling up our sleeves on
and helping to make happen, or just part of, like,
the world we live, like, the context within which
all of these plots are unfolding, right?
So that's why I'm like, give me some climate rom-coms.
Like, give me the meat queued at the composting facility.
Or like...
Emily and compost. Emily and Paris, like give me the meat cute at the composting facility or like... Emily in compost.
Emily in Paris, like going to a city council meeting, seeing some incredibly hot Parisian
guy advocating for better bike lane design and being like, soon!
You know?
Like all this stuff is happening in the real world, right?
People are making decisions about how to, you know, whether and how and where to have kids
based on their concerns about climate change.
People are thinking about like what kinds of degrees
they want to pursue because they're thinking
about the kinds of future they're going to be
graduating into, right?
Like ignoring all of this, just ignoring reality.
And I feel like Hollywood's absolutely, you know, TV,
you know, scripted sitcoms, etc.
have really just had their heads in the sand on this.
Yeah, yeah.
It's hard to not accidentally pun every sort of conclusion here, but I'll continue to do
it by pointing out that yeah, politics, policy is often downstream from culture, from entertainment.
And so there's another part of your book where I was like, oh, this is a thing that I need to remember.
It's the Scully effect.
Approximately two-thirds of women in STEM
during this certain period in the last 20 years
cite Dana Scully from The X-Files
as the reason they got into STEM in the first place.
Right.
The idea of, I want to be that character
that I admire, think is cool, think is badass.
It was not motivated by an infomercial for science and technology.
Like Back to the Future 2 and all these ways in which our technology was inspired by film,
that our career choices can be inspired by film too,
and the kinds of solutions that we want to work on in society, right?
So Black Panther, I think, is potentially another example of that with the Shuri character,
who's like this brilliant young scientist, right, coming up with all these cool solutions.
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And then of course, I turn around and see that actress
who played that character in like a Shell oil ad or something.
Today I'm meeting four students who are involved in Shell Eco-Marathon.
They have to design and build ultra energy efficient vehicles. Today I'm meeting four students who are involved in Shell Eco-marathon.
They have to design and build ultra energy efficient vehicles.
I really want to understand what it takes to be involved in the STEM movement.
I call it a movement because I believe it's very powerful.
And I was like, homegirl, this is not helping.
Like, get the bag, but there must be a better way.
We were counting on you.
But now when you re-examine her doing that through what we've just discussed,
of course they are clever enough to see that territory in this battle.
But also they are just like putting in the money, right?
Like there's no money on the other side, right?
But the people who are most concerned about climate change,
even though they know how serious it is,
just like aren't investing with the speed
that we would want.
They're sitting on so much money
as if it's like the whole philanthropy thing, right?
Where it's like you have an endowment
and every year you spend like one to 5% of your endowment.
I'm like, if you really believe
That the future of life on this planet for humans in particular is as tenuous as you do
Then maybe pace yourselves slightly differently, you know, like what are you waiting for?
The purse strings. Yeah philanthropists government dollars and cents. Yeah, what are we what are we really talking about?
What what needs to happen there?
Well, we just stop funding the bad stuff and start really funding the good stuff
The thing that blows my mind is the US government is still subsidizing fossil fuels to the tune of millions of dollars a day
which is
wildly irrational and obviously counterproductive, instead of really investing
in this clean energy transition.
And banks are a big part of that, too.
The big banks are still funding the expansion
of the fossil fuel industry.
So it's one thing to blame the fossil fuel industry,
but then it's like the banks that are financing them.
And in the US, the top four banks, JP Morgan Chase,
Citibank, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America,
have, since we all agreed we should reduce emissions,
provided about $1.5 trillion of funding
to fossil fuel corporations.
I would argue that that is going in the wrong direction.
And we should put that money into clean energy.
And really just embrace clean energy and energy efficiency
and these different ways of getting around and appliances, et cetera, as upgrades.
Well, that's the thing.
Again, this language question of like, they're trying to take your gas stoves.
This being an abrogation of freedom.
Induction stoves are awesome.
They boil water so much faster.
You're not spewing literal toxins into your home
that cause asthma in kids and leading to very poor
indoor air quality, right?
You're breathing in natural gas in your house.
It's also dangerous in terms of combustibility.
