Years of Living Dangerously
Years of Living Dangerously is an American documentary television series focusing on global warming. The first season, of nine weekly episodes, premiered in the US on April 13, 2014, on Showtime. It won an Emmy Award as Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series. The second season, consisting of eight episodes, is expected to air on the National Geographic Channel, beginning on October 30, 2016, with broader international distribution than the first season.[1] Executive producers include James Cameron, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robert Palumbo, and series creators Joel Bach and David Gelber (formerly of 60 Minutes). Joseph Romm and Heidi Cullen are the chief science advisors.[2]
The weekly episodes feature celebrity investigators with a history of environmental activism and well-known journalists with a background in environmental reportage. These "correspondents" travel the world and throughout the U.S. to interview experts and ordinary people affected by, and seeking solutions to, the effects of global warming. They act as proxies for the audience, asking questions to find out people's opinions and to discover the scientific evidence.[3][4] The final episode of season 1 featured an interview of President Barack Obama. Executive producers for season 1 were Cameron, Schwarzenegger, clean energy investor and environmental activist Daniel Abbasi, Jerry Weintraub, Bach and Gelber.[5]
Season 2 is expected to explore the effects of rising sea levels, historic droughts and the rapidly increasing extinction rate of species, but also to "focus much more ... on solutions that individuals, communities, companies and even governments can use to address worldwide climate change",[6][7] including cheaper solar and wind energy, advancing battery technology and electric cars.[8] Returning hosts for season 2 include Schwarzenegger, Ian Somerhalder, America Ferrera, Thomas Friedman and Don Cheadle, and newcomers David Letterman, Gisele Bündchen, Jack Black, Cameron, Joshua Jackson, Aasif Mandvi, Cecily Strong, Sigourney Weaver, Bradley Whitford, Nikki Reed and Ty Burrell.[9][10][11]
Schwarzenegger reflected on how the series tries to make the issue of climate change resonate with the public: "I think the environmental movement only can be successful if we are simple and clear and make it a human story. We will tell human stories in this project. The scientists would never get the kind of attention that someone in show business gets."[12] Cameron elaborated: "We didn’t use our celebrities as talking head experts, because they’re not climate experts. They were concerned, intelligent, curious citizens who were out to find answers. They were functioning as journalists."[13] Newsweek said that the celebrity reporters "lend sparks to an issue that sends most viewers for the exits".[14]
Episode summaries – season 1
Episode 1, "Dry Season" (first aired on April 13, 2014): Don Cheadle reports on the severe droughts in the Southwest United States, following scientist and devout Christian, Katharine Hayhoe, as she speaks to religious audiences about the connection between extreme weather and climate change; Harrison Ford visits Indonesia to learn how slash-and-burn deforestation, driven by the global appetite for products like palm oil and paper, contributes a large portion of the world's carbon emissions; and Thomas Friedman investigates how drought contributed to the civil war in Syria.[5][15] The UK organization Global Witness stated that although Ford's segment exposed the dangers of deforestation, executive producer Arnold Schwarzenegger owned an approximately 5% stake in Dimensional Fund Advisors, a firm that it said finances many of the world's largest logging companies.[16]
Episode 2, "End of the Woods" (April 20, 2014): Schwarzenegger accompanies the "hot shots", elite firefighters in Western US forests, as they risk their lives fighting the fire season made longer and more destructive by global warming, as fire regions expand from the southwest US further north into Canada. He learns that even more destruction is caused by the proliferation of bark beetles, as longer summers enable them to reproduce up to twice each year and kill trees with their toxic secretions. Meanwhile, Ford continues his quest to stop Indonesian deforestation and the carbon emissions and displacement of animals and people that it causes, confronting officials including Indonesia's Forestry Minister, Zulkifli Hasan, and its President, whom he persuades, with the help of the TV cameras, to take "real action". He also gets sustainability commitments from officers of Unilever, a major user of palm oil. We also see how Greenpeace and other environmental groups are making a real and positive difference.[17][18][19][20]
