Media Coverage

  • San Francisco Chronicle

    San Francisco Chronicle

    A mysterious deep-sea creature appeared in Monterey Bay. Now scientists are finally telling the world

    In 2000, a team of scientists first laid eyes on what they would later call the Mystery Mollusk via a remotely operated vehicle at 8,576 feet. After 150 viewings, many rounds of measurements, some genetic studies and 24 years later, a scientific description of the animal with the scientific name Bathydevius caudactylus has been published.…

  • Modesto Bee

    Modesto Bee

    S.F.’s Ocean Beach could be transformed with massive seawall. Surfers are not happy

    An upcoming scientific article about the impact of development on California beaches by geologist Gary Griggs of UC Santa Cruz and coastal engineer Bob Battalio called armoring and repeated beach nourishment solutions that are expensive and only "effective over a few decades at best."

  • Australian Broadcasting Network

    Australian Broadcasting Network

    Composing music with AI isn't new, but recent advances have serious implications for the music industry

    As AI quickly advances there are a lot of questions about its ethics. But whether it is good or bad there is no denying that AI plays a major role in the future of music making. One of the early pioneers of AI music was David Cope, a UC Santa Cruz professor emeritus of music.…

  • Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz’s ‘Inspector General’ updates classic political play

    The UC Santa Cruz Arts Division is premiering a new play this week. Inspector General, which is an adaption of a Russian play by the same name, raises a conversation around political corruption in the modern day. The Santa Cruz Sentinel spoke to Michael Chemers, the chair of the department of Performance, Play, and Design who…

  • The Jewish News of Northern California

    The Jewish News of Northern California

    Founder of Center for Monster Studies isn’t scared when the lights go down

    Michael Chemers, the chair of the department of Performance, Play, and Design and the founder of the Center for Monster Studies, talks about his role in monsters studies. In this Q&A for The Jewish News of Northern California Chemers explores monsters through the lens of Judaism, in particular discussing the golem which comes from Jewish folklore.

  • Mother Jones

    Mother Jones

    Environmental Justice? Not if Project 2025 Has a Say.

    Mijin Cha, a professor of environmental studies at University of California, Santa Cruz, says Inflation Reduction Act grant programs could be improved by providing benefits more directly to underserved people. “The federal government gives money to a third party, and then that third party distributes the money,” says Cha. “Is it not more efficient to…

  • Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Guest Commentary | Immigrant safety at risk from election rhetoric

    Political leaders who use racist and anti-immigrant rhetoric are directly harming safety and wellbeing in our communities, write UC Santa Cruz faculty members Regina Day Langhout and Saskias Casanova. Recent research conducted in Santa Cruz County supports this assertion. In Fall 2023, youth researchers in United Way of Santa Cruz County’s Alzamos la Voz program worked with…

  • Financial Express

    Financial Express

    Growth, jobs and manufacturing

    Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh argues that increases in productivity and wages that come from investment in human capital are going to benefit a larger slice of the population than investment in physical capital that substitutes for workers, though both kinds of investment matter.

  • WIRED

    WIRED

    This App Set Out to Fight Pesticides. After VCs Stepped In, Now It Helps Sell Them

    Silicon Valley–style venture capital places enormous emphasis on scale and a startup’s ability to grow rapidly, says Madeleine Fairbairn, a sociologist at UC Santa Cruz, who studies agriculture and food systems. “Everybody’s used to this claim that we have a growing population, and they’re going to starve if we don’t feed them,” she says. For…

  • BBC

    BBC Wildlife Magazine

    As scientists plot to bring back the dodo, Helen Pilcher asks whether we should—and what would happen if we did

    In 2022, geneticist Beth Shapiro from the UC Santa Cruz, who is a scientific advisor to Colossal Biosciences, decoded the dodo’s genome. Scientists at Colossal are now determining the sequences which they will edit into cells collected from the dodo’s closest living relative, the Nicobar pigeon. Then, just as for the passenger pigeon, the edited…

Last modified: Apr 02, 2025