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In this special episode, Alex sits down with Jake Willers, TV presenter, award-winning filmmaker, and host of the Behind the Wild Lens podcast. From managing a wildlife park to capturing breathtaking footage for National Geographic and the BBC, Jake's journey is nothing short of wild. Ever wondered what it's like to film urban black bears or swim with dolphins and sharks? Jake's jaw-dropping stories will keep you on the edge of your seat! We'll dive into the world of ethical wildlife filmmaking, explore Jake's coolest projects, and discover how wildlife documentaries are making a real impact on our planet. So, grab your popcorn and get ready for some wildlife movie magic!For sources and more information, please visit our website.One Lagoon, One Voice: The Podcast Scientists, researchers, and community leaders discuss projects and progress in the IRL.Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify
The Master Wildlife Filmmaking Podcast is getting a much needed rebrand. The new name is 'BEHIND the WILD LENS'. Get a behind-the-scenes glimpse of what it takes to make your favorite natural history TV shows and landmark series from the camera people, producers, TV hosts, composers, editors and directors who make them. This is a sneak-peak into the lives of wildlife filmmaking professionals! SUBSCRIBE wherever you listen!
#87. (Português abaixo) Multi Emmy and Bafta award winning cinematographer, Toby Strong shows great passion for what he does. He has shot for BBC and National Geographic in incredible places such as the Arctic, Africa, Antarctica, the Amazon, just to mention a few. His credits include beautiful documentaries like "One Strange Rock", "Human Planet", “Planet Earth 2", the recently launched "Welcome to Earth", and the list goes on. For now, his goal is "to work on things that will make a difference". We chatted remotely, and I hope you like this truly inspiring episode. Please, don´t forget to subscribe and share it with anyone who may like it too. You can also watch the video of this episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/GqCYEna9CDc To know more about Toby Strong, please visit: https://www.tobystrong.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tobystrong1/ Check out Toby´s podcast "Through a Wild Lens": https://open.spotify.com/show/0Tmq02jB4rzEz7XkyRSszr?si=e5cc82d7864846f2 Support the show: https://anchor.fm/marina-guedes0/subscribe See you next Monday. Until then, fair winds! MERRY XMAS, EVERYONE! Cheers, Marina PORTUGUÊS: Cinegrafista e fotógrafo diversas vezes premiado, Toby Strong é apaixonado pelo seu trabalho. Ele já filmou em locais fantásticos como Ártico, África, Amazônia e Antártica, para citar alguns. Se você já assistiu a documentários de alto nível produzidos pela National Geographic e BBC - como "Planeta Humano" e "Planeta Terra 2", por exemplo - certamente conhece o talento do convidado deste bate-papo. Recentemente, o inglês também trabalhou na série "Bem-vindos à Terra", com Will Smith, lançada há poucos dias pela Disney+. Foi uma conversa emocionante, gravada de forma remota. Espero que você curta! Quer assistir ao vídeo deste episódio com legenda traduzida? Acesse o Maré Sonora pelo YouTube: https://youtu.be/GqCYEna9CDc Gostou do podcast e quer ajudar? É muito simples: você pode ser um apoiador ou apoiadora do Maré Sonora doando a quantia que puder, via transferência bancária, para nossa chave PIX: podcastmaresonora@gmail.com Para quem vive fora do Brasil, é possível apoiar através do link: https://anchor.fm/marina-guedes0/subscribe Fale comigo pelo site: https://www.podcastmaresonora.com/ Ou através do Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/podcastmaresonora/ FELIZ NATAL! Marina
Abrar Hassan is on the show! Abrar is a very experienced traveler who has been to over 65(!) countries! In 2020 Abrar did an incredible undertaking and drove on a motorcycle from his home in Germany to his home in Pakistan. In addition to just the trip itself, he made a FIFTY TWO part video series documenting the trip! After getting to Pakistan he travelled all across Pakistan too and the video series on that is releasing now! We talked to Abrar about how he got into travelling, the trip from Germany to Pakistan, about content-creation and much more! Check out the discussion and links to his stuff below! Things discussed in this episode: 1. 00:00 Intro 2. 03:21 How Abrar started travelling & got into content-creation 3. 08:34 Why he focuses on long-duration, low-budget trips 4. 12:53 Why he wanted to do a trip on a motorbike 5. 16:37 His initial plan and how the pandemic affected it 6. 23:08 Talking about the camera gear and bike-related planning 7. 29:45 Highlights of his trip from Germany to Pakistan! 8. 37:04 Difficult & scary situations on a motorcycle! 9. 43:47 Managing content creation on such a busy & lengthy trip 10. 52:48 Junejo Queries - trip priorities & data management 11. 