Episode 3, "The Surge" (April 27, 2014): Chris Hayes reports on how Superstorm Sandy affected towns and families; he meets with congressman Michael Grimm from New Jersey, initially a climate skeptic, who changes his position on global warming after reviewing the science and the work of fellow-Republican Bob Inglis. M. Sanjayan interviews scientists around the world about global warming and reviews the data that they are collecting about the effects of climate change around the world, for example at Christmas Island, where El Niños begin.[21][22]
Episode 4, "Ice & Brimstone" (May 4, 2014): Ian Somerhalder follows Anna Jane Joyner, the daughter of prominent Evangelical preacher, Rick Joyner, as she works to persuade congregations and preachers in North Carolina (including her skeptical father) to join the Evangelical fight against global warming and the Beyond Coal campaign to shut down a coal-fired power plant.[23][24] They meet with Inglis, gulf coast workers, Hayhoe and former skeptical scientist Richard Muller, all of whom provide Rick with information about impacts of climate change.[25] Anna asked her father for his support in an open letter in the Huffington Post, writing: "We are the first generation that knows how serious the stakes are, as well as the last to be able to do something about it in time.[26] Lesley Stahl visits Greenland to investigate the effects of global warming in the Arctic on global sea levels and the rush to develop oil and gas reserves there. Greenland's ice is melting five times faster than it was 20 years ago, but businesses hope to gain trillions of dollars by exploiting the arctic.[24] Scientist Heidi Cullen explains that "if we don’t leave 30 percent of our oil and gas reserves untapped, large parts of our planet will become unlivable."[27] Stahl meets with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry,[28] who has called climate change "perhaps the world's most fearsome weapon of mass destruction".[29] Kerry says that, to make meaningful progress, "the people need to demand that our elected officials take responsible action to craft a real energy policy."[25]
Episode 5, "True Colors" (May 12, 2014): Olivia Munn learns about ocean acidification and the proposed West Coast coal export terminals that would nearly double US coal exports. She follows the governor of the State of Washington, Jay Inslee, as he makes the fight against global warming a top priority in his first year in office, using his executive powers when necessary to get around Republican climate-change skeptics in the state legislature. Inslee "urged the media to be more aggressive in covering climate threats since we face 'civilizational suicide' if we fail to act."[30] Columnist Mark Bittman of The New York Times follows up on the post-Hurricane Sandy rebuilding story, the global rise in sea level, and what is being done to better prepare the East coast for storms and surges. He examines the Dutch system of flood management and concludes that, in New Jersey, rebuilding so close to the ocean is environmentally and financially unsustainable. Governor Chris Christie refuses "to acknowledge the role that climate change played in amplifying the impacts" of Sandy.[30] Christie pulled New Jersey out of RGGI after meeting with the Koch brothers, who then funded campaign advertising for Christie.[31][32]
Episode 6, "Winds of Change" (May 19, 2014): America Ferrera reports on how public policy has supported the growth of wind and solar power in Kansas, and how oil and gas companies, with lobbyists and allies like the Heartland Institute and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) oppose these policies. Meanwhile, Bittman discovers that extracting natural gas through fracking delays our transition to renewable energy and that fracking wells leak a large amount of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, which makes fracked natural gas as dirty as, or dirtier than, burning coal.[33][34]
Episode 7, "Revolt, Rebuild, Renew" (May 26, 2014): Jessica Alba follows Climate Corps fellows as they work to help US companies save money and improve profits through energy efficiency and sustainability management. Friedman studies how the effect of global warming on the US wheat crop (and that of other exporting nations) caused a spike in wheat prices in the Middle East, helping to provoke the Arab Spring. He learns that "Earth could warm by more than 9 degrees F (5 degrees C) by 2100 if we don’t aggressively reduce our emissions of greenhouse gases", and that more frequent heat waves and droughts will contribute to food shortages, which can lead to greater conflicts in the Middle East and elsewhere.[35] Hayes explores the economy of another area stricken by Hurricane Sandy, Far Rockaway, Queens, discovering that the most economically vulnerable people have been the most severely affected, losing their jobs because of lack of transportation, or having to move away altogether. He concludes that New York and other cities are unprepared for the effects of global warming on their poorest citizens.[35][36]
Episode 8, "A Dangerous Future" (June 2, 2014): Michael C. Hall travels to Bangladesh to see how climate change will impact workers and the poor in developing countries in the coming decades, when a projected 150 million people will be forced to leave their homes to escape sea level rise and increased drought, insect-borne disease and flooding. In low-lying, flood-prone, densely populated Bangladesh, sea level rise and the lengthening of the monsoon season, both caused by global warming, have already caused a migration of coastal people to Dhaka and other cities, and across the border into India, because they have lost their homes or livelihoods. These factors are projected to lead to the displacement of 20 million of Bangladeshis by 2100, who are often forced to take dangerous work.[37] Hall argues that since the US has contributed the largest portion of the emissions already in the atmosphere, it bears responsibility for the climate change impacts in poorer nations.[38][39] Matt Damon explores the public health emergencies around the nation and world caused by more frequent, intense, and longer heat waves, which kill more Americans than hurricanes, floods, tornadoes, earthquakes and lightning combined and cause health problems associated with dehydration, such as premature birth.[40][41][42] Friedman continues his Middle East investigation in Yemen, where the scarcity of water is already leading to local fighting. He speaks with President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi. Friedman concludes that where climate change leads to more frequent droughts, it is a factor that will increasingly push volatile political situations towards war.[37][40]
Episode 9, "Moving a Mountain" (June 9, 2014): Hall concludes his journey to Bangladesh, where rising seas are expected to submerge 17% of the country.[38] He learns that global warming is a human rights, public health and foreign policy issue. Sanjayan questions top climate scientists in their fields who collect data from the past, such as ice core samples, that explain how our climate is changing. Friedman interviews President Barack Obama on climate change and finds that climate can change so fast that it can wipe out a civilization and that "action taken to curb greenhouse emissions could have a measurable, helpful impact."[43] Obama echoes this, saying "there's a lot we can do" about global warming.[43] Obama notes that, as a father, he is deeply concerned but optimistic that, with persistence, America can make progress on battling global warming and can become a leader on the issue. Obama acknowledges that, to avoid the worst effects of global warming, we must leave some fossil fuels unexploited. He tells Friedman that "you've got to recognize [that global warming] is going to be one of the most significant long-term challenges, if not the most significant long-term challenge, that this country faces and that the planet faces. ... when [the effects of climate change] start multiplying, then people start thinking ... 'We're going to reward politicians who talk to us honestly and seriously about this problem.'"[44][45]
Episode previews: season 2
