Oil 101: What You Actually Need to Know About Oil | Frankly 135
4/9/202610 min
This week's Frankly is the first in a three-part series on the role oil plays in modern civilization, prompted by the recent flow disruptions and geopolitical conflict surrounding the Strait of Hormuz. This initial installment covers some foundational concepts of The Great Simplification platform, including what oil actually is, what it does for us, and why most of us never see any of it.
Nate begins by describing how oil formed from the compression of ancient marine phytoplankton over millions of years, framing it as a solar battery that took geological time to charge and that humans are draining in centuries. From there, he outlines the sheer amount of human labor that's contained within a single barrel of oil – around 5 years' worth – and scales this to a global level. Nate uses this framing to show how the explosion of population, wealth, and per-capita consumption over the last 150 years was underwritten by an invisible workforce of ancient sunlight. He closes with the metabolic reality that the average American consumes roughly 200,000 calories a day when heating, transport, food systems, and supply chains are considered and assesses why we have become so "energy blind" to it all.
If energy is the invisible labor force underlying every product and service in your life, does that change the way you see the economy? What would it mean to live, even briefly, at a metabolic rate closer to what your body actually requires? And if the work performed by a single barrel of oil is worth orders of magnitude more than its price, what does it say about the systems we have built on top of it?
(Recorded March 30, 2026)
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First 90 secondsNate Hagens· Host0:00
If you're like me, you probably have a little bit of whipsaw, uh, both in your head and your gut, uh, following what's going on in the Strait of Hormuz. Um, my organization plans to have real-time, frankly, uh, heartfelt analyses of the world that we produce very quickly, and also a wider eight to ten-hour, um, professionally choreographed video series we're calling Reality 101. We're working on both of those things simultaneously. But given the urgency of, uh, world events, I forced my team to quickly compile a three-part video series, uh, on oil, um, which we're gonna be releasing the next three days. Here it is. [upbeat music] Greetings. As a result of the Strait of Hormuz closure, you have probably heard a lot about oil in the news lately. You might know that oil is important for filling up your car, but you're probably not quite sure what the big deal is beyond that. It turns out that our entire modern civilization is only possible primarily because of oil and the resulting products