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Climate Shifted
Two Hands Brands
8 episodes
3 weeks ago
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Social Sciences
Business,
Marketing,
Science
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All content for Climate Shifted is the property of Two Hands Brands 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.
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Social Sciences
Business,
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Science
Episodes (8/8)
Climate Shifted
When Data Dances: Matching Scientists with Artists for Stories That Connect with Neelambaree Prasad
In this episode of Climate Shifted, host Eva Frye speaks with Neelambaree Prasad, a pharmacologist and classical Indian dancer who refused to live a "split screen life." After becoming a mother during the pandemic and witnessing how climate change was the root cause of global health crises, Neelambaree co-founded ClimArts—a nonprofit that bridges the gap between climate scientists and artists to create stories that connect with both hearts and minds. From ancient Indian temples that served as centers of learning through dance and music, to modern collaborations featuring ballet dancers personifying coral bleaching and comedians tackling air pollution, Neelambaree shows us why the future of climate communication isn't just better science or better art—it's the magic that happens when research meets emotional resonance. Discover how to match scientific expertise with artistic expression, why "bounded imagination" keeps collaborations grounded, and the practical framework any organization can use to create climate stories that actually move audiences to action. Because when we combine data with dance, facts with feelings, we create something neither science nor art could achieve alone. FULL TRANSCRIPT LIVES HERE. Key Topics Covered The Art-Science Gap in Climate Communication Why technical climate messages push audiences away instead of drawing them in How scientists and artists struggle to find meeting spaces for collaboration The challenge of maintaining scientific accuracy while creating emotional connection Moving beyond "doom and gloom" to solution-oriented storytelling Ancient Wisdom for Modern Problems How Indian temples historically served as centers of learning through art The composite nature of classical Indian dance (music, theater, poetry, storytelling) Applying traditional frameworks to contemporary climate challenges The power of personification in connecting audiences to natural systems ClimArts' Collaborative Framework Building trust between scientists and artists through common goals The concept of "bounded imagination" to maintain scientific integrity Matching art forms to specific scientific messages and audiences Managing the collaboration process from initial meeting to final product Impact and Distribution Strategies Creating docu-films for maximum reach and accessibility Measuring both quantitative metrics and qualitative transformation stories The "train the trainer" approach to amplifying impact through existing storytellers Strategies for demonstrating value to funders in the arts-science space Standout Quotes "I always had this unrest in me about why my two worlds cannot converge." "The pandemic had its root cause in climate change... And that's how ClimArts began." "Science provides data and analysis and evidence while art accesses emotions and intuition, so together they create a more complete understanding of complex problems." "It's not science alone that can do it. Not just policy that can do it, but there needs to be a cultural transformation, and that is where art comes in to change the narratives." "We personified the river through our dance to convey that it's a sentient being." "You cannot do it alone. That's the one big learning—you have to join forces... Collaboration, collaboration, collaboration is my learning." "Who is this message for? No funder will accept the answer that my audience is the general public." Featured Resources & Organizations Neelambaree's Work: ClimArts.org - Nonprofit connecting climate scientists with artists ClimArts LinkedIn and Instagram Neelambaree's LinkedIn Resilient River - Dance piece about Indian rivers and flooding (featured on ClimArts website) Key Collaborations & Partners: Inside the Greenhouse, University of Colorado Boulder - Creative climate communication initiative led by Max Boykoff Energy Change Institute at Oxford - Low carbon community transition theater project English Youth Ballet - Coral bleaching ballet collabor
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3 weeks ago
32 minutes 17 seconds

Climate Shifted
The Power of Place-Based Storytelling: Imagining Climate Possibilities in Your Community with Autumn Leiker
In this episode of Climate Shifted, host Eva Frye speaks with Autumn Leiker, a designer and climate artivist based in Santa Fe, New Mexico. While many climate stories are doom-and-gloom, Autumn decided to ask their community a different question: considering the realities of the climate crisis, what world do you actually want to live in? This simple but powerful question became Into the Unknown Together, a beautiful anthology of stories, recipes, and art from the people of New Mexico. This work is powerful because when we get out of the limiting fear mindset and into creative ideation, when we imagine the world we do want, we actually start to build it.  