2025-01-01
15 分钟Hi, I'm Josh Haner and I'm a staff photographer at the New York Times covering climate change.
For years, we've sort of imagined this picture of a polar bear floating on a piece of ice.
Those have been the images associated with climate change.
My challenge is to find stories that show you how climate change is affecting our world right now.
If you want to support the kind of journalism that we're working on here on the climate and environment desk at the New York Times, please subscribe on our website or our app.
This is the Opinions, a show that brings you a mix of voices from New York Times opinion.
You've heard the news.
Here's what to make of it.
I'm Jessica Gross and I am an opinion writer for the New York Times.
When I started working on the Internet in 2004, I felt like you could really read the entire Internet every day.
And now I don't feel like that at all.
There's way too much information.
It is fragmented among niche communities.
And as a mom and also a journalist who writes about the Internet a lot, it feels like it's impossible to know what to focus on.
Is this an idea that one person believes or is this an idea that a million people believe?
Trends go viral really quickly, but that doesn't necessarily make them important.
There was something about the election happening that really highlighted how much people are struggling to understand what is happening on the Internet and whether or not it's important.
What is just Internet rage baiting and what is actually a cultural trend that we need to pay attention to?
How do we figure out what really matters?
And that is why I'm very excited to talk to Ryan Broderick today.