55:46 Any discrimination along the way? 12. 58:50 Lessons learned, plans for future trips, & YouTube plans! 13. 1:04:15 RHS questions - pandemic impact, security worries, entering Pakistan 14. 1:11:15 Tips on choosing things for content creation & audience interaction 15. 1:16:50 Wrap-up LINKS: Abrar's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/WildlensbyAbrar Abrar's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wildlensbyabrar/ Abrar's Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Wildlensbyabrar Support the podcast by becoming a monthly patron on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/tprpod) or send a one-off token on Ko-fi (https://ko-fi.com/tprpod)! Find all our previous episodes on SoundCloud, Spotify & Apple Podcasts and follow us all on Twitter! Links to everything below! SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/tprpod Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6PvTahp... Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tprpod/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/TPRPod Ali: https://twitter.com/themaholupper Rizwan: https://twitter.com/RizwanPehelwan Sarkhail: https://twitter.com/Sarkhail7Khan
Matt Podolsky grew up immersed in the New England outdoors, but it was an IMAX documentary he saw at an early age that changed his view of humanity’s place in nature. His career as a wildlife biologist working with California Condors led him into the realm of documentary production aimed at conservation. He co-founded Wild Lens, a non-profit committed to telling the stories of those dedicated to conservation issues worldwide. He and Jason talked over Skype about the challenges of documentary filmmaking, problems wildlife face, our place in the ecosystem of Earth, and his experiences using condors to locate human remains. LINKS: Wild Lens: wildlensinc.org scavengerhuntfilm.com Eyes on Conservation: eyes-on-conservation.com facebook.com/EyesOnConservation Souls of the Vermilion Sea (vaquita project): vaquitafilm.com facebook.com/SoulsoftheVermilionSea Call us and leave a message (up to 3 minutes): 1-818-925-0106
It has been a dream of mine to document Marine Science and Conservation on film. Today, I talk to Matthew Podolsky who will tell us how he did it. Matthew founded a Wild Lens, a non-profit charitable organization that works to tell the conservation stories that matter and teach other scientists/conservationists to tell their stories. Enjoy the podcast! Are you looking to change the way you eat for a better health and environment? Start using Arbonne nutrition and health care products that are all natural and environmentally friendly. I use them all the time and their nutrition line has transformed the way I eat and my health. Email me today, andrew@speakupforblue.com to find out how you can transform your health. Looking to transform your health and wellness using Arbonne products? Learn about our starter package to get you living for a better Ocean by contacting me at andrew@speakupforblue.com.
Join Jake Willers as he talks with filmmaker Matt Podolsky of Wild Lens, and host of the Eyes on Conservation podcast. Matt's recent films include Scavenger Hunt and Bluebird Man.
Earlier this year, I got an email from a listener that stood out. It read, Listening to your podcast in college help me realize I wanted to get into filmmaking rather than field biology because I agree SO much with your viewpoints and the reasons you got into wildlife filmmaking. Holy shit! I thought. We had altered the course of someone’s life with this podcast! His name is Zach Steinhauser, and he had already begun working on his first film by the time he reached out with that email. I responded right away to set up a conversation - there was a sense of responsibility that I had never felt before - I wanted to help ensure that Zach’s project was successful. Now I’ve fielded many calls like this from aspiring filmmakers, but this one was different, and not just because Zach was crediting this podcast as his inspiration. Zach reached out at a time when we were re-assessing the strategic plan for our organization, Wild Lens. You may have heard about this on the episode we released a few months back - episode 153. In a nutshell - we had decided to re-structure the organization as a collective, and to place a heavier focus on creating a network of collaboration and support for people working at the intersection of conservation and media arts. Zach was exactly the type of person we wanted to help - so I asked if I could record our conversation for an episode of the show. Zach's film is about a topic if particular interest to me - purple martin conservation. Purple martins are cavity nesters, like the subjects of my film Bluebird Man, but unlike bluebirds they are completely reliant on man made nesting boxes for their survival throughout most of their range. Zach seeks to explore this relationship between humans and the purple martin in his new film, Purple Haze.
