Season 2 Trailer | Your Community, Electrified episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 2, 2025 · 1 MIN

Season 2 Trailer | Your Community, Electrified

from Electric Futures · host University of Southern California

Brief description: Before fires scorched Los Angeles in January of 2025, the Electric Futures team began exploring a new neighborhood in Southern California that was built with climate disasters in mind. This community and other building projects like it generate and store their own energy, bypassing the electric grid – and blackouts. What happens now that federal support for these initiatives is starting to dry up? Can America still electrify? Our host, Chip Zukowski, finds out in Your Community, Electrified, season two of Electric Futures. Long description:The USC Annenberg Center for Climate Journalism and Communication is pleased to announce the launch of season two of Electric Futures, a podcast that focuses on the people and communities on the frontlines of the energy transition. In Your Community, Electrified, the four-episode arc dropping on June 25, 2025, host Chip Zukoski explores a new neighborhood in Southern California that was built with climate disasters in mind. This community and other building projects like it generate and store their own energy, bypassing the electric grid – and blackouts. What happens now that federal support for these initiatives has dried up? Can America still electrify? To find out, we speak to experts like: - Ivan Penn, New York Times energy correspondent- Dr. Rajit Gadh, UCLA Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science and the founding director of the UCLA Smart Grid Energy Research Center- Christina Bellantoni, USC Annenberg School for Journalism Professor of Professional Practice, political pundit and former longtime political journalist and editor- Ram Narayanamurthy, Deputy Director of the Building Technologies Office at the U.S. Department of EnergyAdditional highlights include:Insights from Indiana and Washington, where we learn about other projects that bypass the grid.The science behind the electric grid, how microgrids work, and the state of grids in the U.S. Season one of the acclaimed podcast, launched in 2024, explored narratives from the Imperial Valley in Southern California, an area rich with community – and critical minerals – on the brink of an energy transformation so big, it has potential to completely change the lives of residents. Accolades for season one include:2025 LA Press Club SoCal Journalism Awards finalist, Limited Series Podcast2024 Quill Podcast Awards nominee, Best Science and Medicine PodcastCharted on the Top 50 Science Podcasts chart on Spotify and Apple PodcastsFeatured in the LA Times, La Opinion, and NPR's KCRWListeners can find both seasons of Electric Futures on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon Music. Follow along on Instagram at @usc_electricfutures. For further information, email [email protected].

Brief description: Before fires scorched Los Angeles in January of 2025, the Electric Futures team began exploring a new neighborhood in Southern California that was built with climate disasters in mind. This community and other building projects like it generate and store their own energy, bypassing the electric grid – and blackouts. What happens now that federal support for these initiatives is starting to dry up? Can America still electrify? Our host, Chip Zukowski, finds out in Your Community, Electrified, season two of Electric Futures. Long description:The USC Annenberg Center for Climate Journalism and Communication is pleased to announce the launch of season two of Electric Futures, a podcast that focuses on the people and communities on the frontlines of the energy transition. In Your Community, Electrified, the four-episode arc dropping on June 25, 2025, host Chip Zukoski explores a new neighborhood in Southern California that was built with climate disasters in mind. This community and other building projects like it generate and store their own energy, bypassing the electric grid – and blackouts. What happens now that federal support for these initiatives has dried up? Can America still electrify? To find out, we speak to experts like: - Ivan Penn, New York Times energy correspondent- Dr. Rajit Gadh, UCLA Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science and the founding director of the UCLA Smart Grid Energy Research Center- Christina Bellantoni, USC Annenberg School for Journalism Professor of Professional Practice, political pundit and former longtime political journalist and editor- Ram Narayanamurthy, Deputy Director of the Building Technologies Office at the U.S. Department of EnergyAdditional highlights include:Insights from Indiana and Washington, where we learn about other projects that bypass the grid.The science behind the electric grid, how microgrids work, and the state of grids in the U.S. Season one of the acclaimed podcast, launched in 2024, explored narratives from the Imperial Valley in Southern California, an area rich with community – and critical minerals – on the brink of an energy transformation so big, it has potential to completely change the lives of residents. Accolades for season one include:2025 LA Press Club SoCal Journalism Awards finalist, Limited Series Podcast2024 Quill Podcast Awards nominee, Best Science and Medicine PodcastCharted on the Top 50 Science Podcasts chart on Spotify and Apple PodcastsFeatured in the LA Times, La Opinion, and NPR's KCRWListeners can find both seasons of Electric Futures on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon Music. Follow along on Instagram at @usc_electricfutures. For further information, email [email protected].

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Season 2 Trailer | Your Community, Electrified

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Soft, Earthen Futures Storywork Studio Soft, Earthen Futures is a podcast about imagining and crafting a more whole world. We explore what it means to stand at the threshold between what has been and what is trying to emerge, tending to that in-between space, listening for what the earth is dreaming through us, and giving those visions form. This show is for wild-hearted creatives, entrepreneurs, and visionaries. Hosted by founder, story doula, and eco-somatic depth guide, Daje Aloh. rEVolution rEVolution by Out of Spec Motoring The discussion of the future of transportation from electric vehicle road trips, ownership stories, battery technology, charging, and anything in-between. Guests come from all sides of the transportation sector to share their thoughts and efforts on sustainable transport. rEVolution Podcast is brought to you by Out of Spec Motoring. What Needs to Get Done – Right Now Its-all-here This is the moment where futures are forged. Where men rise by doing what others delay.So I ask: What needs to get done—right now? Ray Dalio Academy of Achievement Ray Dalio is the founder and owner of Bridgewater Associates, the world's largest and richest hedge fund. The firm manages approximately $130 billion in global investments for institutional clients including foreign governments and central banks, pension funds, university endowments and charitable foundations. The son of a jazz musician, Dalio began investing at the age of 12 when he bought shares of Northeast Airlines for $300, tripling his investment when the airline merged with another company. After completing his education at Long Island University and Harvard Business School, Dalio worked on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange and invested in commodity futures. In 1975, at age 26, he founded Bridgewater Associates in his two-bedroom Manhattan apartment. As the firm expanded, he wrote a 100-page essay, 'Principles,' to share his management philosophy with his employees. Dalio believes his team must be 'radically truthful and transparent' to achieve excellence. 'We need to kn

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This episode was published on June 2, 2025.

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Brief description: Before fires scorched Los Angeles in January of 2025, the Electric Futures team began exploring a new neighborhood in Southern California that was built with climate disasters in mind. This community and other building projects...

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