Folks, Al Gore is back. Al Gore is back with a new documentary on saving Mother Earth.
This documentary is part two. It's the sequel, the follow-up to Al Gore's famous documentary,
An Inconvenient Truth from 2006. Well, now the sequel is going to debut at Sundance in
2017. The sequel is Inconvenient Truth number two. Now, I caught up with Al Gore at this recent
event and he gave the audience a preview of his new documentary. An Inconvenient Truth number two,
part two, title is to be announced. Let's take a look at the preview for Al Gore's new documentary
sequel. A drowning polar bear struggles as its mate howls for help. As the drowning bear slips
beneath the waves, its younglings catch a last glimpse of their mother. Penguins, a species
unfamiliar with water, drift off, stranded. They succumb to hypothermia, starve, and die.
These tragedies continue, even though it's been ten years since I first warmed of global warming.
Yes, I have a sense of humor. I know that folks tease me since I predicted New York would be
underwater by now after the polar ice caps melted. And yes, I did predict that the Earth would open
up and we'd be swimming in lava. Folks have had quite a laugh at my expense recently, pointing out
that the Earth seems to be cooling. Yes, the winters are a bit chilly. And I've been painted by
some right wing conservatives as being a hippy-dippy fruitcake starved for attention. But I assure you,
I was right then and I'm right now. Superstorms, like Superstorm Timmy, flooded New York City,
is the Statue of Liberty underwater yet? Not yet. But something is going on with Planet Earth.
I asked myself, as you may be wondering, why hasn't the Earth warmed as quickly as I've predicted?
Is the Earth fighting an infection? Does it have a fever? What could the pestilence be that's
infecting our planet? To answer this question, I picked up my producer and we flew to the Kingdom
of Ireland. Upon arrival in Ireland, we noticed it was very hard to see. Our first stop was the
leprechaun forest where a certain species of clover has managed to survive by genetic mutation. The
first thing we noticed is that there were no leprechauns. There was a time when leprechauns
thrived in Ireland. This is the last known sighting of a leprechaun. Why did leprechauns
suddenly flee the leprechaun forest? Back at the lodge, we pondered this question. Over and over,
I asked my producer, what caused the leprechaun genocide? They were there and now they're not.
To calm my nerves, my producer made me some tea. And as I gazed at the teapot, hypnotized,
my eyes glazed over. I stared at what was coming out of the tea kettle. Steam, I said, out loud.
My producer looked at me and said, what was that? Steam, I repeated. I lept from my chair,
flung open the kitchen door, ran outside, and spun in circles all around me. Steam,
steam, and I realized every time you go to the grocery store, you give off steam. When they
make miso tea in China, they give off steam. Everything we do creates steam. Could steam be
the reason the earth is warming and cooling at the same time? I called NASA and they gave
me this satellite image of last August. Here, if you look closely, you can see steam rising off
the earth. We decided to take our theory into the field and we approached this steam very carefully
so as not to disturb or corrupt our findings. What we found was steam and more steam, steam on
this lake. These birds flew into the steam. A moment after we finished taking these photographs,
these birds succumbed to the steam and they fell out of the sky. We were baffled by this until we
made our way home, passing through what was hours before a lush tropical forest. Now, it was
reduced to tree stumps. What did we notice around the tree stumps? That's right, steam. Steam had
eaten away the trees. Steam had caused this defoliation. Steam, trying to wrap our minds
around this, we returned back to the lodge. Steam had always been there. Why was steam suddenly
causing deforestation? It did not make sense. Steam was always on earth. Steam is not new.
It's been here for millennia. Why now? After several more weeks of investigation, I returned to
the airport in Dublin and flew home. As I crossed the Swiss Alps, I looked out the window. That
steam very close to those mountains, very near, almost touching them. Suddenly, I realized there's
not enough wind to move the steam. There's not enough wind to move the steam. It wasn't steam we
were after. It was the lack of wind. Of course, there's more tornadoes. Of course, there's more
super storms. Of course, there's more lightning. Of course, there's more hurricanes. It's not
enough wind to clear out the steam. So yes, my 2006 predictions in my first film have not
come true fully yet. We are not choking on sulfur. The danger is, with the lack of wind,
the steam is eating our food. Go to any farm early in the morning. What do you find? You find steam.
But how to clear the steam? We consulted United Nations climate experts until we struck upon
an idea. We, all of us, must collect the steam. We must collect the steam, whether it's clinging
to a hillside in Brazil or climbing up the Swiss Alps. We must collect the steam before it destroys
the food supply and we starve. Well, that's it folks. That's the preview of Al Gore's new movie,
An Inconvenient Truth Part 2, premiering at Sundance Film Festival in early 2017. All Al Gore
needs to collect the steam is $33 trillion and you can help their crowd sourcing it,
crowdfunding it. Subscribe to Barry Sotoro channel for ongoing coverage. Check out,
on the left here, check out this video. This is my video about global warming. Global warming
is the Catholic religion in disguise. Don't tell Al Gore, I sent ya.