Episode 1, "A Race Against Time" (October 30, 2016) focuses on renewable energy sources, especially solar. David Letterman travels to India to investigate the populous country's efforts to expand its inadequate electrical grid, as its economy booms, and to supply electricity for the first time to 300 million citizens. He finds that there the country will double the amount of dirty coal that it burns unless it can receive assistance in transitioning quickly to solar and other renewable technologies. He interviews Prime Minister Narendra Modi, travels to rural villages where few can afford power and explores the US potential in bringing renewable energy to India. In Florida and Nevada, Cecily Strong finds former officials and other insiders in the two sunny states who reveal how utility companies and politics are blocking the growth of solar energy and clean energy jobs in the US.[46]
Episode 2, "Gathering Storm" (November 2, 2016): Jack Black explores how Miami and other low-lying coastal areas can survive rising sea-levels caused by climate change. Although the political and business community is largely in denial, and many locals are unaware of the cause of the increasing flooding, he finds a few legislators, residents, activists and scientists racing to solve the problem before disaster strikes. Ian Somerhalder travels to the Bahamas where he looks at historical evidence and explores a blue hole, diving and taking core samples of the ocean floor with scientists from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution to learn how the warming of the oceans' surface will increase the strength and destructiveness of hurricanes and superstorms.[46][47]
Episode 3, "The Uprooted" (November 9, 2016): In Africa, Thomas Friedman finds an increasing population of refugees fleeing wars, rising sea-levels, desertification and hurricanes, as up to 1 billion people are expected to become climate refugees over the next century. Young men left without the prospect of farming are more likely to join extremist groups. Don Cheadle explores how governor Jerry Brown is fighting both climate change and the historic California drought. A Central Valley scientist shows Cheadle the danger of a global water and food crisis, and he observes the problems that climate change is causing for farm families with no crops.[48][49]
Episode 4, "Fueling the Fire" (November 16, 2016): Arnold Schwarzenegger explores how the military is adapting to climate change and limiting national security risk by increasing energy efficiency and using renewables, but needs to increase the pace of this adaptation. In Kuwait, he sees how fuel convoys are responsible for most US soldier deaths. He finds how our armed forces are dealing with an increased number of climate-related military conflicts and natural disasters. Cattle ranching, drought, deforestation, massive hydroelectric dams and illegal mining threaten the Amazon rain forest, which is losing 2 million acres a year to clearing. The degradation of the Amazon accounts for 15 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, more than half of which is caused by clearing forests for cattle ranching. Native Brazilian Gisele Bündchen tours the extent of the damage and joins the national environmental police as they fight to end illegal deforestation. She meets indigenous people and activists trying to protect the forest and flies over the Amazon to view huge patches of deforested and burnt land, logs piled high on trucks and barges, drought-stricken fields and vast cattle ranches that were once lush, thousand-year-old tropical rainforests. She learns that if Americans shifted to more plant-based foods, it would make a big impact in the fight against global warming.[48][46]
Episode 5, "Collapse of the Oceans" (November 23, 2016): At the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, Joshua Jackson investigates the devastating impacts of ocean warming on coral reefs and looks at the predicted impact on ocean ecosystems, and on our own food supply, of ocean acidification. He travels to the Philippines, whose citizens rely heavily on healthy reefs for food and other ocean products and for protection from storms. He finds that fishermen are no longer able to sustain their families because of the increasing scarcity of fish.[48][46]
Episode 6, "Priceless" (November 30, 2016): Nikki Reed looks at the best single solution for climate change: putting a price on carbon. This would accelerate the adoption of clean energy, reduce harmful emissions and the cost of climate-related disasters and could stimulate the economy. She joins college student activists, who confront their college president, and interviews the mayor of Vancouver, where carbon pricing has been a success. In a Kenyan wildlife preserve, Aasif Mandvi explores the threat that climate change poses to endangered species. He meets conservationists who explain how drought is compounding poaching and loss of habitat, leading to accelerating species loss. He learns that the disappearance of one species can have negative consequences on the whole ecosystem.[48][46]
