All posts by media-man

US Senators Investigate $370 Million IRS Payout to Cheniere Energy

Seven Senate Democrats launched the probe over controversial tax credits to the country’s largest exporter of liquefied natural gas.

Seven Democratic U.S. senators have launched a probe into a $370 million “alternative fuel” payout to Cheniere Energy, made earlier this year by the IRS, that critics say the liquefied natural gas export company never should have received.

Alabama’s Governor Signed a Landmark Utility Regulation Bill Into Law. Many Say It’s a Win For Alabama Power.

The legislation was weakened so significantly its original sponsor ultimately voted against it. Alabamians say they’ll continue to push for real reform.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—Alabama Power customers aren’t giving up yet. On Monday, around two dozen of them marched from Birmingham’s Kelly Ingram Park to the nearby headquarters of the investor-owned utility company to make that much clear. 

Tesla’s Cumulative Vehicle Sales Surpass 9 Million — And It Becomes #1 BEV Seller Again

Tesla’s vehicle sales have declined in recent years, and are basically stagnant in a good quarter these days. However, it is still one of the top EV sellers in the world. Actually, news is that it took back the title of #1 from BYD in the first quarter of 2026 ... [continued]

The post Tesla’s Cumulative Vehicle Sales Surpass 9 Million — And It Becomes #1 BEV Seller Again appeared first on CleanTechnica.

“Snap Judgment” and “This American Life” Are Peabody Award Nominees

The podcast and public radio series reflect “work that informs, challenges, and drives meaningful change”

The Peabody Awards announced the nominees in their 86th annual honors, celebrating stories that defend the public interest, encourage empathy, and expand our understanding of the world.

The awards––one of today’s highest honors––recognize programming that reflects the pressing social issues and vibrant emerging voices of our time. Nominated for podcasting/radio: A Tiny Plot from KQED’s Snap Studios and PRX. The podcast and public radio series was broadcast in late summer 2025 and released on-demand to listeners everywhere, via the landmark program Snap Judgment.

For A Tiny Plot, host and reporter Shaina Shealy takes listeners inside an encampment in Oakland for a story about scarcity, community, and the complexity of building something new from the margins of a broken system. What happens when people who’ve been shut out of a system that has failed them decide to take the lead? Disaster, and unexpected beauty.

Also a nominee for podcast/radio: This American Life, for a broadcast titled “The Hand that Rocks the Gavel.” According to the Awards, it “uncovers the systemic undermining of due process and the changing role of immigration judges… highlighting an ongoing crisis faced by asylum seekers and potential long-term implications for the rule of law in the United States.”

The Snap Judgment podcast and public radio show is distributed with PRX. This American Life is brought to public radio with PRX.

Winners in the 86th annual Peabody Awards will be announced in May.

About PRX

Celebrating more than 20 years as a nonprofit public media company, PRX works in partnership with leading independent creators, organizations, and stations to bring meaningful audio storytelling into millions of listeners’ lives. PRX is one of the world’s top podcast publishers, public radio distributors, and audio producers, serving as an engine of innovation for public media and podcasting to help shape a vibrant future for creative and journalistic audio. Shows across PRX’s portfolio of broadcast productions, podcast partners, and its Radiotopia podcast network have received recognition from the Peabody Awards, the Tribeca Festival, the International Documentary Association, the National Magazine Awards, and the Pulitzer Prizes. Visit prx.org for more.


“Snap Judgment” and “This American Life” Are Peabody Award Nominees was originally published in PRX Official on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Mass detention database puts trove of data at fingertips of investigative journalists

Mass detention operations by immigration agents over the last year have taken immigration from what was largely a national political issue to one that is deeply felt in communities of all sizes throughout the country. In that time, news outlets have told countless human stories about migrant life in America, about detainment and about the justice system. But within and alongside those human…

Source

Methodology

The American Trends Panel survey methodology Overview Data in this report comes from Wave 190 of the American Trends Panel (ATP), Pew Research Center’s nationally representative panel of randomly selected U.S. adults. The survey was conducted from March 23 to March 29, 2026. A total of 3,507 panelists responded out of 4,046 who were sampled, […]

Acknowledgments

This report is a collaborative effort based on the input and analysis of the following individuals. Jacob Poushter, Associate Director, Global Attitudes ResearchJonathan Schulman, Research AssociateAndrew Prozorovsky, Research Assistant Julia Armeli, Research AssistantDorene Asare-Marfo, Senior Panel ManagerPeter Bell, Associate Director, Design and UXEthan Charlip, Communications AssociateJanakee Chavda, Associate Digital ProducerLaura Clancy, Research AnalystJustine Coleman, Associate […]

The New York Times Got Played By A Telehealth Scam And Called It The Future Of AI

Since the New York Times published its semi-viral big profile of Medvi last week — the “AI-powered” telehealth startup that it breathlessly described as a “$1.8 billion company” supposedly run by just two brothers — I’ve had multiple friends and family members send me the article with some version of the same message: “Can you believe this guy built a billion-dollar company with AI? Why haven’t you done this?” The story is making rounds, and giving people the impression that with a ChatGPT account and a little bit of marketing know-how, you too could be raking in millions every month.

The problem is that most of the story is utter nonsense.

Let’s start with the headline number itself. The NYT admits — buried deep in the piece — that Medvi “has not raised outside funding” and “has no official valuation.” A company’s value is typically established by investors, an acquisition offer, or public market pricing. Medvi has none of those. What it has is a revenue run rate — a projection based on early-2026 sales extrapolated across a full year. Calling that a “$1.8 billion company” is like calling someone who found a twenty on the sidewalk a “future millionaire.” Any business reporter should know the difference. Even the NYT tips its hand:

Medvi is technically not a one-person $1 billion company, since Mr. Gallagher hired his brother and has some contractors. The start-up, which has not raised outside funding, also has no official valuation.

“Technically not” doing quite a bit of heavy lifting there.

But the misleading valuation is almost the least of it. Even if you accept revenue as the relevant metric, how sustainable is that run rate for a company that just got an FDA warning letter, is facing a class action lawsuit for spam, has a key partner being sued over allegations that a major product doesn’t actually work, and is operating in an industry that regulators are actively trying to rein in?

Oh, wait, did the NYT forget to mention all of those things? They sure did! Not to mention the legions of fake, apparently AI generated doctors and patients who keep showing up in Medvi advertisements. Yes, the NYT eventually alludes to some of that, but it claims these were mere “shortcuts” that were fixed last year (they weren’t).

That said, you can feel the pull of the narrative that seduced the NYT: a scrappy founder with a rags-to-riches backstory, two brothers taking on the world, AI tools stitching it all together, Sam Altman himself anointing the achievement as proof that his prediction of a “one man, one billion dollar company, thanks to AI” was correct.

It’s a hell of a story. The problem is that almost none of it holds up to even the most basic scrutiny, and the fact that the New York Times — the New York Times — fell for it (or worse, didn’t care) is an embarrassment. As much as I’ve made fun of the NYT for its bad reporting over the years, this is (by far) the worst I’ve seen. They didn’t just misunderstand something, or try to push a misleading narrative, they got fully played on a bullshit story that any competent reporter or editor should have realized from the jump. This one stinks from top to bottom.

Medvi’s success has very little to do with “AI” and quite a lot to do with fake doctors, deepfaked before-and-after photos, misleading ads, probable snake oil, and the kind of old-fashioned deceptive marketing that has been separating marks from their money for centuries. The only thing AI really “turbocharged” here was the company’s ability to generate bullshit at scale. Oh, and also the NYT somehow missed out on the FDA already investigating the company, as well as the multiple lawsuits accusing the company and its partners of extraordinarily bad behavior.

Let’s start with what the NYT actually published. Reporter Erin Griffith’s piece reads like a press release that the NYT re-formatted as a newspaper article:

Matthew Gallagher took just two months, $20,000 and more than a dozen artificial intelligence tools to get his start-up off the ground.

From his house in Los Angeles, Mr. Gallagher, 41, used A.I. to write the code for the software that powers his company, produce the website copy, generate the images and videos for ads and handle customer service. He created A.I. systems to analyze his business’s performance. And he outsourced the other stuff he couldn’t do himself.

His start-up, Medvi, a telehealth provider of GLP-1 weight-loss drugs, got 300 customers in its first month. In its second month, it gained 1,000 more. In 2025, Medvi’s first full year in business, the company generated $401 million in sales.

Mr. Gallagher then hired his only employee, his younger brother, Elliot. This year, they are on track to do $1.8 billion in sales.

A $1.8 billion company with just two employees? In the age of A.I., it’s increasingly possible.

And then, because no AI hype piece would be complete without the requisite papal blessing from San Francisco:

In an email, Mr. Altman said that it appeared he had won a bet with his tech C.E.O. friends over when such a company would appear, and that he “would like to meet the guy” who had done it.

Altman “would like to meet the guy.” Well of course he would! The NYT hand-delivered him the perfect anecdote for his next AI hype session. The reporter seemingly solicited that quote to validate a pre-existing thesis: “Sam Altman was right about one-person billion-dollar AI companies.” The fact that the company is a dumpster fire of regulatory violations and consumer fraud was, apparently, a secondary concern to the “Great Man and A Great AI” narrative of innovation. This piece was built around a thesis — Sam Altman was right — and then a company was located to prove it.

To its minimal credit, the NYT does kind of acknowledge — eventually, if you make it past the thirtieth paragraph — that things weren’t entirely on the up and up:

Medvi’s initial website featured photos of smiling models who looked AI-generated and before-and-after weight-loss photos from around the web with the faces changed. Some of its ads were AI slop. A scrolling ticker of mainstream media logos made it look as if Medvi had been featured in Bloomberg and The Times when it had merely advertised there.

I mean… shouldn’t that have raised at least one or two red flags within the NYT offices? Medvi’s website featured a scrolling ticker of media logos — including the New York Times logo — to make it look like these outlets had written about the company, when they hadn’t. A year ago, Futurism’s Maggie Harrison Dupré had even called this out directly (along with Medvi’s penchant for bullshit AI slop advertising).

