TWO DEGREEZ is what happens when you take a mumble-rap vibe, slam it into climate science, and treat the whole thing like a chaotic educational fever dream. I wanted it to feel loud, funny, a little unhinged, and somehow more scientifically accurate than half the news coverage out there.
The idea came from this simple fact. People hear “two degrees” and shrug. It sounds tiny. It sounds harmless. It sounds like weather, not collapse. So the goal was to make the number unforgettable. Not with charts. Not with lectures. With something that hits like a track you would hear blasting out of someone’s cracked AirPods on the bus at 1 a.m.
The lyrics lay it all out. Melting ice caps. Coral reefs dying. Storms getting ridiculous. Sea levels creeping up while humans pretend it is someone else’s problem. Then it gets into the real science. Albedo feedback loops. Exponential heat. The compounding effect of every tenth of a degree. All delivered like a rapper explaining a mixtape, except everything he is saying is peer-reviewed.
I used VEO and Dreamina/LipDubAI for Lipsync to build the visuals so it could lean into the music video energy in the Suno Song. Big color. Fast cuts. Little surreal flourishes that match the humor but keep the science honest. The tone sits somewhere between meme-culture and a UN climate report, which sounds insane but actually works.
The whole point is simple. This is not doom content. It is not fear porn. It is not the usual climate guilt trip. It is a track meant to make the science stick. To make people repeat the number in their heads. To get the idea of “two degrees” to stop sounding like nothing.
If a rap hook can teach the albedo effect better than a textbook, why not let it.
Built With
- dreamina
- veo
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