Atmos Volume 09: Kinship is here! 🫂 Exploring themes of community, biodiversity, symbiosis, and conservation, this issue reminds us that we exist not just as individuals, but in a web of relationships. Get your copy here: shop.atmos.earth
Atmos Magazine
Book and Periodical Publishing
New York, New York 8,445 followers
A media brand exploring the intersection of climate and culture.
About us
Atmos is an exploration of climate and culture, a biannual magazine and media brand curated by a growing ecosystem of adventurers, creatives, and journalists dedicated to pioneering progress around the world. Each volume of Atmos places a different element of our relationship to the Earth under a microscope, from the latest developments in neo-natural resources to collapsing ecosystems to the nature of being human. Through innovative design, in-depth storytelling, and impactful imagery, our goal is to elevate our collective consciousness surrounding sustainability and the future of our planet.
- Website
-
http://www.atmos.earth
External link for Atmos Magazine
- Industry
- Book and Periodical Publishing
- Company size
- 2-10 employees
- Headquarters
- New York, New York
- Type
- Nonprofit
- Founded
- 2019
Locations
-
Primary
New York, New York, US
Employees at Atmos Magazine
-
Theresa Perez
Managing Director @ Atmos Magazine | Climate & Culture
-
Adah Parris (she/her)
Visionary Keynote Speaker and Consultant: Empowering Individuals and Organisations to Drive Innovation and Create a More Sustainable Future. I donate…
-
Jake Sargent
Cofounder and Publisher at Atmos
-
Michelle Golden
Head of Operations & Community at Atmos Magazine
Updates
-
Project 2025, a document meant to be the Republican blueprint for the next conservative presidency, aims to whittle down the federal government and weaken existing laws that protect human rights and the natural world. The document is published by the Heritage Foundation, with proposals penned by leading Republican figures with suggestions to implement conservative policies that would: - end gender-affirming care - restrict abortion access - canonize cis-gender heterosexual marriages Though the policies laid out are largely unpopular, the Heritage Fund's recommendations, which are published every four years, have been taken seriously by previous conservative administrations. Read more on this story from Climate Editor Jason P. Dinh, Ph.D. below.
-
Our ability to shapeshift is one we share with many of our nonhuman kin—a reminder that the chasm between humans and the natural world is smaller than we think. For this story, shot for Atmos Volume 9: Kinship, photographer Elizaveta Porodina and stylist Victoria Sekrier drew inspiration from the five kingdoms of life (animals, plants, fungi, protists, and monera), using the adaptive nature of fashion and photography to depict the magic of these different life forms, referencing species like bioluminescent plankton, the orchid mantis, the Giant Pacific octopus, and more. See more here https://lnkd.in/dbwddtgR
-
-
-
-
-
+5
-
-
Even if fossil fuel emissions cease tomorrow, ocean heat and sea levels will continue to rise well into the next millennium. There’s a long-game story playing out in our oceans—one whose chapters span thousands of years, and that we’ve already kicked into motion. Even in best-case scenario, Earth will see tens of meters of sea level rise, costing coastal communities their land and millions of people their homes. But as Atmos Climate Editor Jason P. Dinh, Ph.D. writes, “The extent of that change and whether more abrupt climate impacts accompany it, remains in our hands. When every tick of the thermometer could save countless lives, the issue is, in more ways than one, a matter of degree.” Read more below.
I’ve Been to the Year 3000. Not Much Has Changed, but They Lived Underwater.
https://atmos.earth
-
Introducing our latest digital cover star—Daisy Edgar-Jones ✨ It’s not unusual to see actor Daisy Edgar-Jones surrounded by vast, untouched nature. In Where the Crawdads Sing, Edgar-Jones’s character, Kya Clark, lives among the lush, green swamps of New Orleans in Louisiana. And in her newest film, Twisters, which premieres tomorrow, the actor, who plays storm chaser Kate Carter, travels across the vast red plains and low-lying hills of Oklahoma. Twisters is as much about the awe-inspiring force of nature—of phenomena like tornadoes and storms—as it is about the adaptability of the human spirit; about urgent efforts to live in harmony with our environment in the face of climatic fury. Ahead of its release, Daisy Edgar-Jones speaks with the film's Oscar-winning director Lee Isaac Chung and Atmos Culture Director Daphne Chouliaraki Milner about the urgency of nature-based storytelling. With photography by Jeremy Everett
In Twisters, Daisy Edgar-Jones Is a Force of Nature
https://atmos.earth
-
Chef-owner of Noma, René Redzepi, opens his new Apple TV+ docuseries, Omnivore, with the maxim, “You are what you eat.” The saying typically refers to health and fitness, but Redzepi, the show’s co-creator, executive producer, and narrator, takes it to mean so much more. Redzepi joins Atmos' Jason P. Dinh, Ph.D. to discuss sustainable food, nature-inspired dining, and his new docuseries at the link below.
For Omnivore’s René Redzepi, Food Reflects Who We Are
https://atmos.earth
-
Recycling can only go so far. Millions of tonnes of plastic waste is produced across the globe on a daily basis, much of it ending up in waterways. When French-born siblings and activists Gary Bencheghib, Sam Bencheghib, and Kelly Bencheghib started the nonprofit Sungai Watch in 2020 (sungai means “river” in Bahasa Indonesia), their mission was simple: to reduce the flow of plastic from Bali’s rivers into the ocean. Their newest venture, Sungai Design, which launched earlier this year, aims to solve another issue: what to do with all the waste. Read more at the link below.
Fighting Indonesia’s Plastic Pollution One River Barrier at a Time
https://atmos.earth
-
We're #hiring a new Director of Development in United States. Apply today or share this post with your network.
-
We're #hiring a new Director of Development in New York. Apply today or share this post with your network.
-
As the daughter of animal rights activists Linda and Paul McCartney, Stella McCartney grew up with a deep reverence for nonhuman life—a respect she has sewn into every aspect of her work as a designer. Here, she talks to Atmos about sustainability, family, and the responsibility she feels for the future.
Stella McCartney on Pioneering Sustainability in Fashion
https://atmos.earth