How to survive the apocalypse | Ada, Ep. 1
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This is episode 1 of the animated series, “Ada.” This 5-episode narrative follows the young library assistant Ada as she juggles two worlds: her daily mundane reality and the future she vividly imagines for all humanity. Traveling through her visions of potential futures, Ada grapples with the ethical and social implications of new technologies and how they could shape the world.
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One academic, Oxford University's Luisa Rodriguez, has a relatively positive view on the survival of humanity in the event of a catastrophe. In most scenarios, catastrophes are incredibly non-uniform in their effects. So if in some places there exists mass starvation, in all likelihood there will be other locations where people will be able to fish, eat seaweed, or grow potatoes. The same goes for infectious disease- while in some places people might be more susceptible to plagues, in other places the community will have likely built up some kind of immunity.
Another danger lies in the idea of indirect extinction: where communities are able to survive but humanity as a whole is unable to return to the level of technological ability it previously achieved. But examples abound of technological ingenuity from people in limiting conditions. Cuba, in the midst of a trade embargo and diplomatic isolation, produced a "market...of people who can rig things up." In Bosnia, during a wartime siege, there was no electricity. Residents then created small power stations, looking for materials in construction sites, broken cars and other wreckage, and created hydropower.
Looking to the future, there are scientists and organizations doing work to ensure the future of humanity right now. This podcast details the current state of science regarding resilient foods, including seaweed and cellulose generated from wood. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault offers long term, safe, free storage of duplicate seed samples that are already stored in the world's gene banks. The vault is like a back up generator for the world's seed diversity. Owned by Norway and operated in a partnership between the Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food and the Crop Trust, the vault has a capacity of 4.5 million seed samples. It is estimated that a maximum of 2.25 billion seeds can be stored in the facility at one time, and it currently holds more than 1.3 million seed samples.
Watch the entire Ada series with this playlist.
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Meet The Creators
- Created by Elizabeth Cox
- Written by Elizabeth Cox
- Directed by Elizabeth Cox, Kirill Yeretsky
- Producer Brooke Brewer
- Produced by Should We Studio
- Voice acting Rachel Rial, Jacob Barrens
- Composer Stephen LaRosa
- Sound Designer Weston Fonger
- Art & Animation Director Kirill Yeretsky
- Technical Director Wing Luo
- Production Manager Brooke Brewer
- Lead Storyboard Artist Wing Luo
- Storyboard Artist Ray Alma, Adam Ford
- Lead Background Artist Nuri Keli
- Background Artist Solène Chevaleyre, Lauren Wendell
- Character Designer Kirill Yeretsky, Wing Luo, Danny Schwartz, Samantha Chitacapa, Pedro Delgado
- 3D Animator Nathalia Lemotte, Caleb Lemotte, Gordana Fersini, Hans Carrasco
- 2D Animator Joaquin Madrid, Elmar Aleskerov, Sergio Mateo, Ana Hallal
- 3D Modeling and Rigging Diego Murphy, Anton Tokar, Baros Studio
- 2D Colorist James Nethary
- Compositor Elmar Aleskerov
- Editor Ted Eschweiler
- Post-Production Sound Services Vinyl Mix
- Audio Producer Angelina Powers
- Mixer Weston Fonger
- Research Assistant Tuğba Zeynep Şen, Freya Hanley
- Fact-Checker Charles Wallace
- Expert Consultant Lewis Dartnell, Luisa Rodriguez, David Denkenberger , Juan García Martínez
- Executive Producer Elizabeth Cox, Kirill Yeretsky