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Explore every episode of the podcast Fix The News

Dive into the complete episode list for Fix The News. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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TitlePub. DateDuration
Education Rebuilding Communities: Girls, Healing and Hope in Northern Uganda24 Jun 202600:37:54

What happens when you redesign education around the people who have been left behind?


Meet Alice Achan - social worker, educator and founder of the Te-Kworo Foundation, a boarding school in Northern Uganda that is helping young mothers and vulnerable girls rebuild their lives. What started as a small support group during the aftermath of war has grown into one of the most remarkable educational models in Africa. Today, Te-Kworo's three campuses support more than 1,000 young women through education, childcare, healthcare, counselling and community support.

 

Alice shares how her own experiences as a child of war shaped what she calls a "School of Restoration" - a place where education, healthcare and healing work together to empower young women to create better futures for themselves, their families and change entire communities.

 

In this episode:
• Why Te-Kworo calls itself a "School of Restoration"
• The link between education, healthcare and opportunity
• The ongoing challenges of child marriage and cultural expectations
• How boarding schools help keep vulnerable girls safe
• The power of defeating shame and rebuilding confidence
• Why educating girls can transform entire communities


 Timestamps:
00:46 Why giving partners are a core part of Fix The News

04:48 Interview with Alice Achen

07:38 Education as a pathway out of poverty

10:15 The tension between creating different futures while protecting cultural boundaries

12:12 From education to healthcare - Te-Kworo's holistic model

14:57 What happens when women have access to healthcare and education

15:31 Gus & Amy - Midpoint reflections

17:35 From trauma to triumph - Alice's personal story

20:57 How Alice started a school under a tree

26:52 The power of defeating shame

28:38 Intergenerational ripples

30:08 Alice's biggest lesson

30:38 Bunk beds from Fix The News

31:19 The big vision for Te-Kworo

33:33 Alice's remedy for the world

34:46 Gus & Amy - Final thoughts


Become part of the Te-Kworo community:
If Alice's story resonated with you, you can learn more about Te-Kworo and support their work below.

👉 Website
👉 Feed the School campaign


About Fix The News:
Fix The News is a solutions-focused media platform sharing stories from the frontlines of progress - exploring what’s working in the world and the people making it happen.


Subscribe & follow:
If you enjoyed this episode, follow the podcast and leave a review - it helps more people find these stories.


Production credits:
Hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose
Produced by Fix The News
Audio production: Anthony Badolato, Hear That!


 This episode was produced in Australia on the lands of the Gadigal, Wurundjeri and Woi Wurrung peoples.

How Colombia Ended a 60-Year War: Lessons from Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Juan Manuel Santos10 Jun 202600:43:41

What can Colombia teach us about what's still possible?

Meet Juan Manuel Santos - former President of Colombia, Nobel Peace Prize laureate and Chair of The Elders - who helped negotiate an end to one of the longest-running armed conflicts in modern history. Under his leadership, Colombia signed a peace agreement with FARC, bringing an end to a conflict that had shaped the country for over 60 years.

 

But this conversation isn't just about ending a war. We also explore Colombia's environmental leadership - from Indigenous wisdom in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta to the idea that there can be no lasting peace among people without peace with nature. Along the way, President Santos explains how Colombia helped inspire the Sustainable Development Goals, why cooperation remains humanity's greatest challenge, and what lessons the world can learn from a country that many once considered beyond repair.

 

In this episode:

  • How post-apartheid South Africa helped shape his vision for peace   
  • Why peace is often unpopular - and why he pursued it anyway
  • The difference between making peace and building it
  • How victims became central to Colombia's peace process
  • The role of Colombia in creating the Sustainable Development Goals
  • Why making peace with nature is essential to creating a better future

Timestamps:

00:44 Amy & Gus: Why Doesn't South America Make the Headlines?
 02:22 A Leadership Lesson from the Colombian Navy
 04:45 Inside The Elders
 05:14 The Four Existential Threats Facing Humanity
 07:59 Making Peace with the Western Hemisphere's Longest-Running Guerrilla Movement
 09:59 How Nelson Mandela Made Peace Seem Possible
 12:25 Why Peace Is Often Unpopular
 15:12 The Difference Between Making Peace and Building It
 19:07 Why Victims Were Central to Colombia's Peace Process
 22:11 Pastora Mira and the Extraordinary Power of Forgiveness
 24:51 Is Peace Good for Nature?
 26:41 The Colombian Idea That Became the SDGs
 29:49 The Santa Marta Mandate: Bringing Humanity Back to Nature
 32:25 Legacy, Elections and the Durability of Progress
 35:52 Why We Need to Learn from Young People
 37:48 What Is Still Possible?
 40:16 The Dream President Santos Still Wants to Fulfil
 41:00 Amy & Gus: Final Reflections


Go Deeper:

👉 The Elders
👉 Juan Manuel Santos
👉 The Open Library of the Colombian Peace Process


About Fix The News:
Fix The News is a solutions-focused media platform sharing stories from the frontlines of progress - exploring what’s working in the world and the people making it happen.


Subscribe & follow:
If you enjoyed this episode, follow the podcast and leave a review - it helps more people find these stories.


Production credits:
Hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose
Produced by Fix The News
Audio production: Anthony Badolato, Hear That!


 This episode was produced in Australia on the lands of the Gadigal, Wurundjeri and Woi Wurrung peoples.

NewsFix - Stardust. Child Mortality. India.30 Mar 202600:05:57

This week’s headlines include – DNA building blocks discovered on asteroids; global child mortality down 60%; China consolidates environmental laws; monarch butterflies rebound in Mexico; women in politics rise across Africa; and AI supporting dementia care.

NewsFix has moved to its own feed!
You can check it out here or search 'NewsFix' on your favourite podcast app. Make sure you look out for the new artwork - we've had a pretty big glow-up! If you need a bit more time, don't worry, we’ll keep popping up here for a couple more weeks .


