We’re one mistake, accident or deliberate act away from nuclear catastrophe. Our family is folding cranes this week to call on leaders to pull us back from the brink and end the dangerous arms race. #CranesForOurFuture
The existence of nuclear weapons is an existential threat to our very humanity.
It is our urgent moral duty and our obligation to future generations to work toward their elimination and create a security structure where nuclear weapons have no place.
I am sharing a #CranesForOurFuture @NTI_WMD to underline the pressing need for creating a world free from nuclear weapons
My family joins with people around the globe in sharing a paper crane, a symbol of peace, in hopes that our world never experiences another Hiroshima or Nagasaki #CranesForOurFuture
Very excited to share our new podcast series: Into the Depths follows National Geographic Explorer Tara Roberts as she joins Black scuba divers searching for shipwrecks from the transatlantic slave trade. The first of 6 powerful episodes is available now!
https://t.co/pA3Xo0fIgl
I had a dream to find the oldest music humanity has ever made and combine them into one big song. After many weeks of work, it's finally ready!
If you have a chance to check it out, I hope you have as much fun listening to it as I did making it!
https://t.co/1yjldzgbBf
Ever wonder what prehistoric music sounded like? On the latest episode of #OverheardNatGeo, follow us on a journey to find the oldest musical instruments and combine them into one big orchestra of human history https://t.co/3AWuwWx3RK
Whoa, check out the latest episode of Overheard! Our very own executive producer Davar Ardalan and National Geographic photographer Tamara Merino take a fascinating journey to visit modern-day cave dwellers! https://t.co/mCSJOBQxKG
Big shout out to Overheard producers @jacobpinter and @menakawilhelm for our new tantalizingly bizarre episode on "zombie flying saltshakers of death"!! #OverheardNatGeo#BroodX
https://t.co/nfKMKeti74
Some people shake hands. Others bow. Some use chopsticks, others forks. We speak in dialects.
Whales, it turns out, do similar things.
My @NatGeo cover story on the cultural lives of orcas, sperm whales, humpbacks + belugas, w/amazing @Brian_Skerry pics https://t.co/DyJXe1jopV
What does a #COVID19 outbreak mean for life at #Everest’s base camp? Climber Mark Synnott talks about the COVID-19 outbreak in #Nepal and his search for the camera that could change history https://t.co/sOXW36JV9B @petergwin@NatGeoTravel@NatGeo
For the current episode of #OverheardNatGeo I got to chat with the legendary @Brian_Skerry about orcas. (Also, don’t miss his story about the sunken Cadillac!) https://t.co/zX4VZYPnPt
I recently started a series on what I’m reading and listening to, and I’m back with another recommendation. This time, I’m sharing one of my favorite podcasts: Overheard at National Geographic: