Épisodes

  • Good News Today — 100 Million Clams, Drone Drops & a Lagoon Fighting Back
    Jun 2 2026
    Florida's Indian River Lagoon once lost ninety-nine percent of its native clam population to overharvesting, storms, and declining water quality. This week, the Billion Clam Initiative hit a landmark: 100 million clams restored, with 3.5 million dropped in a single drone-assisted operation. It's one of the most striking examples of nature-based restoration scaling up through modern technology — and it's working. Clams planted five or six years ago are now spawning independently, and water quality in restored areas is measurably improving.

    A single adult clam filters up to twenty-five gallons of water per day. Multiply that across a lagoon, and you have a biological water treatment system running entirely for free. Drone deployment has made it possible to scatter clams with a precision and scale that boats and manual release simply couldn't match.

    Also this episode: New York State and the Finger Lakes Land Trust have permanently protected thirty-three acres in the Six Mile Creek and Cayuga Lake watersheds — the direct drinking water source for Ithaca and Cornell University. And on World Ocean Day, volunteers at Rockaway Beach joined a shoreline cleanup organised with the Laru Beya Collective, pulling debris and showing up for the unglamorous work that keeps coastlines healthy.

    The through-line: nature-based solutions work when they're resourced and given time. One hundred million clams is a milestone. One billion is the goal — and right now, it looks like a plan in motion, not a fantasy.

    A YesWee production, built using AI technology.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 min
  • Good News Today — Nature Cash, Lagoon Revival & a Rare Childhood Disease Breakthrough
    Jun 1 2026
    (00:00:00) Good News Today — Nature Cash, Lagoon Revival & a Rare Childhood Disease Breakthrough
    (00:01:10) California Lagoon Moves From Planning to Progress
    (00:02:32) A Rare Childhood Disease Gets Closer to a Treatment
    (00:03:25) Closing

    Today's episode covers three stories that share a common thread: doors that were previously closed are opening.

    First, the Big Nature Impact Fund has secured thirty-five million pounds in private backing from insurers and philanthropies — a landmark moment for conservation finance. By aggregating smaller woodland, peatland, and habitat projects into a single managed fund, Finance Earth has created a structure that institutional investors can finally work with. The fund is targeting ninety to one hundred and twenty million pounds within eighteen months. It's early, but the financial model for conservation at scale is becoming real.

    Second, Buena Vista Lagoon in California — the state's very first ecological reserve, designated in 1968 — has received a one million dollar federal grant to move from planning into active design and permitting. What makes the Audubon Society's restoration project notable isn't just that it's finally moving: the design deliberately builds in wetland migration space, allowing the habitat to shift inland as sea levels rise over coming decades. Long-range climate thinking, baked in from the start.

    Third, Beren Therapeutics has presented promising clinical data for adrabetadex, a drug targeting infantile-onset Niemann-Pick disease type C — a rare and severe neurological condition affecting young children. The data shows the drug can slow disease progression when given early. An FDA decision is being targeted for November 2026. Nothing is guaranteed, but for a disease that long had almost no answers, a genuine clinical signal is significant.

    Three stories. Private capital moving into nature. A stalled restoration finally accelerating. A rare childhood disease with a real treatment candidate on the horizon. This is Good News Today.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 min
  • Good News Today — Record GPA, 16 Titles & Nationals: When a School District Gets Everything Right
    May 31 2026
    Today's episode is packed with wins from the world of education — and they span academics, athletics, student achievement, and the educators who make it all possible.

    Seven students from Aldine ISD in the Houston area have qualified for the National History Day national competition at the University of Maryland, earning their spots after a yearlong research process built around this year's theme: Revolution, Reaction, Reform in History. Meanwhile, in Michigan, Ionia High School senior Kaylee Schmid became valedictorian with the highest grade point average in the school's 155-year history — and secured a full scholarship to the University of Michigan's pre-med honors college.

    Back in Texas, Aldine ISD claimed 16 of 20 available district championships in District 14-6A across multiple sports, with several teams advancing to regional and state competitions. The district also honoured nearly 300 staff members for between 20 and 40 years of service at its Employee Service Awards — a remarkable testament to the people who build school communities from the inside.

    Six Aldine campuses finished in the top ten at the 2026 TEXSEF Esports State Championship, competing against 154 schools statewide for the second consecutive year. Over 3,000 students graduated in the Class of 2026, and 150 parents completed the district's Family and Community University program, equipping families with tools to support learning at home.

    From a record-breaking GPA to national history qualifiers, 16 athletic titles, and decades of staff dedication — this episode is a reminder of what's possible when a school community is firing on all cylinders.

    A YesWee production, built using AI technology.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 min
  • Good News Today — Teton River Saved, AI Wetland Maps & Farming With Less Nitrogen
    May 30 2026
    Today's episode is anchored by one of the most meaningful environmental signals in recent memory: the community around Idaho's Teton River has rejected proposals to rebuild the dam that collapsed fifty years ago and devastated the valley. After decades of farmer-led, conservationist-supported restoration work, the river came back — and the community decided that was worth more than concrete. It's not fully settled, but the rejection sends a clear message about what long-term commitment to nature can achieve.

    Elsewhere in the episode, Campbell University has launched a hundred-acre reforestation project along North Carolina's Cape Fear River, using students as active researchers while restoring native forest over the next fifteen to thirty years. In Illinois, farmer Brad Zimmerman achieved 282 bushels of corn per acre using just 150 pounds of nitrogen — far below conventional rates — by combining biostimulants, ocean minerals, and soil health practices. It's a result that challenges how we think about crop productivity.

