Experts on Camera

SciLine Experts on Camera: Sizzle Reel

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SciLine tees up 1-on-1, broadcast-quality interview opportunities with articulate scientists from diverse backgrounds. Reporters can book 15 mins with them via Zoom or request a SciLine interview clip for use in news stories.

Watch our sizzle reel!

Experts on Camera makes it easy for reporters to interview science experts on topics that matter to viewers, listeners, and readers.

“I’m a forest ecologist and climate change scientist …”

“I’m a professor in the Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering …”

“I’m an assistant professor in the Department of City and Regional Planning …”

“… and I study influenza viruses and how they transmit through the air from person to person …”

“… tick borne diseases, and, primarily, Lyme disease …”

“… the role of community organizations to influence education policy and reform …”

“… all kinds of things about transportation …”

“… economic history and macroeconomics …”

SciLine connects you to diverse scientists for every imaginable topic.

Monarchs under threat

“If things are going badly for monarchs, they’re going badly for a lot of other things. So they’re they’re an indicator.”

Sports betting

“We hear that a lot when patients say, I’m in recovery and they see an ad, or they drive by the casino, and they have physical responses right away. Their heartbeat starts going up. There are butterflies in their stomach. It’s an automatic response.”

Kids’ mental health

“Let kids know that you are human as an adult, that you’re struggling as well—that is really important. It validates, I think, for them their own experiences about, OK, I’m stressed out too, Mom or Dad.”

Cannabis and health

“A lot of these delta eight THC products are made through this type of synthetic pathway, where there can be contaminants, there can be heavy metals, pesticides, solvents. There can be other cannabinoids in there that people aren’t aware of.”

Influenza

“The rate at which those folks get infected with viruses—and also the rate at which they develop serious outcomes from those infections—are higher than in communities where there’s more access to health care and resources are better.”

Camera-ready scientist resources. For free.