Old online posts can spark big PR headaches. Three key lessons for leaders on preparing, responding, and managing a communications crisis.
Congressman Sean Casten (D-IL) joined us in the Echo Chamber to share his take on energy policy, permitting reform, market-driven climate solutions, and a surprising high school story.
Katie Porter’s viral interview is blowing up for all the wrong reasons. Here’s what every candidate—or anyone doing interviews—can learn from her mistakes.
Should we even call it “Climate Week” anymore? As Trump’s power grows, Democrats and green groups face a stark choice: stick to old climate rhetoric or adapt messaging to win elections. Chris Moyer argues that framing clean energy around affordability—not existential alarm—is the only way forward.
Morgan and Dan reflect on Climate Week in NYC, sharing key insights on AI, geothermal energy, and the role of communication in driving the clean energy transition.
Scott joined us in the Echo Chamber and told us about his brief internship in outdoor education courses during the summer of ‘99 inspired a deep love of public lands and conservation.
Our team is heading to Climate Week NYC to explore how storytelling, finance, and communications can drive climate solutions and scale impact.
Mary King of Aligned Climate Capital reveals how she spotted the financial potential in climate early and invests in technologies driving decarbonization.
It wasn’t politics that brought her to climate, it was climate that pushed her into politics, transforming a scientist into a strategist. Today we’re featuring Angela Barranco, Executive Director of Climate Group North America, where she oversees the fast approaching Climate Week NYC, the world’s largest private climate gathering, bringing together unexpected allies and bold ideas to move the climate agenda forward.
This episode underscores how aggressive messaging can sway decisionmakers on consequential, multi-billion-dollar issues. A sharp communications strategy can help to deliver outcomes few expect. That has certainly been true for Zeldin. Many assumed he was simply posturing for his boss, with little chance of influencing the courts.