Just underneath these images, MEDVi includes a rotating list of logos belonging to websites and news publishers, ranging from health hubs like Healthline to reputable publications like The New York Times, Bloomberg, and Forbes, among others — suggesting that MEDVi is reputable enough to have been covered by mainstream publications.

…. But… there was no sign of MEDVi coverage in the New York Times, Bloomberg, or the other outlets it mentioned.

And then, despite this, the New York Times went ahead and wrote the glowing profile that Medvi had been falsely claiming existed. The paper of record became the validation that the fake credibility ticker was trying to manufacture.

And the NYT frames all of what most people would consider to be “fraud” as mere “shortcuts” that the founder later “fixed.” Eighteen paragraphs after burying the admission, it reports:

That gave Matthew Gallagher breathing room to fix some shortcuts he had initially taken, like swapping out the before-and-after weight-loss photos for ones from real customers.

“Shortcuts.” Using deepfake technology to steal strangers’ weight-loss photos from across the internet, alter their faces with AI, give them fake names and fabricated health outcomes, and pass them off as your own satisfied customers — that’s a “shortcut.” Ctrl-F is a shortcut. This sounds more like fraud.

And it turns out those “shortcuts” hadn’t actually been fixed at all. As Futurism’s Dupré reported in a follow-up piece published after the NYT article:

As recently as last month, nearly a year after the NYT said that Medvi had cleaned up its act, an archived version of Medvi.org shows that it was again displaying before-and-after transformations of alleged customers. They bore the same names as before — “Melissa C,” “Sandra K,” and “Michael P” — and again listed how many pounds each person had purportedly lost and the related health improvements they apparently enjoyed.

Even though they had the same names, these people that the site now called “Medvi patients” now looked completely different from the original roundup of Melissas, Sandras, and Michaels. Worse, some of the images now bore clear signs of AI-generation: the new Sandra’s fingers, for example, are melted into her smartphone in one of her mirror selfies.

They kept the same fake names and the same fake weight-loss numbers but swapped in entirely different fake people. What the NYT claims was “fixing shortcuts” appears to actually be just “updating the con.”

In a great takedown video by Voidzilla, it’s revealed that at least one set of original images appeared to have been sourced from Reddit forums on weight loss having nothing to do with Medvi, and even with the modified images it used, it massively overstated how much weight the original person claimed to have lost. And while Medvi later switched out the photos with someone totally different, they kept the same name and same false weight loss claims.

And again, all of this was publicly known information that Griffin or her editors could have easily found with some basic journalism skills. We already mentioned that Futurism article from May of 2025, nearly a full year before the NYT piece ran. That investigation traced the deepfaked before-and-after photos back to their real sources, found that a doctor listed on Medvi’s site had no association with the company and demanded to be removed, and documented the AI-slop advertising. That investigation was widely available. A Google search would have found it.

But the fake photos and fraudulent branding are almost quaint compared to what the NYT chose not to mention at all. Six weeks before the NYT piece was published, the FDA sent Medvi a warning letter for misbranding its compounded drugs. The letter admonished Medvi for marketing its products in ways that falsely implied they were FDA-approved and for putting the “MEDVI” name on vial images in a way that suggested the company was the actual drug compounder. The letter warned:

Failure to adequately address any violations may result in legal action without further notice, including, without limitation, seizure and injunction.

The NYT did not mention this letter. And yes, Gallagher now insists that the FDA letter was targeting an affiliate that was using a nearly identical name, and it was that rogue affiliate that was the problem. But the letter is addressed to MEDVi LLC dba MEDVi, which is the name of his company. If he’s allowing affiliates to use his exact name, then that alone seems like a problem. Indeed, it certainly seems to highlight how this is all just, at best, a pyramid scheme of snake oil salesmen, where Gallagher has affiliates willing to deceive to sell more snake oil.

Separately, on March 20, 2026 — thirteen days before the NYT piece ran — a class action lawsuit was filed against Medvi in the Central District of California alleging that the company uses affiliate marketers to blast out deceptive spam emails with spoofed domains and falsified headers. The complaint alleges Medvi is responsible for over 100,000 spam emails per year to class members. The lawsuit seeks $1,000 per violating email.

The NYT did not mention this lawsuit either, even as it was yet another bit of evidence that either Medvi is up to bad shit, or it has a bunch of out of control affiliates potentially breaking laws left and right to increase sales.

And then there are the fake doctors. As Business Insider reported, a review of Meta’s ad library turned up thousands of active ads for Medvi promoted by accounts belonging to doctors who don’t appear to exist. Drug Discovery & Development found over 5,000 active ad campaigns for Medvi on Meta at the time of the NYT piece.

A Drug Discovery & Development review conducted on April 3 of MEDVi’s website, Facebook advertising and public records found a pattern of apparent AI-generated personas, including some presented with medical titles, alongside marketing practices that appeared to go beyond the issues identified so far by regulators. A search of Meta’s Ad Library for “medvi” returned more than 5,000 active ads, many of them running under fabricated physician personas. One Facebook page for “Dr. Robert Whitworth,” which ran sponsored ads for MEDVi’s QUAD erectile dysfunction product, was categorized as an “Entertainment website” and listed an address of “2015 Nutter Street, Cameron, MT, 64429,” a location that does not appear to exist. Other ads ran under names including “Professor Albust Dongledore” and “Dr. Richard Hörzgock,” used AI-generated video testimonials and recycled identical scripts across multiple fabricated personas. In several cases, the page displayed a doctor headshot while the ad itself featured an unrelated person delivering a patient testimonial.