Episode Summary: Today on the show we are talking with Brendan Cummings, who is Senior Counsel at the Center for Biological Diversity. Brendan has been working at the Center for... Read more » The post EOC 077: Using the Legal System to Save Endangered Species with Brendan Cummings appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today we are delving into the Wild Lens interview archives to bring you a conversation that I had with Dr. Mark Pokras back in 2011. This interview... Read more » The post EOC 085: Loons and Lead Poisoning with Dr. Mark Pokras appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today’s guest on the show is the founder of the Environmental Voter Project, Nathaniel Stinnett. Nathaniel has an extremely powerful message to share with us about the... Read more » The post EOC 084: Nathaniel Stinnett Explains Why Voting is the Highest Form of Environmental Citizenship appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Our guest on today’s show is Crawford Allan, who is a senior director at Traffic, which is a wildlife trade network created through a collaboration between the World... Read more » The post EOC 083: Finding Solutions to Wildlife Crime Issues with Crawford Allan appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today on the show we are featuring segments from an event that we participated in this past weekend called, Wildlife Awakening, which was presented as a part... Read more » The post EOC 082: Wildlife Awakening at the Sausalito Film Series at Cavallo Point appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today’s guest on the show is Phil Johnston, who is a wildlife tracker and a field biologist working with the elusive pacific fisher. Phil and I had... Read more » The post EOC 080: Tracking the Elusive Pacific Fisher with Phil Johnston appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today’s episode of the show is about the history of a truly unique National Conservation Area here in Idaho. The Morley Nelson Snake River Birds Of Prey National... Read more » The post EOC 079: The History of a Unique National Conservation Area with Mike Kochert appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today on the show we are revisiting a project that was discussed back in one of our earliest episodes of the show – the New Roots program. ... Read more » The post EOC 078: Connecting Refugee Kids with their Local Environment appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today’s episode of the podcast will feature an interview with one of the most unlikely guests we’ve had on the show thus far. Pat Butler is a real... Read more » The post EOC 075: Could a Sport Fishery for Totoaba Help Save the Vaquita? appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today on the show we are digging into the Wild Lens archives to bring you an interview with one of the central figures in the historic recovery... Read more » The post EOC 076: How the California Condor Came Back from the Brink of Extinction with Lloyd Kiff appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today’s guest on the show in Gena Bentall, who has been working with and studying Sea Otters for over a decade and is the program coordinator for a... Read more » The post EOC 088: Gena Bentall Explains the Importance of Sharing Space with Sea Otters appeared first on Wild Lens.
Today we are talking with Marc McDonald, who is the founder of the International Coalition of Rhino Protection (ICORP), an organization committed to saving rhino populations in Southern Africa. Marc... Read more » The post EOC 074: How to Win the War Against Rhino Poaching with Marc McDonald appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Our guest on today’s show is Sarah Chinn, a master’s student at Sonoma State University who is studying one of our most charismatic marine mammal species – the... Read more » The post EOC 071: New Research on the Southern Sea Otter with Sarah Chinn appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today on the show we are featuring a conversation with Alex Olivera from the Center for Biological Diversity. Alex has been doing research on several of the government... Read more » The post EOC 070: Alex Olivera Explains How Government Corruption is Stalling Efforts to Save the Vaquita appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today on the show we are talking with Ph.D. candidate from the University of Utah, Mark Chynoweth. Mark is conducting fascinating research on large carnivores in Eastern Turkey,... Read more » The post EOC 069: Studying Large Carnivores in Eastern Turkey with Mark Chynoweth appeared first on Wild Lens.
Today on the show we are sharing an interview with Chef Rob Ruiz. Rob is the Chef and Owner of the Land and Water Company, an award-winning restaurant in Carlsbad,... Read more » The post EOC 068: Eating Our Way Out of the Seafood Crisis with Chef Rob Ruiz appeared first on Wild Lens.
Happy Holidays from the EOC team! Tune in to listen to a very light, candid, fun installment of the award winning Eyes on Conservation podcast with hosts Sarinah Simons, Kristin Tieche, Matthew Podolsky, and Gregory Haddock as we talk space-bound dinosaurs, whales, recycling, fundraising, and brushfires. It’s a tornado of holiday cheer! lease, if you can, consider a gift donation to the cause of bringing the stories you care most about to the foreground at www.patreon.com/wildlenscollective ( http://www.patreon.com/wildlenscollective ) Your donation makes this work possible. Music from https://filmmusic.io "Holiday Weasel" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
In this episode of Earth to Humans, which is shared from the Wild Lens produced series COMMON LAND, we explore the ancient history of the Snake River Canyon region in Southwestern Idaho. The Shoshone and Paiute people and their ancestors have lived in and around this area for at least 14,500 years, and this episodes shares a look at their culture and lifeways before the arrival of European American settlers.
