Nerd Nite NYC is in MANHATTAN ON SATURDAY APRIL 25, 2026 for the final
show of our 2025-2026 season, featuring three fun-yet-informative
presentations about the Earth and other PLANETS WILL DIE, how Luffy
from One Piece could use his liberation skills to inspire us to
navigate a world still full of corruption and occupation, and how we
can use our smartphones to save our LOCAL, adorable WILDLIFE. It’s
soooo fluffy! Tickets here.
Nerd Nite NYC
Saturday April 25, 2026 at 7pm
Caveat NYC: 21A Clinton Street (Lower East Side)
$16 early bird (until April 18, 2026 at 7pm) | $21 standard | $26 at
the door
Tickets here: https://www.caveat.nyc/events/nerd-nite-4-25-2026
[https://www.caveat.nyc/events/nerd-nite-4-25-2026]
Back to the Lectures At-Hand:
*Presentation #1
The End of Worlds: How to Kill a Planet in a Billion Years (and why
Earth Is Next)
by Chris Colose
Description: Venus turned into a pressure cooker, Mars lost
everything, and Earth… is hanging in there. At least for now. Like a
love triangle gone wrong, these three planets may have started out
with things in common, then made wildly different life choices.
Let’s talk about runaway greenhouses, carbon, oxygen, disappearing
atmospheres, and what it takes to keep a world habitable. We’ll also
talk about how it all ends, even here.
Bio: Chris Colose is a climate and planetary scientist at NASA’s
Goddard Institute for Space Studies. The institute was formerly housed
above the Seinfeld diner on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, until NASA
was, let’s just say, politely asked to leave last year. These days,
he’s one of many NASA nomads, wandering between offices and coffee
shops in an ongoing search for purpose, stable WiFi, and an outlet
that works. He can sometimes be found working at the American Museum
of Natural History…occasionally orbiting near Neil deGrasse Tyson
(who, yes, may sometimes nap in his office). Chris studies climate and
climate change on Earth and other planets, with a focus on how worlds
evolve, and, more interestingly, why they sometimes fall apart. When
not modeling planetary climates, he will often be explaining to
friends and family that, yes, this is actually his job.
*Presentation #2
Luffy Would Free Palestine – The Political Overtones of One Piece &
How We Can Learn from the Strawhat Pirates
by Fefe Yamaguchi and Liam McSpadden
Description: In this session, fefe and Liam with as little spoilers as
possible will uncover the long-standing & inherent political overtones
of the One Piece (OP) world — not only divulging in the mirrors
present between OP and our lived reality, but also providing examples
of how OP tactics can be used to fight injustices in the real world.
Bio: fefe yamaguchi (they/them) and Liam McSpadden (he/him) are
Californian anime heads ready to bring One Piece and activism to a bar
near you. They met at UC Berkeley (shoutout Tinder!) where fefe
studied Ethnic Studies and Education and Liam studied Architecture.
Although coming up in different worlds, anime and cussing out ignorant
internet trolls are their binding force. Please enjoy watching their
love for anime, and each other, unfold on stage.
*Presentation #3
Networking with Naturalists
by Julia Janson
Description: Only scientists can be conservationists. MYTH. Only
people who live in the country can live sustainably. MYTH. Only
geniuses with time and money on their hands can save wildlife from
extinction. BIG FAT LIE! In a world where climate change,
deforestation, and pollution have exacerbated habitat loss, scientists
have joined forces with the public to monitor and protect remaining
populations of wildlife. During this presentation, former conservation
biologist and naturalist Julia Janson will demonstrate how we can turn
our observations of nature into data for scientific research,
utilizing the power of social media and smartphones… and that is a
FACT!
Bio: Julia Janson is a former naturalist and conservation biologist.
She has spearheaded several conservation and citizen science projects
with the Association of Zoos and Aquariums and the U.S. Forest Service
during her two years of service in AmeriCorps. She has also written
and published natural history articles for Northwoods Magazine, The
Outside Guide, The Peregrine Fund at The World Center for Birds of
Prey, and Elevate Magazine, where she was featured as one of the Top
Voices for 2015. In 2020, Julia earned her Master’s Degree in
Environmental Education. When not out saving the world, she enjoys
hiking, skiing, writing, and being a citizen scientist!
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07/04/2026 Last update