'Climate Reality Check' measures accurate representation of climate change in movies, TV shows

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'Climate Reality Check' measures accurate representation of climate change in movies, TV shows

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A new study is demanding the entertainment industry acknowledge "climate change is our reality" with a proper "reality check." "It's happening here and now, not elsewhere or in the future. It touches every aspect of life. But that reality is still largely absent from our on-screen stories," the study read. "The Climate Reality Check is a simple tool to evaluate whether our climate reality is being represented in films, TV shows, and other narratives. It's inspired by the Bechdel-Wallace Test, which measures gender representation." The Bechdel-Wallace Test refers to an idea popularized by comic artist Alison Bechdel in 1985 that claimed a film accurately portrayed women if it featured at least two female characters who have a conversation that does not involve a man. Similarly, the "Climate Reality Check" requires the film or show to acknowledge that climate change exists with at least one character knowing it. This can be accomplished by referencing "unprecedented" weather events or a character using the term "climate change" in dialogue. BARBIE'S DREAMHOUSE MUST BE 'REDESIGNED TO SURVIVE' CLIMATE CHANGE, CBS REPORTS As an example, the study viewed 13 Oscar-nominated films and found that 23%, or three movies, passed the test. The films were "Barbie," "Mission: Impossible Dead Reckoning Part One," and "Nyad." In "Barbie," climate change is alluded to when Sasha, played by Arianna Greenblatt, tells Margot Robbies Barbie that "You set the feminist movement back fifty years, you destroyed girls innate sense of worth, and youre killing the planet with your glorification of rampant consumerism." In "Mission: Impossible Dead Reckoning Part One," the U.S. develops an AI cyberweapon to prepare for the possibility of "a ballistic war over a rapidly shrinking ecosystem." "Nyad" specifically cites "global warming" as a reason for changes in the ecosystem. "The Climate Reality Check does not suggest or require that every story center around climate change, nor does it prescribe what kinds of stories filmmakers should tell. It simply measures whether our current climate reality is being reflected on-screen. How that is done, friends, is up to you," the study stated. The study reported that it came to its conclusion after its authors spoke with more than 200 writers, showrunners, executives, communications experts, and others. The authors hoped that by 2027, 50% of Oscar-nominated films would pass the "Climate Reality Check." MEDIA PRAISE ECO-TERRORIST FILM 'HOW TO BLOW UP A PIPELINE': 'RATIONAL IF DESPERATE PRAGMATISM' "We are all being impacted by and emotionally responding to climate change, so the characters in the stories we watch and love would be too," the study read. The study was published by Good Energy, an organization dedicated to accurate media portrayals of climate change, and Colby Colleges Buck Lab for Climate and Environment. Fox News Digital reached out to both groups for a comment.