Episode 7, "The Road Before Us" (December 7, 2016): Ty Burrell looks into the progress of electric vehicles (EVs) and automated vehicles (AVs), that can greatly reduce carbon emissions from the transportation sector. He speaks with Silicon Valley's technology innovators and travels to Atlanta, Georgia, where generous and successful EV incentives were recently repealed, to meet with activists. He also visits a Los Angeles EV car show to hear from buyers, dealers and experts. In Washington, DC, Bradley Whitford looks at the progress of activists like Jay Butera, who are working to persuade Republicans to join bipartisan efforts to act on climate change.[48][46]
Episode 8, "Uprising" (December 14, 2016): Burning coal remains a major source of energy, emitting toxic pollutants and carbon dioxide. North of Chicago, Illinois, America Ferrera meets with activists, backed by the Sierra Club's Beyond Coal campaign, who want to shut down a local coal plant, and with a mayor who want to keep it open. Residents complain that the pollution is making them sick. Ferrera learns about an option that can provide clean energy and green jobs. Pollution from energy plants is choking the air in many Chinese cities, and the middle class there has joined with activists to pressure the government to clean up the environment. Sigourney Weaver investigates China's impact on on today's global environment, and the progress it is making to reduce emissions even as its economy grows. China is investing more money in clean energy than any other country in the world.[46]
Distribution and schedule
The show premiered on Showtime on April 13, 2014. Episode 1 was made available freely on the internet on April 7, 2014, prior to its television debut. The following episodes aired on April 20 and 27, May 4, 12, 19 and 26, and June 2.[50] Showtime re-aired the entire series in September 2014.[51][52] Electus International acquired international rights to season 1 of the series[53] and licensed it to broadcasters in over 75 countries and regions.[54] Season 1 of the series is available on DVD and other digital platforms.[55] In 2014, the National Wildlife Federation edited the series one episodes to create curricula for schools and colleges[51][56]
Season 2 is set to premiere on Sunday, October 30, 2016, at 8pm on National Geographic Channel (followed that evening by Before the Flood, Leonardo DiCaprio's climate documentary). The subsequent episodes of season 2 of Years of Living Dangerously are scheduled to air on Wednesdays at 10 p.m. (9 p.m. Central Time), beginning on November 2.[48] Season 2 consists of 8 episodes, distributed in 171 countries and 45 languages.[9][10] The National Geographic Channel is "available in almost 90 million U.S. homes (four times the reach of Showtime) and in over 440 million homes ... worldwide."[57]
Website and advocacy
The series producers maintain a website that contains bonus footage and further information about the stories told in the episodes.[58] It also contains:
- information about, and links to, the science on which the episodes are based;[59]
- an extensive "solutions" page with links to materials about what government, individuals and others can do to stop climate pollution; and[60]
- an educators page, in partnership with the National Wildlife Federation, that links to age-appropriate resources for middle and high school teachers and students, college faculty and students, and parents.[61]
The series' advocacy for climate action includes the #PutAPriceOnIt campaign and a satiric series of "climate inaction figures" representing public officials and private persons who oppose action on climate change.[62]
Reception
Critical reaction
The first season's Metacritic score was 81.[63] The Globe and Mail calls the series "a lavish, gripping production focused on the real effect of climate change in real people's lives around the world."[12] The Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media noted that the series shows what scientists do in the field "and why they’re reaching the conclusion that this problem is such a serious risk to the viability of our civilization and requires urgent action. ... [The] actors [get] their 'hands dirty'. ... [The show] may ... open new avenues for climate change communications."[64] Skeptical Science terms the series "terrific and powerful. ... The series sets a dramatic, powerful urgent tone."[15] Bryan Walsh of Time magazine wrote that: "it's a strong work of documentary journalism, with richly shot and compelling stories".[65]