Autumn had never published a book or run a contest before—but they showed that any of us can create something meaningful in our own communities. Discover why listening matters more than telling, how stories are humanity's most powerful tool for creating change, and the practical steps any of us can take to inspire climate imagination in our own communities. Because when we tell new stories about our climate future, we imagine the pathways for living into them. FULL TRANSCRIPT HERE Key Topics Covered The Power of Place-Based, Community Storytelling Why stories are humanity's tool for creating change and new worlds How climate stories can move beyond apocalyptic doom to inspire imagination Making abstract climate issues personally relevant through place-based narratives The role of artists and storytellers as "new world midwives" Building Climate Imagination Moving from "what we don't want" to "what we do want" in climate futures Why utopian thinking isn't the goal—complex, realistic visions are Balancing grief and joy in climate work Processing the full spectrum of climate emotions through creative expression Community-Centered Approach How Autumn approached their project as an anthropologist and listener The importance of amplifying local voices rather than imposing outside ideas Creating space for diverse perspectives and first-time contributors Building projects that reflect the actual ecology and culture of a place Practical Project Building How to start a community storytelling project from scratch Navigating grants, outreach, and building without institutional backing The power of commissioning alongside open submissions Making projects accessible and beautiful to draw people in Standout Quotes "We are the storytelling animal... Everything is a story that someone has imagined, so the world that we're living in today and all the systems that we are living in, for better or worse, they are all something that someone imagined at some point." "When writers create new stories, they open up pathways that we can also live into... it is how we can create new worlds." "If we don't try to start imagining what we do want and then how to get there, then it's never going to happen." "Being on the right side of history doesn't necessarily mean we're going to make it... but I want to be on the right side of things, and I want to help others engage with that as well." "I so want more people to do this. Please take the idea, do whatever you want with it, change it, do it in your communities." Featured Resources Autumn's Project: Into the Unknown Together - Climate anthology for and by the people of New Mexico Autumn's Portfolio - Design and climate storytelling work Influences & Inspiration: Adrienne Maree Brown - Visionary fiction author and activist who inspired the project Jamie Figueroa's "Prophecies of Possibility" for Emergence Magazine Anonymous Was A Woman Environmental Art Grant - Funded the project Essential Reading Mentioned: Ursula K. Le Guin - Science fiction author who explored creating new worlds and systems Robin Wall Kimmerer - Blends science with indigenous wisdom (highly recommended in audiobook) David Abrams - "The Spell of the Sensuous" on animism and written language Norma Wong - Activist and community organizer Organizations & Colla
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1 month ago
33 minutes 58 seconds

Climate Shifted
From Anxiety to Action: How to Use Behavior Change Models in Climate with Melinda Briana Epler
In this episode of Climate Shifted, host Eva Frye speaks with Melinda Briana Epler, a TED Speaker and behavior change strategist who has worked on national programs with organizations like the American Hospital Association. Melinda is currently authoring a whitepaper on climate communication best practices called Our Moment is Now, out soon. Discover why fear-based climate messaging burns people out, how to move audiences up Maslow's hierarchy of needs to create lasting change, and why listening might be the most powerful tool in a climate communicator's toolkit. Learn practical frameworks for designing user journeys that meet people where they are and guide them toward sustained climate action over time.   Full Transcript Found Here Key Topics Covered The Psychology of Climate Motivation Why fear and guilt are unsustainable motivators for climate action How to use Maslow's hierarchy of needs in climate communications The importance of moving from fear-based messaging to love and joy Building identity-based climate action for lasting change Behavior Change Strategy The "trim tab" approach: finding small actions that create big impact Stages of change model: from unconcerned to maintaining action Meeting people where they are vs. where you want them to be Designing user journeys for long-term engagement Communication Tactics That Work The power of listening before speaking Why storytelling beats abstract messaging Building trust through community ambassadors Moving from individual awareness to policy change Bridging Political Divides Whether to engage dismissive audiences or focus on the converted Finding common ground across political differences Learning from bipartisan policy successes The role of trusted messengers in polarized times Standout Quotes "Often people want to just go right to the solution and jump into building awareness... But I would say you need to take a step back to really understand the problem that you're trying to solve." "Fear is a common emotion that can be evoked by climate communications... And it's not a sustainable emotion. That's why climate anxiety is on the rise." "If somebody identifies as somebody that takes climate action, they're much more open to taking other climate actions." "The number one role in communications I would say is listening. First really understanding where people are coming from." Featured Research & Resources Melinda's Climate Communication Research: Our Moment is Now: Best Practices in Climate Communication - Executive summary available now, full research paper coming soon Featured Interview: Nisha Anand on Bipartisan Climate Policy - CEO of Dream.org discusses building bridges across political divides