‘This is part of our world now’: can TV shows adequately reflect the climate crisis?

The Guardian

‘This is part of our world now’: can TV shows adequately reflect the climate crisis?

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Only around 2.8% of TV shows and films between 2016 and 2020 mentioned climate issues. But a new run of writers is looking to increase that From hurricanes bearing down on Florida to megafires burning in the west, the climate crisis seems to be everywhere, all at once. But in TV shows and movies, mentions of climate are far rarer. A study by the University of Southern Californias Media Impact lab examined more than 37,000 film and TV scripts that aired in the US between 2016 and 2020. It found that only 2.8% even mentioned climate-adjacent words like solar panels, fracking, sea level rise or renewable energy. We know thats really low for a phenomenon that we are all experiencing, said Anna Jane Joyner, founder of Good Energy, a non-profit consulting firm. The group has a goal: to get 50% of television and film scripts to touch on the climate crisis by 2027. A growing number of shows are incorporating climate themes, Joyner said. Last season, the long-running hospital drama Greys Anatomy aired an episode called Hotter Than Hell, based on the real-life heat dome that baked the Pacific north-west the previous summer. When the bodys exposed to rising temperatures, it has the ability to cool itself down. We sweat, our blood vessels dilate, and our heart rate increases, Meredith Grey, the shows titular character, narrated. But when the temperature starts to inch above 100 degrees, our bodies have to work overtime, leading to heat exhaustion. We become nauseated, dizzy and confused. The upcoming Apple TV+ anthology drama Extrapolations , starring Meryl Streep, Edward Norton and Marion Cotillard, is billed as an exploration of how the upcoming changes to our planet will affect love, faith, work and family on a personal and human scale. Hulus Indigenous American teen comedy-drama Reservation Dogs features Dallas Goldtooth, an advocate with the Indigenous Environmental Network, and includes references to the Land Back Indigenous sovereignty movement , which is part of a wider climate justice movement. On ABCs Abbott Elementary, Principal Ava complains about a February hotter than the devils booty, to which a colleague replies: Climate change. We are living in the middle of its disastrous effects. [The climate crisis] is such a part of our global and individual experience, and thats only going to become more so in the next decade, Joyner said. Eventually its going to be an intentional creative choice to not include mentions of climate change, and stories will feel outdated if they dont acknowledge this is part of our world now. Research shows that people tend to underestimate how much others care about climate change they think they care more than their neighbors or family members. While 70% of American adults say they are concerned or alarmed about the climate crisis, theyre not talking about it only about one-third reported discussing the topic with their friends or family. That creates a sense of isolation and anxiety, Joyner said. Television and film can do a lot to assuage that because it validates the audiences own experiences and feelings. That means that climate storylines can be comedic, absurdist or dramatic. In fact, Joyner said she finds doom and apocalypse plotlines to be limiting. People need more stories about the future we do want, she said. Showing that the climate crisis is real, and happening now, can galvanize audiences to act, said Max Boykoff, a researcher at the University of Colorado Boulder who studies climate change communication. Even in the last few years, weve been seeing this more and more not just futuristic portrayals that are talking about climate change, but showing where we live and whats going on right now, he said. This isnt just about sacrifice. This can be about innovation, it can be about opportunity, it can be about actually having fun. Victor Quinaz, a writer and producer on Netflixs Big Mouth and Glow, said it was not always easy to bring up the climate crisis in a pitch meeting. I dont think I would ever go into a room and pitch, this is about climate change, he said. That is such a pitch-killer. I think we have to be far more subtle about the storytelling. On Big Mouth, Quinaz said his team consulted neuroscientists, psychiatrists and other experts to understand what kids were feeling during puberty and one predominant emotion was anxiety. Climate anxiety is a major stressor among young people and something Quinaz weaves into storylines: in one episode, Andrew Gloubermans family visits Florida, when a giant sinkhole opens up and devours the west coast of the state. Quinaz is currently developing a show with Jenji Kohan (Weeds, Orange is the New Black) based on his experiences as a disaster relief volunteer. For me, the story wasnt about climate change, it was about how we help people in this time period, and the anxiety of living through this time, he said. Dorothy Fortenberry, a writer and producer on Extrapolations, said she sees more interest in climate plot lines in Hollywood. Just in the last five years, Ive been a part of many more conversations about how to bring an awareness of the complexity of climate change to the show they already want to write, she said. People are asking: wheres the climate part of that show? Fortenberry points to short climate mentions in Shen Wengs new Netflix standup special , the comedian leans into a joke about climate change and then moves on. It doesnt feel like pausing and doing a Very Special Episode , it doesnt feel like you leave the narrative world, she said. Its not like a 90s sitcom that suddenly needs to talk about bulimia for 26 seconds. She hopes that climate stories will be ubiquitous but also multifaceted. If all the climate stories are the same, and the same type of view, it will be boring and bad, said Fortenberry. My hope is every creative person takes this in the direction that is fruitful for the narrative and we end up with a real panoply of narratives. This article originally appeared in Nexus Media News and was made possible by a grant from the Open Society Foundations