Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast podcast artwork

PODCAST · society

Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast

Imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change... because they are.Each week, Imagine If spotlights changemakers creating measurable impact, from innovators reshaping industries to creatives rewriting the rules, to students reimagining what’s next.These are stories of progress, possibility, and people proving that meaningful change, at any scale, can move our planet forward.Visit our website: https://bluedotliving.com

  1. 21

    PFAS, Microplastics & Your Tap Water: What You Need to Know with Epic Water Filters

    We’ve all been told plastic is an environmental problem. But what if it’s also a human health problem—starting with the water you drink every day?In this episode, we sit down with Ash, co-founder of Epic Water Filters, to break down what’s actually in our tap water, what “clean” water really means, and how to make better choices at home without overcomplicating it.From microplastics and PFAS to heavy metals and pesticides, this conversation cuts through the noise and helps you understand what matters (and what doesn’t) when it comes to your water.If you’ve ever wondered whether you need a filter—or how to choose one—this episode will give you a clear place to start.Key Takeaways:Clean water isn’t just about clarity—it’s about what’s removed from itMany contaminants (like PFAS and microplastics) aren’t new—we’re just more aware nowNot all water filters are created equal—transparency and testing matterYou don’t need to be perfect—small upgrades (like a pitcher or bottle filter) can make a real differenceConsumer demand is driving better, safer products in the water spaceShop Epic Water Filters: https://shop.bluedotliving.com/collections/epic-water-filters-usaBe part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry.If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.comFor daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  2. 20

    Reducing Plastic One Small Swap at a Time with Me Mother Earth

    Living more sustainably does not require perfection, it requires more intention.In this episode of Imagine If, we sit down with Amanda Runkle, founder of Me Mother Earth, a company built on one simple idea: small, everyday changes can create real impact.Amanda shares how a single product (a collapsible straw) grew into a mission-driven business helping households reduce plastic in practical, approachable ways. But this conversation goes deeper than products.We explore the hidden ways plastic shows up in our daily lives—from dental floss to packaging—and how those exposures impact not just the planet, but our health. You’ll also hear an honest take on what sustainability looks like in real life, from running a business to navigating motherhood, and why “progress over perfection” isn’t just a phrase, it’s a necessity.In this episode, we discuss:The surprising health implications of everyday plastic useHow to identify greenwashing (and shop more intentionally)Why reusable and sustainable products often cost more—and why they matterSimple, high-impact swaps for your kitchen, bathroom, and daily routineThe role of small businesses in driving environmental changeHow to think about sustainability without overwhelmResources & Mentions:Me Mother Earth (sustainable products): https://memotherearthbrand.com/TrashBlitz app (track plastic waste): https://www.5gyres.org/trashblitzPlastic Detox documentary: https://www.netflix.com/title/82074244Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry.If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.comFor daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  3. 19

    What's Hiding in Your Underwear Drawer? The Truth About Synthetic Fabrics & Plastic Panties Impact on Health with Stacy Grace, co-founder and CEO of KENT

    Half of all underwear is made with synthetic fibers—which basically means you're wearing plastic next to your skin all day. And the rest? Probably loaded with harsh dyes or pesticides. This isn't just a planetary problem—it's a human health issue.In this episode, Victoria and Cleo sit down with Stacy Grace, founder and CEO of Kent, who's building a company around 100% plant-based, compostable underwear. From her aha moment in London studying fashion sustainability, to confronting infertility issues that connected back to synthetic fabrics, Stacy shares why she's on a mission to transform what we wear closest to our bodies.In This Episode:• Why synthetic underwear is a health risk (BPAs, fertility issues, plastic absorption)• How Kent makes truly compostable underwear ("plant your pants")• The supply chain challenges of going 100% natural• Why price reflects fair trade factories and organic materials• Customer stories: from chemotherapy patients to breastfeeding moms• Easy swaps: Huck rags, silicon bags, reusable coffee cupsShop KENT: https://www.wearkent.com/Listen to more episodes of Imagine If… https://bluedotliving.com/imagine-if-podcast/Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry.If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.comFor daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  4. 18

