You’ve heard it from cable news pundits, Democratic strategists, and your favorite YouTuber: young men swung the last United States election for Trump. Understanding what's driving the "manosphere" and how to reach the young men in its grips is on everyone's minds, but we're zooming into a speciific corner of it: the intersection of male grievance culture and climate denial. Why are American men less likely than women to believe in climate change, or take personal or political actions against it? What does their reluctance to deal with the climate crisis have to do with men’s shift to the right in general? And what can be done to reverse it?
Carbons Bros is a cross-over miniseries from Drilled and Non-Toxic.

Drilling Deep: Karen Hao on How Big AI Is Gambling with the Planet’s Chips
52:20

10 Years After Berta Cáceres’s Murder, Why Is Honduras Still So Dangerous for Environmentalists?
59:00

Just Because the U.S. Says It's Legal Doesn't Make It So: Companies Trading in Illegally Seized Venezuelan Oil Face Legal Risk
28:44