Why would we do that unless we have better options now?
Right. If you want the new iPhone, why don't you want the new best version of a stove?
Also, electric cars accelerate much better than gas cars, actually.
Because less of the energy goes into combustion. It can all go into forward motion.
But can you get those sounds? Can you get an app?
You can, which I really don't want us to.
There are electric motorcycles now with fake muffler combustion sounds.
And I'm like, oh, the worst.
Can't we just leave that in the bass too?
So you're going to want to turn the volume all the way up. But I think it's important to mention that there is something that individuals can do
on the finance side.
If you're saving for your retirement or you're investing your money, please think about where
you're investing.
Because if you don't, if you're just in some general fund
for your 401k or your IRA or whatever,
even just your savings account,
odds are you're investing in the expansion of fossil fuels
because so many of these banks are investing
in the expansion of fossil fuels, right?
Your credit card company, if it's JPMorgan Chase
or Citi or Bank of America or Wells Fargo,
like that money is invested in fossil fuels.
You give it to them to hold, and then they put it out the door
and invest it so they can make profits, right,
and then give you back your piece of it.
And so I move my money, my retirement savings,
piddling though it may be, into a fund that's climate friendly.
And we could all do that.
It could do more good in reducing the harm you're
doing to the climate than all the eating plants and riding your bike could all do that. It could do more good in reducing the harm you're doing to the climate than all the eating plants
and riding your bike could possibly do,
because it's that bad to be financing
the expansion of fossil fuels.
So please, if you've got any money in the bank at all,
bankforgood.org has some options,
and greenportfolio.com on the investing side
that have a bunch of different options
you can look at.
But yeah, I mean, the money question, I think it's something like to reach our climate goals.
We'd need to be spending $4 trillion annually on climate solutions.
And let's be clear, there's like plenty of money in the world.
It's just a matter of how we're allocating that.
Right. Which trillions are going where?
And it's government and it's private, it's corporations, it's philanthropy. I mean,
there's a whole chapter in here about what corporations need to do to get it right that
I co-authored with Corley Kenna, who's the head of policy and comes at Patagonia where
I'm on the board. They're trying to get it right. And it's a significant outdoor apparel company,
but it's nothing like a Nike or an Adidas, right?
These big corporations that are shaping the whole market.
And so they can lead by example, but if no one follows them,
it doesn't really make that much of a difference.
So trying to evangelize and show that it can be profitable
to do the right thing.
Again, in that overlap, maybe there's a place for sports
to actually direct that monocultural funnel of money.
Absolutely, and there's some great people I know,
like working in places like Nike, trying to innovate
on the sustainability front.
I know some of them, I've collaborated with them, right?
But it's hard to shift a global supply chain like that.
I respect the challenge of it.
We've created this whole economy, supply chain, culture
based on fossil fuels.
And now we have to shift somehow very quickly
to a much more regenerative, renewable economy,
a clean energy world.
And we've never had to do that before as humans.
So we're just like making it up as we go along,
and I think we need to give each other some grace there, but also, you know.
Also, just do it.
That was good. I like that.
I'm a little slow on the sports jokes. Thank you. Three neurosurgeons, two scientists, one movement disorders coordinator, 58 answered questions, two focused ultrasound procedures, one specially developed helmet,
thousands of high intensity focused ultrasound waves, zero incisions, and that very same day,
two steady hands. From innovation to action, Sunnybrook is special. Learn more at sunnybrook.ca
Learn more at sonnybrook.ca slash special. There's another part of your work in this book and at that event, the Book of Museum,
that did also drive home the point of we got one shot at this.
I have been guilty of being enthralled by this initially, the idea of humanity being
a multi-planetary species.
Oh, yeah.
Mars. We should, in fact. Mars should be part of our approach here.
I mean, it's a cute idea, is how I would describe it.
But now, given your journey through this, how would you describe Earth and Mars in this context?
Yeah, we had this game show, Earth vs. Mars, with Roy Wood Jr. as the host, and Wyatt Sinak as, you know,
repping Mars, and Dr. Kate Marvel, NASA climate
scientist repping Earth.
Real name.
Welcome to Earth versus Mars, where we go toe to toe
to see which planet steals the show.
Some people say we need to go to Mars.