    15 Episodes, Countless Solutions: Our Biggest Climate Takeaways

    After 15 episodes of interviewing climate changemakers, our four co-hosts sit down together to reflect on what they've learned and why climate optimism matters more than ever.Victoria Riskin, Janet Kraus, Cleo Carney, and Allison Giebutowski share an honest, multi-generational conversation about building this podcast together, why every innovator they've asked has said yes, and how climate action is shifting from planetary to personal.In This Episode:• Why everyone from nuclear fusion scientists to sustainable fashion founders has eagerly said yes to the show• Gen Z on climate anxiety: Is it apathy or fear?• How climate is becoming a human health issue (plastics, fertility, endocrine disruption)• The power of intentional living and small choices• Favorite "Imagine If" moments from Eric Garcetti, Caroline Saunders, Liz Carter, and Adam Leipzig• Our own "Imagine If" statements for the futureComing Soon: Epic Water Filters, Ettitude Bamboo Sheets, Brodo Bone Broth, Me Mother EarthListen to more episodes of Imagine If… https://bluedotliving.com/imagine-if-podcast/Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry.If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.comFor daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  5. 17

    The Hidden Link Between Microplastics & Fertility: One Couple’s Story

    What if something as small as microplastics could have a meaningful impact on your health—and even your ability to get pregnant?In this episode of Imagine If, we meet Darby and Jesse, a couple featured in Plastic Detox, who spent three years navigating unexplained infertility despite strong health markers and no clear diagnosis.Their journey led them to explore an often-overlooked factor: microplastics and everyday chemical exposure.By making gradual changes—reducing plastic use, minimizing exposure to fragrances and endocrine disruptors, and rethinking what was in their home—they began to see shifts in hormone balance and overall health.In this conversation, we explore:The emerging link between microplastics and fertilityHow everyday products may disrupt hormonesWhat a “plastic detox” actually looks likeSimple, practical swaps to reduce exposureWhy small changes can create meaningful impact over timeThis episode is a reminder that while we can’t control everything, we are not without agency. Sometimes, the smallest changes are where transformation begins.Connect with Darby and Jesse: https://www.instagram.com/jesseanddarby_plastics/Watch The Plastic Detox Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Esd8PEWlt9wBe part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry.If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.comFor daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  6. 16

    Why Dessert Might Be the Secret Ingredient to Climate Action with Caroline Saunders

    What if fighting climate change could start with dessert? Climate journalist and Le Cordon Bleu-trained pastry chef Caroline Saunders reveals why sustainable baking might be the most delicious path to transforming our food system.After years covering climate change at Grist Magazine, Caroline made an unexpected career move: she enrolled at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris. Her mission? To explore how dessert can be an entry point for climate action.In this conversation, Caroline shares why she believes chefs and bakers can lead food culture transformation, reveals her framework for sustainable baking, and explains what's really in your pantry (and why it matters). From flour to sweeteners to that one daily habit that could make a big impact, this episode will change how you think about dessert.In This Episode:• Why Caroline went from climate journalism to pastry school, and how dessert became her vehicle for climate storytelling• The three sustainability principles for climate-smart baking• The truth about the flour industry and why vulnerable to climate change• Which desserts work beautifully without eggs and dairy—and which ones need traditional ingredients• Natural sweeteners that actually work: dates, coconut milk, white miso paste, and when sugar is truly necessary• Why eating pulses (beans and lentils) every day could be one of the most impactful climate actions we can takeRead Caroline’s writing: https://bluedotliving.com/author/carolinesaunders/Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  7. 15

    Plastic Detox: How Microplastics Are Stealing Our Fertility with Oscar-Winner Louie Psihoyos