Key Frameworks Mentioned: Stages of Change Model for behavior design Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs for motivation Yale's Six Americas climate audience segmentation Community-based social marketing approaches Organizations & People Mentioned Dream.org - Nisha Anand's organization focused on bipartisan policy change American Hospital Association - Partner on national energy efficiency program Nature Conservancy - Example of nonpartisan environmental approach Greenpeace - Contrasted as confrontational vs. collaborative approach Dr. Katherine Hayhoe - Climate scientist and communication expert Dr. Renee Lertzman - Environmental psychologist George Marshall - Author of "Don't Even Think About It" Brené Brown - Researcher on shame and vulnerability Juicy Bits: Key Takeaways for Climate Communicators Start with systems thinking - Find the "trim tab" - the smallest action that creates the biggest impact Listen first, speak second - Understanding where people are now is more important than where you want them to be Move beyond fear - Use fear only as an initial trigger, then transition to hope, love, and identity-based motivation Design for the long term - Create user journeys that move people through stages of change over time Find trusted messeng
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2 months ago
36 minutes 32 seconds

Climate Shifted
Art That Sculpts Communities: Xavier Cortada's Climate Social Practice
In this episode of Climate Shifted, host Eva Frye speaks with Xavier Cortada, a socially engaged environmental artist and Florida Artist Hall of Fame member. He creates participatory art projects transforming how communities understand and respond to the climate crisis.  Xavier shares how his "Underwater Homeowners Association" project used lawn signs showing home elevation levels to make sea level rise personally relevant to inland residents, how he strategically uses art to invite curiosity rather than confrontation, and how he builds coalitions with local institutions to create lasting policy change.  Learn how his approach to "social practice art" sculpts people instead of clay, makes topics personal to bypass political polarization, and discover how anyone can get started doing projects like this in your own communities. Transcript available here Key Topics Using "social practice art" to create community climate engagement Making abstract climate threats personally relevant through art Designing art experiences that invite curiosity rather than confrontation Building strategic partnerships with municipalities, schools, and nonprofits Creating platforms for civic engagement beyond awareness Moving from individual action to policy change Balancing different communication approaches for different audiences Starting with personal passion rather than waiting for permission Finding sustainable motivation through love rather than fear Quotes "Art allows you to see things differently, but it also allows you to behave differently. And you then model to those who aren't part of the process, how they too can do the same thing." - Xavier Cortada "My way in was the yard sign. What's this weird number doing in my neighbor's front yard? And then that curiosity allows you to understand that you have a vulnerability, that it's not someone else's problem, it's your problem." - Xavier Cortada "What I try to do is journey into this land called hope, and art gets us there." - Xavier Cortada "At the end of the day I'm not trying to change human behavior. I'm trying to change the policies that allow corporate interests to exploit people and to extract from our environment." - Xavier Cortada People & Organizations Mentioned Xavier Cortada - Socially engaged environmental artist and Florida Artist Hall of Fame member Underwater Homeowners Association - Community organization created through Cortada's art project Cortada Foundation - Organization founded to scale Cortada's climate art approach Natural Resources Defense Council - Environmental organization that partnered with Cortada on the Blake Plateau project Joseph Beuys - Pioneering social practice artist mentioned as an influence Notable Art Installations Discussed Underwater Homeowners Association: A participatory art project where residents displayed signs showing their home's elevation above sea level, transforming abstract sea level rise data into personal concerns about property values and flood insurance. Elevation Markers: Street paintings showing elevation levels at intersections throughout Miami, demonstrating how even areas miles inland were vulnerable to sea level rise. Park Elevation Sculptures: Vague concrete sculptures with QR codes in parks that, when scanned, revealed the park's elevation and sea level rise projections. Reclamation Project: An installation where mangrove seedlings were displayed in water-filled cups on retail storefronts throughout Miami Beach, revealing the area's history as a mangrove forest before development. JUICY BITS: Takeaways for Climate Communicators Believe in yourself: Understand that you have a voice and role in delivering the future you want. Combat imposter syndrome - if you doubt yourself, you've already lost. Believe in others: Recognize you can't create change alone. Value the unique perspectives and skills others bring and believe they too have a seat at the table. Don't give up: Persist even through difficult challeng
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3 months ago
35 minutes 21 seconds

Climate Shifted
Beyond Yell, Tell, Sell: Dr. Renee Lertzman on the Psychology of Climate Communication
