Because scaring people with doom-and-gloom movies about climate change will somehow be better than preachy, woke movies.

The Hollywood Climate Summit brings filmmakers together with scientists and activists, in a bid to change the industry’s culture and to encourage movies and TV shows to use their outsized influence on audiences around the world.

“Hollywood is an extremely powerful industry,” said summit co-founder and TV writer Ali Weinstein. “We are on the precipice of cultural change in many ways.”

Yet a recent study by the Norman Lear Center and Good Energy found the climate crisis was “virtually nonexistent” in scripted entertainment.

Fewer than three percent of around 37,000 TV and film scripts made since 2016 mentioned “any climate-related keywords,” and only 0.6 percent used the words “climate change.”

Because Al Gore’s movie and other flicks like The Day After Tomorrow worked so well the last time. But don’t look when Hollywood elites scold you for your carbon footprint while they keep or even expand theirs.