    What if the plastic crisis isn’t just harming the planet, but also impacting human fertility?In this episode, Victoria Riskin sits down with Academy Award-winning filmmaker Louie Psihoyos (The Cove, Racing Extinction) to unpack the growing concern around microplastics—and how they may be affecting our bodies in ways we’re only beginning to understand.From declining fertility rates to emerging research on endocrine disruptors, this conversation explores what’s actually happening beneath the surface—and why it matters now more than ever.In this episode, you’ll learn:What microplastics are—and how they end up in the human bodyThe connection between plastic exposure and declining fertility ratesThe research behind “phthalate syndrome” and long-term health impactsA behind-the-scenes look at Plastic Detox and its real-world experimentSimple, practical ways to reduce your daily plastic exposureThis conversation is all about awareness, informed choices, and understanding the world we’re living in.Watch The Plastic Detox: https://www.netflix.com/title/82074244Learn more about the Oceanic Preservation Society: https://opsociety.org/Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  8. 14

    The Hidden Environmental Cost of Fresh Cut Flowers with Liz Carter of Unwilted

    That bouquet of roses traveled 3,000+ miles and will be dead in 5 days—but there's a beautiful solution that lasts forever.Here's something most people don't know: fresh cut flowers have a surprisingly large environmental footprint. But after 18 years as a florist, Liz Carter didn't just complain about it—she completely reimagined what flowers could be.As founder of Unwilted, Liz creates stunning handcrafted paper flowers that eliminate waste, carbon emissions, and plastic packaging while celebrating the beauty of nature forever. This is a story about innovation, creativity, and proving that sustainable alternatives can be even MORE beautiful than the originals.What You'll Discover:How paper flowers solve problems fresh flowers can'tWhy this business model is MORE scalable and sustainableThe power of consumer voices to shift entire industriesWhy "stopping to smell the flowers" is climate activismAbout the GuestLiz Carter is the founder and CEO of Unwilted, a company creating handcrafted paper flowers as a sustainable alternative to fresh cut florals. With nearly 18 years of experience in the fresh flower industry as a florist in Colorado, Liz intimately understands both the beauty and the environmental cost of traditional floristry.After leaving Colorado for her safety and initially walking away from flowers entirely, Liz discovered paper flowers and realized she could merge her artistic passion with sustainability values. Today, Unwilted offers gorgeous, realistic paper flowers that eliminate waste, last indefinitely, and bring joy to customers seeking mindful alternatives.Visit Unwilted's website for more: https://unwilted.comBe part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  9. 13

    Climate Optimism and Sustainable Living: How Imagine5 Makes Green Choices Feel Cool

    What if climate stories didn’t leave you anxious, but actually made you want to take action?In this episode of Imagine If, Vicki sits down with Justin from Imagine5, a nonprofit media organization sharing hopeful, solution-driven stories about sustainability. Justin explains why Imagine5 started in Northern Europe, why the United States is a key next chapter, and how “climate” became unnecessarily politicized—when clean air, healthy food, and thriving communities benefit everyone.Justin also shares his pivot from the entertainment industry into impact storytelling, plus the role celebrities, athletes, and culture play in normalizing sustainable behavior. From vintage fashion (hello, Billie Eilish) to plant-forward fine dining and renewable energy advocates like climber Alex Honnold, this conversation explores how sustainability can be more aspirational, more creative, and more irresistible.To close, Vicki asks the signature question: Imagine if… Justin’s answer is simple and powerful, what if we all remembered we’re not separate from nature, but part of it?What you’ll hear in this episode:How Imagine5 turns climate doom into climate hopeWhy Europe has led sustainability conversations (and what the U.S. can learn)Celebrity influence, culture shifts, and “making green choices cool”Justin’s move from Hollywood to mission-driven mediaPrint magazines, slower media, and stepping away from the scrollImagine if we truly lived like we belong to natureConnect with Imagine5: https://imagine5.comBe part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  10. 12