In this episode of Climate Shifted, host Eva Frye speaks with Dr. Renee Lertzman, a pioneer in climate psychology who is transforming how we communicate about our planet's future. While most climate messaging bombards us with facts or terrifies us with doomsday scenarios, Renee's approach taps into something deeper: our human need to feel heard before we can change. Her groundbreaking work with Project Inside Out reveals why traditional "yelling, telling and selling" tactics fail so spectacularly with climate issues—they actually trigger defensiveness. Instead, Renee offers frameworks that help us become guides who create genuine dialogue rather than delivering monologues. Her approach is built on the same psychological techniques that help people overcome addiction—some of the most difficult behavior change imaginable. Whether you're an activist looking for new tools, a communicator hitting walls, or simply someone who cares and wants to share effectively, this conversation provides practical frameworks to transform how you engage with people about the climate crisis. Transcript available here Key Topics Moving beyond "yell, tell, sell" approaches to climate communication Using motivational interviewing techniques to create dialogue instead of defensiveness The importance of acknowledging anxiety, ambivalence, and aspiration Becoming a "guide" rather than an educator or cheerleader Addressing polarization through empathetic listening Creating sustainable activism campaigns that don't traumatize people Using attunement and relational approaches even for urgent campaigns Quotes "Your job is to draw out from others what their concerns are, values, volition for change, and it's actually massively more impactful and effective than what I call yell, tell, and sell." - Renee Lertzman "How to become a climate communication “guide”? The first step is to become very self-aware and with a lot of compassion, to go through a bit of an internal reflection on how am I showing up?" - Renee Lertzman "It was crystal clear that we needed to be bridging these worlds of psychological insight with, what does it mean to actually come to terms with climate issues as well as how did we get here?" - Renee Lertzman "It's very hard to do this work effectively unless you have a pretty high level of self-awareness." - Renee Lertzman "A really good guide also is tuned in to how people are doing. And so, it's always a matter of balancing the 'take action now' with, 'I get it. Maybe this is upsetting to you, but we need to take action anyway.'" - Renee Lertzman People & Organizations Mentioned Dr. Renee Lertzman - Climate psychologist and strategic advisor Project Inside Out - Resource platform for climate communication Alliance for Climate Education - Organization that worked with Renee on a video about how to talk about climate change Victor Frankl - Psychologist whose work Renee references Dan Siegel - Neuropsychologist mentioned for "name it to tame it" concept Barbara Ehrenreich - Author of "Nickel and Dimed" Van Jones - Activist mentioned for his ability to bridge divides Amy Edmondson - Harvard professor and expert on leadership development JUICY BITS: Takeaways for Climate Communicators Shift from educator to guide: Learn to create invitations for dialogue rather than lectures that trigger defensiveness. Practice the three A's: Acknowledge anxiety, ambivalence, and aspiration in your audience to create deeper connection. Use "Ask, Offer, Ask" (AOA): Start by asking about experience, offer information with permission, then ask for reflection. Create reflective pauses: Help people find the space between stimulus and response where change can happen. Practice "name it to tame it": Naming feelings reduces their charge and makes them more manageable. Call to Action Subscribe to Climate Shifted wherever you listen to podcasts Follow @climateshifted on all social media platforms Share this episode with friends interested in climate co
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3 months ago
35 minutes 23 seconds

Climate Shifted
Creating Climate Art That Goes Viral: Benjamin Von Wong’s Cultural Hacking Playbook
In this episode of Climate Shifted, host Eva Frye speaks with Benjamin Von Wong, an environmental artist and activist who creates large-scale art installations to make climate issues accessible to wider audiences. Benjamin shares how he uses familiar cultural metaphors to draw people into climate conversations, strategically places his art to influence decision-makers, and approaches climate work from love rather than duty. Learn how his installations like the four-story "Turn Off the Plastic Tap" sculpture and "Biodiversity Jenga" use recognizable concepts to make complex environmental issues instantly understandable, and discover his insights on creating sustainable activism practices that avoid burnout. Transcript available here Key Topics Using popular cultural metaphors to make climate issues more accessible Strategic placement of art installations to influence policy decisions Transitioning from duty-based climate work to love-based activism Creating large-scale art that requires no words to explain Building relationships instead of chasing social media algorithms Developing sustainable activism practices to avoid burnout Using art as a "top of funnel" to draw new people into climate conversations Quotes "I try to think of popular metaphors or popular cultural tropes that I can hijack." - Benjamin Von Wong "Coming at things from a place of love, it's almost like a privilege to be able to show up and to offer yourself in the fullest most complete way." - Benjamin Von Wong "My role is to simply provide a piece of art that is as universal as possible that any organization or even a company or a government, regardless of where they are on the journey, can find utility in what I'm creating." - Benjamin Von Wong "The ultimate goal of mine is to be able to constantly create work that requires no words to explain." - Benjamin Von Wong "As climate professionals, we spend a lot