Kate Yoder
About Kate Yoder
Kate is a writer for Grist
Google searches for ‘climate change’ finally beat out Game of Thrones
According to your Google searches, September was climate change’s biggest month of all time. For the first time since Game of Thrones became a thing, Americans showed more interest in climate change than the plight of the scattered Stark family.
Humans are the villain in Netflix’s new series ‘Our Planet’
It may be narrated by David Attenborough, but it's not your typical nature documentary. The show is part of an emerging genre of wildlife documentary that tackles conservation and climate change in tandem.
‘The Uninhabitable Earth’ puts words to a future you don’t want to live in
Prepare yourself for grisly descriptions of how the body breaks down in overwhelming heat, predictions of prehistoric plagues springing back to life beneath melting permafrost, and the possibility of an economic collapse several times worse than the Great Depression.
Eight per cent of Americans recently changed their minds on climate. What gives?
For some people, the awakening comes in science class.
We ignored pandemic warnings. Will the next catastrophe take us by surprise?
The pandemic gripping the planet has been compared to a “black swan” event, a danger so rare that it catches people unawares. But given that plenty of experts predicted a pandemic was bound to happen eventually, such a disaster is better described as a “gray rhino” — a highly likely and obvious danger that gets ignored.