    The Seaweed Solution: How Notpla Is Ending Ocean Plastic Pollution

    Imagine a world where seaweed replaces plastic.Where packaging disappears—composted, dissolved, or even eaten.That future isn’t far off… it’s already happening.In this episode, Janet Kraus and Cleo Carney sit down with Pierre-Yves Paslier, co-founder of Notpla and winner of the UK’s Earthshot Prize, to talk about how seaweed is becoming a real alternative to single-use plastic.From supplying 36,000 edible water pods at the London Marathon to partnering with brands like IKEA and Wimbledon, Notpla is proving that sustainable packaging can scale.Pierre shares how he went from designing plastic bottles at L’Oréal to building a company that’s rethinking packaging from the ground up, and why the solution to plastic waste might already exist.Key Takeaways:• Seaweed packaging can be composted, dissolved in water, or eaten, and it biodegrades naturally without harming ecosystems• The hidden plastic lining in takeaway containers is poisoning us with microplastics every time we reheat food• Consumer demand drives change, telling brands you want plastic-free options creates real market pressure• Nature offers abundance, not sacrifice: "We don't have to embrace austerity. We have to embrace the natural building blocks we're part of." —Pierre-Yves PaslierAbout Pierre Paslier:Pierre Paslier is co-founder and co-CEO of Notpla, creating seaweed-based alternatives to single-use plastic. After working as a packaging engineer at L'Oréal, Pierre earned a Masters in Innovation Design Engineering from Imperial College London and the Royal College of Art. He and co-founder Rodrigo García González have won the UK's Earthshot Prize and partnered with major brands to deploy plastic-free packaging at scale.Connect with Notpla:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/notplaWebsite: https://www.notpla.com/Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  11. 11

    How Music Is Being Used to Fight Climate Change (with Madame Gandhi)

    Imagine if music could heal both people and the planet at the same time...Kiran Gandhi (Madame Gandhi) is an electronic music producer, drummer, and climate activist who recorded melting glaciers in Antarctica and credits nature as an artist on Spotify. In this conversation, Kiran shares why joy and love are the fuel for sustained climate action, her daily meditation practice, and how small intentional actions create massive ripple effects.From touring with MIA to building underwater microphones at Stanford to working with Brian Eno on Earth Percent, Kiran proves that art and activism aren't just compatible—they're essential. This episode is for anyone who's felt overwhelmed by the climate crisis and needs a reminder that meaningful change starts with joy, connection, and intentional living.In this episode:• Recording the sounds of melting glaciers in Antarctica• Earth Percent: Crediting nature as an artist and redirecting streaming royalties to conservation• Daily meditation practices for sustained climate activism• Why emotional depletion leads to overconsumption• Intentional living as radical climate action• The difference between American and global climate attitudes• Building spiritual strength for long-term activismAbout the guest:Kiran Gandhi, known as Madame Gandhi, is an electronic music producer, drummer, and climate activist. She toured internationally with MIA, holds degrees from Georgetown, Harvard Business School, and Stanford, and has been recognized by Forbes 30 Under 30 and BBC 100 Women. She integrates activism and environmentalism into her music.Connect with Kiran:Instagram: @madamegandhiWebsite: madamegandhi.comSpotify: Search "Madame Gandhi" to support Earth Percent conservationSplice: Download the Antarctica glacier sound packBe part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  12. 10

