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  <title>Heat! Camera! Action!</title>

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  <itunes:author>Jules Pretty</itunes:author>
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  <description><![CDATA[<p>The planet’s losing.&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>We’re in a hole. Climate, nature and social inequality crises. Story with a swerve gets us out. It’s the shape of all our lives. Up-down, down-up. And this shape of slantwise story, it creates hope and agency.</p><p><br></p><p>In this podcast, we hear from culture leaders and wanderers, the crossers of boundaries, the story-tellers. They share their ideas on how we get out of holes. Good story is not just a hiding place. It’s a finding place.</p><p><br></p><p>The podcast vibe is the warm-dark daguerreotype photograph, invented at the start of the industrialised era, before human-induced carbon pollution of the atmosphere.&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>My guests are writers and poets, artists and scientists, environmental and business leaders, farmers and landowners, local and national activists, festival directors, therapists, religious leaders. All are storytellers too.&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>The music clips at the start and end of episodes were recorded at public dances in Punakha and Thimphu (Bhutan).</p><p><br></p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."&nbsp;</p>]]></description>
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  <itunes:keywords>Climate recovery, nature recovery, agency, togetherness, renewables, story</itunes:keywords>
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    <itunes:title>04 Rupert Read on how to activate the climate majority </itunes:title>
    <title>04 Rupert Read on how to activate the climate majority </title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In his garden in the Norfolk Broads, philosopher, author and climate activist Rupert Read talks to me about climate movements and action.  We hear of the formation of Extinction Rebellion, thrutopian ideas and transformative adaptation. And how too the declaration of climate emergencies moved thinking and local policies. We hear about the need to focus on a climate majority: the middle 60-70% of the population who know something bad is going on, but don’t know quite what to do. Thrutopia...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>In his garden in the Norfolk Broads, philosopher, author and climate activist Rupert Read talks to me about climate movements and action. </p><p>We hear of the formation of Extinction Rebellion, thrutopian ideas and transformative adaptation. And how too the declaration of climate emergencies moved thinking and local policies. We hear about the need to focus on a climate majority: the middle 60-70% of the population who know something bad is going on, but don’t know quite what to do. Thrutopia implies going through, a leaning in, the taking of good from bad. </p><p>Rupert’s heroines are Joanna Macy and Greta Thunberg (“small people can change the whole world”, he says).</p><p>His books include “This Civilisation is Finished”; <em>Why Climate Breakdown Matters; The Climate Majority Project</em>”; “<em>Transformative Adaptation”.</em></p><p>Rupert recommended action: believe this: most of us are capable of far more than we dare to imagine.</p><p>See Rupert’s website: <a href='https://rupertread.net/'>https://rupertread.net/</a> </p><p>Climate Majority Project: <a href='https://www.climatemajorityproject.com/'>https://www.climatemajorityproject.com/</a> </p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called &quot;Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery.&quot;</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In his garden in the Norfolk Broads, philosopher, author and climate activist Rupert Read talks to me about climate movements and action. </p><p>We hear of the formation of Extinction Rebellion, thrutopian ideas and transformative adaptation. And how too the declaration of climate emergencies moved thinking and local policies. We hear about the need to focus on a climate majority: the middle 60-70% of the population who know something bad is going on, but don’t know quite what to do. Thrutopia implies going through, a leaning in, the taking of good from bad. </p><p>Rupert’s heroines are Joanna Macy and Greta Thunberg (“small people can change the whole world”, he says).</p><p>His books include “This Civilisation is Finished”; <em>Why Climate Breakdown Matters; The Climate Majority Project</em>”; “<em>Transformative Adaptation”.</em></p><p>Rupert recommended action: believe this: most of us are capable of far more than we dare to imagine.</p><p>See Rupert’s website: <a href='https://rupertread.net/'>https://rupertread.net/</a> </p><p>Climate Majority Project: <a href='https://www.climatemajorityproject.com/'>https://www.climatemajorityproject.com/</a> </p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called &quot;Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery.&quot;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 07:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>03 Phoebe Barnard on the science of climate and need for public engagement</itunes:title>