Episode Summary: Today on the show we are bringing you another example of art and conservation coming together. Our guests Chad Harmon, Phillip Lacinak, and Heidi Kniesl are the... Read more » The post EOC 087: Rhino Art 50 Ways with the Horns and Heroes Project appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today’s guest on the show is the director of the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (Muestra de Cine Medioambiental Dominicana), Natasha Despotovic. I was fortunate enough to... Read more » The post EOC 089: Inside the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival with Natasha Despotovic appeared first on Wild Lens.
Today, we take you for a tour of the inside of Wild Lens as the organization starts the difficult process of transforming, growing and differentiating. Following a weekend retreat with collaborators and contributors to the work of Wild Lens, I spoke with Matt Podolsky and Sean Bogle about this process, what it has looked like, how it feels and the circumstances leading up to their recognition for the organization’s need to undergo a metamorphosis. The music for today’s show was recorded live at the retreat and is the talented Greg Willis, who not only provided wisdom and insight that will inform this next iteration of Wild Lens, but contributes his art to the Wild Lens collective that is beginning to form and is mentioned throughout today’s show. Sean kicks this discussion off with an overview of how Wild Lens has grown. Have a listen!
Episode Summary: Our guest on today’s show is Jake Kheel. Jake is the co-director and producer of the new documentary film, Death by a Thousand Cuts – which is about... Read more » The post EOC 098: Documenting the Illegal Charcoal Trade in the Dominican Republic with Jake Kheel appeared first on Wild Lens.
Over the past decade, carbon offsetting has become increasingly popular, but it has also become increasingly controversial. While some argue that carbon offset programs allow people to feel absolved of their carbon consuming sins without genuinely changing behaviors, which may very well be true in some instances, we here at the Eyes on Conservation Podcast as part of the larger Wild Lens crew all work to be active participants in a sustainable future. As all of us at Wild Lens prepare to gather from all across the country to discuss the future direction of the organization, we will be participating in a carbon offset program to make this a more sustainable venture. But, as we began researching the options, it was difficult to figure out which programs were genuinely effective. That is, until we discovered ECO2. ECO2 works in Kenya and offers carbon offsets that pay for several programs, including locally produced efficient stoves that reduce wood consumption and help to preserve the unique vegetation and biodiversity of the Kakamega rainforest. These stoves have a cleaner burning process, decreasing indoor air pollution and associated acute respiratory infections in women and children. Moreover, savings in burning unsustainably harvested fuel wood cuts down CO2 emissions. Matt Podolsky spoke with Anton Espira, a founder and principle of ECO2 and Solibrium, that has been overseeing this inspiring project that Wild Lens is excited to contribute to.
So I’m guessing that folks have started to notice that we’ve been lagging behind on our typical weekly release schedule with the show. We are going through a bit of a transition period with the show, and with Wild Lens as a whole - in fact one facet of this transition will be discussed in detail on today’s episode. But regarding the podcast - I just want to assure you that we aren’t going anywhere - we are planning lots of exciting interviews for the coming months and will be back to our weekly schedule very soon. Now we had to make the vaquita the focus of this episode because I am about to embark upon what could be the most dramatic shoot of my career. In less than 2 weeks the vaquita capture effort will begin, and our Wild Lens crew will be there to capture whatever happens. As if the capture effort itself wasn’t exciting enough, we also have an exciting update to share about our film project itself. This will be discussed in detail on today's episode of the show - but just to give you a teaser - we have partnered with several other large production companies to produce the feature length version of our film. We’re super excited about this collaboration and everything that it means for both vaquita awareness generally and Wild Lens.