After public scrutiny following the article, those fake doctor accounts started disappearing. In fact, Medvi’s own website fine print acknowledges the practice:

Individuals appearing in advertisements may be actors or AI portraying doctors and are not licensed medical professionals.

Seems like maybe something the NYT should have noticed?

Oh, and that same Drug Discovery and Development article highlights how other snake oil sales sites are using the same named doctors… but with totally different images.

Same names… different people. Drug Discovery and Development has a bit more info about Drs. Carr and Tenbrink:

MEDVi’s current site lists two physicians: Dr. Ana Lisa Carr and Dr. Kelly Tenbrink. Both are licensed doctors who work together at Ringside Health, a concierge practice in Wellington, Florida, that serves the equestrian community. Neither is identified on MEDVi’s site as being affiliated with Ringside Health. On MEDVi’s site, Dr. Tenbrink is listed under “American Board of Emergency Medicine.” Dr. Carr is listed under St. George’s University, School of Medicine, her medical school. The Florida Department of Health practitioner profiles for both physicians state that neither “hold any certifications from specialty boards recognized by the Florida board.” A search of the American Board of Emergency Medicine‘s public directory, which lists 48,863 certified members, returned no current affiliation for Dr. Tenbrink.

Did the NYT do any investigation at all? Serving the equestrian community?

Even the few real doctors Medvi claims to work with turn out to be questionable. From Futurism’s article from last May (again, something the NYT should have maybe checked on?):

We contacted each doctor to ask if they could confirm their involvement with MEDVi and NuHuman. We heard back from one of those medical professionals at the time of publishing, an osteopathic medicine practitioner named Tzvi Doron, who insisted that he had nothing to do with either company and “[needs] to have them remove me from their sites.”

Then there’s what a class action lawsuit filed last November against Medvi’s main partner, OpenLoop Health, alleges about the actual products being sold. The NYT frames OpenLoop as basically making what Gallagher is doing possible, noting that while Gallagher has his AI bots creating marketing copy OpenLoop handles: “doctors, pharmacies, shipping and compliance.” You know, the actual business.

So it seems kinda notable that way back in November of last year, this lawsuit was filed that claims that the compounded oral tirzepatide tablets — one of Medvi’s key offerings — are essentially pharmacologically inert when delivered as a pill. Tirzepatide (marketed as Zepbound by Eli Lilly) is an FDA approved weight-loss drug as an injectable. But OpenLoop and Medvi have apparently been selling it in pill form. And Eli Lilly says that there are no human studies, let alone clinical trials, involving any tirzepatide pills.

All of that seems like the kind of thing reporters from the NYT should point out.

What we actually have here is a marketing operation that used AI to automate the production of deceptive advertising at a scale and speed that would have been harder to achieve otherwise. Snake oil salesmen have existed forever. What AI gave Matthew Gallagher (and, I guess, his affiliates) was the ability to crank out fake doctors, fabricated testimonials, and deepfaked before-and-after photos faster than any human team could — and to do it cheap enough that a guy with $20,000 and no morals could build it from his house. That’s the actual AI story the Times should have written.

Being good at deceptive marketing while selling weight-loss and erectile dysfunction drugs online has been a thing since the dawn of email spam. The only novelty here is the tools used to do it. The New York Times just wrapped that up in a neat bow and presented it as the proof of Sam Altman’s big promises for AI.

For what it’s worth, Gallagher has been whining about all this on X, per Futurism’s Dupre:

Though Medvi has yet to respond to our questions, the company’s founder, Gallagher, has spent the last few days on X defending his company. He complained in one post — seemingly in reference to criticism — that “the most low t [testosterone] guys” are “the loudest online” and the “Karens of the internet.” In another post, he wrote that it’s “actually a little crazy the number of people who form a whole opinion from a headline and then publicly wish horrible things will happen.”

Ah yes. The guy complaining about “low t guys” and “karens on the internet” for questioning his “AI business” skills, sure is a trustworthy kind of business person that deserves a NYT puff piece.

The real issue now is what the New York Times plans to do about this. A standard correction noting a few missing details won’t cut it. The entire premise of the article — that this company represents the exciting realization of AI’s business potential — is nonsense. Every element of the narrative is tainted: the growth story is built on deceptive marketing, the product claims are contradicted by the FDA and the manufacturers of the actual drugs, the “$1.8 billion” figure is a projection with no valuation to back it up, and the company is currently facing legal action on multiple fronts. The entire article should be retracted.

The NYT says it “was given access to Medvi’s financials to verify its revenue and profits.” Great. They verified that a company engaged in widespread deceptive practices was, in fact, making money from those deceptive practices. Congrats to the NYT for auditing a snake oil salesman and presenting your findings as if he were an upstanding pharmaceutical salesman.