This podcast is brought to you by ⁠Fix The News⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That!⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

NewsFix - Education Boom. Land Back. Cleaner Air.22 Mar 202600:05:50

This week's headlines include – Nigeria’s record investment in basic education; Indigenous-led land restoration across the United States; cities cutting air pollution by up to 45%; rhinos returning to the DRC; and a breakthrough stem cell treatment offering new hope for Parkinson’s.


NewsFix has moved to its own feed!
You can check it out here or search 'NewsFix' on your favourite podcast app. Make sure you look out for the new artwork - we've had a pretty big glow-up! If you need a bit more time, don't worry, we’ll keep popping up here for a couple more weeks .


This podcast is brought to you by ⁠Fix The News⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That!⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

NewsFix - HPV Vaccines. Solar Power. EV Charging Breakthroughs.16 Mar 202600:04:44

This week’s headlines include – India launches the world’s largest HPV vaccination campaign; school meal programmes across Europe reach 25 million children; solar becomes the fastest-growing energy source in history; EV giant BYD unveils a nine-minute charging system; river otters make a comeback in the Great Lakes and southern Africa launches its first cross-border birding route.

NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix The News⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

NewsFix - Croatia's Landmines. Aral Sea. Spider Silk Superpower. 09 Mar 202600:05:27

This week’s headlines include: Chile eliminates leprosy; the malaria vaccine is working in Nigeria fall after a vaccine rollout; Croatia clears its last landmines; renewable energy surges; recovery in Kazakhstan’s Aral region; wildlife comebacks from the Galápagos to Central Asia; and a breakthrough that could finally bring spider silk into mass production.

NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix The News⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

NewsFix - Sea of Possibility. Aid Entering Gaza. Beavers. 23 Feb 202600:06:04

This week's roundup of good news includes – Gaza aid; Amazon deforestation; Ukraine energy; new blood test for cancer; world's largest marine reserve in Canada; Bonobo imagination study.

 

NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix The News⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠To get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com


NewsFix - Bike Angels. Solar Farms. Legal Rights for Whales.16 Feb 202600:05:11

This week's headlines include – Solar power could supercharge farming; universal healthcarein Armenia; more good news for the Amazon; poorer economies are closing the gap; poverty reduction in Jamaica and personhood for Whales in the Pacific.

 NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix TheNews⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ Get in touch with the team: amy@fixthenews.com

NewsFix - Middle Class Mexico. California Clean-Streak. Puppy Love.23 Jan 202600:04:03

This week's headlines include – How Mexico is changing its narrative on poverty; good newsfor the High Seas and the Amazon; a glimmer in Gaza; electrified Porsches claim a victory;  Poland’s step in the right direction for same sex-couples and is it really puppies-v-babies?  

 

NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix The News⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

 

NewsFix - 'Remarkable' Iraq. Cancer ⬇️. Matchmaking for Lizards.16 Jan 202600:05:06

Welcome back to NewsFix and our first edition for 2026. This week's headlines include – a counterpoint to the Middle East, astonishing progress on cancer, a golden age of vaccines, murder and homicide rates decline in the world’s leading cities, coal bites the dust (again)  and Love Island for lizards?

 NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix TheNews⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ Ifyou want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

NewsFix - 2025 Roundup31 Dec 202500:05:16

Welcome to our final NewsFix for 2025 - we're sneaking it in just before the finish line! In this edition we roundup the stories that changed the world this year. From the historic change in global health to an international maritime treaty, great news for green sea turtles and the climate story of the year - this is the hidden progress that unfolded behind the headlines. You can read the full download in our newsletter here.

NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix TheNews⁠. Hosted by AnthonyBadolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

NewsFix - Empty Spain. Alphafold. Measles ⬇️09 Dec 202500:04:51

This week's headlines include – a medical breakthrough in Gaza; death rates plummet for one of our most contagious viruses; ‘Empty Spain’; Australia’s environmental reform;more bad news for fossil fuels and AI for good.

 NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix TheNews⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

The Largest Dam Removal in U.S. History: Indigenous Leadership, the Klamath River & Lessons in Repair27 May 202600:43:16

The battle to restore the Klamath River lasted generations. When the dams finally came down, salmon returned within three days - far faster than scientists expected, marking a turning point for Indigenous rights, ecological restoration and cultural survival.

 

Meet Amy Bowers Cordalis - attorney, activist and member of the Yurok Tribe - who helped lead one of the most significant river restoration efforts in modern history. Amy shares the story behind America’s largest dam removal project: from growing up alongside the Klamath River and witnessing the devastating 2002 salmon die-off, to becoming the first General Counsel for the Yurok Tribe and helping navigate a long fight against political, legal and corporate interests that many believed was impossible to win.

 

This isn’t just a conversation about dams or conservation. It’s about what comes after victory - and what repair truly means for ecosystems, communities, culture and our collective future.


In this episode:

  • How Amy blew up a dam on her birthday
  • Why salmon returned to the Klamath River in just three days
  • The cultural and spiritual connection between the Yurok people, the river and salmon
  • What the 2002 mass death of 70,000 salmon meant for Indigenous communities
  • How grief and anger led Amy to law school and environmental advocacy
  • Warren Buffett - and why his team ended up on the banks of the Klamath River
  • The surprising economics of dam removal and river restoration
  • Finding the joy in advocacy
  • What the Klamath story teaches us about hope, persistence and ability of nature and communities to heal

Timestamps:

00:54 - Introduction to the Klamath River story

02:26 - Meet Amy Bowers Cordalis

03:59 - The Yurok's relationship with the Klamath and the salmon

07:05 - The turning point in 2002 

10:59 - How Amy's great-grandmother told her to take action

12:53 -  80,000 salmon died, no media showed up 

13:38 - What a decades-long battle felt like on the inside?

15:13 -  When Warren Buffet's team came out to the Klamath

19:02 -  Midpoint reflections

20:43 - How the Klamath restoration changes the story of environmental activism

22:55 - Why restoration and economics can go hand in hand

23:49 - What it's like to blow up a dam, on your birthday

25:04 - How the elders have responded to the Klamath flowing again

27:32 - How salon beat scientific predication and returned after three days

29:23 - The myth of the lone hero

32:11 - Other river restoration projects happening in America

34:26 - What comes after victory? Healing.

