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Can Humor Help Solve Our Climate Crisis? David Cross Sure as F**k Hopes So.

The Emmy-winning comic teams up with a Princeton scientist in a new video campaign.

This story was originally published bthe Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

David Cross is many things: a famed comic, an Emmy award winner, and a New York Times best-selling author. But he is not a climate scientist.

That fact might make him the perfect person to communicate the urgency of global heating to mass audiences. “You’ve got to speak to people in a way they can understand,” he said.

That’s the purpose of a new video in which Cross co-stars with renowned environmental scientist Michael Oppenheimer. “Humor, as I think has been shown over centuries, is a very effective way to get people to absorb the information,” said Cross.

The new video puts that theory to the test. In it, Oppenheimer plays the straight man, issuing a dire warning: “Heat records are being broken all over the world. In fact, last year was the hottest year since the industrial era began,” he says.

Cross then interprets that message for laypeople. “Translation: The shit is hitting the fan,” he says. “And the fan is on maximum.”

The video was released by the group Climate Science Breakthrough, which has over the past two years has made videos with leading UK comedians such as Nish Kumar and Jo Brand in an attempt to “help climate science break through to many more people—and unlock action.”

“We’re aiming to reach beyond the converted and depolarize the debate,” said Ben Carey, one of the video’s producers. If the new video is well-received, they’ll enlist more scientists and experts to produce more of them, he said.

The video series comes as part of a wave of climate-focused comedy launched in recent years. In 2023, Oscar-winning director Adam McKay launched the non-profit Yellow Dot Studios to make content about the dangers of fossil fuels, and the following year, climate advocacy organization Gas Leaks Project launched a mini series about the dangers of gas stoves.

These projects could help reach people who experts aren’t often reaching, said Oppenheimer, since “most of the training for young scientist is aimed at being able to communicate enough so you get your next job, not necessarily aimed at communicating to the public.”

If it seems odd to use humor to build awareness about a grim subject, Cross says it’s a tactic with a long history. Indeed, George Carlin railed against censorship in the 1970s, while Bill Hicks famously used his platform to speak out against George W. Bush’s foreign policy.

Dharna Noor was the Boston Globe's climate producer. Prior to joining the Boston Globe's climate team, Dharna worked as a staff writer at Earther, Gizmodo's climate vertical, where she also co-produced a season of the podcast Drilled on the fossil fuel industry's influence on education. Before that, she led the climate team at the Real News Network. Her writing has also appeared in publications including In These Times, Jacobin Magazine, and Truthout, and was also featured in a 2021 book from The New Press called The World We Need. She has been interviewed on podcasts and radio programs such as the Times Radio, Vox’s Tell Me More, the Insurgents, and NPR’s Living on Earth. She lives in Baltimore.

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