So to my friends and family members wondering why I haven’t built my own billion-dollar AI company: apparently the missing ingredient wasn’t AI — it was being willing to run a deepfake-powered spam operation selling potentially inert pills to desperate people. The AI just made the lying faster. And the New York Times made one guy appear respectable.

Methodology

The American Trends Panel survey methodology Overview Data in this report comes from Wave 182 of the American Trends Panel (ATP), Pew Research Center’s nationally representative panel of randomly selected U.S. adults. The survey was conducted from Oct. 20 to 26, 2025. A total of 5,111 panelists responded out of 5,866 who were sampled, for […]

Acknowledgments

This report is made possible by The Pew Charitable Trusts. It is a collaborative effort based on the input and analysis of the following individuals. Find related reports online at: pewresearch.org/science. Primary research team        Eileen Yam, Director, Science and Society ResearchGalen Stocking, Associate Director, Science and Society ResearchBrian Kennedy, Senior ResearcherGiancarlo Pasquini, Research AssociateEmma Kikuchi, […]

Users of social media and AI chatbots for health information are more likely to say they are convenient than accurate

Key takeaways: In a world where health information can come from countless sources outside of a doctor’s visit, social media and AI chatbots offer newer, digital-first avenues to health news and advice for some Americans. But these always-available alternatives don’t necessarily include guarantees of accuracy or understandability, and some of that shows in how users […]

Op-Ed: Chinese EV Brands Overwhelm The Manila Auto Show 2026

The 2026 Manila International Auto Show runs from April 9 to 12 across the World Trade Center and the Philippine Trade Training Center, with a noticeably broader electrification footprint than in previous years. The expansion to an additional 3,000 square meters of exhibition space increases both vehicle count and brand ... [continued]

The post Op-Ed: Chinese EV Brands Overwhelm The Manila Auto Show 2026 appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Twos Day

Frontiers of What and When

Nice Reddit pointage to the new Bloomington community calendar, behind which is work we've been involved with, led by the B Square Bulletin. That one is here.

That was also probably as old as the Sun

The Sun just destroyed a comet.

Some are funny to humans too

David Weinberger: Jokes LLMs tell other LLMs.

Even more dead now

The AP is abandoning its surname.

Word

Nitin Badjatia: Why Customers Must Set the Terms: The Sobering Reality of Surveillance Driven CX 

A small test

I wanted to know when the transmitter site for Denver radio station KHOW/630, which I shot from an airplane in 2018, was built. So I asked ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and Perplexity. Three had the answer, sourcing this report by Scott Fybush from January 2018. (It was in 1979.) The AI that found nothing was Claude. 

This stuff interests me because the land under many AM stations' towers is now worth more than the signals, and KHOW is an excellent example of a transmitter site poised to become suburb. I like to shoot these because the broadcast transmission engineering and science are becoming obsolete while still being deeply interesting—at least to old broadcast geeks like me.

$51 Million In New EV Charger Funding Available In Michigan

The state of Michigan is not an electric vehicle leader among US states. However, we have seen some progress in EV charger installations in the state. Most recently, the Michigan Department of Transportation announced new National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) funds are now available. “MDOT is now authorized to begin ... [continued]

The post $51 Million In New EV Charger Funding Available In Michigan appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Covering Tourism

Welcome to Locally Sourced, a biweekly Covering Climate Now newsletter for journalists working to localize the climate story. Share this newsletter with colleagues and journalism students interested in localizing the climate story. 


Story Spark: Tourism

Rising sea levels, more frequent extreme weather, and other climate-fueled hazards are reshaping tourism across the world. Look no further than the trend of “coolcations” to avoid the intensifying heat of traditional summer locales or the growing hesitation to travel to regions experiencing greater flooding or wildfire threats. As climate change makes travel more expensive, complicated, and stressful — many are choosing to simply stay home.

At the same time, more people are traveling to destinations that may soon disappear due to rising temperatures — creating an ethical dilemma for tourists. Air travel is especially carbon intensive, ultimately contributing to the environmental degradation of glaciers, coral reefs, and other environmental wonders that some people are racing to see. 

To build climate resilience and protect fragile ecosystems, some tourism-dependant communities have passed tourism taxes; Hawaii’s “green fee,” for example, went into effect earlier this year and is expected to generate $100 million annually from the nearly 10 million who visit the island. Interested in reporting on tourism? Explore other ways tourist destinations are adapting to climate change’s impacts — whether it’s changing traditional dishes, shifting away from snow activities, or trying to save what is quickly being lost.


Expert Tips 

 Ajit Niranjan, The Guardian’s European environment correspondent, offers tips to help journalists report on tourism’s climate impact. Previously a climate reporter at DW News, he has highlighted the concept of “flight shame” and reported on why German petrolheads won’t slow down — despite the energy crisis.

