What do pasta, polar bears, and the Pope have in common? They all show up in this episode about climate change. Peterson Toscano refuses to preach doom or guilt—instead, you’ll hear Jewish wisdom on acting fast in a crisis, Christian takes on food justice, and a Bronx guy who’s had it with polar bears. Also: coffee is under threat, so now you’re paying attention. And we end on a diesel-fumed bus ride through Quito, Ecuador, where the future smells like electricity.
Juicy Quotes
“The climate crisis calls our bluff about being individuals—we are interdependent, whether we like it or not.” —Joelle Novey
“We’re the first generation to live through the climate crisis—and the last generation that can do anything about it.” —Derek Weston
“Polar bears? They’re the raccoons of Alaska. Coffee going extinct? Now that’s the apocalypse.” —Tony Buffuzio
“Combustion cars will be remembered like typewriters—legacy tech we finally grew out of.” —Peterson Toscano
Guest Links
Joelle Novey – Interfaith Power & Light DC/MD/VA: http://www.ipldmv.org
National Interfaith Power & Light: https://interfaithpowerandlight.org
Derek Weston – Creation Justice Ministries: https://www.creationjustice.org
Derek Weston’s book (The Just Kitchen): https://broadleafbooks.com/products/the-just-kitchen
Food and Faith Podcast: https://www.foodandfaithpodcast.org
All content for Bubble and Squeak is the property of Peterson Toscano and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
What do pasta, polar bears, and the Pope have in common? They all show up in this episode about climate change. Peterson Toscano refuses to preach doom or guilt—instead, you’ll hear Jewish wisdom on acting fast in a crisis, Christian takes on food justice, and a Bronx guy who’s had it with polar bears. Also: coffee is under threat, so now you’re paying attention. And we end on a diesel-fumed bus ride through Quito, Ecuador, where the future smells like electricity.
Juicy Quotes
“The climate crisis calls our bluff about being individuals—we are interdependent, whether we like it or not.” —Joelle Novey
“We’re the first generation to live through the climate crisis—and the last generation that can do anything about it.” —Derek Weston
“Polar bears? They’re the raccoons of Alaska. Coffee going extinct? Now that’s the apocalypse.” —Tony Buffuzio
“Combustion cars will be remembered like typewriters—legacy tech we finally grew out of.” —Peterson Toscano
Guest Links
Joelle Novey – Interfaith Power & Light DC/MD/VA: http://www.ipldmv.org
National Interfaith Power & Light: https://interfaithpowerandlight.org
Derek Weston – Creation Justice Ministries: https://www.creationjustice.org
Derek Weston’s book (The Just Kitchen): https://broadleafbooks.com/products/the-just-kitchen
Food and Faith Podcast: https://www.foodandfaithpodcast.org
1. Performance artist George Ferrandi tells us about intimate work that has emerged in spite social distancing https://www.georgeferrandi.com
2. Four Voicemails from Peterson's Dad, Pete Toscano
3. A sound slice from an incomplete temple in Mexico
Bubble&Squeak is a podcast with uncanny sounds, funny interludes, and stories—most weird, many true. Created by Peterson Toscano. He mostly creates the show for himself, and his dad, Pete Toscano, who died in 2012
“The Bubble&Squeak theme song is Worthless. by The jellyrox from the album Bang and a whimper. You can find it on iTunes, Spotify, of wherever you listen to music.” You also heard Aurelian by S.A. Karl. and Our Waters by Isobel O’Conner. They are available at Epidemic Music.
George Ferrandi is an American artist whose work ranges in form and scale from a simple gesture–like leaning on someone on the subway, to a giant spectacle–like parading with hundreds of people through the streets of South Philly. Sculpture usually plays a role in her work, as does humor. It’s often a collaborative experiment in story-telling, with participants becoming performers in the narrative or even creating it.
George’s work has been presented at the International House of Japan in Tokyo, Abrons Arts Center and the Kitchen in New York, Cinders Gallery and Booklyn in Brooklyn, Brunnenpassage in Vienna, the MAC in Dallas, the Wexner Center in Columbus, the Harn Museum in Gainesville, Harvester Arts in Wichita, and Fleisher Art Memorial in Philadelphia. Her projects have been supported by the Franklin Furnace Fund, Brooklyn Arts Council, Mid Atlantic Arts Council, Kindle Projects and Pratt Institute. She was a Japan-US Friendship Commission Fellow, and her Jump!Star initiative in Kansas was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts "Our Town" Grant.
George was the founding director of Wayfarers Studio Program and of Cloud Seeding: Circus of the Performative Object. She currently publishes George’s Lovely Variety, a monthly newspaper of thoughts and drawings.
George's Lovely Variety is pulpy and wonderful subscription-based newspaper featuring legit science, Covid-era existentialism and cute animals. Jump!Star Constellates are collaborative dreamtanks for organizations and institutions interested in collectively imagining the future.
Visit: georgeferrandi.com jumpstar.love brooklynwayfarers.org
Peterson on Twitter @p2son
Bubble&Squeak on Instagram: @BubbleSqueaker
Logo design by Christine Bakke
Bubble&Squeak is part of the Rock Candy Network www.rockcandyrecordings.com
Learn more about Peterson at www.petersontoscano.com
Bubble and Squeak
What do pasta, polar bears, and the Pope have in common? They all show up in this episode about climate change. Peterson Toscano refuses to preach doom or guilt—instead, you’ll hear Jewish wisdom on acting fast in a crisis, Christian takes on food justice, and a Bronx guy who’s had it with polar bears. Also: coffee is under threat, so now you’re paying attention. And we end on a diesel-fumed bus ride through Quito, Ecuador, where the future smells like electricity.
Juicy Quotes
“The climate crisis calls our bluff about being individuals—we are interdependent, whether we like it or not.” —Joelle Novey
“We’re the first generation to live through the climate crisis—and the last generation that can do anything about it.” —Derek Weston
“Polar bears? They’re the raccoons of Alaska. Coffee going extinct? Now that’s the apocalypse.” —Tony Buffuzio
“Combustion cars will be remembered like typewriters—legacy tech we finally grew out of.” —Peterson Toscano
Guest Links
Joelle Novey – Interfaith Power & Light DC/MD/VA: http://www.ipldmv.org
National Interfaith Power & Light: https://interfaithpowerandlight.org
Derek Weston – Creation Justice Ministries: https://www.creationjustice.org
Derek Weston’s book (The Just Kitchen): https://broadleafbooks.com/products/the-just-kitchen
Food and Faith Podcast: https://www.foodandfaithpodcast.org