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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
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Growing Up With Guns
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Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
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Journalist Tom Johnson reflects on personal and professional struggles and triumphs
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks to journalist Tom Johnson about his career and experiences in battling depression, which he describes in his new memoir, Driven.
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•
8:07
FBI Director Patel defends his leadership, Kirk probe at combative Senate hearing
The more than four-hour hearing frequently devolved into fiery outbursts from Democrat lawmakers and Kash Patel.
The week of devastating floods that Spaniards will never forget
After a storm devastated parts of eastern Spain last week, survivors are becoming impatient at the steady government rescue efforts. On Sunday, it all went down in the town of Paiporta.
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•
3:26
Local news is in crisis. This paper has a $150 million plan
Nearly two years ago, the owners of Atlanta's leading newspaper hired former CNN executive Andrew Morse to reverse its steep decline. He's laid out a grand vision.
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•
4:26
Japan's plan to boost its birth rate raises doubt. But one city has reason for hope
For years, Japanese leaders have tried to halt the country's falling birth rate. They might find lessons in the city of Akashi, whose population has been growing.
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•
4:58
Jeff Selingo on his new book 'Dream School: Finding the College That's Right for You'
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with journalist and author Jeff Selingo about his new book "Dream School: Finding the College That's Right for You."
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•
7:02
New book looks back at 'Sunset Boulevard,' a poison-dipped love letter to Hollywood
David M. Lubin's book Ready for My Close-Up: The Making of Sunset Boulevard and the Dark Side of the Hollywood Dream looks at how the film's poison-dipped love letter to Hollywood endures 75 years later.
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•
8:00
Who are the 20 hostages who have been released from Gaza?
After more than two years in captivity, the last 20 hostages abducted during Hamas's Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, have been released.
Mother of teen who died subway surfing says social media videos glamorize dangerous behaviors
When police came to Norma Nazario's home in 2023 to tell her that her 15-year-old son Zackery had died in a subway surfing accident, she was stunned to find social media videos of him riding atop NYC subway cars.
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•
10:34
How America's debate over student loans has changed over the decades
At the start of the 20th century, only the most privileged could afford to go to college. Today, millions of students pursue higher education, but collectively they owe $1.7 trillion in debt.
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•
8:17
People In The Afghan Capital Kabul Are Uneasy About U.S. Troop Drawdown
In the last weeks of the Trump administration, the U.S. is moving to close a two-decade chapter and withdraw from Afghanistan, causing great apprehension among Afghans as the Taliban step up attacks.
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•
7:31
Trump's changes to a $42 billion broadband program could be a win for Musk's Starlink
After years of planning, the Trump administration is overhauling a federal universal broadband initiative to open the door to Musk's Starlink satellite service.
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•
4:14
Former Justice Department official talks about John Bolton's indictment
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with former Justice Department official Elliot Williams about the charges against John Bolton, who served as national security adviser during President Trump's first term.
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•
7:38
Author Ken Liu on AI, reality, and the world we're building
The American sci-fi novelist Ken Liu talks about his new thriller All That We See or Seem and the blurred lines between technology, reality, and imagination.
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•
7:41
Upheaval and firings at CDC raise fears about disease outbreak response
Staff and observers worry that the agency may not be prepared for emerging threats including bird flu and insect-borne diseases.
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•
4:19
The Davie School: The century-old building at the heart of a town known for horses and rodeos
Long before the Town of Davie became known for horses and rodeos, it was miles of untamed Everglades. After the wetlands were drained in the early 1900s, people flocked there for the agriculture and development opportunities. The pioneers who settled learned to work the land and face the challenges of building a new community. At the heart of those early days was the Davie School. Today, it's the Old Davie School Museum.
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•
7:36
Some viruses can play a deadly game of hide-and-seek inside the human body
Ebola is one of the nasty viruses that can hide in the body even after a patient recovers and tests negative. It can reemerge and trigger a new outbreak years later. How do they survive? And how can they be kayoed?
Questlove reflects on changes in culture and music with his book 'Hip-Hop Is History'
Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson, founder and drummer of The Roots, has written a new book. "Hip-Hop Is History" is a very personal take on the influence of rap and how it's changed, for better or worse.
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•
7:00
Why Border Patrol is taking the lead in mass deportations
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with The Atlantic staff writer Nick Miroff about the increasing role of Customs and Border Protection officers in immigration enforcement operations.
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•
8:16
A critic's year-end 'ghost list' wanders from Italian movie sets to 'Demon Hunters'
Critic-at-large John Powers gives his due to the movies, TV and books he wasn't able to cover earlier in the year, including La Grazia, Andor, Mississippi Blue 42 and the documentary Mr. Scorsese.
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•
9:44
From 400-year-old globes to cosmic shrouds: A Maine library brings maps to life
From 400-year-old globes to cosmic funeral shrouds, how the Osher Map Library in Maine shows people that maps aren't just for navigation — but windows into history, culture, and how we see the world.
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•
6:35
U.S. airlines lose 2 million suitcases a year. Where do they all go?
When luggage and its owner can't be reunited, airlines sell it to a store in Alabama, where its contents are sold to the public. The result is a grab bag of normal and odd things people travel with.
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•
4:28
Feast your eyes on these 10 cookbooks from 2025
Whether you're craving something sweet, savory, spicy — or all of the above in one flavorful meal — we've got you covered. Here are 10 favorite cookbooks from the past year.
U.S. health care is broken. Here are 3 ways it's getting worse
One year after UnitedHealthcare's CEO was shot and killed, the crisis in U.S. health care is intensifying — even for the companies and investors who make money from it.
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•
3:42
Florida is the lightning capital of the U.S. Is climate change making it worse?
The age-old maxim says lightning never strikes the same place twice. Florida would beg to disagree.
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