Extreme weather hurts tourism. From Alpine ski resorts running out of snow to Mediterranean hotels choked by wildfires, the tourism industry is being hit by costly weather extremes. The financial toll is not limited to direct losses. Rising temperatures will push up food prices and insurance premiums — and that’s before factoring in investments for the green transition. While hotels and guesthouses may save money from putting solar panels on roofs and replacing gas boilers with heat pumps, the owners of planes and cruise ships will face huge costs running them on fuels that do not foul the air. There are plenty of human-interest and business stories to tell as the tourism industry changes — both for audiences jetting off on holiday and those struggling to adapt in the affected regions.

The economic benefits of tourism are real, but local. Tourism is thought to account for 10% of global GDP, a fact that politicians are quick to highlight when justifying airport expansions or handouts to airlines. But this obscures how much of that money would still have been spent if people were to relax closer to home. In countries like the UK, coastal towns that once hosted holidaymakers are now the sites of some of the worst deprivation in the country. Climate-vulnerable countries that have geared their economies around foreign tourists, on the other hand, will take a financial hit if tourism drops and face catastrophe if emissions keep rising. There is excellent reporting on how to transition away from fossil fuel extraction in a way that is fair to the communities who depend on it. Tourism deserves similar attention.

Travel is a small but growing source of pollution. Aviation, as the industry and its supporters like to point out, is just 2–3% of planet-heating pollution. That is mostly true and very misleading. First, all sectors of the economy must decarbonize to stop the planet heating. Second, the technological alternatives to jet fuel — unlike the clean replacements for generating electricity, heating homes or driving cars — are scarce and expensive. Third, only an estimated 5% of the world population will get on a plane in a given year, and if people in poor countries flew as much as those in rich ones, the sector would soon become one of the biggest sources of pollution. Putting tourism’s emissions in context — as incomes rise and other parts of the economy electrify — it’s essential to help readers understand the impact of their choices.


Stories We Like

  • In El Salvador, a world-class surfing destination, a first-of-its-kind climate insurance seeks to protect livelihoods and ecosystems threatened by increasing extreme weather events, The Guardian reports.
  • In Iceland, a fatal accident highlights the growing danger of glacier tourism, as more visitors arrive to the island amid warming temperatures, Grist reports.
  • As the Iran war leads to skyrocketing oil prices, WIRED explores how airlines are preparing for an oil crisis ahead of summer travel. 
  • With winters warming faster in Canada than any other season, ski resorts must rely on expensive snowmaking, pricing out more visitors, CBC reports.
  • In addition to being a renowned tourist destination, Mexico’s arid Baja Peninsula is a poster child for climate-driven desertification. Yale Climate Connections explores how the area is navigating the worsening water crisis.  

Resources


Experts

  • Erin Seekamp, Coastal Resilience and Sustainability Initiative Director, North Carolina State University
  • Jackie Dawson, Associate Professor,  University of Ottawa

Before We Go…

The next Locally Sourced will highlight violence. Have you reported on how rising temperatures and more frequent and extreme weather events lead to escalating threats of violence or an increase in violence in your region? Send them to us at local[at]coveringclimatenow[dot]org. We’d love to consider them for the next edition of Locally Sourced and our media trainings and social platforms.

Want more story ideas? Check out the Locally Sourced archive for more topics to explore, including AI data centers, coastal flooding, air transportation, and more. 

Know someone who might be interested in this newsletter? Forward Locally Sourced to a colleague!


Support Covering Climate Now

The post Covering Tourism appeared first on Covering Climate Now.

A new economic superpower could spark a global retreat from fossil fuels | Mark Hertsgaard and Kyle Pope

Eighty-five countries have sought a roadmap to phasing out fossil fuels. A conference this month offers hope they could unite

  • This article is published as part of the global journalism collaboration Covering Climate Now

The Iran war is also a climate war. Beyond its terrible human costs, the war’s disruptions of oil, gas, fertilizer and other shipments is another reminder of the risks inherent in basing the world economy on fossil fuels. The war’s jets, missiles and aircraft carriers, and the tankers, refineries and buildings they blow up, represent millions of tons of greenhouse gas emissions that further imperil a climate system that is already “very close” to a point of no return, scientists say, after which runaway global warming could not be stopped. Nevertheless, petrostate leaders around the world continue doing their utmost to stave off a desperately needed course correction.

Now, a little noticed ray of hope may be peeking over the horizon.

Mark Hertsgaard and Kyle Pope are co-founders of the global journalism collaboration Covering Climate Now

Continue reading...

Radio Station Visit #197: WNEK at Western New England University

“We desperately need this station! With every other campus on the air, it is a crying shame…After all, with a name like WNEC, what would seem more natural!” (The Westerner, 11/5/1969)

In 1969, a columnist for the Western New England College student newspaper, The Westerner, noted the irony of the college not having a radio station when the school was referred to by an acronym (WNEC) that resembled radio station call letters. This association was so apparent that a predecessor publication, the W-N-E-C News, incorporated an illustration of a radio tower in its flag when it launched the rebranded paper in 1951 following the school’s name change (it was previously part of Northeastern University). Nearly 20 years later, students did launch a campus radio station, calling it WNEK. And eventually, the school became a university and switched to a three-letter acronym (WNE), leading to far less confusion with radio stations on and off campus.