of time thinking about regeneration and sustainability for the outside world. I think we also need to put up a mirror every so often and think about how are we making our work and career path sustainable and regenerative." - Benjamin Von Wong People & Organizations Mentioned Benjamin Von Wong - Environmental artist and activist United Nations Environmental Assembly - Venue for the "Turn Off the Plastic Tap" installation Sir David Attenborough - Mentioned as an influential environmentalist Notable Art Installations Discussed Turn Off the Plastic Tap: A four-story tall sculpture resembling a faucet spewing plastic trash, installed at the United Nations Environmental Assembly where delegates were voting on plastic treaties. The installation gave physical form to the phrase "turning off the plastic tap" used in negotiations. Biodiversity Jenga: A two-and-a-half story tall Jenga tower where each block represents a different ecosystem, demonstrating how removing elements of biodiversity could lead to collapse. Created with 200 students who made 150 animal figures to populate the installation. Straw-pocalypse: An installation made of 168,000 plastic straws, illustrating what happens when we pour plastics into the ocean. Mermaid on Plastic Bottles: An installation featuring a mermaid on 10,000 plastic bottles to raise awareness about plastic pollution. JUICY BITS: Takeaways for Climate Communicators Make it irresistible: Create environmental messaging that invites curiosity instead of hitting people over the head with information. Approach climate work from love, not duty: When you connect with what you're protecting and approach climate work from love rather than obligation, activism becomes sustaining rather than draining. Use familiar metaphors: Leverage recognizable concepts (like Jenga) as shortcuts to make complex problems instantly understandable - the art should require no words to explain. Think ecosystem, not individual: Remember that your work is part of a broader ecosystem of solutions. Focus on the role you can play rather than t
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4 months ago
35 minutes 50 seconds

Climate Shifted
The Art of Climate Propaganda: Flipping the Script with Julie Mallat
In this episode of Climate Shifted, host Eva Frye speaks with Julie Mallat, founder of The Climate Propagandist. Julie shares how she studies propaganda and persuasion techniques to help climate advocates craft more compelling messages that stick and spread. Learn how big oil has weaponized propaganda for decades and how we can flip their tactics to drive climate action. Explore what makes messages stick, Michael Mann's 5Ds framework for understanding corporate delay tactics, and why hope might be the biggest threat to polluting industries. Transcript available here Key Topics How propaganda techniques can be used for positive climate communication The evolution of fossil fuel industry propaganda tactics Michael Mann's 5Ds framework to understand fossil fuel’s climate delay: Deflection, Delay, Division, Despair, and Doomism What makes messages stick and spread in the digital age How to measure impact in culture-based climate action Strategies for climate communicators to build effective campaigns Quotes "We're not just in a battle of science, we're in a battle of narratives." - Julie Mallat "Climate communication doesn't have to be boring or academic. It can be engaging, impactful. It can be easy to digest." - Julie Mallat "Hope is actually a direct threat to their agenda." - Julie Mallat People & Organizations Mentioned Julie Mallat - Founder of The Climate Propagandist  Michael Mann - Scientist who developed the 5Ds framework of climate delay tactics Adrienne Maree Brown - Author mentioned regarding pleasure activism Notable Ads & Campaigns Discussed Energy Transfer Hospital Ad: A controversial commercial showing a couple rushing to a hospital for childbirth, only to find it dark and empty, implying that ending fossil fuel use would lead to healthcare system failures. This exemplifies fear-based propaganda designed to convince the public that transitioning away from fossil fuels would be catastrophic. Watch here Parents for Future Campaign: An impactful campaign where British parents casually apologize for small daily mistakes before a mother looks at her baby and apologizes while climate disasters play out on TV. This campaign effectively leverages the "good ancestor frame," making people feel responsible for future generations.  Watch here Clean Creatives Campaign: Organization behind campaign calling out agencies working with fossil fuel clients. Read here JUICY BITS: Takeaways for Climate Communicators Think like a propagandist - Use the "stick and spread" method to craft narratives that both stick in people's minds and spread through populations. Use culture as a vehicle - Don't just inform people, but change what's considered normal to make sustainability mainstream. Be bold and subversive - The climate crisis is urgent, and communication tactics should reflect that urgency by challenging norms. Call to Action Subscribe to Climate Shifted wherever you listen to podcasts Follow @climateshifted and @thewclimatepropagandist on all social media platforms, and on Substack Share this episode with friends interested in climate communication
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5 months ago
28 minutes

Climate Shifted
Climate Shifted Trailer
Season 1 trailer of Climate Shifted, the podcast where psychologists, behavior designers, artivists & movement builders share how to shift perception for climate action. Featuring guests like Dr. Renee Lertzman, Xavier Cortada, Melinda Briana Epler, Autumn Leiker, Ben Von Wong, and more.
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5 months ago
2 minutes 30 seconds

Climate Shifted