The Level is a podcast for people who love video games. It's a weekly roundtable hosted by friends and industry outsiders Kole Ross, Ben Merkel, Dennis Furia, David Moneysmith, and Jala Prendes. Every Friday, we discuss video game news, the games we've been playing, and listener mail.

Sarah Longwell, Tim Miller, and Jonathan V. Last bring their signature political insight and banter to the masses in The Next Level podcast. Tune in to hear them discuss the news of the week, breakdown campaigns and elections, and wade into pop culture feuds.


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For a long time I went to Flores and Chapin's Top Level Podcast for my constructed podcast needs and when CR 2 came out I listened to a lot of it but it seems like the past two years has been pretty rough on competitive magic and I no longer can go to those because both seem defunct at this point.

Is there a constructed podcast that you guys listen to that you could recommend? There have been a few that I have heard like, Faithless Brewing, Crew3 and Pioneer Perspective that while they may make a good podcast, I'll be honest, I don't trust their opinions and I find myself disagreeing with them a lot. I do, however, like the Dive Down because while they aren't experts, they do acknowledge that and are at least fun to listen to.

Is there a podcast I'm missing that's good that has a Pro/Former-Pro on there that are particularly open-minded? Someone who has experience but also has an enjoyable podcast to listen to? I'm not a fan of the typical Magic player dismissal/being overly pessimistic or overly hyperbolic. There are some players/streamers that are wayyyyy too acidic when it comes to ideas they don't agree with or are too quick to shoot down something. Even though Chapin can certainly be hyperbolic, I did like that he did have caveats to what he said and was always open to wild and different ideas.

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In this section, listen to our series of podcasts for learners at A2 English level (pre-intermediate) and B1 English level (intermediate). The episodes are divided into different sections, from fictional drama and jokes to quizzes and language advice.

This is the NOAA Ocean podcast, I'm Troy Kitch. It's impossible to miss the impacts of sea level rise in many coastal places around the nation. Take Charleston, South Carolina. In 2020, this coastal city experienced a record 14 days of sunny day flooding... that's what many people call these type of days when there are no storms, no rain, no strong coastal wind, nothing special, but low-lying areas along the coast are flooding. This type of minor coastal flooding is so common in all around the world that you could say it's become the 'new normal'... that's how things are today. But what about 10, 20, 30 years from now? What can we expect in the coming decades for places like Charleston or for the coastal place where you live?

In this episode, we're going to talk about a report released in 2022 that provides some startling insights on what the future holds. It's called the Sea Level Rise Technical Report and it provides sea level rise projections for all U.S. states and territories out to the year 2150.

Here are two things from the report you need to know up front: over the next 30 years, we can expect the same amount of sea level rise that we experienced over the past 100 years, so sea level rise is accelerating. And for coastal flooding, we can expect more of that, with an increase in frequency of flooding events that cause damage. But that's not all. So to dig deeper into the report, we have two members of the Federal Sea Level Rise Task Force joining us: Mark Osler, NOAA's Senior Advisor for Coastal Inundation and Resilience, and William Sweet, an oceanographer and scientist with the National Ocean Service who is an expert in sea level rise and is the lead author of the new report.

MARK OSLER: This is a cross-agency science team that was convened by the White House in 2015 in recognition of the need and increasing demand for authoritative, consistent, and accessible science around sea level rise and the associated hazards that sea level rise brings to our coast. There are many different parts of the federal government at work on issues of sea level rise that this task force brought together to help coordinate and develop the necessary science through sustained coordination and participation of key agencies. All of this towards the goal of incorporating sea level rise information into agency-based tools that are user-friendly; things like maps and visualizations and analysis tools that can actually help decision-makers on the ground, whether it's an engineer or a planner or a state hazard mitigation officer, to help get the science refined and in a useable format to support decision-making.

MARK OSLER: Sea level rise science is advanced through publications and scientific journals and research documents. It takes a high degree of expertise to actually distill all that research down into an aggregate statement on most likely outcomes, something authoritative where the government says this is actually our best understanding of how this process of sea level rise is changing. So at its highest level the groups purpose is to do that: to be a group that can digest with their own expertise all of the state of the science, all the cutting edge research, and say OK well what does this mean today in terms of the future conditions at our coast per sea level rise under different scenarios.

WILLIAM SWEET: The United States Sea Level Rise Task Force is projecting that sea levels along United States coastline will rise somewhere between 10 and 126 inches in the next 30 years or by 2050, relative to those today. The basis for this are the models themselves, which come from the Sixth Assessment of the International Governmental Panel on Climate Change, as well as the regional sets of observation that we have along the United States coastline. Together, the two of them both point to a rise along the coastline.

MARK OSLER: We're specifically telling you, with a fair degree of certainty, this is how it will change in detail, by location. And so We are able to look at those statements of future conditions and plan and adapt. The hope is that this information is indeed sobering, but is also empowering and becomes the basis for action. That it is not a poorly defined statement that the future may be less nice than the present. This report is telling you: this is where the coastal water levels will be, on average. This is how the extremes are changing. And so, you can take that to the bank for the next coming decades, which is critical for financial planning, urban planning, all sorts of insurance and risk transfer implications can rely on this data in a way that is much more specific that we are able to produce for many other aspects of our changing climate.

HOST: William, we've talked about increases in minor and moderate flooding due to sea level rise. Can you talk about the differences between minor, moderate, and major coastal flooding?

HOST: I'd like to talk about this risk in coming years. We're now in the midst of accelerating sea level rise around the world and the report points to what we can expect in the next three decades. But what can we expect beyond that?

WILLIAM SWEET: Over the last several years, we have witnessed the impacts of sea level rise occurring now. Flooding of streets when it's sunny outside. More times than not, there's no localized storm and there's water coming out of stormwater systems, onto the streets, getting up towards people's property, getting up towards people's businesses. And that's sea level rise, plain and simple. So I think the sense of urgency is pretty much there. Folks know what sea level rise looks like. It's the increase frequency of these kind of events that used to be in response to a big storm and it made sense. You were flooding because there was a storm. But now, we are flooding more often than not when there's no storm in sight. And so what this report does, is it says there is to be more of that. That is to be expected. And by how much are these flood frequencies likely to change is largely due to the amount of sea level rise that occurs. And that amount of future sea level rise is very much related to the amount of future emissions that we pump into the atmosphere. Not so much the next 30 years, that's pretty much baked in to the system at this point, and so that's why we have very good guidance as to what we expect to happen in the next 30 years. But beyond that, it's collectively in our hands as to how much sea levels are potentially going to rise. More emissions equals more heating, equals more ice melt, equals more thermal expansion, equals higher sea levels, equals more flooding. And that we are trying to put in context for the United States as to what to expect now, a few decades from now, and potentially what could happen by the end of the century and beyond. ff782bc1db

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