Today’s guest on the show is Rosalyn LePier. Rosalyn is an environmental historian, ethnobotanist, and indigenous writer. She is a professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Montana, a research associate an the National Museum of Natural History, and is currently a visiting professor of Women’s studies, Environmental Studies and Native American religion at the Harvard Divinity School at Harvard University. She is an enrolled member of the Blackfeet Tribe and also identifies as Métis. Rosalyn is also on the steering committee for the March for Science, and has been involved in the March for Science since the birth of this concept shortly after the Women’s March and President Trump’s inauguration. The March for Science will be taking place this coming Saturday, April 22nd - Earth Day - and although the main event will be taking place in Washington D.C., there are hundreds of satellite events happening all around the globe, providing ample opportunity for folks to participate. We are actually launching a new experiment here at the Eyes on Conservation podcast that is connected to the upcoming March for Science - we will be covering the March from a variety of perspectives this coming Saturday. We have seven Wild Lens correspondents involved in this little experiment - and each of them will be attending a different March for Science event. These correspondents will be capturing audio to use for an upcoming episode of the podcast, as well as video footage for a potential short film. A select few will also be streaming live video from the Marches directly to our Eyes on Conservation Facebook page. So if you’re not able to attend a March for Science event - or if you want to get a feel for what some of the larger events in Washington D.C., Los Angeles and San Francisco look like - stay tuned to our Eyes on Conservation Facebook feed to get live updates. In the meantime - we hope that you will enjoy today’s conversation with Rosalyn LaPier, in which we’ll explore some of the connections between science, Native American religion, and the environmental movement.
Today we are bringing you a panel discussion focused on conservation oriented filmmaking in Idaho. We put together a panel of Boise-based filmmakers who are screening films at this year’s Les Bois Film Festival - an event that Wild Lens actually helped found. This is the second year that we are co-hosting Les Bois Film Festival alongside the Land Trust of the Treasure Valley, and we’re extremely excited about this year’s event. We’re screening 20 short films across three separate screening blocks all at the Egyptian Theatre in downtown Boise on Saturday, March 4th. One of the aspects of this festival that we’re most proud of is the emphasis on locally produced films, and this is why I’m so excited about today’s panel discussion. We brought together all of the Boise-based filmmakers that are screening films at Les Bois this year for a conversation about the intersection between filmmaking and conservation here in Idaho. In addition to being aired on this podcast series, this conversation will also air on our community radio station here in boise (Radio Boise, KRBX 89.9), in collaboration with our favorite local radio show, Building a Greener Idaho. I was joined in the studio by today’s co-hosts, Remington Buyer from Building a Greener Idaho, and Julia Rundberg, who is the new development and communications manager at the Land Trust of the Treasure Valley.
Today we are once again delving into the Wild Lens archives to share with you an interview that was recorded for our film project Bluebird Man. One of our first shoots for this film project took place in the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia. Fellow producer Neil Paprocki and myself spent about a week in Canada shooting with the then-president of the North American Bluebird Society, Sherry Linn. While visiting with Sherry, we were able to also connect with PhD student Catherine Dale from Queens University, who was in the Okanagan Valley studying bluebird migration! Neil and I were lucky enough to spend a day out with Catherine at one of her field sites and get some footage of her banding adult male bluebirds. After a long day out in the field, we sat down with Catherine for at interview, which we are sharing with you today for the very first time! In addition to her research on bluebirds, Catherine is also one of the creators of Dispatches from the Field - a blog site focused on stories about field work from all around the globe. A few of us Wild Lens folks have contributed to her site, and we’re all really big fans of the work Catherine and her collaborators are doing with the blog.
Today’s guest on the show is Tom Jefferson, a marine mammal researcher and the director of Viva Vaquita, an NGO dedicated to the conservation of the vaquita. jg5ps89q Here at Wild Lens, we’ve been actively involved in vaquita conservation for a year and a half through our work producing the documentary, Souls of the Vermilion Sea. 2016 was a milestone year for vaquita conservation - efforts to save the species from extinction were ramped up considerably and the species received more mainstream media coverage than ever before. Despite this, the vaquita population in the upper gulf of California has continued its precipitous rate of decline, with the increased conservation efforts having no measurable impact. This culminated just a few weeks ago when the Mexican Minister of the Environment, Rafael Pacchiano, announced that Mexico would take steps in 2017 to launch a captive breeding program for the vaquita. Although vaquita experts have been discussing this option for a number of years, it was always viewed as a last ditch effort - something only worth attempting if all other options had been expended. Well - it is now clear that we have reached that point. EOC producer Sean Bogle and I got Tom on the line to do a year in review for the vaquita, as well as to answer some of our burning questions about the what a captive breeding program for the vaquita may look like.
Episode Summary: On today’s show we have a follow-up conservation with one of our most well-received guests on the show – Nathaniel Stinnett from the Environmental Voter Project. Nathaniel... Read more » The post EOC 099: Post-Election Breakdown with Nathaniel Stinnett from the Environmental Voter Project appeared first on Wild Lens.