38:21 - What the Klamath story tells us about what's possible

40:22 - Final reflections


Want to dive deeper?

👉 Find out more about Amy and her book 'The Water Remembers'
👉 Amy's non-profit Ridges to Riffles


About Fix The News:
Fix The News is a solutions-focused media platform sharing stories from the frontlines of progress - exploring what’s working in the world and the people making it happen.


Subscribe & follow:
If you enjoyed this episode, follow the podcast and leave a review - it helps more people find these stories.


Production credits:
Hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose
Produced by Fix The News
Audio production: Anthony Badolato, Hear That!


 This episode was produced in Australia on the lands of the Gadigal, Wurundjeri and Woi Wurrung peoples.

NewsFix - The Kiss. Child Poverty ⬇️. Rewilding Keeps Winning.01 Dec 202500:05:08

This week's headlines include - major victory against extreme child poverty; rewilding efforts paying off in Scotland, Vietnam, Bulgaria and Ukraine; more good news on the malaria vaccine; what went right at COP30 and science reveals some very flirty primates.

NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix TheNews⁠. Hosted by AnthonyBadolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ Ifyou want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

Future Council - No More 'Adult Washing'28 Nov 202500:32:35

Meet Future Council, a global youth-led movement that’s empowering kids and teenagers to help co-design the future. Inspired by the documentary ‘Future Council’ that followed eight young activists as they travelled across Europe in a yellow bus confronting big business leaders, the movement is showing how the next generation can reshape climate leadership. In our final episode for this season, we chat with filmmaker Damon Gameau and two of the original councillors –Skye Neville, a 15 year old environmental campaigner from Wales and Clemence “CC” Currie, the 12 year old CEO of CCs Plastic Pick-up Crew in Scotland. From Billie Eilish to the phrase that we need to stop telling our kids, this conversation is a reminder than when it comes to changing the world, none of us can sit on the sidelines.

 Other topics: what adults can learn from young activists; early encounters with environmental risk; small steps that scale into meaningful impact; corporate accountability and sustainability culture; hope as a tool for young campaigners; generational views on climate crisis; emerging models of youth governance; power dynamics inside sustainability boardrooms; media narratives shaping climate perception; digital networks for youth organising; the role of families in early activism; values-driven climate decision-making; the tension between optimism and urgency; cross-cultural collaboration among young leaders; and the fine line between encouragement and overwhelm.

 

Find Out More:

  • If you want to support or join the Future Council Global Movement, click here.
  • Want more details about the film? Click here.

 

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.Audio Producer/Director Anthony Badolato, Hear That? If you love this episode, please leave a comment or review. You can get in touch with the team via email amy@fixthenews.com


NewsFix - Aha! Mongolia. Crime Decline.21 Nov 202500:05:01

Hold onto your hats - it's a big week of news including: the science behind Aha moments; top marks for global primary school education; cancer breakthroughs; more good news for the Amazon; Mongolia's ambitious conservation plan; crime declines in London and new hope for Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Check out our full coverage in this week's newsletter here.

NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix TheNews⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com


Bryan Walsh - Solving the Narrative Deficit19 Nov 202500:38:35

Meet Bryan Walsh, an editorial director at Vox, where he leads Future Perfect – an ambitious solutions journalism project that focuses on the policies and technologies that will make the future a better place. As a former foreign correspondent and climate writer for Time and the author of End Times: A Brief Guide to the End of the World, Bryan has spent more than two decades tracking humanity’s gravest threats. Today he is focused on highlighting the under-reported progress that shows we still have room to bend the story in a better direction.


Topics discussed: the good news hiding behind everyday conveniences; George Washington’s candles as perspective; why the report card for humanity is “incomplete”; negativity bias, doomscrolling, and the allure of bad headlines; local crime statistics versus national fear of rising violence; how American political psychodrama dominates the global news feed; what AI overviews and chatbots are doing to online media traffic; the economics of journalism after print advertising and social media; Future Perfect’s origin story and focusing on what matters most; philanthropy, foreign aid cuts, and momentum in development gains; why solutions journalism can feel like eating your vegetables; the narrative deficit and hero deficit in progress reporting; pandemic vaccines as an under-appreciated scientific and moral triumph; hope as a life preserver rather than a prediction and creating a media ecosystem that rewards depth, nuance, and solutions.

 Find Out More:

Future Perfect – Vox Media

Are you interested in how ⁠80,000 Hours⁠ can help you use your career to make a difference? Check out their podcast on Apple,Spotify or where ever you listen to your podcasts.

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio Producer/Director Anthony Badolato, Hear That? If you love this episode, please share, leave a review. You can get in touch with the team via email amy@fixthenews.com


NewsFix - Global Health Wins. Overfishing. Stair-Climbing Wheelchairs.14 Nov 202500:04:45

This week's headlines include: big news for HIV, tuberculosis and Leishmaniasis; China continues emissions decline; surprising drop in youth crime; long-awaited victory for Indigenous communities in Bolivia; more fish in the US and a stair-climbing wheelchair. NewsFix is brought to you by Fix The News. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, Hear That! If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com


Enric Sala - Ocean Time Machine12 Nov 202500:37:17

Meet Enric Sala, a marine ecologist, National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence and founder of Pristine Seas – an organisation that has helped create 31 Marine Protected Areas, safeguarding nearly 7 million square kilometres of ocean. From his five-year Pacific expedition using a three-person submersible to his film Ocean with David Attenborough and his work with governments and coastal communities to drive the 30x30 goal – Enric is someone who intimately understands the scale of the crisis and still has proof that restoration is possible.