    Bridging Generations: How Different Ages Experience and Fight Climate Change

    You don't need to be an expert, an activist, or perfect. You need to start where you are, do what you can, and connect with people who care, across every age, background, and zip code.When 14-year-old Cleo walked into Vicki's life and asked, "Can I work for you?", neither imagined they'd become proof that our greatest climate advantage isn't technology or policy, it's the bridge between generations who refuse to wait for permission to act.In this conversation, Victoria Riskin and Cleo Carney share how they're each taking daily climate action, from reducing food waste to choosing plant-based eating to mobilizing grandmothers and college students to show up at the same hearings. These aren't abstract commitments. They're choices you can make tomorrow.What you'll learn:The personal moments that transformed climate change from news to action (and how to recognize yours)Small daily habits that actually reduce your footprint — no perfection requiredWhy local action is winning faster than federal policy (and how to join it)What each generation brings to climate work that the others desperately needPractical ways empathy becomes climate action in your own communityEpisodes that prove change is happening now:Jordan Thomas: How controlled burns are healing our forestsEric Garcetti: The climate mayors coalition changing cities globallyBun Lai: Turning invasive species into sustainable cuisineGranor Farm: Building community through regenerative agricultureRead stories on Bluedot Living by Cleo Carney: https://bluedotliving.com/author/cleocarney/Subscribe to Your Daily Dot: https://bluedotliving.com/category/advice/daily-dot/Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  13. 9

    Can Fusion Energy Really Power the Future? With Alex Creely, Commonwealth Fusion Systems

    What does it really mean to “build a star on Earth”?In this episode we explore one of the most ambitious clean-energy ideas of our time: fusion power. Joining us is Alex Creely, a plasma physicist and tokamak operations lead at Commonwealth Fusion Systems, who has spent nearly a decade working to turn fusion from a scientific breakthrough into a practical energy source.Alex breaks down fusion in refreshingly human terms and explains why something that sounds simple is one of the hardest engineering challenges humanity has ever taken on. We talk about why fusion has always felt “just around the corner,” what has changed in recent years, and why the next decade could be pivotal.Along the way, the conversation expands beyond science. We examine fear and misconceptions around nuclear energy, how fusion differs fundamentally from fission, and why big innovations often take decades of quiet progress before they suddenly feel inevitable. This is a conversation about patience, curiosity, risk-taking, and what it means to work on something that may not pay off immediately, but could change everything.In this episode:What fusion energy actually is, and how it differs from nuclear fissionWhy fusion requires temperatures hotter than the center of the sunThe challenge of producing more energy than it takes to sustain the reactionHow powerful magnets act as “insulation” for 100-million-degree plasmaWhy recent breakthroughs have shifted timelines from distant to tangibleHow fusion could complement wind and solar, especially for dense citiesThe infrastructure, cost, and policy challenges of scaling fusion globallyWhat everyday people can do to support fusion’s futureWhy the most impactful work always carries uncertainty and riskAbout Our GuestAlex Creely is a plasma physicist and tokamak operations lead at Commonwealth Fusion Systems. His work focuses on advancing fusion energy from laboratory research to grid-ready infrastructure. Known for his ability to explain complex science in accessible ways, Alex is part of a growing group of scientists working to make clean, firm fusion power a reality.Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us ⁠BluedotLiving.com ⁠For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  14. 8

    How Invasive Species Became a Climate Solution with Bun Lai, Miya’s Sushi

    Imagine if the food on our plates could do more than nourish us, but also actively restore the planet?In this episode of Imagine If by Bluedot Living, we’re joined by Bun Lai, chef and owner of Miya’s Sushi, for a conversation at the intersection of food, climate change, and biodiversity.Raised in New Haven by parents who believed deeply that food is medicine, Bun grew up immersed in nature, foraging, fishing, and learning from a richly multicultural community. Those early experiences shaped his understanding of food as a source of health, connection, and care for both people and the planet.Bun shares how Miya’s Sushi evolved over time, including the gradual removal of unsustainable seafood like tuna, eel, and salmon, and the introduction of plant-based dishes and invasive species such as shore crabs, lionfish, and Japanese knotweed. Rather than seeing invasive species solely as an ecological threat, Bun reframes them as a creative opportunity — one that protects native ecosystems while inviting people into sustainability through flavor and curiosity.In this episode, we explore:Why food sits at the core of community, connection, and healthHow invasive species can become part of climate solutionsThe balance between grassroots action and policy changeWhat foraging teaches us about slowing down and reconnecting with natureHow cultural and ecological diversity can be healingAbout our guestBun Lai is a James Beard Award nominee and recipient of the 2016 White House Champion of Change Award for Sustainable Seafood. He is the chef and owner of Miya’s Sushi, founded by his mother in 1982 and widely recognized as the world’s first sustainable sushi restaurant.Known as “the mad scientist of the sustainable sushi movement” by The New York Times, Bun is an educator, speaker, and advocate whose work spans food, climate, and social justice. He is currently developing educational experiences, creative projects, and mission-driven food ventures focused on ecological restoration.Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  15. 7