The American Kestrel North America’s smallest falcon species, the American Kestrel is a unique and fascinating animal. It is our most colorful raptor, and also one of the few raptors... Read more » The post The American Kestrel appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today on the podcast we are talking about a conservation issue that has been getting lot’s of mainstream media coverage over the past several months – the fight... Read more » The post EOC 097: Inside the Fight Against the Dakota Access Pipeline appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today’s guest on the show is Clare Perry from the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA). Clare has been working for EIA for 17 years, and she is the director... Read more » The post EOC 090: Collateral Damage – How the Environmental Investigation Agency Exposes Environmental Crime appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Today’s guest in Roxanne Beltran, a PhD student at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks, and an expert on the Weddel Seal – a species found in relative... Read more » The post EOC 096: Weddell Seal Research in Antarctica with Roxanne Beltran appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: We thought that it would be appropriate on the day after this historic presidential election to bring you an episode focused on science, reason, and the importance of... Read more » The post EOC 095: The Science Communicators – How to be a Skeptic with Brian Dunning appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Back in March of this year I put together a quick bonus episode of the podcast after participating in the largest presidential caucus in US political history. Despite... Read more » The post EOC bonus episode: Voting for Conservation, part 2 appeared first on Wild Lens.
The Whizpops make music for kids, but they are so much more than just another kid’s band. They employ clever songwriting and highly skilled musicianship to create music that any... Read more » The post The California Condor Song by the Whizpops! appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Todays guests on the show are “Wildman” Steve Brill along with his daughter Violet Brill. “Wildman” Steve and his daughter Violet are expert foragers – they lead... Read more » The post EOC 094: Eat the Weeds with “Wildman” Steve Brill and his Daughter Violet appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Our guests on today’s show are the co-founders of a group called, Conceivable Future – Meghan Kallman and Josephine Ferorelli. Conceivable Future is a woman-led network of... Read more » The post EOC 093: Conceivable Future – How Climate Change Threatens Reproductive Rights appeared first on Wild Lens.
Episode Summary: Our guest on today’s show is science filmmaker Nate Dappen. Like many of the folks that we choose to profile on this show, Nate has a background... Read more » The post EOC 092: The Science Communicators – Nate Dappen’s Path to Becoming a Science Filmmaker appeared first on Wild Lens.
Environmentalism and its sister message of conservation have echoed throughout the ages. The love, fascination, and sublime fear of nature have been as much a part of humankind as any book or historical document can recall. But, it doesn’t mean that we’ve always understood our duty to it, or even been able to comprehend our capacity to permanently change it. In fact, despite our affinity to the outdoors, our respect of Mother Earth has often come second to our ability to dominate it. "A Sense of Wonder" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isoJxPZH1LQ (Here, writer and actress Kaiulani Lee portrays Rachel Carson in the biographical play, “A Sense of Wonder”. The play has been touring the world for nearly a quarter of a century.) RACHEL CARSON SILENT SPRING https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IC3jAQBqb38 (Taken from American Experience on PBS) 6th Great Mass Extinction https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=12&v=cmb5hn2X2ok (From video, produced of Stanford Biology Professor, Paul Ehrlich. Credit: Rob Jordan) What is Climate Change? https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2018/10/ipcc-report-climate-change-impacts-forests-emissions/ (From National Geographic, October, 2018) Greta Thurnberg, United Nations, Poland https://www.democracynow.org/2018/12/13/you_are_stealing_our_future_greta (15 year old Greta Thurnberg addresses the United Nations on taking effective action on Climate Change) This has been a production of the Eyes on Conservation podcast, brought to you by Wild Lens. To visit the show notes for this episode and to see a whole host of amazing stories and incredible adventures, start now at www.wildlensinc.org/eoc172. Show intro and outro music by the humidors. Show music by The Humidors. Additional music from Lobo Loco provided by the Freemusicarchive.org under Creative Commons licensing. For a full list of clips and show notes – head over to the website.
Episode Summary: Today’s guest on the show is Brad Brooks who is the Idaho deputy regional director at the Wilderness Society. Brad and his collegues at the Wilderness Society... Read more » The post EOC 091: Public Lands – How They Became Publicly Owned, and Why They Should Stay That Way appeared first on Wild Lens.
Noise pollution experts Heidi Ware and Jesse Barber discuss new research of the impacts of road noise on migrating songbird populations. This new research shows that, for many bird species,... Read more » The post The Invisible Source of Habitat Degradation appeared first on Wild Lens.