    Washington State is using artificial intelligence to map previously undetected wetlands, building a protection foundation just as federal safeguards face pressure. At the Hay Festival, international marine experts spotlighted marine protected areas and community fishing programs as the clearest ocean recovery models working today. And a new House bill would require oil companies to fund the decommissioning of over 2,700 overdue wells and 500 platforms — shifting a $196 million taxpayer liability back to the industry responsible.

    Every story today carries the same thread: patient, long-term stewardship produces outcomes worth fighting to protect. Good news, grounded in evidence.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 min
  • Good News Today — Lunch as Medicine, Ancient Rainforest Humans & Eid Giving
    May 29 2026
    Today's episode brings three genuinely good stories from places you might not expect.

    In Cave City, Arkansas, pharmacist Jenny Davis started hosting simple twice-monthly luncheons for elderly residents. Today, those gatherings draw over sixty people from several surrounding counties every single week. It isn't charity — it's community. People aren't just showing up to receive a meal; they're showing up to belong. In a world where senior isolation is a documented health crisis, Jenny's lunch counter has become one of the most quietly powerful medicines in her town.

    Then, scientists working in Côte d'Ivoire have published a discovery that rewrites a chapter of human prehistory. Stone tools and environmental evidence found at an ancient rainforest site push back the earliest evidence of humans living in dense African tropical rainforest from around 18,000 years ago to approximately 150,000 years ago. Early humans weren't waiting at the forest edge — they were already inside, already adapting. It's a reminder that our ancestors were far more resourceful than older models suggested.

    Finally, during Eid al-Adha, the Musim Mas Group distributed 154 cows and 69 goats to communities surrounding their operations across Indonesia as part of the qurban tradition of charitable sacrifice. What makes it meaningful isn't the scale — it's the consistency. A recurring commitment rooted in something that genuinely matters to local people is how real trust gets built.

    Three stories. A pharmacist. A prehistoric forest. A company showing up for its neighbours. Real things, happening now.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 min
  • Good News Today — Concrete to Open Sky: The Owl Rescue That Rewrote Wildlife Rehab
    May 28 2026
    A great horned owl encased in concrete for seven months is back in the wild — and the technique that made it possible has never been used quite like this before.

    Found in Utah with feathers destroyed by hardened concrete, the owl faced a brutal reality: natural molting would have kept it grounded for years, likely longer than it could survive in care. The rehabilitation team turned to imping, a feather-repair method borrowed from centuries of falconry practice, where donor feathers are bonded to damaged ones using a small adhesive pin. Applying it to a wild rescue owl in this condition was entirely new territory.

    What makes this story significant goes beyond one bird's survival. Before this intervention, severe feather damage in owls meant either an agonisingly long rehabilitation or no realistic path back to the wild at all. Imping changes that equation — and other wildlife rehabilitators are already paying attention.

    The broader takeaway is about how progress actually happens in fields like wildlife rescue: not through massive research programmes, but through practitioners asking whether a proven tool from one context might work somewhere new. Falconers, rehabilitation specialists, and a great deal of patience combined to give this owl its sky back.

    One successful case is a proof of concept, not yet a protocol. But it's a meaningful one — and it happened because a team decided the standard answer wasn't good enough.

    Today's reminder that good things are happening in the world has wings. This is Good News Today.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 min
  • Good News Today — 60x More Precise Gene Editing, a Million Trees & Spinal Cord Recovery at Home
    May 27 2026
    Today's episode opens with a landmark moment in genetic medicine. MIT researchers have re-engineered the Cas9 protein at the heart of prime editing, slashing the error rate from roughly one in seven down to one in one hundred and one — a 60-fold improvement they call the vPE system. For the hundreds of inherited conditions caused by single-letter DNA errors, including sickle cell disease, certain forms of blindness, and rare metabolic disorders, this brings the gap between lab result and clinical reality significantly closer.

    From the lab to the landscape, thirty thousand volunteers gathered in China's Minqin County to plant one million trees in a single campaign. Driven by a viral social media push and a reality TV show, the effort adds new momentum to a reforestation battle that locals have been fighting since the 1950s in one of the country's driest desert corridors.

    In medical technology, ONWARD Medical deployed seventy ARC-EX spinal cord stimulation systems in Q1 2026, now available across more than one hundred US and European clinics — and critically, cleared for home use. Veterans Affairs patients are among those regaining movement and function outside a treatment room for the first time.

    Finally, Oklahoma City launched a new podcast shining a light on twenty-five local nonprofits tackling homelessness, foster care, and community development — giving grassroots leaders a platform they didn't have before.

    Progress is happening in labs, deserts, living rooms, and communities. This is what's going right today.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 min
  • Good News Today — Brain Signals Restore Movement & 1 Million Trees Planted in a Desert
    May 27 2026
    Today's episode covers two stories that deserve your full attention — both are real, both happened recently, and both point in a genuinely hopeful direction.

    First, the science of spinal cord injury recovery is accelerating. ONWARD Medical's ARC-BCI technology pairs a brain-computer interface with spinal cord stimulation, reading a patient's intended movements directly from brain activity and using that signal to trigger physical response. Two additional patients have now successfully received this therapy, with measurable results. Separately, the FDA-cleared ARC-EX therapy — focused on restoring hand strength and sensation — is now available in over one hundred clinics across the US and Europe, and is being delivered into the homes of Veterans Affairs patients for the first time. ONWARD Medical recently raised over forty million euros, extending their runway into 2028, and is now expanding into Parkinson's disease research.

    Then, in China's Gansu province, thirty thousand volunteers travelled to Minqin County to plant one million trees in a desert. The movement began with one man — Zhong Jin — who studied desert control, came home, and started planting. His story spread on social media, and people came from across the country to help. The trees are in the ground. That's a measurable outcome.

    These aren't government targets or future projections. They're things that happened — brain signals restoring movement, and tens of thousands of people choosing to show up for the planet. This is what good news looks like.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 min