A curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature with over 20,000 daily subscribers and over 8,000 archived posts.

In the FRONTLINE documentary Alaska’s Vanishing Native Villages, residents of a coastal Alaska Native community called Hooper Bay confront a dilemma.
Their way of life relies in part on harvesting food directly from the sea. But as the documentary explores, flooding, erosion, warming temperatures and thawing permafrost are forcing conversations about relocating to higher ground.
“This climate change thing is wreaking havoc,” says Agatha Napoleon, the climate change coordinator for one of the Alaska Native tribes that lives in Hooper Bay.
Alaska’s Vanishing Native Villages, a collaboration with the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at Arizona State University, premiered on April 22, 2025. The following month, FRONTLINE aired a new joint investigation with NPR, Hurricane Helene’s Deadly Warning. Building on a decade of reporting on disasters and their aftermath, the documentary investigates how Helene — whose floods caused death and destructioneven in inland, elevated areas — became an ominous warning about America’s lack of preparedness for climate change-related storms.
These two films are the latest installments in FRONTLINE’s years of documentaries on the science, politics and impact of climate change — from early research into climate change by fossil fuel companies, to the organizations that fought the scientific establishment to shift the climate conversation in the U.S., to the role of climate change in deadly American wildfires.
Explore a selection of these documentaries below.
An examination of Hurricane Helene’s aftermath in North Carolina, and how and why the U.S. is more vulnerable than ever to climate change-related storms.
A look inside Alaska Native villages fighting for survival against climate change.
A documentary investigating the deadliest American wildfire in a century, and how changes to the climate and landscape have made Maui increasingly vulnerable to fires.
This three-part documentary series investigates the fossil fuel industry’s decades-long history of casting doubt and delaying action on climate change. Part One: Denial charts the fossil fuel industry’s early research on climate change, investigating industry efforts to sow seeds of doubt about the science:
Part Two: Doubt explores the industry’s efforts to stall climate policy, even as evidence about climate change grew more certain in the new millennium:
Part Three: Delay follows the rise of natural gas and examines the Obama, Trump and Biden administrations’ actions on climate change:
A film on the 2018 Camp Fire, California’s deadliest-ever wildfire, that examines contributing factors, including climate change.
With The GroundTruth Project, an interactive exploration of climate change as seen through the eyes of three children living in the Marshall Islands, a nation threatened by rising seas.

A 360-degree documentary set amid Greenland’s melting glaciers, from FRONTLINE, NOVA, Emblematic Group, X-Rez Studio and Realtra.
A documentary examining how the antiregulatory movement in America gained power.
A short documentary about Exxon’s early research into climate change, produced in collaboration with InsideClimate News.
A look inside the organizations that fought the scientific establishment to shift the direction of the climate debate.
Patrice Taddonio is Senior Digital Writer, FRONTLINE

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
i read physical environment at The University of Nottingham.
but non of that matters when you go through the political tragedies in the middle east.
for example Aleppo, a second city of Syria, was floating on surface waters, 3 main rivers. Now all the three are dry. Turkey decided to cut out the sources for political reasons. I think we need to neutralize the climate first. Our efforts so far are not faithful.
LikeLike
Thank you, Saleh. I believe that the climate crisis is driving many of the other problems, political unrest, mass migration, drought, floods.
>
LikeLike
Thank you for these resources which I will return to and most likely use, but now I am still floating on a Ferris wheel from a short happy time in my youth. Thank you again. I am almost afraid to leave this page, so much scary stuff awaits.
LikeLike
By page I mean the blank space I was filling, not the piece itself.
LikeLike
Thanks for helping create access to such useful resources.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Jim. FRONTLINE is a national resource. The work it does is exactly why Trump and the fascists have pulled funding for PBS. Eva and I have increased our monthly donation, and I urge others who value objective professional journalism to do the same.
>
LikeLike