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For a veteran muse of David Lynch, old habits die hard. On 'Dune,' then and nowKyle MacLachlan in David Lynch's "Dune." Then of course, because it's David Lynch, he wants to spend some time in his creative universe, and that's really what you got. Our "Dune" is the amalgam of David Lynch and his creativity, and Frank Herbert and his creativity. David Lynch and Kyle MacLachlan at the premiere of "Twin Peaks: The Return" in 2017.
Persons: Jeffrey Beaumont, Dale Cooper, Kyle MacLachlan, David Lynch, MacLachlan, Lynch, Hank MacLean, Lucy, Ella Purnell, isn't, David Lynch's, it's David Lynch, Frank Herbert, Frank, it's, David, Isabella Rosselini, Timothée Chalamet, haven't, Scorsese, Alberto E, Rodriguez, Robert Redford You've, Chris, Oliver Stone's, didn't, Robert Redford, he's, would've, Hank, You've, Kristin Davis, HBO You've, Trey, there'd, Dennis Hopper, Dennis Organizations: De Laurentiis Entertainment, Getty, HBO Locations: Hollywood
Oliver Stone's new movie, "Nuclear Now," makes an impassioned case that nuclear energy is a necessary and obvious solution to climate change. People ought to be more afraid of climate change than nuclear energy, the movie argues. He started reading about climate change, including a review of the book "A Bright Future: How Some Countries Have Solved Climate Change and the Rest Can Follow" by Joshua S. Goldstein and Staffan A. Qvist. "This is a simple, practical, understandable argument for how to solve climate change from nuclear energy," Stone told CNBC on Friday. In the movie, Stone presents a case that the beneficial potential of nuclear energy has not been reached because society conflated its collective fear of nuclear bombs with nuclear energy.
In his latest documentary "Nuclear Now," Stone argues for the use of nuclear energy as an environmentally friendly alternative to fossil fuels. "We had the solution [nuclear power] … and the environmental movement, to be honest, just derailed it. For investors, the film adds to growing interest in nuclear power as a fossil fuel alternative beyond renewables. These funds invest in a variety of stocks tied to nuclear power throughout the value chain. Other global nuclear energy ETFs such as Sprott Uranium Miners (URNM) and the VanEck Uranium+Nuclear Energy (NLR) have gained more than 13% and 4% in 2023, respectively.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailOliver Stone's new documentary aims to change the nuclear energy narrativeCan nuclear energy play a role in combatting the climate crisis? Oliver Stone and Joshua Goldstein’s latest documentary "Nuclear Now" makes the case for atomic energy as an effective and environmentally friendly alternative to fossil fuels.
The country's largest online source of JFK assassination records is suing President Joe Biden and the National Archives to force the federal government to release all remaining documents related to the most mysterious murder of a U.S. president nearly 60 years ago. “This is about our history and our right to know it,” said Morley, the author of the JFK Facts blog. The National Archives and Records Administration, the agency in charge of the JFK documents, also said it’s complying with the law and the procedures Biden outlined. JFK assassination historian David Talbot, a Trump critic, said he sees an irony in the two cases. Uscinski said he’s hesitant to draw a direct line between lack of trust in the government and the refusal to release the JFK records, but he argued the feds essentially have themselves to blame.
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