Recent Episodes
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How the U.S. Got the World to View Environmentalists as "Terrorists"
May 7, 2025 – 43:13 -
Coming Soon: The Man-o-Sphere
Mar 29, 2025 – 25:49 -
New Research: The Advertorials Many Media Outlets Make for Oil Companies Are Misleading, But They Don't Have to Be
Mar 21, 2025 – 19:16 -
Introducing: Hazard-NJ
Dec 8, 2024 – 28:37 -
The Massive Climate Case that Shell Both Won and Lost, and What It Means for the Future of Global Climate Litigation
Dec 2, 2024 – 20:43 -
Introducing Master Plan
Nov 13, 2024 – 35:16 -
Fuel to Fork: The Role the Oil and Gas Industry Plays in Food-based Emissions
Nov 12, 2024 – 49:28 -
Introducing Reclaimed: The Navajo Nation's Fight for Water
Nov 11, 2024 – 46:02 -
Genevieve Guenther on the Language of Climate Politics
Oct 1, 2024 – 01:18:48 -
Climate Week 2024: Finally Tackling the Mad Men of Big Oil
Sep 24, 2024 – 20:21 -
Denial to Delay: How Fossil-Funded University Research Lays the Foundation for Fossil-Friendly Policy
Sep 20, 2024 – 01:07:59 -
Drilled Presents...Spill: Mary Annaise Heglar & Amy Westervelt on climate in this week's debate, Project 2025, and a whole lot more
Sep 9, 2024 – 53:40 -
Denial to Delay: The Battle Over the Clean Air Act
Aug 15, 2024 – 32:07 -
Denial to Delay: How the Fossil Fuel Industry Rebranded an Oil Production Technique as a "Climate Solution" and Got Taxpayers to Foot the Bill
Jul 30, 2024 – 38:22 -
In El Salvador a Cold Case Murder Has Become a Weapon for Silencing Environmental Activists
Jul 17, 2024 – 42:27 -
Could You Really Charge Oil Companies with Murder? Plus: Supreme Court Climate Update
Jul 9, 2024 – 36:55 -
Denial to Delay: The Great "Greening" of LNG
Jul 3, 2024 – 40:33 -
Denial to Delay: How Management Consultancies Data-Wash False Solutions and the Great Gas Lock-In
Jun 25, 2024 – 36:24 -
The Coordinated Attack on Shareholder Activism
May 18, 2024 – 52:55 -
Climate News Update: The New Carbon Majors + Swiss Elders Win Landmark Climate Case
Apr 16, 2024 – 41:17 -
Sainte-Soline, the Government Effort to Disband a Movement in France, and the Radical Solidarity of the Earth Uprisings
Apr 3, 2024 – 50:20 -
The U.S. Anti-Renewables Movement, Explained
Mar 20, 2024 – 47:19 -
Nearly 30 Years After the Ogoni 9 Tragedy, Nigerians Are Still Resisting Oil Colonialism
Mar 5, 2024 – 43:54 -
What Ecuador's Yasuní Referendum Really Means for Oil, in Yasuní and Beyond
Feb 20, 2024 – 26:58 -
Introducing: Hazard NYC
Feb 19, 2024 – 02:22 -
Dana R. Fisher on the Past, Present and Future of Climate Protest
Feb 13, 2024 – 46:57 -
Department of Homeland Security, the Manufactured "EcoTerrorist" Panic, and Cop City
Jan 31, 2024 – 40:16 -
Meet the UN's First Special Rapporteur on Environmental Defenders
Jan 23, 2024 – 01:13:37 -
How UK Courts Became the New Climate Protest Battleground
Jan 16, 2024 – 33:47 -
What Happened At Bayou Bridge? The Other End of the Dakota Access Pipeline
Dec 19, 2023 – 44:45 -
Seven Years Later, an Environmental Impact Statement for the Dakota Access Pipeline
Dec 7, 2023 – 37:46 -
Modern-Day Bead Trading: The Fossil Fuel Industry Meets Indigenous Protest with "Redwashing" and Repression in Canada
Dec 5, 2023 – 42:59 -
Abeer Butmeh: Living on the Front Lines of a War and the Climate Crisis, in Palestine
Nov 14, 2023 – 35:57 -
Messy Conversations: Magatte Wade, Atlas Network's Center for African Prosperity
Nov 1, 2023 – 01:14:44 -
The Tomato Soup "Controversy"
Oct 17, 2023 – 32:19 -
In Brazil, A Tale as Old as Colonization: Why Indigenous Land Defenders Are Particularly Targeted by Extractive Industries
Oct 10, 2023 – 29:40 -
Guyana Update: Gas to Energy for Guyana, or Problem to Profit for Exxon?