Other topics: the Ocean Decade’s slow progress; High Seas Treaty benefits and blind spots; why 96% of catch comes from inside coastal waters; the spillover benefits of Marine Protected Areas; community-driven reserves in Greece and Turkey; a five-year Pacific expedition with a new sub; the Port State Measures Agreement in practice; China’s distant-water fleets and accountability; combining science and National Geographic storytelling; how protection boosts local incomes; community-driven reserves in Greece and Turkey; exploring ‘pristine ocean’ that no human has gone to; financing and defending parks through politics; succession planning after a cancer scare;educating future stewards across the Pacific; Revive Our Ocean as a tool for communities; focused action as an antidote to despair; and bottom-trawling footage as a visceral wake-up call.


Find Out More:

Pristine Seas

Revive Our Ocean

Ocean⁠, the film.

Enric Sala- Website + Books,

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio Producer/Director Anthony Badolato, Hear That! If you love this episode, please leave a comment or review. You can get in touch with the team: amy@fixthenews.com




Women Moving the World10 Nov 202500:34:14

Meet Krystal Birungi, Carolina Morgado, Nice Leng’ete and Bhavreen Kandhari – four incredible women who are working on the frontlines of science, conservation, human rights, and environmental advocacy. Krystal is an entomologist with Target Malaria in Uganda developing gene-drive mosquitoes; Carolina is the executive director of Rewilding Chile; Nice leads community-based campaigns to end female genital mutilation in Kenya; Bhavreen co-founded Warrior Moms in India to force accountability on air pollution.

Topics discussed: growing up with endemic malaria and the arrival of the Global Fund; proof-of-concept gene-drive trials in Italy and timelines to 2030; resistance to insecticides and drugs; elimination as a realistic regional goal; Chile’s Route of Parks as connected protected areas; park creation as local economic engine; carbon storage in temperate rainforests and kelp systems; Chile’s Cape Froward as a new national park; conservation grounded in community livelihoods and guide certification; outlawing FGM in Kenya in 2011 and the limits of law alone; elders’ councils and alternative rites of passage; mother-to-girl and father-to-son forums; measurable outcomes from community ceremonies and schooling; Delhi school closures during severe smog; COVID as a natural experiment in pollution control; formal complaints versus performative fixes; collective action by parents; clean air as a right, not a luxury.


02:08 Krystal Birungi - The scientist using gene drive to fight malaria

10:27 Carolina Morgado - Rewilding landscapes and communities in Chile

19:42 Nice Leng’ete - Creating an alternative rite of passage for girls in Africa

28:12 Bhavreen Kandhari - The warrior mum fighting for clean air

 

Find out more:


This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rosefrom ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato from HearThat? If you have a guest suggestion, feedback or interested in sponsorship, please reach out amy@fixthenews.com


NewsFix - Amazon Deforestation. Czechia Bans Smacking. Less Grumpy.07 Nov 202500:03:38

This week's headlines include: deforestation in the Amazon takes another plunge; Mexico reduces poverty; Nigeria boosts child health; no more corporal punishment in Czechia and the world is surprisingly becoming less grumpy.

NewsFix is brought to you by ⁠Fix The News⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That! ⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

NewsFix - Literacy Soars. Sixth Sense. Air Pollution.30 Oct 202500:04:30

Welcome to our first edition of NewsFix - your weekly dose of good news! On today's episode: global air-pollutiondeaths fall as the 'clean-air' era begins, hidden progress on youth literacy, why we're celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement, a new atlas to map the human body, how AI is helping farmers in India, species extinction is losing speed and some big news for the humble zipper.

NewsFix is brought to you by the team at Fix The News and hosted by Anthony Badolato from Hear That. If you want to find out more about what's gone right in the world this week, subscribe to our newsletter.

David Fajgenbaum - The Medicine We Missed24 Oct 202500:39:39

Meet David Fajgenbaum, a physician scientist who is saving lives by repurposing existing medications to treat different diseases through his organisation Every Cure. This conversation will challenge the way you look medicine and unlock the possibility that some of the solutions we’re looking for, are hiding in plain sight, on the shelves of your local pharmacy. From the near-death experience that changed the course of David’s life to how he’s harnessing the power of AI for good, this episode is a total game changer. Topics discussed: how a repurposed drug saved David’s life, living life in ‘overtime,’ what it’s like to swim upstream against the medical system, the AI advantage in fast-tracking drug matches to our 18,000 known diseases, how Viagra is saving sick kids, the economics of repurposing existing drugs and what we can expect from the future of medicine.

 Find out more:

You can check out David’s recent TED talk or his book ChasingMy Cure. You can also support Every Cure and if you want to let his team know about a repurposed drug that’s worked foryou, click here.

Are you interested in how 80,000 Hours can help you use your career to make a difference? Check out their free resources here.

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rosefrom Fix The News and sound design by Anthony Badolato from Hear That!


Inside Women Deliver 2026: Feminist Leadership, Climate Action & Youth Power13 May 202600:42:44

Gus and Amy recently attended Women Deliver 2026 – the world’s largest global conference on gender equality. Beyond reporting on the sessions, it was an opportunity to sit down with the people driving social change at every level. From feminist leaders in the Pacific to youth-led innovation, policymakers, and evolving conversations about the role of men in the fight for gender equality, Women Deliver 2026 offered a snapshot of a global movement in motion - and the tensions, ideas, and leadership shaping what comes next.

