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Climate One

ENCORE: Taylor Brorby and Suzie Hicks Tell The Stories We Don’t Always Hear

Climate One

Climate One

News, Social Sciences, News Commentary, Science, Earth Sciences

4.7583 Ratings

🗓️ 24 April 2026

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Finding one's voice in climate action can come in many forms. Author and activist Taylor Brorby grew up in Center, North Dakota as a fourth-generation member of a fossil-fuel family. He struggled to find his place as a young gay kid who loved art, music, nature and poetry. Over time, he turned that tension into writing that challenges the fossil fuel industry, makes space for others stuck in a broken system, and inspires a more just future.  Suzie Hicks felt the weight of climate concerns but after college, didn’t know what to do with those feelings. After doing an internship at the New England Aquarium, they realized they could merge their love of performing with a career focused on climate. With the help of a sunflower puppet named Sprout, Suzie created a children’s show that teaches kids about climate change through a frame of possibility and hope, not doom and gloom.  Guests Taylor Brorby, Activist, Author, “Boys and Oil: Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land” Suzie Hicks, Climate Media Maker and Educator For show notes, transcript, and related links, visit ClimateOne.org/podcasts. 00:00 – Intro 02:20 – Taylor Brorby describes the N.D. town where he grew up 05:00 – What he learned from the prairie landscape 07:30 – Other queer writers from the Great Plains 13:30 – Influential environmental writers  17:00 – Writing optimistically rather than dystopian narratives 20:00 – Getting arrested protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline 25:30 – Why we need to be supporting rural writers  30:00 – Project Tundra, a carbon capture project near Center, N.D. 34:00 – Origins of Suzie Hicks, the Climate Chick 36:30 – It’s okay to have complicated feelings about climate change 40:00 – Working with kids' existing love for nature in educating them about climate change 42:00 – Why introduce kids to climate change? Because it’s already happening. 47:00 – How Hicks sees their role as a positive storyteller around climate change ********** Support Climate One by going ad-free! By subscribing to Climate One on Patreon, you’ll receive exclusive access to all future episodes free of ads, opportunities to connect with fellow Climate One listeners, and access to the Climate One Discord. Sign up today at patreon.com/ClimateOne.  Ad sales by Multitude. Contact them for ad inquiries at multitude.productions/ads Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Instagram teen accounts with automatic protections on who can contact teenagers and the content they can see.

0:06.0

Instagram teen accounts have contact limits on by default,

0:10.0

so teenagers get messages from people they know, not strangers,

0:14.0

and default content settings.

0:17.0

Plus, teenagers under 16 can't change these default settings without parental approval.

0:22.8

So parents can help teenagers connect safely.

0:26.5

Learn more at Instagram.com slash teen accounts.

0:30.1

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0:38.1

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0:43.1

If eligible, treatment is delivered discreetly, with UK-registered clinicians offering support along the way.

0:49.3

Visit Medexpress.co.ukau-Uk slash podcast to get started today.

0:55.3

I'm Ariana Brocious.

0:57.0

I'm Kushan Abadar.

0:58.2

And this is Climate 1.

1:02.3

Hey Kusha, I want to start today's show with a good news story.

1:05.7

I just read this week in Canary Media.

1:08.1

In March, the U.S. got more electricity from renewables than it did from

1:12.2

methane gas.

1:13.2

Oh, that is cool.

1:14.4

Yeah, and it's really notable because usually gas is our largest fuel source for electricity.

1:20.3

And so this is according to data from the think tank Ember.

1:22.6

So I'm guessing like solar, wind renewables were the ones growing?

...

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