Oct 9, 2023 – 28:05 -
Joanna Smith on "Conspiring Against the United States" with Fingerpaint
Oct 3, 2023 – 49:44 -
Loss Is on the Calendar in Nigeria
Sep 26, 2023 – 33:20 -
How Think Tanks Laid the Groundwork to Criminalize Protest
Sep 19, 2023 – 44:39 -
In Vietnam, Tax Evasion Charges Help Lock Up Climate Activists
Sep 11, 2023 – 23:09 -
In Australia, A State-By-State Approach to Criminalizing Climate Protest
Sep 5, 2023 – 29:46 -
Disha Ravi on Becoming the Face of "Radical" Protest in India
Aug 29, 2023 – 32:53 -
The Corporate Push to Criminalize Speech
Aug 29, 2023 – 34:09 -
How the Media Has Helped to Criminalize Climate Protest, with Evlondo Cooper
Aug 22, 2023 – 24:09 -
Outside/In: When Protest Is a Crime, Part 1
Aug 15, 2023 – 47:14 -
Introducing Our New Season: The Real Free Speech Threat
Aug 15, 2023 – 03:21 -
Herb, Ep 3: The Next Citizens United Will Be a Climate Case
Aug 1, 2023 – 26:40 -
Herb, Ep 2: A Legal Strategy
Jul 25, 2023 – 30:32 -
Herb, Ep 1: The Panic
Jul 18, 2023 – 35:55
Recent Reviews
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dark green powersexcellentthis podcast is as crucial as it is informative. one of the best, true crime indeed.
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gypsy climberGreat information, but…Great information but I found that they kept repeating voice clips from interviews and made the whole thing just drawn out for unnecessary reasons. I think they cut the episodes to be really short so they can pack as many adds in and then they keep reusing the same interview bits. I love climate science and love fighting big oil but this could have been 3 episodes with much less adds…
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AMM MNEssential listeningThe climate is the number 1 issue we must solve, and this podcast is essential for understanding the enemies who are blocking real action.
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HduwjjwtsuejwMust listen podcastLove this podcast. Entertaining, informative but also highlights how scary and manipulative the fossil fuel industry is. It’s amazing story telling, but sometimes when you say story you think of fiction but terrifyingly this is all real life.
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marty blattDrilledThis is an excellent podcast. Well researched, interesting, it poses a fundamental challenge to established doctrine
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Andrew7892EssentialYou need to listen to the back log of this podcast. Amy does such an incredible job of exposing the mechanics of how we have been lied to for decades and the costs of those decisions by major corporations. You need to listen to this podcast to be a well-informed person! Keywords: Environment, PR, psyops, propaganda, corporate crimes, oil, petroleum, journalism, Exxon, Chevron, climate change, green energy, green transition, green new deal, history, lobbying, corporations, regulations, Steven Donziger.
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Ben*30SuperbDrilled is my favorite climate podcast. The information and presentation are oth excellent. Can’t recommend enough
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journo JeffWhat a gem!As a journalist who covers oil and gas globally, as well as a curious person, this podcast is simply amazing. Thanks for your hard work and great reasearch! Jeffrey Barbee
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Jarvin20Great start but…Really enjoyed the first few episodes of the Guyana season and then randomly on episode 6 we have a professor talking about us for 30 minutes and episode 7 was about Namibia? Seemed a bit unplanned.
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GeumpyhistoryGreat PodcastNow THIS is the “a true Crime” people should be listening to. Sure, plastics have revolutionized healthcare for oils and other things. But we don’t have to use it to the degree we do. And we certainly shouldn’t be /subsidizing/ an industry which used the inflation crisis as cover to increase their profits. Enough of the soapbox. The podcast: well researched. Enjoy the different voices they have talking about the background of this stuff. Good host. Episodes could be a little longer, but that’s better than if they were drawn out just for the sake of it. As for the ads, producing podcasts and paying researchers and travel and and and does cost money. So there’s that. By all means, no more ads than now, but at least they are short.
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~ Violet ~Ad OverloadA panic-inducing quantity of ads. The balance of ads to content is so distracting it’s hard to assess the content. Might be worth a try if there were an ad-free feed available — it’s a really good subject area. I really hope the era of the 5 minute host-read ad block ends soon.
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Hmm, I’m confusedGreat pod, too many adsLove the pod, but the ads are ridiculous.