 

In this episode:

  • The value of global conferences
  • Why the current “crisis” feels like a reckoning
  • How the frontlines of feminism are reshaping the Pacific
  • Vanuatu and the landmark ICJ climate decision
  • Why global organisations are focusing on adolescent girls
  • The uncomfortable question around youth leadership
  • Helen Clark on why the UN Charter needs to adapt to the 21st century
  • Good news in global health and women’s health
  • The Melbourne Declaration on gender equality
  • The State of the World’s Fathers report
  • A glimmer of hope from conflict zones

Timestamps:

00:58 Why do we cover these conferences?
03:01 Gus & Amy - same conference, different responses
06:19 The legacy of gender equality conferences
08:08 Oceanic feminist leadership
08:48 Virisila Buadromo - Urgent Action Fund
10:29 Climate is not a single-issue story
11:23 Virisila Buadromo on echo chambers and global solidarity
12:49 Flora Vano - ActionAid Vanuatu
14:08 Climate and maternal health intersect
15:16 The power of community-led solutions
16:47 Vanuatu and the landmark ICJ climate ruling
18:44 Renewed focus on adolescent girls
19:16 Julia Fan - Director for Collective Action, Women Deliver
21:06 Emily McChrystal - Restless Development
22:18 Youth-led digital solutions
23:38 Rethinking the UN Charter for the 21st century
24:02 Helen Clark - former Prime Minister of New Zealand
25:01 Good news in global health
26:35 The Melbourne Declaration for gender equality
28:33 Paola Salwan Daher - Women Deliver
29:36 Unexpected outcomes from the Melbourne Declaration
31:24 State of the World’s Fathers report
31:47 “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All”
33:08 Dr Taveeshi Gupta - Equimundo
34:56 What’s working with fathers globally?
36:38 Gary Barker - Equimundo
38:31 Bright sparks from Women Deliver
39:33 Anna Jarrett Rawlence - Women for Women International
40:47 Final reflections


Find Out More:

👉 Women Deliver
👉 Image credit: Joburg Ballet School/ Ihsaan Haffejee

About Fix The News:
Fix The News is a solutions-focused media platform sharing stories from the frontlines of progress - exploring what’s working in the world and the people making it happen.


Subscribe & follow:
If you enjoyed this episode, follow the podcast and leave a review - it helps more people find these stories.


Production credits:
Hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose
Produced by Fix The News
Audio production: Anthony Badolato, Hear That!


 This episode was produced in Australia on the lands of the Gadigal, Wurundjeri and Woi Wurrung peoples.

UNGA 2025 - The End of Aid?15 Oct 202500:56:03

Two weeks ago, Amy was on the ground in New York during the UN General Assembly and Climate Week. Attending various events, including the Clinton Global Initiative, Amy spoke with some incredible people who work on the frontlines of climate, healthcare, education and crisis response. Despite dwindling aid budgets and mounting challenges, these people are meeting this moment with big, bold ambition while quietly reshaping the future of development. From the ‘miracle drug’ for HIV to energy access for all and the rewilding project that will mend ecosystems across the heart of South America, this episode may expand what you think is possible. These are the people who are fighting for a better future every single day.

 

Here's who you’ll meet:

Carolyn Amole, Clinton Health Access Initiative

Erica Coe & Frank Aswani, Coalition for Mental Health Investment

Sandra Chukwudozie, Salpha Energy

David Harris, Christel House

Elpida Kokkota, Mexoxo

Geeta Mehta, SocialCapital Credits

Emily Benson & Melanie Joiner, Integrate Health

Tjada D'Oyen McKenna, Mercy Corps

Deli Saavedra & Mario Haberfeld, Jaguar Rivers Initiative

 

Timecodes:

03:58 - HIV 'Miracle Drug'

09:36 - More funding for mental health

16:38 - The shift from aid to self-sufficiency

17:44 - Making solar energy accessible to underserved communities in Nigeria

22:54 - Working Groups at the Clinton Global Initiative

24:17 - A comprehensive education model that alleviating poverty

28:03 - The group who are democratising access to education for women

32:53 - The social currency that banks good acts in communities

37:46 - Putting women at the centre of healthcare in Togo & Guinea

42:51 - Mercy Corps, the humanitarian organisation serving 38 million people

46:18 - Cross-continental conservation initiative restoring the heart of South America

52:45 - Final Thoughts

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from Fix The News, with audio production by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That? If you want to know more about this series or are interested in sharing it with your networks, send us an email: amy@fixthenews.com




 

A Shot At History, Part 3 - The Jab26 Sep 202500:32:46

In our final episode of the series, we’ll uncover the surprising stories behind the science of the world’s first jab for malaria and how this ‘orphan’ vaccine became a lifesaving intervention that has already reached 5 million children. We look at what's next for the malaria vaccine, the threats of funding cuts to global health and answer the big question – is it working?

Here’s who you’ll meet:

Angus Hervey: Founder of Fix The News

Teresa Chirwa-Ndanga: Journalist & human rights activist, Malawi

Dr Joe Cohen: Project Lead, Malaria Vaccine at GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals

Dr Mehreen Datoo: Clinical research fellow-Malaria vaccine trials, Oxford University

John Bawa: Director, Malaria Vaccine Implementation, PATH.

Dr Scott Gordon: Head of Gavi's Malaria Program

 A Shot At History is produced by Fix The News. Series Producer, Amy Davoren-Rose, Fix The News. Associate Producer & Audio Director, Anthony Badolato, Hear That?

A Shot At History, Part 2 - The Chain15 Sep 202500:34:08

Rolling out a new vaccine across an entire continent takes an extraordinary chain of people - from the scientists in the labs, to delivery truck drivers and healthcare workers on motorbikes who stop at nothing to get this vaccine into far-flung villages. In this episode, we’ll show you what it takes to navigate the last mile challenges of transporting a cold-chain vaccine across the hottest continent on earth and the surprising heroes who are stepping up to champion the world’s first malaria vaccine.

Here’s who you’ll meet:

Angus Hervey: Founder of Fix The News

Teresa Chirwa-Ndanga: Journalist & human rights activist, Malawi

Zacharia Kafuko: Director of 1Day Africa

Amanda Clemens:  Social Mobilisation Coordinator, Ministry of Health, Sierra Leone

Kombra Network, Sierra Leone: Sallamatu Barrie – School Health club Champion, Reverend Christina Sutton and Dr Ramadan Jalloh.

 Special music credit: "Wok Dae Ya" by Speedo'o

A Shot At History is produced by Fix The News. SeriesProducer, Amy Davoren-Rose, Fix The News. Associate Producer & Audio Director, Anthony Badolato, Hear That?Producers for Sierra Leone, Marcus Costello and Jodie Bennet.

For more information about this production, email amy@fixthenews.com

A Shot At History, Part 1 - The Stakes05 Sep 202500:37:38

Malaria is one of the deadliest diseases of all time - responsible for more deaths than all of humanity's wars combined. That means that the arrival of not one, but two malaria vaccines has the potential to change the future of our species.

