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Time magazine names me one of the "Heroes of the Environment 2009″ Posted: 27 Sep 2009 08:15 AM PDT
I don't know what's more suprising. That Time named me one of its "Heroes of the Environment 2009" — I certainly don't see myself as a hero. Or that they gave the assignment to Bryan Walsh, given my earlier critique of one of his pieces — and he still wrote such a generous profile, which continues:
Indeed, it does (see "Why I blog"). Walsh is a good reporter, as evidenced by his 2008 cover story, "How to Win the War on Global Warming," which I thought was first rate. [Note: If anyone has come here because of the Time story, be sure to read "An Introduction to Climate Progress."] Time sent a great photographer, Jordan Hollender, who took a lot of photos. I might try to post some of the others. I'm a little surprised this is the one they used but I certainly do sometimes blog with my daughter on my lap. And she certainly is a great motivation for me to fight to preserve a livable climate for the next generation. One final comment on the subject of heroes. When your father is a newspaper editor and your mother is also a journalist and your older brother collects comic books, it's hard not to see journalists as heroes. Clark Kent, of course, was (is?) a mild-mannered reporter for a great metropolitan newspaper. Peter Parker was a newspaper photographer. Journalists were secret heroes. With Woodward and Bernstein and All The President's Men, real journalists themselves became movie heroes to my generation. But now, a great many journalists have become part of the establishment, like Woodward himself, defenders of the status quo, like David Broder, stenographer of those centrists who are fatally uninformed about global warming. Certainly I have the greatest respect for Time magazine, which continues to do the best science-based global warming coverage of any major national magazine (see "Time: How climate change is causing a new age of extinction"). So this means a lot coming from them, though it is ironic that I am being recognized in part for taking on the media itself, for being in some sense an anti-journalist, like Jon Stewart. Let me end with Time's framing of this issue:
We can all make a difference. Indeed, we must. |
World exclusive* video premier: Simulating and stimulating climate hope Posted: 26 Sep 2009 11:57 AM PDT If you want a stirring stemwinder on climate action, here it is. The speaker is my good friend Drew Jones, coauthor of this guest blog post ("Only the most ambitious emissions reductions under discussion within UNFCCC can achieve climate goals"). As you'll see, Drew took to heart my earlier "Advice to a young climate blogger [and public speaker]: Always use WWII metaphors. *Technically, this can't be the world premiere since the video is online. But Drew has withheld posting it anywhere else so this is the official non-YouTube world premiere. I'm not quite as optimistic as Drew is in this talk, but more good news keeps coming from key countries like China, India, and Japan. I am going to launch a multipart series on this important topic this week. For more of Drew's work, click here. |
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