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Mally_Mal_Mal6789Great, but..I really enjoy this podcast and the well researched thoughtful information provided. My issue is that each episode has very little actual content. There’s a recap of the past episode, several ads, then a preview of the next episode. Only about ten minutes of each episode is actual content. I’d prefer longer episodes with fewer per season.
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泰书华good but need to improvefor an important and relevant science based podcast i think over the top inaccurate language is egregious. Specifically; telling lies about EVs. we dont need to lie about EVs to be pro clean air. and it tarnishes our efforts to clean the environment, or saying “mid two thousands”. Such an ugly clumsy mouthful. and if that is not reason enough in consideration of us who have to listen to it, then maybe the logic is enough reason. that would be around the year 2500, or in the range of 2400-2600. if you want to talk about the years 2000-2010 you have plenty of choices. “oughts”, “naughts”, “naughties”, “early 21st century” or just saying specific numbers like “2003 to 2005”. thanks for reading this. i hope to help.
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DCR1992Another Great SeasonThis was yet another great, thorough, well-researched season. I enjoyed hearing varied, nuanced opinions on this complex topic. Grateful to Amy and her team for all their hard work!
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MCohCShedding light once again!Another important and underreported story this season, and I liked the melding of the Drilled and Damages approaches.
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FBHOPropaganda at its finestThis podcast is a biased view of Exxon’s involvement in Guyana. The narrator misleads the listener continuously while claiming that Exxon is doing the same. Only made it through two episodes but didn’t hear anything about the Chinese oil companies operating in Guyana. Also, the narrator made the choice to comment about Vice report that showed Chinese businessmen bribing Guyanese officials but failed to mention it outside of the context of Exxon’s oil deal. I wonder how many CCP donations this climate activist group receives?
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ExtinctbirdsThe best true crime podcast that will leave you both enraged and enlightened.Knowledge is power, the fossil fuel industry has for far too long had total control over the way they are portrayed. Drilled is a podcast which continues to remove the veil of misinformation and confusion oil & gas corporations have built around them to protect their ecocide & criminal activities around the world. Thank you Amy & team for the important work you do.
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Noe Valley listenerBest short-form docu-series I have ever heardMany podcast episodes today are an hour and half, sometimes two hours long, saturated with jarring ads and poor editing. On top of this, the content is often emotionally draining to listen to, especially since host's sharing their subjective political opinions are the new social norm, existing in echo chambers with guests merely rephrasing their priors. Well here is the antidote. Rigged is like a documentary mini-series, continually exposing and educating the public in digestible but salient portions, with experts who bring technical rigor to storytelling. Thank you for terrific work, stellar reporting, and succinct short-form pacing. Truly love this podcast.
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TahoeAceEnlightening ReportingAW and the rest of the Drilled team expose the fossil fuel industry and all its corruption with great stories, detail, and perspective. A must listen for the modern informed citizen.
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DrangundsturmClimate decision makers take heed!Everyone involved in making decisions about oil and gas industry and climate should be required to listen — especially including all members of federal and state legislatures.
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CTmorningEveryone should listenThank you Amy, this topic needs more attention.
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mdossantosExcellentAs many other reviewers have said, this podcast is simultaneously fascinating and infuriating. Amy does a phenomenal job of digging into the history of oil in the United States and clarifies how it became part of our cultural identity. And despite the often upsetting nature of revealing all these truths, I binged all of the episodes over the course of a couple of weeks because it was so engaging. Thanks to Amy and the rest of the Drilled team for shining a light on how we got to where we are today, and for reminding me that there are ways out of the mess we’re in.
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The KobayashiDrilledInformative and upsetting at the same time. Keep it up and thanks.
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AtlJemoThe best education I’ve ever gottenThis podcast is amazing. I can’t believe how in depth it is and the mad men season blew my mind. Definitely worth supporting.
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Kay JagExcellent and informativeA must-listen for anyone who wants to understand why progress on climate has been stymied and what we can do about it.
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brett.anton.34Take a listen.Reporting from internal company sources and top scientists. Pods can be a little short… listen to a few at a time?
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OniyabaGood content - awful podcast executionGreat content - awful podcast execution. 100 episodes that could literally be just 5 long episodes. Each is 15 minutes with 10 minutes of replay + advertising. All I get is creepy music and a short build up to the next episode. So annoying, sorry.
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DJ JoePopMy fav podcast…Such great reporting. It’s tough to hear how industry is screwing our planet over, but a lot of hope is offered as well.
