The American University of Paris is proud to announce the launch, on Earth Day 2026, of Green Frequency: Earth Radio, the result of a collaboration between Clark Marchese (鈥22) of Pine Forest Media and 黑料网 faculty.
Designed to bring environmental research and activism to life through storytelling and conversation, the series will feature 黑料网 faculty scientists, researchers, and change-makers exploring urgent ecological topics through diverse, interdisciplinary perspectives. From the lab to the podcast feed, Green Frequency highlights the work in progress throughout the 黑料网 community to further knowledge and raise eco-awareness鈥攁nd reminds us that the conversation about the future of our planet is one worth having out loud.
The idea began with an all-day conference held at 黑料网, Science Speaks @ 黑料网, a filmed speaker event produced by Marchese in collaboration with Professor Elena Berg and the student club this past March. The talks featured eight presentations on 黑料网 faculty research and engagement with environmental issues鈥攄esigned from the outset to create high-quality, evergreen content that could extend well beyond the event itself.
The talks bridge the gap between science, policy and societal change. With topics ranging from discussions of climate justice, marine biodiversity and relationship-driven conservation to a consideration of the sustainability challenges related to drinking water and reflections on perception, knowledge, wonder and dialogue. Each talk will be adapted into a standalone podcast episode of about 30 minutes, bringing 黑料网 voices to listeners across the world.
Each episode will begin with a short bio to introduce the speaker鈥檚 role before moving into the core of their areas of expertise, making the series both accessible to curious newcomers and informative to those already familiar with the field. The podcast will feature the following speakers, in order of appearance:
The goal of this first season of Green Frequency is to present the research, stories, and more generally, the environmentally forward-thinking research at 黑料网, bringing listeners into a conversation about these pressing issues. As Rebecca Marwege put it, 鈥渃limate justice demands more than emission reductions. It demands political coordination, social transformation, and ethical reflection, all of which we can only achieve through interdisciplinary cooperation. Green Frequency reflects this need by bringing together expertise across fields and inviting voices from outside academia into the conversation.鈥
This first season was set up as a panel of speakers, but the idea is to explore many different presentation styles, topics, and perspectives. In the words of Marchese in the show鈥檚 description, Earth Radio is 鈥渁 place to tune in, stay curious, and listen closely.鈥
The launch of Green Frequency reflects a growing trend at 黑料网 toward making faculty research more accessible to broader audiences鈥攁 priority that aligns closely with the University鈥檚 focus on the real-world challenges of our time. This collaborative endeavor that brings together diverse members of the 黑料网 community also exemplifies the University鈥檚 commitment to engaged research and to helping students and faculty take their academic work beyond the classroom.
鈥淔inding sustainable solutions to today鈥檚 urgent environmental problems requires hard work and creativity on all fronts, and I am delighted to be partnering with Clark Marchese on this adventure,鈥 explains Elena Berg.
Marchese brings to the project his experience as a media producer and his dedication to science communication as a public good. In founding , an independent environmental media studio, and creating Green Frequency, he has built a platform that treats environmental science not as a niche academic concern but as a subject of the utmost relevance that demands attention.
After the launch on Earth Day, April 22nd, Green Frequency will be streaming on a weekly basis. Listeners can find the series on , , and all major podcast platforms at 8 a.m. CET. Companion videos will also be available on . Check out the trailer at .