SEA-Media Blog

SEA-Media eNewsletters

If you haven’t received the recent SEA-Media eNewsletter, Sign up for our free newsletter!
We’ll keep you posted about the latest media and SEA-Media’s latest projects.

For example, there are terrific new ways to get to know the world below the water’s surface.  SEA-Media’s web site brings these opportunities up to the surface where you can find them easily.

What’s more, you can subscribe to the web site and each new entry will be automatically delivered to your RSS reader. Use the address: https://sea-media.org/rss.xml

Here is an archive of past eNewsletters:

Of Course We Want Healthy Oceans! — December 2011

Ocean Related Media Pioneers — November 2012

Year End Donation Plea December 2012

New Website Plan — late December 2012

Student videos and new SEA-Media web site status — February 2013

 

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Recent Media Articles

Ian’s Ride
Book Cover of Ian's Ride

In Ian’s Ride, Karen Polinsky tells an inspiring story of Ian Mackay learning ways to approach life after he had been paralyzed from the neck down. One of the things I especially liked about the story was how it focused on the process of finding solutions rather than dramatizing a negative view of the situation.

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Our Oceans

A five-episode series, each one about a different ocean. The underwater video is stunning, and it does a good job of pointing out ecosystem interconnections.

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The Accidental Ecosystem
cover of book The Accidental Ecosystem

Cities do, indeed, have their own ecosystems. These have developed over centuries of city growth, suburb growth, and other human impacts on the lands. This book added a new dimension to my understanding of how we are impacting nature.

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Earth For All

Earth for All was published in 2022 as a report to The Club of Rome. As I read it, I realized that it was part of a “new wave” of literature about addressing our current global problems — a wave that was based on systems thinking.

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Homewaters
Homewaters cover

I highly recommend Homewaters — for the way it introduces the components of the Puget Sound ecosystem, but especially for how it weaves the various parts together.

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