Andrew C. Revkin of The New York Times wrote that "the Showtime team, at least in episode one, deserves plaudits for taking a compellingly fresh approach to showing the importance of climate hazards to human affairs ... having the movie and television stars ... asking questions and driving the story through their inquiry."[3] CleanTechnica called the series "powerful" and "compelling", observing that the "often baffling science of climate change, marked by relatively small changes that are often invisible to lay observers, is finally something the larger public can immediately understand here in the format of the finest mainstream cable television.[52] The Sun Herald commented: "The stories are compelling, and were filmed as real news was happening around the participants.[66] A reviewer for The Hollywood Reporter thought: "The documentary does an excellent job of being simple and clear without being arrogant, and its convergence of science, politics, religion and industry proves its ultimate point."[67] The Guardian calls the series "perhaps the most important climate change multimedia communication endeavor in history."[68]
After the DVD and digital release of the series, The New York Times review lamented that "many American households did not have the chance to see Years of Living Dangerously. That is a shame. ... With nine episodes running nearly an hour apiece, "Years" represents a serious time commitment. But that time will be rewarded, because this is the best American television series ever done on climate change."[69]
Viewership
The first episode of the series had 294,000 viewers.[70] The four Sunday evening episodes of Years of Living Dangerously, from April 13 to May 4, 2014, had ratings of 0.07%,[71] 0.04%,[72] 0.04%[73] and 0.04%[74] in the adults 18–49 demographic.[75] These figures do not include "on demand" viewers or the viewers who saw the show during Showtime's free weekend, May 9–11, 2014[76] Episode No. 1 has been viewed more than 750,000 times on YouTube.[77]
Cameron commented that the producers had hoped for higher ratings, but they "braced for less because historically people tend to not tune into something that's environmentally themed or climate change related. ... It's part of the whole denial process that we're all in as a society that we really have to face up to."[56]
Awards
Years of Living Dangerously was nominated for two 2014 Emmy Awards: Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series and Outstanding Writing for Nonfiction Programming (for Episode 3: "The Surge").[78] It won the first of these.[79] The series also was named as the first honoree of the 2014 Environmental Media Awards, winning for Outstanding Achievement for Environmental Content.[51][80]
References
- ↑ Years of Living Dangerously, Facebook, August 2, 2016
- ↑ "Team", Years of Living Dangerously website, Showtime, accessed September 1, 2016; Cullen, Heidi and Joseph Romm. "Why author Terry L. Anderson is all wrong about the urgency of climate change", Fox News, April 28, 2016
- 1 2 Revkin, Andrew C. "Showtime Series Aims to Engage Sleepy Public on Global Warming With Celebrity Guides", The New York Times, April 7, 2014
- ↑ Fitts, Alexis Sobel. "Almost Famous", Columbia Journalism Review, January 2, 2014
- 1 2 Hale, Mike. "A Climate of Complexity", The New York Times, April 12, 2014
- ↑ Romm, Joseph. "Years of Living Dangerously Is Back for Season 2 on National Geographic", ThinkProgress.org, September 17, 2015
- ↑ "National Geographic Orders Season 2 of Years of Living Dangerously", BroadwayWorld.com, September 18, 2015
- ↑ Cullen, Heidi and Joseph Romm. "Why author Terry L. Anderson is all wrong about the urgency of climate change", Fox News, April 28, 2016
- 1 2 Steinberg, Brian. "David Letterman Will Explore Climate Change For National Geographic Docu-Series", Variety, September 17, 2015
- 1 2 Gajewski, Ryan. "David Letterman Lands First Post-'Late Show' TV Gig – About Climate Change", Hollywood Reporter, September 17, 2015
- ↑ Shanahan, Mark. "Gisele films episode for National Geographic show", The Boston Globe, June 2, 2016; and "Season Two of the Emmy Award-Winning and Critically Acclaimed Series Years of Living Dangerously Set to Premiere Sunday, Oct. 30, 8/7c Exclusively on National Geographic Channel", TheFutonCritic.com, August 8, 2016
