
The Future of Fire
Is it even possible to reduce the number of massive blazes that are now commonplace in the American West?

Fighting Fire with Fire
How do you protect yourself from wildfire on a warming planet? You burn everything on purpose.

Science of Survival: The Sky Is Burning
A rare convergence of events turned a wildfire in the Boundary Waters into a massive burn. Two campers were right in its path.

The Hidden Graves of Kuku Island
Carina Hoang fled the Vietnam War on a boat that was supposed to take her to a refugee camp. Instead it took her to a deserted island.

Struck by Lightning (Replay)
If you live through a strike, the recovery can be a confounding, bizarre journey that never really ends

The Simple Secrets to Athletic Longevity
Why do some of us flame out in our thirties while others are still racing in their sixties? And how can we reverse the effects of getting older?

Shelma聽Jun Can Flash Foxy
The founder of the Women's Climbing Festival talks about the influence female athletes are having on a sport long dominated by men

Knox Robinson Crafts Running Culture
The eclectic founder of the Black Roses NYC running collective on using athletics to create community in urban environments.

Ayesha聽McGowan Wants to Be First
A violinist describes her bold quest to become the first female African American cyclist on the pro tour

Mikhail聽Martin聽Is a Brother of Climbing
The athlete-activist is on a mission to get more people of color into the sport he loves

Bundyville
What the Bundy family's battle with the federal government really means for the future of public lands in the American West

Kellee Edwards's Story Is a Trip
How a former bank teller became the first African American woman to host a regular-season show on the Travel Channel.

Alexi Pappas Dreams Like a Crazy and Runs Like One, Too
The Olympian and filmmaker connects with people in ways that other athletes can't. We asked her why.

A Very Old Man for a Wolf
As the alpha male of the first pack to live in Oregon since 1947, he was beloved by conservationists. Then he broke one too many rules.

The Woman Who Rides Mountains
Sarah Gerhardt, the first woman to surf Mavericks, on her long path from homelessness to the top of a monster wave

Kris Tompkins's 10-Million-Acre Life
She worked tirelessly with her husband to conserve one of the last wild places on earth. Since his tragic death, she's worked even harder.

鈥淔/V Destination, Do You Copy?鈥
How the mysterious disappearance of a boat in the Bering Sea changed Alaskan fishing

Bear Grylls Will Never Give Up
Reality TV stars never have long careers. So how come Grylls is charging harder than ever?

Cheryl Strayed's Wild Creativity
The acclaimed author of 'Wild' shares her process and philosophy with Tim Ferriss

An Amazingly Crappy Story
Efforts to manage human waste in national parks have failed miserably. Now a creative scientist may have found an elegant remedy.

Your Hungry Brain Is Making You Fat
Evolution has made humans instinctually crave sugary, fatty, and salty foods. Here's how you can fight back.

Red Dawn in Lapland
On the border between Russia and Finland, a band of Finnish soldiers are preparing to defend the country if the Bear decides to charge

Susan Casey Might Have Gills
The bestselling author on going deep with great white sharks, big-wave surfers, and dolphins鈥攑lus her concerns about the future of the sea

He That Is Down Need Fear No Fall
If you found yourself stuck at the bottom of a canyon with a broken leg, what do you do? Not long ago, our host faced this exact scenario.

The Whole Life Challenge Is Easier than You Think
The cofounders of the wildly popular program explain why the easiest way to get in better shape is to make healthy living a game

Bee Still My Heart
A bee sting won't hurt you unless you're allergic鈥攐r so you thought until you disturbed a hive of African bees

Dangerously Delicious
When you picked some mushrooms off the forest floor, you planned to make a nice risotto. But now you're in the hospital, fighting for your life.

The Secret History of Biosphere 2
A team of scientists entered a glass bubble in the desert to live for two years cut off from society. Things didn't go as planned.

Frozen Alive Redux
A remote car accident, a broken ski, a tumble in the snow, and a slow descent into hypothermia

Can鈥檛 Hack It? Gene-Hack It.
You may soon be able to change your DNA to optimize performance in your favorite sport

Doc Parsley Solves Your Sleep Crisis
Former Navy SEAL doctor Kirk Parsley insists getting enough rest is the single most effective performance-enhancing habit

Can Humans Outrun Antelope?
As endurance predators, we should be able to catch anything鈥攅ven one of the world's fastest animals

Dr. Michael Gervais on Mental Mastery
The renowned expert in high-performance psychology offers up an incredibly simple approach to training your mind

Captain Jackass
Writer Kevin Fedarko went looking for meaning in the bottom of the Grand Canyon. He ended up in charge of a boat full of poop.

Laird Hamilton and Gabby Reece on the Extreme Edge of Fitness
The power couple shares lessons from their extreme approach to training, nutrition, and recovery

The Fine Art of Weaponizing Critters
Fighting one invasive species with another has led to some famous horror stories. But biocontrol can be done right.

Jack Johnson Loses His Cool
On his new album, the king of kick-back beach music takes a bold turn. He tells us why.

