Monthly Archives : September 2011

The Monktopus vs the Lucianator

So what’s this about? All that damn math hurts my eyes. Can someone take pity on my meager mental powers and boil this battle down to a nice soundbite? (As for my headline, partial credit goes to the inscrutable Mosher.) I’m interested in hearing the significance of this smackdown. Can you make it pithy? Does it…Continue Reading…

The Climate Funny Bone

At the Yale Forum on Climate Change & the Media, I survey the landscape beyond mind-deadening gloom and doom.

Ecocide on the Docket

So the idea here is to make the burning of fossil fuels equivalent to genocide, which means the  CEO’s of oil & gas companies would be the equivalent to war criminals. Some UK group I never heard of is behind this. They will succeed in generating headlines. And bringing scorn to their cause.

How Low Will Ken Green Go?

Ken Green, the conservative AEI scholar who has been sparring with liberal science writer Chris Mooney over which political party is more anti-science, keeps digging himself a bigger hole. Yesterday, I called attention to the loaded language Green used to describe his political opponents. I also wasn’t very impressed with his sourcing. Via Twitter, Green…Continue Reading…

An Elegy for Greece

There is nobody I know in journalism who is more modest than Joanna Kakassis, who I got to know several years ago when we were both fellows at the University of Colorado, in Boulder. Since then, Joanna has been filing incredible stories from around the world, including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and her native Greece. Joanna’s latest…Continue Reading…

When the Ideologue Gets Ugly and Shrill

You are what you eat, and you are what you say. Or put another way, the kind of person you are is revealed by the language and terms you use to characterize those whose politics or policies you disagree with. Ken Green tells me everything I need to know about him here, of which this…Continue Reading…

Science Journo Transformation Underway

A media scholar surveys an emerging science journalism trend: The dominant way of thinking about the role of science journalists historically was to view them as translators, or transmitters, of information. Now, however, a powerful metaphor for understanding their work as science critics is to see them as cartographers and guides, mapping scientific knowledge for readers, showing…Continue Reading…

Wedges: The Sequel

In his 2010 book, The Climate Fix, Roger Pielke Jr. writes: The view that decarbonization of the global economy is a political problem and not a technological problem has been strongly influenced by a 2004 analysis by two Princeton researchers, Stephen Pacala and Robert Socolow, that was published in Science. The analysis is often referred…Continue Reading…

Eco-Metaphors

They capture our imagination. They help frame public discourse on important issues. Just one problem: some of our most famous eco-metaphors have not held up to the test of time. At the Yale Forum on Climate Change & the Media, I suggest that some of the more popular ones stick around past their expiration date. Have…Continue Reading…

About That Anti-Climate Change Spike in the U.S.

On Sunday, a longish AP article appeared, with this headline: The American ‘allergy’ to global warming: Why? The reporter, Charles Hanley, takes stock of the hardening U.S. attitudes on climate change, including the sharp divergence between Democrats and Republicans. But Hanley seems to conflate the reasons for this state of affairs. Charlie Petit at The…Continue Reading…