- 1 2 Doyle, John. "The Governator's got a new foe – Climate Change", The Globe and Mail, January 16, 2014
- ↑ Joiner, James. "James Cameron on Getting Over Dread, Despair and Yourself Long Enough to Believe in Climate Change", Esquire magazine, September 23, 2014.
- ↑ Elder, Sean. "Years of Living Dangerously Shows the Devastating Effects of Climate Change", Newsweek, September 4, 2014
- 1 2 "Watch Episode 1 of James Cameron's Years of Living Dangerously", Skeptical Science, April 7, 2014
- ↑ Picken, Tom. Global Witness, "Arnold Schwarzenegger's Inconvenient Truth", March 31, 2014, accessed August 18, 2015
- ↑ Abraham, John and Dana Nuccitelli. "In the Years of Living Dangerously, Part 1", The Guardian, September 6, 2014
- ↑ Bittel, Jason. "The Governator's Back – and Going After Climate Change", On Earth, April 21, 2004
- ↑ Demaline, Kristen. "Years of Living Dangerously Recap: Episode 2", Ecocentric, Grace Communications Foundation, April 21, 2014
- ↑ Ross, Judith A. "Years of Living Dangerously Brings Home the Facts ~ Episode 2", Moms Clean Air Force, April 23, 2014
- ↑ Demaline, Kristen. "Years of Living Dangerously Recap: Episode 3, 'The Surge'", Ecocentric, Grace Communications Foundation, April 28, 2014
- ↑ Ross, Judith A. "Years of Living Dangerously Explores a Mother's Worst Nightmare in Episode 3", Moms Clean Air Force, April 29, 2014
- ↑ Sellitti, Rebecca. "Years of Living Dangerously Episode #4: Ice and Brimstone with Ian Somerhalder", Globalcool.org, May 7, 2014
- 1 2 Demaline, Kristen. "Years of Living Dangerously Episode 4: 'Ice and Brimstone'", Ecocentric, Grace Communications Foundation, May 5, 2014
- 1 2 Abraham, John and Dana Nuccitelli. "In the Years of Living Dangerously, Part 2", The Guardian, September 8, 2014
- ↑ Joyner, Anna Jane. "An Open Letter to My Daddy Who Doesn't Accept Climate Change", Huffington Post, May 2, 2014
- ↑ Ross, Judith A. "Years of Living Dangerously Episode 4 Shows Us Why We Can’t Give Up", Moms Clean Air Force, May 14, 2014
- ↑ Photo of Stahl and Kerry, "Under the Ice", Episode 4, Years of Living Dangerously, accessed June 6, 2014
- ↑ Mohney, Gillian. "John Kerry Calls Climate Change a 'Weapon of Mass Destruction'", ABC News, February 16, 2014
- 1 2 DeMelle, Brendan. "Years of Living Dangerously Takes on Climate Denial, Anti-Science Attacks on Climate Solutions", De-Smog Blog, May 19, 2014
- ↑ Demaline, Kristen. "Years of Living Dangerously Recap: Episode 5, 'True Colors'", Ecocentric, Grace Communications Foundation, May 13, 2014
- ↑ Sellitti, Rebecca. "Years of Living Dangerously Episode #5: True Colors starring Olivia Munn", Globalcool.org, May 19, 2014
- ↑ Demaline, Kristen. "Years of Living Dangerously Recap: Episode 6, 'Winds of Change'", Ecocentric, Grace Communications Foundation, May 20, 2014
- ↑ Sellitti, Rebecca. "Years of Living Dangerously Episode #6: Winds of Change starring America Ferrera", Globalcool.org, May 30, 2014
- 1 2 Ross, Judith A. "Years of Living Dangerously Episode 7 Reveals Climate Change's Worldwide Web", Moms Clean Air Force, June 4, 2014
- ↑ Demaline, Kristen. "Years of Living Dangerously Recap: Episode 7, 'Revolt, Rebuild, Renew'", Ecocentric, Grace Communications Foundation, May 27, 2014
- 1 2 Abraham, John and Dana Nuccitelli. "In the Years of Living Dangerously, Part 2", The Guardian, September 10, 2014
- 1 2 Sellitti, Rebecca. "Years of Living Dangerously Season Finale: The Future Is Now Starring Michael C. Hall", Globalcool.org, June 17, 2014
- ↑ "The Future is Now", Years of Living Dangerously, Showtime, accessed June 3, 2014; Romm, Joseph. "Climate Change 101: An Introduction", Years of Living Dangerously, Showtime, accessed June 3, 2014
- 1 2 Demaline, Kristen. "Years of Living Dangerously Recap: Episode 8, 'A Dangerous Future'", Ecocentric, Grace Communications Foundation, June 3, 2014
- ↑ "The Science Is In: Heat – Heat Deaths", Years of Living Dangerously, Showtime, accessed June 3, 2014
- ↑ Sellitti, Rebecca. "Years of Living Dangerously Episode #8: Mercury Rising starring Matt Damon", Globalcool.org, June 10, 2014
- 1 2 Demaline, Kristen. "Years of Living Dangerously Recap: Episode 9, 'Moving a Mountain'", Ecocentric, Grace Communications Foundation, June 10, 2014
- ↑ Alman, Ashley. "Obama 'Absolutely' Wants to Go Off on Climate Change Deniers in Congress", The Huffington Post, June 8, 2014