    <title>03 Phoebe Barnard on the science of climate and need for public engagement</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[I’m chatting online with prize-winning global change scientist and film-maker Phoebe Barnard in her borrowed home in Ireland, as the sun breaks through on her and her happy dog.  We talk about Phoebe’s life as a climate scientist, about international negotiations and processes that bring countries together, about film making for positive stories. She describes having to leave beautiful Washington State in the US. “We work on change, after all," she says.” We talk about the need for new t...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>I’m chatting online with prize-winning global change scientist and film-maker Phoebe Barnard in her borrowed home in Ireland, as the sun breaks through on her and her happy dog. </p><p>We talk about Phoebe’s life as a climate scientist, about international negotiations and processes that bring countries together, about film making for positive stories. She describes having to leave beautiful Washington State in the US. “We work on change, after all,&quot; she says.” We talk about the need for new thinking, a new story. “We can choose” she says of taking agency and ownership. </p><p>“Feminism is a public good mindset,” she also says. “We need to move towards more feminism and a world of greater ancient-culture influence.”</p><p>Phoebe’s book recommendation is Robin Wall Kimmerer’s <em>Braiding Sweetgrass</em>.</p><p>Her heroine and mentee: Abidemi Raji, Nigerian researcher at Cornell University. </p><p>Her recommended action: recognise you are not alone. Join something with others, like a climate repair café and the climate majority project. </p><p>The Climate Restorers films: <a href='https://www.theclimaterestorers.com/'>https://www.theclimaterestorers.com/</a></p><p>The Climate Repair Café films: <a href='https://www.climaterepaircafe.com/'>https://www.climaterepaircafe.com/</a>  </p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called &quot;Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery.&quot;</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I’m chatting online with prize-winning global change scientist and film-maker Phoebe Barnard in her borrowed home in Ireland, as the sun breaks through on her and her happy dog. </p><p>We talk about Phoebe’s life as a climate scientist, about international negotiations and processes that bring countries together, about film making for positive stories. She describes having to leave beautiful Washington State in the US. “We work on change, after all,&quot; she says.” We talk about the need for new thinking, a new story. “We can choose” she says of taking agency and ownership. </p><p>“Feminism is a public good mindset,” she also says. “We need to move towards more feminism and a world of greater ancient-culture influence.”</p><p>Phoebe’s book recommendation is Robin Wall Kimmerer’s <em>Braiding Sweetgrass</em>.</p><p>Her heroine and mentee: Abidemi Raji, Nigerian researcher at Cornell University. </p><p>Her recommended action: recognise you are not alone. Join something with others, like a climate repair café and the climate majority project. </p><p>The Climate Restorers films: <a href='https://www.theclimaterestorers.com/'>https://www.theclimaterestorers.com/</a></p><p>The Climate Repair Café films: <a href='https://www.climaterepaircafe.com/'>https://www.climaterepaircafe.com/</a>  </p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called &quot;Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery.&quot;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 06:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>02 Lloyd Peck on living in the Antarctic and how it’s changed over two decades</itunes:title>