In this first episode, we’ll show you what’s at stake for millions of families across Sub-Saharan Africa, explain the economic and personal cost, and describe how the world’s first vaccine for a parasitic disease made it out of the lab, through trials, and into the lives of mothers and babies across the continent.

Here’s who you’ll meet:

Angus Hervey: Founder of Fix The News.

Teresa Chirwa-Ndanga: Journalist & human rights activist.

Dr Mary Hamel: Team Lead, Malaria Vaccines at WHO

Zacharia Kafuko: Director of 1Day Africa

Dr Rose Jalang'o: Head of the National Vaccines and Immunization Program, Kenya

Alanta Colley: Public health worker & science communicator

A Shot At History was produced by Fix The News.

Series & Story Producer, Amy Davoren-Rose, Fix The News

Associate Producer & Audio Director, Anthony Badolato, Hear That?

Research Producer, Marcus Costello and AudioCraft.

If you want to know more about this series or are interested in sharing it with your networks, send us an email: amy@fixthenews.com



A Shot At History - Trailer03 Sep 202500:03:38

Over a year ago, we decided that we wanted to tell the storyof the malaria vaccine; one of the most important yet hidden stories of progress in the world right now. We knew that this would be a massive undertaking, but it turned out to be more epic that we could have possibly imagined. Over three episodes, we’re going to show you what it takes to develop and roll out a new vaccine, why this one matters so much and how it could change the trajectory of human history. First episode drops Friday 5th September. 

If you want to find out more about our work, go to fixthenews.com

Ask Us Anything29 Aug 202500:36:12

What do KPop Demon Hunters and Bluey have to do with stories of progress? Well, you’ll hear the answer in this ‘Ask Us Anything’ episode. From controversial opinions on the climate crisis, to our very first News Fix bulletin, Gus and Amy dive into a range of topics and answer some big, burning questions from subscribers. Other topics discussed: Why solar energy is such big news, the role of solutions journalism in Gaza, good humans everywhere, individual action versus systemic change, the question of scale and the launch of our audio documentary about the malaria vaccine, A Shot At History.

What did you think of our News Fix? If you want to send us a question, feedback or nominate a potential guest for the podcast, go to our website or email amy@fixthenews.com

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

 

Rutger Bregman – Quit Your Job, Change The World22 Aug 202500:43:26

Meet Rutger Bregman, a Dutch historian, bestselling author andour first repeat guest on the podcast! In this episode we chat with Rutger about his new book Moral Ambition and why it’s time for people to stop wasting their talent and start making a difference. From his early midlife crisis to what we can learn from the abolitionists and why the world needs to redefinesuccess, this is a conversation for our times. Topics discussed: Why the biggest waste of time is the misallocation of talent, the ‘mother of all movements,’ what it takes to build a wildly better world, on taking the long view, the problem with online activism, money is not a dirty word in creating social movements and why the School for Moral Ambition is paying people to quit their jobs.

 Find out more:

https://www.moralambition.org

https://rutgerbregman.com

https://www.givingwhatwecan.org

Don’t forget to ‘Ask Us Anything’ – email yourquestion to amy@fixthenews.com or leaveus a voice note here. You have until 9am Wednesday 27th September AEST.

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from Fix The News and sound design by Anthony Badolato from Ai3 - Audio & Voice.

 

Paulie Stewart - Punk Magic15 Aug 202500:31:27

Meet Paulie Stewart, an Australian punk rocker who teamed up with a group of nuns to help disabled kids in Timor Leste. From walking on the wild side, to almost crossing over to the other side – Paulie’s story is about full circles, second chances, and the one of the most unlikely and inspiring partnerships. Topics discussed: the deathbed encounter that changed Paulie’s life, why the Alma Nuns are more punk than Billy Idol, the impact of Paulie’s work in Timor, the power of faith and the unexpected twists that have defined his extraordinary life journey.

If you want to support the Alma nuns, you can donate through their funding platform, Myriad Australia.

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.


Wawira Njiru - Engine Of Potential08 Aug 202500:34:45

Meet Wawira Njiru, a nutritionist and social entrepreneur in Kenya who’s gone from serving lunch to 25 children out of a makeshift kitchen to establishing Food4Education, a nonprofit organisation that serves half a million hot, nutritious and affordable school meals every day. From the uncalculated cost of childhood hunger to powering an 'engine of potential', Wawira’s story shows how thinking big and starting small can change the world. Topics discussed: why the world's future leaders need a school meal today, the logistics of feeding half a million kids, the power of scaling a simple idea, why optimism matters, the ripple effects of school meals on communities and how a well-fed future could change Africa.

You can support Wawira’s work at Food4Education.org and for more inspiration, check out her 2025 TED talk here.

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Boyan Slat - The Impossible Cleanup31 Jul 202500:36:38

Meet Boyan Slat, founder of The Ocean Cleanup - the world’s largest cleanup in history. After starting as a high school project in the Netherlands in 2011, Boyan’s mission has gone global, removing tens of millions of kilograms of plastic from oceans and rivers. It’s an epic job and with plastic pollution on the rise, the cleanup is doubling down on its goal to remove 90% of ocean plastic by 2040. From the recent launch of the cleanup’s 30 Cities program to dealing with critics on social media, Boyan’s 'engineering energy' might just change the way you think about the world. Topics discussed: mother nature vs human nature; why The Ocean Cleanup is not a lifelong project; behind-the-scenes of the cleaning up the world’s most polluted river; what motivates Boyan to keep going in the face of impossible odds and why addressing the root cause is not the best way to tackle our problems. 

For more information check out: theoceancleanup.com


This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Myra Anubi - Is “Good News” Real Journalism?29 Apr 202600:37:14

What happens when two solutions-focused news platforms compare notes on how to change the narrative of the world? Meet Myra Anubi - BBC journalist and host of People Fixing the World - who, like Fix The News, is part of a growing movement to challenge the doom and gloom by reporting on what’s working. Through stories of climate innovation, global health breakthroughs and grassroots problem-solving, Myra is helping prove that solutions journalism isn’t a soft alternative - it’s rigorous, necessary, and reshaping the future of news.

