After the Fukushima disaster shut down Japan's nuclear reactors, the coal industry rushed in to fill the energy gap. As climate advocate Kimiko Hirata watched dozens of new coal plant proposals quietly surface across the country — each one locking in decades of future emissions — she resolved to make them impossible to ignore. She shares how a small, scrappy civil society movement took on a fossil-fuel-dependent economy and got people to say "yes" to a renewable future.
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Why AI is unlikely to become conscious | Anil Seth
17:06

Reimagining traditional architecture for modern needs | Riyad Joucka
10:06

The "hot shot rule" to help you become a better leader | Kat Cole (re-release)
09:49