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EllConOweA must listen for all of humanitySuch an excellent podcast, but also terrifying. The human race is so screwed.
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tab84Amazing podcast.Well researched, hard hitting. B rings me news and views about climate change that I didn’t know I needed to know. Thank you Amy. You are my Shero!
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🐓🦎Great podcastI love this podcast. The information is fantastic, if not sad, and the host is amazing!
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Brady OrcaNecessary and in-depthThank you Amy and Drilled team! This podcast needs to be heard by the world to understand the criminal nature of the fossil fuel industry and facilitate its swift demise. We aren’t going anywhere!
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JonbsanThe factsExcellent show that exposes the gas-lighting that the fossil fuel industry has been doing for decades. Must listen for anyone who cares about our shared future.
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Musing by MeImportant!Verifiable information. Reputable guests. Scary (bite size) episodes. True crime format fits this podcast to a tee! Thumbs up.
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AnneCPattLove this podcast!Great show; informative and just the right length for my walks :)
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Kirby007Details and great deliveryI have been listening for a short time and already have made connections between what local action I can take in my New England community to fight the fossil fuel industry. Thank you!
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Camisado666By far my favourite podcastI’ve generally struggled to get into podcasts because I can never really keep up with the info. This podcast has stories that keep you interested, with a good mix of narrative and interviews in an easy to understand way. It breaks climate issues down into concrete examples rather than vague ideas. I also like how the ads on the podcast are for things viewers would actually be interested, rather than the standard sponsors that other podcasts tend to use. I guess my only complaint is that I wish episodes came out more often, because if so it would probably be the only thing I listened to.
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modest mediator and BuddhistMust must must listen!Incredibly detailed account of the subversion of our democracy by Big Oil at the cost of the earth and our way of life..
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PaulDuke33The bestVery informative well researched and reported.
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ksl789Great informationGreat show with information and insight to combat the big oil propaganda machine.
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sue p momSue p momKeep up the great work!
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kingkaylenamy is the bestyou are doing such incredible important work in this world and I am so thankful I have found Drilled and Hot Take and everything you do. can’t thank you enough, you’re changing lives hearts and minds with this amazing podcast
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curtsnrtEye opening and essentialThe newest series of shows (about how fossil fuel companies put together lesson plans for educators to use) continue the excellent tradition of the show. Who needs more podcasts, you may ask. Well, this one gives you a lot of information you need to think about how to address climate change and why the fight is so hard and so many are resistant. And it’s not overwhelming listeners with episodes (a good thing in our Information Age). Quality over quantity. Excellent work.
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alliesanteEssentialThis is the most important conversation we can have. Expertly produced and thoroughly researched. Thank you to the team who put together what I think is the best anthology of the libertarian anarchists’ undermining of our global future.
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Masgj245:36IlluminatingDrilled has helped my understanding of the oil and gas industry deepen and expand. The information is robust, and the show is well-edited and produced. I find it engaging and informative.
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clooisFantastic and importantThis is a terrifically presented and researched show on an extremely important topic.
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shadycarpProduction issues make it unlistenableAmy, you have a great voice. Don’t listen to these people. I am extremely sensitive to vocal fry and annoying voices—yours is incredibly enjoyable to listen to. But please, for the LOVE OF GOD, the producers of this show need to up their game. 1. Master your audio levels so my ears don’t get blown out every time someone gets excited or moves close to the mic. 2. STOP playing music behind the entire episode! Music is used to mark transitions in podcasts. When I hear that annoying frenetic track going in the background the whole time, my brain is constantly on edge waiting for a transition rather than listening to the content. It’s very distracting. 3. Either make longer episodes, or get rid of the padding. Episodes are extremely short yet are still padded with unnecessary recaps of the last episode and previews of the next. Plus an ultra long introduction with that awful music track playing behind it the whole time. The actual substance of the episodes can be so good, but then it’s over before it even started. Very frustrating as a listener. 4. It seems Amy has started talking very slowly this latest season, which is annoying as well. If this isn’t due to a physical reason, please change back to your normal cadence. Trust your audience. They can change the playback speed if they aren’t absorbing the information well enough. I really love the content of this show, but the issues above (especially the incessant music) makes it very difficult to enjoy overall.
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MadWayne101Well doneWe need a lot more podcasts like this. The battle to save our planet is way to lopsided in favor of big oil. Wayne in San Francisco
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- PCSimply Great InformationA great look into the manipulation of citizens by a company with well-documented pollution issues. Underscores the hubris of Formosa Plastics and their total disregard for human and ecological impacts of their activities and products. - PC
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