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    Movie Review

    An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power puts climate change in stark relief

    Alex Bentley
    Aug 11, 2017 | 9:00 am
    An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power puts climate change in stark relief
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    A lot has happened politically since former Vice President Al Gore’s Oscar-winning documentary, An Inconvenient Truth, came out in 2006.

    Barack Obama was elected in 2008, bringing with him an administration that was more environmentally friendly than that of George W. Bush. However Donald Trump, since taking office in January 2017, has already rolled back many of the initiatives that Obama and, by extension, Gore worked to enact.

    The viewpoints of all three men and more are heard in An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power. Because of the multiple times Gore is shown reading about or listening to Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign, as well as the final note detailing Trump’s decision to pull out of the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, it’s easy to view the film in strictly political, left vs. right terms. But doing so minimizes the rest of the film's message.

    Directors Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk follow Gore around the world as he takes his Climate Reality Leadership Corps training program to multiple cities and countries. He also makes stops in various spots where the effects of climate change can be easily seen, whether it’s the melting glaciers of Greenland or the flooding streets of Miami.

    Each visit enhances Gore’s authority on the topic of global warming, as well as his obvious passion for the issue. No longer beholden to strictly political interests, Gore is free to appeal to people from all walks of life: liberal or conservative, American or foreign, rich or poor. More often than not, if someone is willing to actually listen to Gore’s ideas, he finds a way to convince them that climate change is something worthy of their attention.

    There are times where the film can make Gore come off as self-aggrandizing, especially when it revisits his defeat in the 2000 presidential election. Whether you supported him then or not, dredging it up again seems apropos of nothing in terms of his ongoing mission. In fact, Gore tends to deflect such questions in promotional interviews for the film, so the choice by Cohen and Shenk to include it seems questionable.

    When the focus is on the obvious realities of climate change and the fast-moving technologies that can combat it, the movie shines. Gore’s presentations are highly effective, laying out points that easily refute the most hardened deniers. And since solar and wind power are shown to be much more cost-effective, widely available, and capable of producing jobs and energy than they were 11 years ago, it’s fair to wonder what the source of continuing objections actually are.

    Some may not see An Inconvenient Sequel because they view it as repetitive, and some may not see it because they object to Gore and his viewpoints on principle. But if you’re willing to listen to what it has to offer, prepare to find yourself shopping for solar panels and looking for other ways to help the environment right away.

    Al Gore giving one of his climate change talks in An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power.

    Al Gore in An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power
      
    Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures
    Al Gore giving one of his climate change talks in An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power.
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    Mr. Bentsen goes to Washington

    New podcast celebrates legacy of Houston politician Sen. Lloyd Bentsen

    Jef Rouner
    Feb 28, 2025 | 4:30 pm
    A selection of Sen. Lloyd Bentsen Memorabilia from the podcast launch party
    Photo provided by the Bentsen Family
    Sen. Lloyd Bentsen's legacy of public service is memorialized in a new six-part podcast.

    Sen. Lloyd Bentsen was a towering figure in the Democratic Party and a Houston icon. His family is now producing a six-part podcast celebrating his legacy.

    “My father’s accomplishments in Texas and then in Washington truly changed the course of history,” Lan Bentsen, Sen. Bentsen’s son, said in a statement. “His policies led to the greatest peacetime economic expansion in American history. His full story has never been told, and we believe that no matter your political affiliation, you will find hope and motivation in this podcast.”

    The podcast, dubbed The Bentsen Blueprint, draws on a wealth of transcripts and tapes discovered by his family after Bentsen's death in 2006. With the help of Texas Tribune political reporter Elise Hu, excerpts from the tapes are woven together with interviews from Bentsen's friends and colleagues to give a deeper understanding of Bentsen's remarkable political career.




    Bentsen was a well-known dealmaker who reached across the political divide on many issues. The podcast shows Bentsen's skill at bipartisanship and possibly offers a guidebook for accomplishing things in one of the most politically-divisive periods in American history. The show also tackles Bentsen's economic policies, which helped create a surplus during the Clinton years by reducing the national deficit by $500 billion and creating 5 million new jobs.

    Bentsen was born in Mission, but spent most of his five-decade political career in Houston. He served in World War II as a pilot, winning the Distinguished Flying Cross. Bentsen was elected to the Senate in 1970, the second-to-last Democrat to do so in Texas. He served there until he left to become Secretary of the Treasury under President Bill Clinton.

    The senator is also part of one of the most famous verbal comebacks in American political history. When he was picked to be Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis's vice presidential candidate in the 1988 presidential election, he debated Sen. Dan Quayle, who was fielding attacks about his youth and fitness for office. When Quayle remarked he was the same age as President John F. Kennedy when he was elected, Bentsen replied: "I served with Jack Kennedy. I knew Jack Kennedy. Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you're no Jack Kennedy." Politicians have been trying to match that verbal drubbing ever since.

    Listen to The Bentsen Blueprint on all major podcast platforms, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify.



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