    Growing Ingredients, Growing Community: The Granor Farm Model with Liz Cicchelli

    Imagine if farms across America were designed to nourish land, people, and community, not commodities. This week we explore what that world could look like through the story of Granor Farm, a certified organic and regenerative farm in Three Oaks, Michigan.Janet Kraus and Cleo Carney sit down with Liz Cicchelli, co-founder and co-owner of Granor Farm, who shares how she and her family transformed 10 acres of conventional farmland into a thriving 400-acre regenerative ecosystem with a dining program, grain and spirits production, a farm store, and a beloved children’s farm camp.Liz brings deep intentionality to every part of Granor, from soil health to community meals to raising the next generation of people who care about nature and food. This conversation will leave you dreaming about a future where farms heal soil, build connection, and strengthen local economies, one ingredient at a time.In this episode:From 10 acres to 400: How a family vision turned into a nationally recognized regenerative farm.Why Granor grows food for people, not markets, and how that changes everything.The soil-first philosophy: How Granor partners with Michigan State, Purdue, and heritage seed networks to continually improve soil health.Scaling regenerative farming: The real economics behind expanding and later contracting acreage — tariffs, labor, demand, and time.Building a local food ecosystem: Why success isn’t about one big farm but many interdependent small businesses thriving together.Taste of Granor: A weekly greenhouse dinner featuring a menu created entirely from what was harvested that week.Farm Camp: How childhood curiosity sparked a signature program that now serves over 200 kids each summer.The labor reality: Why romanticized images of farming don’t match the physical demands and how Granor built a long-term, reliable agricultural team.About our guest:Liz Cicchelli is the co-founder and co-owner of Granor Farm, a 400-acre certified organic and regenerative farm in southwest Michigan. Raised in Chicago with summers spent in Michigan, Liz brings a unique blend of nonprofit leadership, global health experience, and community-minded values to her work at Granor.Before farming, Liz worked in human rights and global health with organizations including Human Rights Watch and Partners In Health. Her passion for equity, education, and nourishment guides Granor’s mission today.Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change because they actually are. Each episode of the podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you enjoyed this episode…Follow/subscribe to Imagine If on your favorite podcast app and YouTubeShare this episode with a friend who cares about climate, community, or living more in balance with fire-adapted landscapes.Visit Bluedot Living online for more stories of people turning climate insight into everyday action.

  16. 6

    The Climate Movement Is Local: A Conversation with Eric Garcetti

    Imagine if the most effective climate solutions aren’t coming from Congress or global summits, but from mayors working city by city, block by block?In this episode, former LA Mayor and U.S. Ambassador to India Eric Garcetti joins Victoria Riskin and Cleo Carney to unpack how cities have become the real engines of climate progress and why local action, community resilience, and everyday leadership matter more than ever.We dive into the rise of Climate Mayors, a coalition that began with a handful of leaders and exploded into hundreds of cities across red, blue, and purple states. Eric reveals how mayors quietly kept the U.S. in the climate game even when the federal government stepped out—and why practical, local solutions cut through partisanship.We also explore the global climate crossroads in India, LA's vision for the first carbon-reducing Olympics, and the emotional side of leadership: courage, joy, and staying connected to community during moments of crisis.In this episode:Why cities—not nations—are driving the most meaningful climate actionHow the Climate Mayors coalition grew into a nationwide movementWhy climate work is inherently nonpartisan when it stays local and humanWhat LA is doing to make the 2028 Olympics the greenest games everWhy India may shape 40% of global climate outcomes in the next 20 yearsHow Eric’s background in human rights and foster parenting influences his leadershipEric’s “Imagine if…”: A simple invitation to reclaim joy and personal agencyAbout our guestEric Garcetti is the former Mayor of Los Angeles and former U.S. Ambassador to India. He helped launch the Climate Mayors coalition and has spent his career at the intersection of human rights, city leadership, and climate resilience.Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us ⁠BluedotLiving.comFor daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  17. 5