- ↑ Freidman, Thomas L. "Obama on Obama on Climate", The New York Times, June 7, 2014
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Years of Living Dangerously, WRI, accessed November 21, 2016
- ↑ Lenthang, Marlene. "Forget Vampires! Why Ian Somerhalder’s Latest Project Will 'Scare the S— out of You'", People magazine, November 2, 2016
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Romm, Joe. "Celebs talk climate at Years of Living Dangerously premiere", ThinkProgress, October 28, 2016
- ↑ Wray, James. "Climate refugees and California’s drought with Don Cheadle and Tom Friedman on Years of Living Dangerously", Monsters & Critics, November 10, 2016
- ↑ "Project Scheduling Sheet", Yearsoflivingdangerously.com, accessed April 14, 2014
- 1 2 3 Doan, Pamela. "Critical Success for Global Warming Series", Philipstown.info, August 24, 2014
- 1 2 Dechert, Sandy. "Years of Living Dangerously Reprise Starts Tomorrow Night", CleanTechnica.com, September 4, 2014
- ↑ O'Connell, Michael. "Electus Acquires International Rights to Showtime Doc Years of Living Dangerously", Hollywood Reporter, September 12, 2013
- ↑ "Years of Living Dangerously Wins 2014 Emmy for Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series", CNN.com,
- ↑ Astle, Randy. "Joel Bach and David Gelber on Years of Living Dangerously", Filmmaker magazine, September 3, 2014
- 1 2 Gaudiosi, John. "Director James Cameron's 'dangerous' message", Fortune, August 10, 2014
- ↑ Sinclair, Peter. "New Years of Living Dangerously Season Expands Reach on (Murdoch owned) NatGeo", Climate Denial Crock of the Week, August 11, 2016
- ↑ Plait, Phil. "Years of Living Dangerously", Slate, March 28, 2014
- ↑ Romm, Joseph, et al. "The Science Is In", YearsofLivingDangerously.com, accessed June 5, 2014
- ↑ "What We Can Do", YearsofLivingDangerously.com, accessed September 22, 2014
- ↑ "Years of Living Dangerously central education website", Climateclassroom.org, accessed June 5, 2014
- ↑ Dunne, Carey. "Play at Doing Nothing with Trump, Palin, and Other 'Climate Inaction Figures'", Hyperallergic.com, August 23, 2016
- ↑ "Years of Living Dangerously: Season 1", Metacritic, accessed June 10, 2014
- ↑ Wihbey, John. "Celebrities, Climate and Showtime's Years of Living Dangerously", The Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media, Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, March 26, 2014
- ↑ Walsh, Bryan. "The Docu Series Years of Living Dangerously Tries to Close the Climate Gap", Time magazine, April 12, 2014
- ↑ Leytham, Tammy. "Showtime's Years of Living Dangerously looks at climate change through 60 Minutes storytelling", Sun Herald, April 7, 2014
- ↑ Keene, Allison. "Years of Living Dangerously: TV Review", The Hollywood Reporter, April 11, 2014
- ↑ Abraham, John and Dana Nuccitelli. "Years of Living Dangerously – a global warming blockbuster", The Guardian, 9 April 2014
- ↑ Gillis, Justin. "Shining Star Power on a Crucial Subject", The New York Times, p. D5, September 23, 2014
- ↑ Keveney, Bill. "Nielsen ratings: NCAA men's basketball final wins", USA Today, April 15, 2014, accessed March 8, 2016
- ↑ Salem, Mitch. "The SKED Cable/Network Scorecard – 4/13/14", ShowBuzzDaily.com, April 15, 2014, accessed March 8, 2016
- ↑ Salem, Mitch. "The SKED Cable/Network Scorecard – 4/20/14", ShowBuzzDaily.com, April 22, 2014, accessed March 8, 2016
- ↑ Salem, Mitch. "The SKED Cable/Network Scorecard – 4/27/14", ShowBuzzDaily.com, April 29, 2014, accessed March 8, 2016
- ↑ Salem, Mitch. "The SKED Cable/Network Scorecard – 5/4/14", ShowBuzzDaily.com, May 6, 2014, accessed March 8, 2016
- ↑ "Showbuzz Basics", ShowBuzzDaily.com, accessed March 8, 2016
- ↑ Baker, Brandon. "Showtime's Free Weekend Pairs Years of Living Dangerously With White House Climate Report's Release", Ecowatch.com, May 9, 2014, accessed March 9, 2016
- ↑ "Years of Living Dangerously Premiere Full Episode", YouTube, April 6, 2014, accessed March 9, 2016
- ↑ Nominations list", Emmys.com, July 20, 2014
- ↑ "Creative Arts Emmys Doled Out in Hollywood", CBS Local, August 16, 2014
- ↑ Gajewski, Ryan. "'Years of Living Dangerously' Named First Honoree of 2014 Environmental Media Awards", Hollywood Reporter, August 7, 2014
External links
- Years of Living Dangerously, official website
- Years of Living Dangerously at the Internet Movie Database
- Episode 1: "Dry Season" (official video)
- Series 2 trailer number 1 (2016)
- Series 2 trailer number 2 (2016)
- Thomas Friedman discusses the series on MSNBC
- The series' Tumblr archive