"I think of my paintings as alarm clocks," says artist Isabella Kirkland. "They're reminders of what's at stake; the only problem is we keep pushing the snooze button." Investigating humanity's relationship to nature, she shares work that takes a creative stand against ecological despair — and quietly urges climate action through permanent images of vanishing wildlife.
The US vs. itself — and other top global risks in 2024 | Ian Bremmer
It's time for infectious generosity. Here's how | Chris Anderson
Is alternative meat the recipe for a healthier planet? | Tao Zhang
Enough red tape — we need to say yes to clean energy | Rich Powell
Don't be a jerk to your barista — and other thoughts on frontline work | Adriann Negreros
The vital data you flush down the toilet | Newsha Ghaeli
What's your leadership language? | Rosita Najmi
Life is hard. Art helps
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The science of happiness with Laurie Santos | How to Be a Better Human
Mind, body, spirit (part 1) | TED Radio Hour
Rick Rubin | Design Matters with Debbie Millman
ChatGPT did not title this podcast | ReThinking with Adam Grant
Why businesses need a dreamer's magic and a doer's realism | Beth Viner
When AI can fake reality, who can you trust? | Sam Gregory
My mission to change the narrative of mental health | Glenn Close
Why AI will spark exponential economic growth | Cathie Wood
What happens as we die? | Kathryn Mannix
How to build a global pro-democracy movement | Yordanos Eyoel
Why helping people makes you happy | Asha Curran
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