    Rethinking Wildfire: Jordan Thomas on When It All Burns

    Imagine if out of the tragedies of these huge fires came insight and opportunity to rethink how we live more in balance with the world and reshape policies that would actually allow us to protect and preserve the natural lands on which we live in a more holistic way…California’s fire seasons are getting longer, hotter, and more destructive, but what if the problem isn’t “nature gone wild,” but human decisions that turned a fire-adapted landscape into a tinderbox? In this episode of Imagine If Janet Kraus and Victoria Riskin sit down with anthropologist and former Los Padres Hotshot Jordan Thomas, author of When It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World, to explore how we got here and what a better relationship with fire could look like. Drawing on his frontline experience fighting megafires and his research into the history of colonization, logging, and Indigenous fire stewardship, Jordan challenges the idea that wildfires are “natural disasters.” Instead, he shows how specific policies and economic choices have primed forests to burn and how communities can reclaim “good fire” as a tool for resilience. For Victoria, the conversation is deeply personal. She shares her own story of surviving the 2017 Thomas Fire and Montecito debris flow, and how disaster unexpectedly deepened her sense of community. Together, she, Janet, and Jordan talk about grief, courage, and the kind of clear-eyed hope that comes from taking action, not looking away.In this episode, you’ll hear:Why California’s fires feel so different nowHow colonization and logging rewired fire-adapted landscapesThe hidden costs of clear-cutting and fire suppressionLife on an elite hotshot crewGrief, place, and the long tail of fire disastersHope vs. naïve optimism vs. despair“People as technology” for solving the wildfire crisisPractical pathways to better fireAbout our guestJordan Thomas is an anthropologist and former member of California’s elite Los Padres Hotshots, one of the U.S. Forest Service’s top wildland firefighting crews. His 2025 book, When It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World, was longlisted for the National Book Award for Nonfiction and blends frontline storytelling with a sharp analysis of how colonization, industrial forestry, and climate change created today’s megafires. His writing has appeared in outlets including The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and The Drift. Want to go deeper?When It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World by Jordan ThomasJordan’s work and upcoming events: search for “When It All Burns Jordan Thomas” or visit his author site.Learn about prescribed burn associations and Indigenous-led fire stewardship in your region through local conservation groups, tribal nations, or state forestry agencies.Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us ⁠BluedotLiving.com ⁠For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  18. 4