1200 Miles on Blood Road
Cycling legend Rebecca Rusch discusses Blood Road, the new documentary on her journey down the Ho Chi Minh trail to find the crash site where her father disappeared.

Vanessa Garrison Walks the Walk
The co-founder of GirlTrek explains how an organization encouraging women to head out the door became a powerhouse national movement

A Very Scary Fish Story
To the protectors of Alabama鈥檚 swamps, the vanishing of an iconic river creature posses terrifying questions about the water we swim in and fish in and drink.

How the Sports Bra Changed History
When some friends sewed together a couple jock straps to stop boob bounce in the late-70s, they ignited a revolution

Andy Samberg鈥檚 Tour de Farce
We tried to have a serious conversation with the SNL alum about his new HBO cycling mockumentary. We mostly failed.

Racing a Dying Brain
When Bob Sturtz had a stroke in the Boundary Waters, his friend Scott Pirsig had only one choice: get out and get help as fast as possible.

The Ice Queen Cometh
Sarah McNair-Landry, one of today鈥檚 boldest young explorers, describes the unique thrill of crossing the Arctic on skis.

Drinking Yourself to Death
There's a flipside to dehydration that kills athletes and otherwise healthy people every year. And it's on the rise.

XX Factor: Diana Nyad Goes the Distance
What does it take to swim 111 miles from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage? Passion bordering on obsession.

XX Factor: Snowboarding While Iranian
Mona Seraji's unlikely path to becoming the first snowboarder from the Middle East, male or female, to compete in the pro freeride series

Science of Survival Ep 16: Cloudbusters
Humans are on the brink of technologies that can control the weather and possibly save us from climate change. But playing God is risky business.

Science of Survival Ep. 15: The Death Blow
When forecasts called for a massive tornado in central Oklahoma in 2013, storm chasers flocked to the area. Then all hell broke loose.

XX Factor: A Woman鈥檚 Place Is On Top
How a bold women鈥檚 climb of a Himalayan giant shocked the world and forever changed mountaineering

XX Factor: Beth Rodden Unpacked
The star climber opens up about her kidnapping and finding love after a broken marriage

After the Crash, Part 2
Once Joe Stone learned to use his paralyzed body, he decided he鈥檇 race an Ironman. Then he went even bigger.

After the Crash, Part 1
What do you do when you鈥檙e addicted to adrenaline but confined to a wheelchair? So much more than people expect.

The Everest Effect
Myles Osborne was poised to summit Mount Everest when a flapping of fabric caught his eye. He thought it was a tent鈥攖hen it spoke.

Florence Williams on the Nature Fix
In her new book, the writer explains why getting outside cures so many of our problems

Line of Blood in the Sand
Denmark's Faroe Islands have a brutal tradition in which men publicly butcher hundreds of pilot whales by hand. But why?

Mark Sundeen on the New Pioneers
He's spent the last three years chronicling the lives of couples who have swapped mainstream society for rare kind of freedom

Call of the Wild Things
Wolf howls, bird songs, crickets, frogs鈥攕oundscapes contain clues to not only what's going on around us but also who we are.

Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell
Secretary of the Interior tells all: what's next for the Department of the Interior and the environmental movement?

Cliffhanger, Part 1
How two friends from Boston solved the world's greatest aviation mystery, Eastern Air Lines Flight 980

National Parks Don't Need Your Reverence
Ian Frazier has had it with people calling favorite outdoor spots 鈥渃athedrals,鈥 鈥渟hrines,鈥 and 鈥渟acred spaces.鈥 Here's why.

The Lessons of Superstar Conrad Anker
His journey from dirtbag to rock star, how to choose a climbing partner, and why bottled oxygen might be a performance-enhancing drug

The Secret History of Doping
An inside look at America's history with doping and double standards related to performance enhancement

Tim Ferriss Overshares
The "human guinea pig" talk about his 4-hour plan to being good at, well, everything

国产吃瓜黑料 Podcast: Robert Young Pelton
He was kidnapped, survived an assassination attempt, and joined the hunt for the most deadly terrorist. Meet the most interesting man alive.

Jason Motlagh on the Dari茅n Gap
The incredible story behind a journalist's terrifying journey through high-conflict jungle

In Too Deep
Alone, deep underwater inside a sunken ship, with only minutes to survive, Michael Proudfoot's survival story might be the most epic to date

国产吃瓜黑料 Podcast: Under Pressure
When your submarine is on the verge of imploding, you better make all the right choices

国产吃瓜黑料 Podcast: The Devil's Highway, Part 2
When a group of immigrants set out across the desert, the results helped researcher create the Death Index, a new model for dehydration.

国产吃瓜黑料 Podcast: The Devil鈥檚 Highway, Part 1
Pablo Valencia spent six days wandering the 110-degree desert before stumbling into McGee's camp. He shouldn't have been alive, but he was.

国产吃瓜黑料 Podcast: Struck by Lightning
The bizarre science behind Phil Broscovak's lightning strike, and his incredible journey of recovery

国产吃瓜黑料 Podcast: Frozen Alive
A remote car accident, a broken ski, a tumble in the snow, and a slow descent into hypothermia before (spoiler alert!) a dramatic rescue