Magazine making is an intensely collaborative effort among writers, editors, researchers, designers, and photographers — yet in March, and now into April, we, like many Americans, were forced to work in isolation, communicating over phone, email, Slack and Zoom, as we adapt to this terrifying, temporary new global reality.
As I write this, many staffers have been working for weeks alone in a hushed and fearful New York City, with ambulance sirens as the sonic backdrop. Others are scattered: Staff writer Suzy Exposito was grounded in Miami en route to Puerto...
As I write this, many staffers have been working for weeks alone in a hushed and fearful New York City, with ambulance sirens as the sonic backdrop. Others are scattered: Staff writer Suzy Exposito was grounded in Miami en route to Puerto...
- 5/5/2020
- by Jason Fine
- Rollingstone.com
Earlier this year, Rolling Stone contributing editor and environmental journalist Jeff Goodell went on an extraordinary journey to Antarctica to learn how climate change is irrevocably changing our planet. Goodell traveled aboard the Nathanial B. Palmer ship for a two-month journey to the world’s coldest locations — Western Antarctica and the Thwaites Glacier — to further understand how the destabilization of the ice could lead to catastrophic floods around the world. Now, in a new audiobook, titled The Big Melt: A Journey to Antarctica’s Doomsday Glacier, listeners can hear his...
- 10/25/2019
- by Natalli Amato and Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
This is the first dispatch in a series from Jeff Goodell, who will be investigating the effect of climate change on Thwaites glacier.
Read: The Doomsday Glacier
I’m writing this aboard the Nathanial B. Palmer, a 308 foot-long ocean research vessel that is, at this moment, tied up at a dock in Punta Arenas, Chile. On board the ship are 26 scientists and 31 crew members and support staff, as well as many millions of dollars worth of scientific equipment. We departed for Antarctica two nights ago, but we had to return...
Read: The Doomsday Glacier
I’m writing this aboard the Nathanial B. Palmer, a 308 foot-long ocean research vessel that is, at this moment, tied up at a dock in Punta Arenas, Chile. On board the ship are 26 scientists and 31 crew members and support staff, as well as many millions of dollars worth of scientific equipment. We departed for Antarctica two nights ago, but we had to return...
- 1/30/2019
- by Jeff Goodell
- Rollingstone.com
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