Focus: Greenland — Q&A with Current TV producer Adam Yamaguchi
Current TV's reporter went to Greenland to see how environmentalists and end-of-the-world tourists experience a country that sees global warming as having an upside.
Around, say, February of this year, you probably got an email forward titled "Hipster Olympics." There are good forwards, and there are bad forwards. This was a good forward—a mockumentary. After you watched nonchalant hungover hipsters being rated on the tightness of their pants and the aptness of their ironic T-shirt selections, you sent the clip on to a dozen friends, most of them in their 20s or 30s, like yourself. You may or may not have been too busy laughing to notice that the clip was produced and distributed by Current TV, a peer-to-peer station founded in 2005.PLENTY: How do these stories evolve for you? How do you decide what to focus on?
How big a part of Vanguard's original mission was environmental coverage?
Who's the Vanguard audience?
Your most recent story was about Greenland. What was the feeling you had watching these people who had come to enjoy the seafood and watch this tragic spectacle of glaciers melting and residents' lives being changed?
Are they environmentalists?
Were you worried about putting what you could see as a positive spin on global warming, that people would take away a sunnier message than you had intended?
Chatting with locals, did you get the sense that most people are happy, or did you meet people who were really worried or upset?
Do you think we all, people in other parts of the world are going to develop that same toughness and ability to adapt in time?
Did the glacial water you drank taste noticeably purer than what you're used to?
What about the glacial beer?





