 

Myra takes us behind the scenes to unpack how these stories are found, verified and told inside one of the world’s largest media organisations. She also reflects on her lifelong relationship with the BBC World Service - and why telling stories of progress may be one of journalism’s most important challenges, and greatest opportunities, today.

 

In this episode:

·      What solutions journalism actually is - and why it matters

·      Why “good news” still faces resistance in mainstream media

·      Growing up in Kenya “raised by radio” 

·      How COVID and George Floyd coverage reshaped her family’s media diet

·      Collaboration as a practical remedy

·      Why audiences are hungry for stories of progress

·      What the future of journalism could look like

 

Timestamps:
02:15 What Myra really thinks of the news
03:50 What counts as someone fixing the world?
05:19 Inside the BBC: Pitching “What’s Working”

09:13 Raised by radio in Kenya
10:43 How the BBC shaped Myra’s worldview
12:16 Myra’s journey from solutions sceptic to evangelist

15.47 Gus & Amy’s midpoint reflections

17.11 The power of Kangaroo Care as a solution

19.03 The pattern of change

20.07 What makes someone fix the world?

22.13 Dr Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka and conservation through public health 

24.42 How being detained in Uganda exposed deeper challenges within journalism

26.56 The work ahead for solutions journalism

28.48 How to change your children’s media diet

31.55 Myra’s remedy for the world – collaboration

32.55 The personal impact of solutions journalism 

34.00 Gus & Amy’s final reflections 


Find out more:

👉 BBC People Fixing The World

👉 Podcast link

👉 Linkedin
👉 Instagram


About Fix The News:
Fix The News is a solutions-focused media platform sharing stories from the frontlines of progress - exploring what’s working in the world and the people making it happen.


Subscribe & follow:
If you enjoyed this episode, follow the podcast and leave a review - it helps more people find these stories.


Production credits:
Hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose
Produced by Fix The News
Audio production: Anthony Badolato, Hear That!


 This episode was produced in Australia on the lands of the Gadigal, Wurundjeri and Woi Wurrung peoples.

Trailer - Season 424 Jul 202500:02:18

A new chapter begins on July 31st, 2025. 

The Good News You Missed In 202418 Dec 202400:44:25

Depending on where you get your news, 2024 probably sounded like a complete disaster. And while a lot of terrible things happened, not everything that happened in the world was terrible. From breakthrough treatments for HIV and obesity, to the rise in global happiness and the decline in deforestation in the Amazon – there were a lot of bright glimmers of progress that you just didn’t hear about.  

Go to our website to read the full list of our 86 Stories of Progress from 2024.

Other topics discussed: our word of the year (hint – it’s not "brain rot"); the surprising news about global reproductive rights; the good news for obesity; how 90 million kids got fed at school; the medical breakthrough of 2024; LGBTQ+ victories in Thailand & Greece; China’s 3000 kilometre green wall; the hidden stories of hope in Gaza and Ukraine; why 2025 is going to be a big year in the Amazon; how the clean energy transition is fuelling hope for future; the biggest environmental story of the year; incredible wins for animals; and why stories of progress matter now more than ever.

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Steven Pinker – Why Progress Is Possible05 Nov 202400:45:17

Meet Steven Pinker, a cognitive psychologist and public intellectual who is one of the world’s greatest thinkers on the topic of progress. He is the author of 12 books, including ‘Better Angels of Our Nature,’ which played a key role in the origin story of Fix The News. After five years of email correspondence between Steven and Gus, this is their first face to face conversation. From progress to politics and the rise of tattoos, this episode offers a big dose of perspective about the current state of the world.

Other topics discussed: why longstanding peace never makes headlines; the best metrics for human progress; the decline of mental health in rich countries; the problem with word police; changes in social norms and how they happen; why today’s election in the US is better than 1968; the cognitive illusion perpetuated by mass media; how graphs and data can help change beliefs; designing better institutions to help drive more progress; two lessons that Steven learned the hard way; the power of reasonable hope.

This episode wraps up season three of this podcast. To celebrate, we’re offering new and existing subscribers a 30% discount on 12-month subscriptions to our weekly newsletter. If you want to make your inbox a more hopeful place: go to fixthenews.com and enter the code PINKER at checkout.

Find out more about Steven Pinker:

https://stevenpinker.com/


This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Ncazelo Ncube-Mlilo – The Caravan Of Joy And Tears30 Oct 202400:29:43

Meet Ncazelo Ncube-Mlilo, a psychologist and narrativetherapist who uses a travelling caravan to bring mental health services to townships on the outskirts of Johannesburg. Tackling gender-based violence andhigh rates of youth depression, Ncazelo’s cutting edge methods for healing trauma are now being used across the globe.

We are proud to support Ncazelo’s organisation, ⁠Phola⁠,as one of our charity partners at ⁠Fix The News⁠.

 

Find out more about Ncazelo:

⁠https://phola.org⁠

⁠https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W6IWbbuYVgw⁠

 

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Sonia Vallabh - A Scientist's Quest To Cure Her Own Disease21 Oct 202400:36:43

Meet Sonia Vallabh, a lawyer turned scientist with one of the most compelling stories we have ever heard. In 2011, Sonia was diagnosed with prion disease, a rare and fatal genetic illness with no viable treatment. Against all odds, Sonia and her husband retrained as a patient–scientists and set out to cure the disease before Sonia misses her window. Thirteen years later, they've found a way to shut off enough genetic signals to halt the disease - and save hundreds of thousands of lives around the world.