Some people say that Earth is where it's at.
We are going to find out whether or not
interplanetary gentrification is the right move. I think it was very clear that Earth is where it's at, we are gonna find out whether or not interplanetary gentrification is the right move.
I think it was very clear that Earth is the best planet at the outcome of that.
Dr. Marvel, I will start with you.
Make the argument for us staying on Earth and not gentrifying Mars based solely
on Earth's supply of food and water.
Drama music.
of food and water.
Drama music.
We have both of those things.
Sure, sure.
I rest my case.
Alright.
That is a fair point.
Yeah, there is no food or water on Mars at the moment.
Wyatt was really dealt a bad hand. Yeah, I mean, he knew when he was signing up for it.
Yeah, polling was.
I mean, we have an atmosphere where we can breathe.
We have 8 million other species.
We have this incredible biodiversity.
We have like a gorgeous ocean, right?
We have everyone we love here.
We have all this delicious food here.
The temperature, even with climate change,
is much better than any other planet.
We can actually just walk around outside
with normal amounts of clothing on
without a breathing apparatus or a spacesuit
and just hang out in fields of wildflowers and at the beach
and make art and go look at it.
And instead we're like, let's take rocket ships across the void
and like live in a weird container where the atmosphere is like not suitable for human life
and it's like a hundred degrees below zero.
Like why would that be an alternative to pursue?
Right. Let's get the people who are posting and consuming these videos on Twitter
about how New York City has become a hellscape.
Look at this. Look at how they just leave the garbage so full.
They would love going to the place where you would die within a month if you actually were.
I think it's just like such a distraction because we also like really need that ingenuity and those resources
spent on this planet solving the problems that exist here.
Because even if we find a way for some people to go live there,
like we've got eight billion humans on this planet.
Like we're not all going to Mars, right?
You know, it occurs to me also that your your job of marine biologist
Yeah, I don't actually like scuba diving count fish anymore. It's been a really long time
But I thought is but your origin story and as as as that it it's one of those jobs again
I'm we're both children of the 80s
It's one of those jobs, again, we're both children of the 80s. It's one of those jobs where you go around the classroom. And kids would say, I would like to be a marine biologist.
Total dream job for like elementary school kids.
And you are the only person I've ever met who became one.
I don't know what that says about me, just like, stubborn as hell or something.
It's just like, you find something cool and you're like, maybe I'll be that when I grow up.
But that was the first one.
And the one that like I kept coming back to
in different ways, but I made this,
I was, I could, because I would say very wise decision
to study abroad in Turks and Caicos.
I'm just gonna give myself a little credit there.
And so I just like spent a semester snorkeling,
hanging out with fishermen, like learning the Latin names I give a little credit there. And so I just spent a semester snorkeling,
hanging out with fishermen, like learning the Latin names
of all these Caribbean coral species.
And trying to understand what would sustainable fisheries
management actually look like.
And so it's just so amazing to get to have that
be part of my world and think about all the work
I did with fishermen on different islands in the Caribbean after my PhD research and for my PhD research, just really trying to understand the human
part of this, what people who spend their whole lives and have generations worth of
knowledge about what these things are supposed to look like, how these ecosystems are supposed
to work and how off balance they are.
They could, I mean, my favorite question to ask fishermen is if you could write the rules are supposed to work and how off balance they are.
My favorite question to ask fishermen
is if you could write the rules to manage fishing,
what would they be?
What were the things they would say?
Oh, all sorts of stuff that I would not
have anticipated because so often the blame gets put solely
on them for the decline in fish populations, right?
And I was guilty of this too.
But in reality, of course, there are many different factors,
climate change being one of them,
pollution being one of them.
They blame cruise ships and jet skis for all the noise
and pollution associated with that,
scaring fish into deeper waters or further offshore.
They're talking about big fishing boats
from other countries coming in with big nets. They're talking about tourists fishing boats from other countries coming in with big nets.
They're talking about tourists with tons of sunscreen on, just like slathered on right before they dump in the water.
And then you see like this iridescent sheen of like oil slick on the surface.
And they're like, the fish don't like that.
Right. So they're seeing all these different factors.
And then the one policy put in place is like we're gonna regulate fishing and they're like
Fuck off you guys like we didn't cause this by ourselves, right?
We're down to be regulated as part of the suite of solutions
But we're not down to be scapegoated as like the only problem here
It's not quite that we are solving the problem of climate change.
What instead are we trying to do?
We're trying to just create the best possible future, right?
In that spectrum of options that exist still, this perfect world as we imagine it with like
nothing changed, no pollution, that ship has sailed, right?
We also do not have to have complete apocalypse.
And so how close to paradise can we get, right?
I think it's so important to actually value those increments
because they are major.
It's not like a tiny, like the difference between,
you know, three degrees Fahrenheit of warming
and five degrees Fahrenheit of warming and five degrees Fahrenheit of warming
is a huge f***ing deal, right?
We're talking about major differences in sea level rise
and storms and droughts and wildfires
and heat waves associated with that.
We have the challenge of communicating about
both things that seem really, really, really big,
planetary and really, really small, like a tenth of a degree.
And how do those things match up?
And how do we communicate about them?
And my answer is, I usually avoid it
and just talk about the solutions.
Like, OK, so we know we're in this planetary pickle.
Where do we go from here?
Like, how do we each figure out our roles
and just do this building of the future together
instead of like just worrying all day
about worst case scenarios?
It reminds me of a larger problem that we always,
I think, are grappling with in politics and culture,
which is how do you make your self-interest feel immediate enough
to act upon?
And I should acknowledge that we are technically a sports show.
Yeah, let's talk about sports.
I'm ready.
If you're a sports fan, this is something that you want to go well,
the whole adapt to the climate future you're describing thing.
Because sports, we need the outdoors.
A lot of sports happen outside.
I mean, watching the Olympics this year,
I mean, Paris is not known for its heat waves,
but it is now a place that has heat waves, right?
And it was so hot during the Olympics,
like athletes were wearing ice-packed vests
before and after their events to just keep Olympics, like, athletes were wearing ice-packed vests
before and after their events to just keep their core body temperature
at a normal level, right?
Not ideal if you're the competitor to have to do that.
Crazy. And having to change literally the rules of the game
to give people longer breaks or more water breaks
because the human body is just not built for these kinds of climates like extreme exertion
in these temperatures and levels of humidity.
And on the winter Olympics side of things,
we're talking about very few places left
where you can reliably have winter Olympics quality snow.
I'm not trying to watch a winter Olympics
that takes place inside of a soundstage.
Yeah, not as cute.
No, no, no.
And I'm also not trying to watch a Summer Olympics where the river, the Seine,
is too dangerous for at least some of the competitors to want to actually compete in.
And I think about air pollution associated with that too, especially like the neighborhood I grew up in,
Fort Greene, didn't really used to have a lot of traffic. And now it's constant bumper to bumper traffic
going by all those ball courts. And I'm just thinking about people exerting themselves,
breathing all that in, all of that pollution, which is just burning fossil fuels, right?
And so there are lots of benefits to dealing with the climate crisis and
one of them is like we could just play more sports outside.
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So when it comes to the political choice at hand, I do want to make this immediate in
the context of this election.
Yeah.
In your mind, how compromised is Donald Trump when it comes to fossil fuel?
Just actually, I get that he's not your preferred candidate
nor mine, but how bad is it?
No, I mean, the reason that was my reaction
was because there's a very specific thing he's done
during this campaign season that shocked even me.
And I have very low expectations for that man, right?
So he literally said to fossil fuel executives, if you donate $1 billion to my campaign, I
will make sure that you get regulations lifted on your industry when I am back in the White
House and you will make like a
hundred billion dollars in return. He's selling federal policy to the highest
bidder, which is so disgusting and so dangerous, right? I mean the last time he
was in the White House, he rolled back the federal agencies he, you know, was in charge of,
rolled back over a hundred environmental regulations, clean air, clean water, safety
around fossil fuel extraction and practices, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill kind of stuff with the
valves. He's like, whatever, who needs safety valves? Like those kind of regulations were rolled back
Those kind of regulations were rolled back as well. Took the United States out of the UN climate agreement,
which is like, we don't want to participate
in this collective effort to address this crisis, right?
Appointed a literal fossil fuel executive
as the head of the State Department, right?
These are the kinds of things
that we can expect him to do again,
like when people show you who they are, believe them.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Rex Tillerson.
