News and Art Meet Through the Eyes of a Drone
An art exhibit opening this week is providing a window to the atrocities of modern warfare from one hundred feet above.
An art exhibit opening this week is providing a window to the atrocities of modern warfare from one hundred feet above.
Justin Catanoso talks about his reporting in Peru and the pope's potential impact on the climate debate.
After spending a week in Lima reporting on the UN climate summit, Justin Catanoso offers this wrap up on the results for WFDD, public radio for central and western North Carolina.
Part V: In the final segment of Justin Catanoso's radio series on WFDD in North Carolina, he discusses his reporting with Wake Forest biologist Miles Silman and host Audrey Fannin.
Part IV: The reality of global warming is grim. But there are things that can be done — if the world's leaders have the will to act, and soon.
Part III: An explanation of why the tropics are important to global viability and what's at stake with temperatures rising.
Part II: Wake Forest tropical biologist Miles Silman was attracted to the rain forests of southern Peru to study forest mechanics. Global warming made him shift his focus.
Part I: In the first segment of a five-part radio series, reporter Justin Catanoso takes listeners into the jungle in Peru's Amazon basin to witness the impact of global warming in the tropics.