{"podcast":{"title":"Drilled","slug":"drilled-860945","podcast_index_feed_id":860945,"rss_url":"https://www.omnycontent.com/d/playlist/e73c998e-6e60-432f-8610-ae210140c5b1/9a7ab5ee-ce11-48ff-a544-b3ec00ea9b1e/7f82f371-6316-4ea6-a108-b3ec00ea9b2d/podcast.rss","website_url":"https://www.pushkin.fm/podcasts","image_url":"https://www.omnycontent.com/d/playlist/e73c998e-6e60-432f-8610-ae210140c5b1/9a7ab5ee-ce11-48ff-a544-b3ec00ea9b1e/7f82f371-6316-4ea6-a108-b3ec00ea9b2d/image.jpg?t=1778854500&size=Large","author":"Pushkin Industries","episode_count":257,"summary":"Drilled is a true-crime climate change podcast exposing how corporate corruption and political operatives built decades of climate denial and delay. Hosted and reported by award-winning investigative climate journalists and led by Amy Westervelt, each season unravels new evidence of deception, disinformation, and the power structures keeping real climate solutions out of reach. In September 2025, a group of Brazilian ministers trekked all the way to chilly North Dakota to see a presentation on a new type of clean energy project, one that promised to help them deliver Brazilian President Lula’s dream of turning Brazil into “the Saudi Arabia of sustainable aviation fuels.” It was the latest in a string of projects from Midwest Republican kingmaker and corn ethanol magnate Bruce Rastetter, whose investments in Brazil might just transform him into a global carbon czar, even as his Summit pipeline carbon project faces fierce opposition from Iowa to North Dakota. The problem? It all requires loads of land and none of it does a thing about climate change.","last_synced_at":"2026-06-16T14:21:37.467256+00:00","page_url":"https://stenobird.com/podcast/drilled-860945"},"episode":{"title":"How Climate Protest Backlash Led to Present-Day Repression","slug":"how-climate-protest-backlash-led-to-present-day-repression","published_at":"2026-02-03T19:23:00+00:00","page_url":"https://stenobird.com/podcast/drilled-860945/how-climate-protest-backlash-led-to-present-day-repression","show_page_url":"https://stenobird.com/podcast/drilled-860945","url":"https://drilled.media/","audio_url":"https://podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/tracking.swap.fm/track/SxlTEPDY7xDg35RXkASs/pdrl.fm/3e5572/traffic.omny.fm/d/clips/e73c998e-6e60-432f-8610-ae210140c5b1/9a7ab5ee-ce11-48ff-a544-b3ec00ea9b1e/701b208f-7992-4fe3-95f8-b3ec00ead127/audio.mp3?utm_source=Podcast&in_playlist=7f82f371-6316-4ea6-a108-b3ec00ea9b2d","summary":"It's easy to feel like climate \"doesn't matter\" as the United States descends into fascism, as if climate and democracy are somehow separate issues. Researcher Oscar Berglund and Amy Westervelt connect the dots between the global backlash to climate protest and the broader repression we're seeing in supposedly democratic countries around the world. &nbsp; See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.","meta_description":"It's easy to feel like climate \"doesn't matter\" as the United States descends into fascism, as if climate and democracy are somehow separate issues. Resea…","key_points":[],"chapters":[],"topics":[],"duration_seconds":2760,"processing_state":"not_requested","actions":[{"name":"request_transcript","method":"POST","url":"https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/drilled-860945/episodes/how-climate-protest-backlash-led-to-present-day-repression/transcription-requests","description":"Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode."},{"name":"read_markdown","method":"GET","url":"https://stenobird.com/podcast/drilled-860945/how-climate-protest-backlash-led-to-present-day-repression.md","description":"Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource."}]}}