    <title>02 Lloyd Peck on living in the Antarctic and how it’s changed over two decades</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In his brim-full office at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, I chat with Lloyd Peck just after his return from a spell at Rothera Research Station. We talk about how fast things are changing. He’s a veteran of some 800 cold water dives, often under the ice. The Antarctic is the site of enormous aquatic biodiversity, much completely unique. We talk of great sea spiders and fish with no haemoglobin; of low temperature enzymes that will help in organ donor transport. But he’s seen glaci...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>In his brim-full office at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, I chat with Lloyd Peck just after his return from a spell at Rothera Research Station. We talk about how fast things are changing. He’s a veteran of some 800 cold water dives, often under the ice. The Antarctic is the site of enormous aquatic biodiversity, much completely unique. We talk of great sea spiders and fish with no haemoglobin; of low temperature enzymes that will help in organ donor transport. But he’s seen glaciers and ice sheets retreat two miles; he’s seen rain fall instead of snow, soaking albatross chicks; he’s seen great abundance of humpback and orca whales. He says, “I find it really wearing; it gets me down.”</p><p>Lloyd recommends Jared Diamond’s <em>Collapse</em> for its warning call about care for nature. His hero is a teacher who took great interest in him.</p><p>His recommended action: look at what you do, and choose something small to foster climate action and positive change. Do it bit by bit. </p><p>British Antarctic Survey: <a href='https://www.bas.ac.uk/'>https://www.bas.ac.uk/</a> </p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called &quot;Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery.&quot;</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In his brim-full office at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, I chat with Lloyd Peck just after his return from a spell at Rothera Research Station. We talk about how fast things are changing. He’s a veteran of some 800 cold water dives, often under the ice. The Antarctic is the site of enormous aquatic biodiversity, much completely unique. We talk of great sea spiders and fish with no haemoglobin; of low temperature enzymes that will help in organ donor transport. But he’s seen glaciers and ice sheets retreat two miles; he’s seen rain fall instead of snow, soaking albatross chicks; he’s seen great abundance of humpback and orca whales. He says, “I find it really wearing; it gets me down.”</p><p>Lloyd recommends Jared Diamond’s <em>Collapse</em> for its warning call about care for nature. His hero is a teacher who took great interest in him.</p><p>His recommended action: look at what you do, and choose something small to foster climate action and positive change. Do it bit by bit. </p><p>British Antarctic Survey: <a href='https://www.bas.ac.uk/'>https://www.bas.ac.uk/</a> </p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called &quot;Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery.&quot;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 07:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>01 Anita Roy on nature writing and making good things happen in transition towns</itunes:title>
    <title>01 Anita Roy on nature writing and making good things happen in transition towns</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In a borrowed room at local Tone Dale House, author and activist Anita Roy chats to me about personal and community transformation. We are in Wellington in Somerset, winner of the national prize for best transition town, and we hear how the people did it. They created a new commons, a 65-acre woodland-orchard that all are free to use. Anita talks about the up-down down-up arc of writing and how it mirrors our own lives. She says, “I wonder what this is going to be like in 20 years; everything...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>In a borrowed room at local Tone Dale House, author and activist Anita Roy chats to me about personal and community transformation. We are in Wellington in Somerset, winner of the national prize for best transition town, and we hear how the people did it. They created a new commons, a 65-acre woodland-orchard that all are free to use. Anita talks about the up-down down-up arc of writing and how it mirrors our own lives. She says, “I wonder what this is going to be like in 20 years; everything’s getting worse, except when I think of Fox’s Field.”</p><p>Anita recommends two books: <em>Wild</em> by Jay Griffiths; and <em>The Spell of the Sensuous</em> by David Abram.</p><p>Her own books include <em>Gifts of Gravity and Light</em> and her children’s book about death, <em>Gravepyres; The School for the Recently Deceased</em>. She is a writer for The Guardian’s Country Diary.</p><p>Her recommended action: be messy, leave ecological spaces, and maybe holes are good.</p><p>See Anita’s website: <a href='https://anitaroy.net/'>https://anitaroy.net/</a></p><p>Transition Town Wellington: <a href='https://ttw.org.uk/'>https://ttw.org.uk/</a> </p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It’s called &quot;Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery.&quot;</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In a borrowed room at local Tone Dale House, author and activist Anita Roy chats to me about personal and community transformation. We are in Wellington in Somerset, winner of the national prize for best transition town, and we hear how the people did it. They created a new commons, a 65-acre woodland-orchard that all are free to use. Anita talks about the up-down down-up arc of writing and how it mirrors our own lives. She says, “I wonder what this is going to be like in 20 years; everything’s getting worse, except when I think of Fox’s Field.”</p><p>Anita recommends two books: <em>Wild</em> by Jay Griffiths; and <em>The Spell of the Sensuous</em> by David Abram.</p><p>Her own books include <em>Gifts of Gravity and Light</em> and her children’s book about death, <em>Gravepyres; The School for the Recently Deceased</em>. She is a writer for The Guardian’s Country Diary.</p><p>Her recommended action: be messy, leave ecological spaces, and maybe holes are good.</p><p>See Anita’s website: <a href='https://anitaroy.net/'>https://anitaroy.net/</a></p><p>Transition Town Wellington: <a href='https://ttw.org.uk/'>https://ttw.org.uk/</a> </p><p>My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It’s called &quot;Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery.&quot;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 06:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>Trailer: Heat! Camera! Action!</itunes:title>
    <title>Trailer: Heat! Camera! Action!</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[A 5 minute trailer for Heat! Camera! Action! Heat – too much in the air and oceans Camera – for focus and attention Action – what we need   We’re in a hole. The planet’s losing. This is how we get out. Story with a swerve, slantwise. More hope, more agency.   In the pod, we hear from culture leaders and wanderers, the crossers of boundaries, the story-tellers.  Good story is not just a hiding place. It’s a finding place. My guests are writers and poets, artists and scientists, envir...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>A 5 minute trailer for Heat! Camera! Action!</p><p>Heat – too much in the air and oceans</p><p>Camera – for focus and attention</p><p>Action – what we need</p><p> </p><p>We’re in a hole. The planet’s losing. This is how we get out.</p><p>Story with a swerve, slantwise.</p><p>More hope, more agency.</p><p><br/></p><p>In the pod, we hear from culture leaders and wanderers, the crossers of boundaries, the story-tellers. </p><p>Good story is not just a hiding place. It’s a finding place.</p><p>My guests are writers and poets, artists and scientists, environmentalists and farmers, business leaders and activists, international negotiators and free festival directors. </p><p> </p><p>Containing clips from 7 episodes - featuring:</p><p>Anita Roy, author, scyther and transitioneer</p><p>Lloyd Peck, veteran of 800 Antarctic dives </p><p>Jo Roberts, wilderness therapist</p><p>Rupert Read, on activating the climate majority</p><p>Mandy Haggith poet and Assynt activist – who says verse can’t make it worse</p><p>Ian Collins, on the 100-year-life of Ronnie Blythe</p><p>Nicky Saunter, mask maker, and on being a magpie</p><p> </p><p>Launch date for the podcast: midsummer 2026, 2 episodes Friday May 29th and 2 on June 3rd, then weekly.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A 5 minute trailer for Heat! Camera! Action!</p><p>Heat – too much in the air and oceans</p><p>Camera – for focus and attention</p><p>Action – what we need</p><p> </p><p>We’re in a hole. The planet’s losing. This is how we get out.</p><p>Story with a swerve, slantwise.</p><p>More hope, more agency.</p><p><br/></p><p>In the pod, we hear from culture leaders and wanderers, the crossers of boundaries, the story-tellers. </p><p>Good story is not just a hiding place. It’s a finding place.</p><p>My guests are writers and poets, artists and scientists, environmentalists and farmers, business leaders and activists, international negotiators and free festival directors. </p><p> </p><p>Containing clips from 7 episodes - featuring:</p><p>Anita Roy, author, scyther and transitioneer</p><p>Lloyd Peck, veteran of 800 Antarctic dives </p><p>Jo Roberts, wilderness therapist</p><p>Rupert Read, on activating the climate majority</p><p>Mandy Haggith poet and Assynt activist – who says verse can’t make it worse</p><p>Ian Collins, on the 100-year-life of Ronnie Blythe</p><p>Nicky Saunter, mask maker, and on being a magpie</p><p> </p><p>Launch date for the podcast: midsummer 2026, 2 episodes Friday May 29th and 2 on June 3rd, then weekly.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 17 Apr 2026 13:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
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