Find out more:

https://www.ted.com/talks/sonia_vallabh_my_quest_to_cure_prion_disease_before_it_s_too_late?subtitle=en

https://www.broadinstitute.org/bios/sonia-vallabhThis podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Clinton Global Initiative - A Million Little Bits09 Oct 202400:47:13

Two weeks ago, Amy attended the Clinton Global Initiative in New York, where she met some incredible change makers who are driving solutions across healthcare, water access, food security, conservation and scientific discovery. In this episode we'll take you behind the scenes of the two-day event and introduce you to some of the people she met in the corridors, including her interview with the legendary Dr Jane Goodall.

Correction: Coalition for Mental Health Investment

Five organisations are part of the coalition - The McKinsey Health Institute (MHI) has joined the African Venture Philanthropy Alliance (AVPA), Clinton Global Initiative, Kokoro, and Wellcome.

The quote about “every country is a developing country when it comes to mental health” is attributed Shekhar Saxena.


Find out more:

https://www.clintonfoundation.org

https://www.thementalhealthcoalition.org

https://www.whywaste.io

https://carolinafarmtrust.org

https://www.millersocent.org

https://sungai.watch

https://www.adventurescientists.org

https://www.clintonhealthaccess.org

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.


Sigrid van Aken - The Lottery Of Progress19 Sep 202400:29:12

Meet Sigrid van Aken, the CEO of Postcode Lottery Group, the world's 3rd largest private charity donor, after the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation & the Wellcome Trust. To date, the organisation has given €13.5 to charities that are driving significant social and environmental change. With over 14 million subscriptions and record turnover of €2.5 billion in 2023, it’s one of the greatest philanthropy stories, you probably haven’t heard about.

Find out more:

www.postcodelotterygroup.com

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Fernando Trujillo - Hope Songs In The Amazon13 Sep 202400:29:24

We cover a lot of conversation stories about the Amazon at Fix The News, but it’s not often that we get the chance to talk with someone who is driving these efforts. Meet Fernando Trujillo, a marine scientist who is fighting to save the Pink River Dolphins of the Amazon River. Over the past 30 years Fernando and his team have scaled a small research project in Colombia into a global mission to protect river dolphins and their waterways around the world.

Find out more:

https://omacha.org

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠⁠⁠Fix The News⁠⁠⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Valery Wichman - Waves Of Change06 Sep 202400:29:57

Meet Valery Wichman, a leading LGBTQI+ activist and lawyer in the Cook Islands who was on the forefront of the fight to decriminalise homosexuality in her country. This conversation explores the 13-year journey behind the landmark victory and the power of faith, love and kindness to change the law, and the world.

Find out more:

RNZ

Pink News

Cook Island News

This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from ⁠Fix The News⁠. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

Ada Palmer - A History Of Saving The World30 Aug 202400:36:51

Meet Ada Palmer, a historian and science fiction author who believes that when we zoom out to a centuries scale, humanity has a lot to be hopeful about. This conversation is a time-travelling adventure, that explores how far we’ve come since the1600s, where we might end up in 2454 and why Shakespeare was worried about fake news too.

 Find out more about Ada:www.AdaPalmer.com

www.ExUrbe.com 

Twitter: @Ada_Palmer

Metaverse: @adapalmer@wandering.shop

Bluesky: @adapalmer.bsky.social


This podcast is hosted by Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose from Fix The News. Audio sweeting by Anthony Badolato at Ai3 – audio and voice.

NewsFix - Clean Energy Hits Turning Point. 19.5 Million Lives Saved. Seagrass Comeback.27 Apr 202600:05:46

This week’s headlines include – a historic shift in the global energy transition as renewables meet all new electricity demand; Africa’s measles vaccination drive saving 19.5 million lives; a breakthrough gene therapy restoring hearing; major global progress on poverty reduction and mental health; expanded access to education in Chicago; and  two different comeback stories for seagrass ecosystems in France and Australia.

NewsFix has officially moved to its own feed! You can check it out here or search 'NewsFix' on your favourite podcast app.

This podcast is brought to you by ⁠Fix The News⁠. Hosted by Anthony Badolato, ⁠Hear That!⁠ If you want to get in touch with the team, email amy@fixthenews.com

Ron Davis Alvarez - The Dream Orchestra23 Aug 202400:29:45

Meet Ron Davis Alvarez, a musician, teacher and conductor who created The Dream Orchestra to help refugee children and teenagers forge connections in their host country. This is a story about the power of music to bring people together, to open our hearts and to believe in the possibility of a better future.


To find out more:

Website: https://dreamorchestra.se/

Go-Fund-Me:  https://www.gofundme.com/f/ron-davis-alvarez-dream-orchestra
Video: https://youtu.be/7i63Kqulb-w?si=arT6lbJ4iXH2EdUZ

CNN Heroes: https://edition.cnn.com/2024/08/16/world/his-love-of-music-is-helping-refugees-and-immigrants-build-new-lives?cid=ios_app

About Hope Is A Verb

Hosts: Angus Hervey and Amy Davoren-Rose

Sound Design: Anthony Badolato, Ai3 - Audio & Voice

Marwa & Peta - The Mother's Call16 Aug 202400:30:15

Meet Peta & Marwa, two women from opposite sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict who are working together to create a shared and peaceful future for their families. Their sister organisations, Women Wage Peace and Women of the Sun, have received a joint Nobel Peace Prize nomination this year. This is a story of hope against all odds, and the bonds that unite mothers, regardless of background.

The intention of this conversation is to widen the lens of media coverage and to share a story from within this conflict, that you might not have heard.


To find out more:

https://www.womenwagepeace.org.il/en/

https://womensun.org/

Kris Tompkins - A Love Letter To Rewilding08 Aug 202400:34:51

Meet Kris Tompkins, a rewilding legend who, alongside herlate husband Doug, has helped protect over 14 million acres of biodiverse landscape across Chile and Argentina. This is a story of great love, great loss and what it takes to create a living legacy, against the headwinds of great odds. 


To find out more about Tompkins Conservation: www.tompkinsconservation.org

If you would like to contact us directly, send an email to:amy@fixthenews.com

Season 3: Trailer28 Jul 202400:01:43

This new chapter of stories begins August 9th, 2024. Please join us by subscribing to Hope Is A Verb where ever you listen to your podcasts.




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