Rex Tillerson.
Why?
That's the dude.
He seems nice.
I mean, there's been an analysis of what could we expect as far as US greenhouse gas emission trajectories
if we have a re-election of Trump
versus if we have a Harris administration.
And it's diverging futures.
And it matters so much because the US is not anymore
the largest annual emitter of carbon pollution,
greenhouse gases, but it is the largest cumulative emitter
in world history.
We're responsible for something like a quarter of all greenhouse gas pollution, just the United States.
We are the Michael Jordan of emitting greenhouse gases.
This is the sports analogy I was hoping for. I finally, I'm going to be helpful to you.
Yes, thank you.
But like, and also a lot of other countries look to us to either meet the standards we are setting
or turn to us to say the U.S. isn't doing this, so why should we? So it actually really, really
matters how we show up on the world stage. And I'm just really worried about, yeah, what a Trump
administration would mean. And I also think Harris doesn't get nearly enough credit for her leadership on climate,
right? Spanning decades of her career. I mean, she has taken fossil fuel companies to court and
extracted many millions of dollars in damages from them for their malpractices. Established a climate
justice office when she was working in California was, you know, one of the original signatories to
the Green New Deal
back when that was initially introduced,
which was not immediately a popular thing to do,
and was the deciding vote on the Inflation Reduction Act,
which was signed two years ago and resulted
in like $370 billion invested in climate solutions
by the US government, really spurring something
like 170,000 new clean
energy jobs in the last two years because of that legislation, right?
But I do want to say that local elections also really, really matter in that climate
rom-com way.
Like, where are we having the meat queues at the community composting facilities if
we don't have city council members who are creating those, right?
And the like, the like, the cute side-eye glances in the bike lane
when you're stopped at the red light,
like, who is that hottie peddling next to me?
Like, if you have protected bike lanes.
Right, it happens to be local comptroller Glenn Powell,
who is shirtless and glistening with sweat
that can only be generated by someone who has been biking around
for a very long time.
I mean, I think there's a lot of fodder here for plots is all I'm saying.
You know, when it comes back around then to any sort of lesson here about how to message
this stuff.
Yes.
In terms of like what actually does work with the broad population.
What have you found out because the stuff that we've been trying
for decades clearly has not worked? Love for future generations. That is the
winning argument. I have to say I've been hearing people talk about this for a
long time, like use that messaging for so long, and as someone who knows that the
problem is here and now, I'm like why are we pretending this is a future thing?
And it was just one of those things where I was just like,
I don't know about all this mushy love stuff, you guys,
but it's like 12 times more effective
as a message in the polling.
It's an echo of what we had seen from the right wing
when it came to, you know, no child left behind.
When it came to, let's just hammer the idea that we are in favor of kids,
that we are the ones protecting the children.
And what it turns out is that, yeah, it's not fear versus hope,
it's love for the people who will actually inherit this thing.
And that's really a normal thing when you're exposed to nature
to just think it's cool. And so wanting to keep that around, whether that's really a normal thing when you're exposed to nature to just think it's cool.
And so wanting to keep that around, whether that's whales or elephants or lobsters or whatever,
just be like, wouldn't it be great to just not screw these other species over either?
Right, right.
Wouldn't it be great if this lobster could pee on another lobster in peace?
In peace and then just like have some hot sex and make more lobster.
But like not too hot.
Well, I was going to say.
Yeah.
I was going to say.
Hot sex, not hot ocean water.
Let me just be really clear about that.
Soft shell, temperate, not too hot water.
Yeah.
Dr. Ayanna Elizabeth Johnson, thank you for proposing a different way
to, you know, get it right.
Thank you for having me.
Pablo, let's do this thing.
["Pablo Tore Finds Out"]
Pablo Tore Finds Out is produced by Michael Antonucci, Walter Ravaroma, Ryan Cortez, Sam
Daywig, Juan Galindo, Patrick Kim, Nealey Lohman, Rob McCrae, Rachel Miller Howard,
Ethan Schreier, Carl Scott, Matt Sullivan, Chris Tuminello, and Juliet Warren.
Our studio engineering by RG Systems, our sound design by NGW Post, our theme song, as always, is by John Bravo,
and all of us will talk to you on Tuesday.