    How Films Change the Climate Story with Adam Leipzig

     Imagine if everyone left the movie theater, not only feeling inspired, but also connected to one another and the planet and ready to make a difference. In this episode, Victoria Riskin and Ally Giebutowski sit down with acclaimed film producer Adam Leipzig, former president of National Geographic Films and creative force behind environmental classics like March of the Penguins and A Plastic Ocean. Adam shares how powerful storytelling moves people from climate overwhelm to meaningful action, from reusable cups in the campus café to plastic bans and rights-of-nature laws around the world.Together, we explore how film can balance urgency with optimism, why emotion drives climate action more than data alone, and how each of us can take “micro actions” that add up to real change.In this episode:Why big issues like the climate crisis can feel hopeless, and why that feeling is wrongHow March of the Penguins evolved from a nature film into a story about family, humanity, and a warming planetThe ripple effect of A Plastic Ocean, including its role in more than 150 laws on plastic bags, straws, and recycling practices around the worldWhat PFAS “forever chemicals” are, and the story behind the short film Sludge and poisoned farmland in MaineHow filmmakers measure “impact,” and why emotional connection is the foundation for policy change, beach cleanups, and personal behavior shiftsThe new reality for creatives: why building your own audience is now part of the job descriptionHow Adam stays hopeful while telling hard climate stories and why every solution must leave viewers with something they can personally do nextMicro actions you can take after listeningSwap one single-use item in your daily routine for a reusable option (cup, bottle, or straw).Host a screening of an environmental documentary and open the floor for local action ideas.Learn whether your city, state, or country has any rights-of-nature provisions—and if not, what advocacy is already underway.Support filmmakers and organizations using storytelling as a catalyst for climate progress.About our guestAdam Leipzig is a producer, filmmaker, and former president of National Geographic Films. A former senior vice president at Walt Disney Studios, he oversaw films including Dead Poets Society and Honey, I Shrunk the Kids. As a producer and creative executive, he has helped bring more than 35 films to life, including the Oscar-winning March of the Penguins and the influential documentary A Plastic Ocean, which has been used as a primary advocacy tool in passing plastic-related legislation in countries and communities around the world.His recent and forthcoming projects include Sludge, a short film on PFAS and contaminated farmland, Nature’s Guardians, a new film on the rights of nature, and a forthcoming sea lion–centered film set in the Galápagos. Adam is also the author of a forthcoming book, Fearless Persistence: Creative Life, Creative Work, and the 10 Laws of Omics, focused on helping creatives, entrepreneurs, and change-makers sustain their work and their well-being over time.Be part of the Bluedot Living communityAt Bluedot Living, we imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change—because they actually are. Each episode of Bluedot Living Podcast shares stories of people, policies, and projects that prove your choices matter, from micro decisions at home to macro shifts in law and industry. If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com For daily inspiration you can follow us @Bluedotliving on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedotliving/

  19. 3

    Imagine If: A Bluedot Living Podcast

    Imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change… because they are.Imagine If is a podcast from Bluedot Living that spotlights the people, ideas, and actions creating real momentum for our planet. In this trailer episode, meet your four hosts and get a preview of the conversations ahead -  stories rooted in progress, possibility, and hope.Join each week as Victoria Riskin, founder of Bluedot Living, is joined by Janet Kraus, serial entrepreneur, Cleo Carney, sophomore at Harvard, and Allison Giebutowski, freshman at Lafayette College, explore what climate action looks like in the real world.From innovators reshaping industries, to creatives rewriting the rules, to students rethinking the future, Imagine If brings you conversations with changemakers who prove that meaningful impact doesn’t have to be massive to matter.Because when we imagine a better world, we can start building it.Connect with Us:If you want to explore our recipes, products for your home and lifestyle, and read interesting stories, you can find us BluedotLiving.com and and for daily inspiration you can follow us at @Bluedotliving on Instagram.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change... because they are.Each week, Imagine If spotlights changemakers creating measurable impact, from innovators reshaping industries to creatives rewriting the rules, to students reimagining what’s next.These are stories of progress, possibility, and people proving that meaningful change, at any scale, can move our planet forward.Visit our website: https://bluedotliving.com

HOSTED BY

Bluedot Living

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast have?

Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast currently has 19 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast about?

Imagine if people were actually making progress on climate change... because they are.Each week, Imagine If spotlights changemakers creating measurable impact, from innovators reshaping industries to creatives rewriting the rules, to students reimagining what’s next.These are stories of progress,...

How often does Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast release new episodes?

Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast has 19 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast?

You can listen to Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast?

Imagine If... a Bluedot Living Podcast is created and hosted by Bluedot Living.
URL copied to clipboard!