Front page of the debut issue of W-N-E-C News from October 1951. Source: Students of Western New England College, “W-N-E-C News, 1951-1964” (1951). Student Newspapers. 2.
https://digitalcommons.law.wne.edu/studentnews/2

Touring WNEK in March 2026

Before knowing any of this history, on a frozen foggy March morning I navigated snowy and icy roads on my way to visit Western New England University’s college radio station WNEK “The Voice” in Springfield, Massachusetts. In the midst of its 50th anniversary celebration, the station has been hosting a variety of events, including a birthday rave and commemorative broadcast.

Signage for WNEK adjacent to its former location in Rivers Memorial. Photo: J. Waits

Vinyl on the Turntable and on the Shelves

When I entered the studio in the St. Germain Campus Center, a record was spinning on the turntable during WNEK Director of Shows Jake Lavallee’s live program. “I’m a big physical media collector,” Lavallee noted, as we chatted with members of the WNEK leadership team. Over the years he’s brought in his own records to play on the air and he also expressed his appreciation for the WNEK music library, noting that he and Head of PR Steven Bromberger are especially “fond of the vinyl,” at the station. Luckily, the on-air studio shelves are full of LPs from the past, which the crew of WNEK members happily pulled from in order to share some of their favorite albums with me.

WNEK Director of Shows Jake Lavallee in the studio of the Western New England University college radio station. Photo: J. Waits

Classic rock records from Journey, Supertramp and Steve Miller Band reside near albums from a mix of artists and genres. Hip hop and 1990s electronic dance music releases sit alongside albums from Linkin Park, Weird Al Yankovic, and 1980s classics from Oingo Boingo, Modern English and Frankie Goes to Hollywood. In addition to the 12″ records, some even older 7″s are in boxes in another section of the spacious studio.

A portion of the vinyl records at college radio station WNEK. Photo: J. Waits

Closet Full of Gems: From CDs to Vintage Audio Recordings

Only about half of the music library is housed in the studio, with the WNEK CD collection stashed away in a dark upstairs closet. By the glow of cell phone flashlights, we did a quick archeological dig through the space and spotted gems from decades past. Stored near the CDs are a smattering of carts (including one containing an Edwin Starr cover of “War”), as well as a metal cabinet covered with stickers.

Sticker-covered cabinet at WNEK. Photo: J. Waits

WNEK’s Shared Office with Fellow Campus Media Organizations

After moving from a nearby building, WNEK has been broadcasting from its current location for just about a semester. The move was so recent that a sign for WNEK still sits near the entrance to its former home across the street. Now housed within a broader media complex, WNEK shares an office with other members of student media, and operates under the umbrella of “Bold Media.” The communal space has plenty of WNEK touches on display, including event posters, “club of the semester” awards, promotional T-shirts, and a case containing vintage audio equipment. A cluster of couches provide comfortable seating for meetings and hanging out. Next door, the studio also has funky knickknacks and pop culture ephemera, including a tiny disco ball and a life-sized cardboard cut-out of the Joker from Batman.

Couch in the Bold Media office. Photo: J. Waits

WNEK History: Radio Club Makes Plans for Station in 1969

An online-only station, WNEK gave up its FM license in 2014. When it launched in 1976 as a 10 watt class D FM station, it used the call letters WTRZ, changing them to WNEK (for “Western New England Kollege”) in 1979. Its frequency shifted around the dial over the years, not uncommon for lower wattage class D FM stations, which often struggle to be heard on the crowded radio dial. Looking closely at some of the older records at the station one can spot “WTRZ” scrawled on cardboard album covers, evidence of those short-lived call letters.

Fleetwood Mac record from the early days of the station (when the call letters were WTRZ) in the WNEK studio. Photo: J. Waits

Leading up to WTRZ’s 1976 FM launch, the Western New England College Radio Club had been working behind the scenes for years to produce radio for campus and beyond. In May 1969, The Westerner reported that a radio station was in the works after the radio club was granted $2000 by the student government. The plan was for the station to set up a temporary “shack” on the first floor of Berkshire (The Westerner, 5/12/1969). Despite its hopes for debuting that fall, the station struggled to find a dedicated broadcasting space on campus. An editorial opined, “For over a year, the little radio station was promised this and promised that yet got nothing.” An accompanying cartoon depicts radio equipment set up in a bathroom stall (The Westerner, 4/14/1970).

Stickers and flyer at WNEK in 2026. Photo: J. Waits

Campus-Only WNEK-FM Debuts in 1970-1971 School Year

Radio finally came to campus in fall 1970, with the launch of a dorm-based radio station thanks to freshman Lee Soroca. On November 17, 1970, WRAP-FM began campus-only broadcasts over 87.5 FM. The Westerner reported that the station was transmitting from room 102 in Berkshire Hall and that “its coverage includes a radius occupied almost exclusively by the WNEC campus.” (The Westerner, 11/23/1970). Programming was to include a social bulletin board with announcements for campus events, ride share listings, song requests and dedications, “man on the street” interviews, and more.

