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Home » Why Are We So Bad at Reporting Good News? – Angus Hervey (Transcript)

Why Are We So Bad at Reporting Good News? – Angus Hervey (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript and summary of Angus Hervey’s talk titled “Why Are We So Bad at Reporting Good News?” at TED conference.

In this talk, journalist Angus Hervey discusses the underreported good news related to climate change, global health, and environment. Despite progress in ending child marriage, strengthening reproductive rights, reducing poverty, and protecting wildlife, the media tends to focus on negative news stories, causing vital stories of progress to go unheard. Hervey argues that we need to shift towards action and hope by actively choosing to hope and take action towards progress instead of only focusing on negative news.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Hello and welcome to this special report where we take a look at the big events that have shaped our world in the last 12 months. I’m Angus Hervey, and this is the news. We begin our broadcast with a story that has dominated headlines this past year, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The war has inflicted a terrible human toll, plunging millions into an unrelenting conflict, dramatically upending international politics, and sparking turmoil in energy markets around the world.

Perhaps the only thing scarier than a war like this is the prospect of our planet being ruined by climate change. However, on that front, the news has been somewhat better. Specifically, as a result of this crisis, the global fight against climate change has accelerated. In response to Putin’s attempt to use gas and oil as weapons, Europe has doubled down on green energy.

Last year, for the first time ever, wind and solar overtook gas, nuclear, or coal as the continent’s largest source of electricity. And analysts say that as a result of the war, Europe’s timeline for ditching fossil fuels has accelerated by up to a decade.