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The Bay Blend
The Zest Podcast
The Florida Roundup
Our Changing State
Morning Edition
All Things Considered
More
Your Florida
Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Florida Legislature
2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
Your Florida
Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Florida Legislature
2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
Events
About Us
Our Mission
Editorial Integrity and Code of Ethics
Social Media Commenting Policy
Meet the Staff
Contact Us
Subscribe to our Newsletters
Careers
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Google Preferred News Source
Contact BBC and NPR
WUSF Rebrand
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A center dedicated to Bob Dylan prepares to open in Oklahoma
The Bob Dylan Center opens in Tulsa on Tuesday. It contains more than 100,000 pieces from his archives.
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•
2:34
Florida hospital admissions for COVID is up more than 14% over the past week
Florida in recent weeks has seen steady increases in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, though the numbers remain lower than early in the year.
Band of Horses: A Sort of Homecoming
The critically acclaimed rock group Band of Horses has roots in South Carolina. But the band formed, made its name and recorded its first CD in Seattle. Now its members are back in the Palmetto State, and back with a new album called Cease to Begin.
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•
0:00
Letters: India's Partition
One listener objected to what he heard in the report about the 1947 partition of India.
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•
0:00
Letters: Bush Presidency
Listeners sent in their thoughts in response to a review of the highs and lows of the Bush presidency.
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0:00
PolitiFact FL: Five misleading claims from Trump’s executive order on trans youth health care
In an executive order about medical care for transgender youth, President Donald Trump called to end "reliance on junk science." But the order itself included claims about gender-affirming care that clash with leading medical research and practice.
Trump administration plans to propose time limits on federal rental assistance
The Trump administration would like to impose time limits on how long people can get federal rental subsidies, NPR has learned. A handful of places already do it. NPR visited one to see how it works.
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•
6:18
COVID-19 Relief Aid Will Be On Its Way, Government Shutdown Avoided
President Trump signed the coronavirus relief aid and government spending package after demanding last-minute changes that put the deal in limbo. Congress passed the legislation last week.
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•
6:52
'Artivist' Nikkolas Smith Combines Art And Activism Into A Singular Superpower
For the past seven years, the Los Angeles-based artist has celebrated and mourned Black lives in his work. Smith's portraits are sometimes unfinished — a reflection of Black lives cut short.
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•
4:53
FEMA Rejected 95% Of Aid Applicants During California's Last Wildfire Disaster. Why?
California's 2020 wildfires set a record: the most acres burned in a year. But another record was set: The second half of the wildfire season had the lowest FEMA wildfire-aid approval rate.
Rosanna Arquette Responds To Partial Guilty Verdict In Harvey Weinstein Case
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with actress Rosanna Arquette, who has accused Harvey Weinstein of sexual misconduct, about the verdict rendered in the former movie executive's New York criminal trial.
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•
8:05
Whose Term Was It? A Look Back At The Supreme Court
The end of this latest Supreme Court term leaves us with questions: Is it Justice Kennedy's court or Justice Roberts'? Does pragmatism triumph over ideological purity?
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•
7:46
Ethiopia set a world record for displacements in a single year: 5.1 million in 2021
The war there is responsible — and makes it difficult just to assess the scale of displacement. Details are in a new report from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre.
Asian founders work to steer the narrative as beauty trends pull from their cultures
The latest obsessions in America's wellness craze are rooted in South Asian practices. Industry leaders who grew up with those rituals are caught between joy and a battle against cultural erasure.
Experts expect Putin will try to weaponize its energy resources
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of S&P Global, about the impact of Russian President Putin's move to cut off gas to Poland and Bulgaria on Europe's energy economy.
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•
7:28
'Abducted': The Myth of Alien Kidnappings
Harvard University psychologist Susan Clancy is the author of the new book Abducted: How People Come to Believe They Were Kidnapped by Aliens. She speaks with host Madeleine Brand her years of research and conversations with people who believe themselves victims of alien abduction.
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0:00
'There is no message': The search for ideological motives in the Minneapolis shooting
The FBI is calling the attack at a Minnesota Catholic church an act of domestic terrorism driven by "hate-filled ideology." Extremism analysts say the picture may be more complex.
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•
4:20
IRS Budget Cuts, Staffing Challenges Create Coronavirus Payment Headaches
Over the past 10 years, the IRS budget has been reduced by roughly 20%, leaving the agency with aging technology and forcing it to cut back on staff and training.
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•
4:00
Supreme Court Eyes The President's Power To Say 'You're Fired!'
In the short run, the fate of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau hangs in the balance. In the long run, the future of independent regulatory agencies are at stake.
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•
6:29
Apparent 'Ethnic Cleansing' Is Now Unfolding In Myanmar, U.N. Says
Operations against the Rohingya look like a "textbook example of ethnic cleansing," the U.N. human rights chief says. But Myanmar's civilian leader, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, denies the allegations.
80 Years On, Dominicans And Haitians Revisit Painful Memories Of Parsley Massacre
This week marks the anniversary of the 1937 massacre, in which Dominican soldiers targeted Haitians living near the Dominican-Haitian border. A team from NPR's Latino USA gathered survivors' memories.
What Americans Told Us About Online Shopping Says A Lot About Amazon
Of Americans who shop online, 92 percent have shopped on Amazon, according to a new NPR/Marist poll that shows the company creating new shopping habits and retaining a striking amount of trust.
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•
5:17
Mother And Daughter Injured In Boston Bombing Face New Future
As victims of the Boston Marathon bombings leave the hospital or prepare to, their stories are beginning to pour out. Celeste Corcoran and her daughter, Sydney, both suffered grievous leg injuries. Their accounts give a fuller toll of the attack and the challenges that lie ahead.
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•
8:56
Health Workers Bring COVID-19 Testing To Pinellas County's Black Community
These pop-up sites make it easier for communities disproportionately affected by the coronavirus to get tested. But convincing people to come is another hurdle.
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•
4:27
Charlotte A. Cavatica: Bloodthirsty, Wise And True
She's a spider's spider — sophisticated, pretty (by her own account), authoritarian — and she says something profound about love and commitment. Melissa Block looks at the heroine of Charlotte's Web.
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