Mini disco ball at WNEK in 2026. Photo: J. Waits

Around the same time, the Radio Club’s originally-planned radio station, WNEK-FM, launched campus-only broadcasts at 88.9 FM out of a former TV lounge on the second floor of the same dorm. According to an article in the student paper, the station had 14 staff members and 200 records (The Westerner, 2/17/1971). By the following fall, programming had expanded further to include more public affairs shows and news and sports from the American Information Radio Network (The Westerner, 10/5/1971).

WNEK Program Guide in April 29, 1974 edition of The Westerner. Source: Western New England College, “Westerner, 1971-1975” (1971). Student Newspapers. 4.
https://digitalcommons.law.wne.edu/studentnews/4

Radio Club Works to Obtain License for Terrestrial FM

In March 1973, the Radio Club filed an application with the FCC in hopes of obtaining a license to broadcast beyond campus. This was apparently not the first application, as The Westerner noted that the station had made repeated annual attempts to secure a license. While awaiting word from the FCC, WNEK continued campus transmissions, including music shows, forums, syndicated programming from ABC news, interviews with campus leaders (the Dean of Students spoke frankly on-air about “the drug problem”) and a marathon day of programming that included a remote broadcast from a snack bar.

WNEK ad in the February 28, 1973 edition of the Western New England College student newspaper, The Western, touts “good music” and “good talk.” Source: Western New England College, “Westerner, 1971-1975” (1971). Student Newspapers. 4.
https://digitalcommons.law.wne.edu/studentnews/4

WTRZ-FM Launches in 1976, Changing Call Letters Back to WNEK in 1979

In December 1974, the Radio Club was granted a construction permit for a 10 watt class D FM station. The Westerner wrote that the club expected to “modify existing transmission equipment to bring total power from the present 1 to 8 variable watts to 10 watts,” adding that this would allow the station “to be heard within a 15 mile radius, giving most commuters the opportunity to tune in” (The Westerner, 12/11/1974). Unfortunately the club’s first choices for call letters (WNEK and WNEC) were not available, so it was assigned WTRZ for the 89.1 spot on the dial (The Westerner, 2/4/1975). WTRZ finally hit the airwaves on its licensed frequency in 1976 out of its second floor studios in Berkshire Hall. By 1977 the station extended its campus reach with the addition of speakers in the Campus Center Dining Hall and Snack Bar (The Westerner, October 20, 1977). And in 1979, the station was able to resume usage of its original call letters: WNEK.

Vintage WNEK-FM sticker from its time on 97.5 FM. Photo: J. Waits

WNEK in 2026: Concerts, Mobile DJ Events and Radio

Today, as it did decades ago, WNEK extends its listener base through transmissions over speakers in the university’s campus center and dining hall. Beyond the radio broadcasts, WNEK also DJs on campus, does turntable events, and regularly hosts concerts. Every spring, WNEK produces the day-long outdoor Kodiak Music Festival at the university, showcasing student bands. Past festivals have also included collaborations with other student clubs, with games, crafts and food tables.

T-shirt from the 2023 WNEK Kodiak Music Festival. Photo: J. Waits

As far as on-air, the WNEK radio schedule includes a sports talk show (“Golden Hour Sports”), the bossa nova-focused “La Hora Tropical,” an oldies show (“the Quirky Hour”), metal program (“Modern Mood”), soundtrack show (“Silver Screen Soundtracks”) and more. When there isn’t a live show, WNEK runs automated programming, including rebroadcasts of past shows.

WNEK schedule board propped against the wall of the shared Bold Media office. Photo: J. Waits

A Training Ground and Space for Creative Expression

During my chat with the WNEK crew, Lavallee remarked that he’s begun to do radio professionally and airs his current show, “Legacy of Rock,” on online station Cookie Monster Radio. Nearing graduation this spring, he said that he hopes to continue the program on other stations. Others chimed in that their work at WNEK aligns with career aspirations as well. Station Manager Garren Nordquist is a junior at WNE and hopes to work in audio technology after college. In addition to running the station, he hosts a metal show and plays in a metal band. He enjoys running events and working on the tech side of music and sound, telling me, “that’s what I want to go into.”

WNEK Station Manager Garren Nordquist. Photo: J. Waits

Beyond the practical skills gained by working at WNEK, its members also relish that the station is a creative space with few rules. Bromberger shared that he was drawn to WNEK in part because of the “freedom” that is given to participants, telling me that show hosts generally have “free rein.” He described the mix of tech folks and broadcasters at the station, saying, “we’re almost two tribes of people in a trench coat with those who like event production and the details of how audio is getting routed through to the speakers, to the other half of people who just love to get their voice out on the air and share what is special to them.”

WNEK Head of PR Steven Bromberger in the studio. Photo: J. Waits

Thanks to WNEK + Station Tour Archive

Thanks to everyone at WNEK for the tour and conversations. This is my 197th radio station tour report and my 138th college radio station tour. You can view the entire collection of my radio station visits in numerical order or by station type in our archives. Coming up next: more Western Massachusetts college radio station tours + two more reports from my 2025 trip to British Columbia, Canada.

Audio equipment at WNEK, with labels for music output locations on campus. Photo: J. Waits

The post Radio Station Visit #197: WNEK at Western New England University appeared first on Radio Survivor.

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