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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
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Growing Up With Guns
Your Florida
Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
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Social Media Commenting Policy
Meet the Staff
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WUSF Rebrand
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Detective: Florida School Shooting Deputy Statement Faulty
A Florida detective told investigators the former deputy entrusted to protect a high school where 17 people died in a mass shooting last year gave an...
Science, English, Math Teachers In Short Supply in Florida Public Schools
The State Board of Education is expected Wednesday to approve a report that details a shortage of certified science, English and math teachers in...
Future Of Medicaid Cut Remains Unclear
A new era in the Medicaid program will begin Friday when the state eliminates a long-standing policy about paying health-care bills that accumulate...
Coronavirus Victims: World-Renowned Botanist Art Whistler
Art Whistler was a botanist and an adjunct professor at the University of Hawaii. He traveled the South Pacific, documenting its plants. He died of COVID-19 at the age of 75.
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•
2:28
Italians Revive An Old Wine-Serving Custom In Florence
In the era of social distancing, Italians in Florence have revived the custom of serving wine through pint-size windows in centuries-old buildings.
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•
3:18
'A Contest Of Wits': A Former Forger Recalls His Art
Ken Perenyi made millions painting and selling more than 1,000 forgeries over 30 years. He's imitated the likes of Charles Bird King and James Buttersworth — and confesses it all in his new book, Caveat Emptor: The Secret Life of an American Art Forger.
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•
8:24
Alan Cheuse's 2004 Holiday Book Picks
Reviewer Alan Cheuse offers his annual recommendations for holiday gift-giving. This year's list includes novels of travel on Earth and in space, new versions of tales from the Bible, Africa and Mesopotamia, and collections of poetry and song.
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•
0:00
Shacochis Spans Generations In 'The Woman Who Lost Her Soul'
In his new book, The Woman Who Lost Her Soul, Bob Shacochis returns to Haiti, but also takes the reader across continents and generations. The 700-page book has been compared to the work of Joseph Conrad, Graham Greene and Norman Mailer.
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•
9:11
Returning to Long Island and 'That Night'
When people ask me, "What was it like to grow up on Long Island?" I give them a copy of Alice McDermott's novel That Night. "Read this," I say.
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•
0:00
Five Senses, Minus One: Living Without Smell
Garden writer Bonnie Blodgett didn't know what her sense of smell meant to her — until she lost it. Her new book, Remembering Smell, describes what it's like to live in the world without being able to smell it — from the sweet aromas of springtime to the stench of sour milk.
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•
8:20
Memoir Reveals Where 'Ask Amy' Gets Her Advice
Amy Dickinson, author of the syndicated advice column "Ask Amy," writes about the strong women in her life in her new memoir, The Mighty Queens of Freeville. The youngest in her family, Dickinson says she's "the plankton at the end of the food chain and the advice flows down."
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0:00
Nigella's Winter Advice: Indulge Yourself, Darling
As winter nears, we look for ways to be warm and comfortable. One of the best ways to do that, says food writer Nigella Lawson, is to indulge in rich, tasty foods that some might call guilty pleasures. For instance: Why not make French toast that tastes like a doughnut?
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•
7:20
The Man Who Kept The Cold War Cool
Most people think of the Cold War as a long, glacial period, but in the beginning it was dangerously unstable. Neil Sheehan, author of A Bright Shining Lie, says there might well have been nuclear war — had it not been for one man: the subject of his latest book, A Fiery Peace in a Cold War: Bernard Schriever and the Ultimate Weapon.
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7:49
Senate Can't Vote On $15 Minimum Wage, Parliamentarian Rules
The Senate parliamentarian informed lawmakers that a plan to gradually increase the federal minimum wage to $15 by 2025 does not fit the complicated rules that govern budget bills in the Senate.
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•
3:32
Greenspan: 'I Probably Could Have Caught' Economic Crises
Alan Greenspan was often celebrated during his long chairmanship of the Federal Reserve. But Greenspan's policies have been blamed by some for the Great Recession. In an interview with NPR about his new book, The Map and the Territory: Risk, Human Nature, and the Future of Forecasting, Greenspan discusses difficulties in predicting economic calamity.
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•
5:36
Mom And Toddler Put Sleep-Inducing 'Rabbit' Book To The Test
Psychologist Carl-Johan Forssen Ehrlin designed his best-selling (and self-published) story The Rabbit Who Wants to Fall Asleep to help kids doze off. We visited a local naptime to see if it works.
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•
3:36
'Spy': A Nuclear Caper, With A Nod From Clinton
In Thomas Caplan's latest novel, The Spy Who Jumped Off the Screen, Ty Hunter, a spy-turned-movie star, is called back to service at the U.S. president's behest. The book is Caplan's third work of fiction, and an early draft got a little editing help from the real-life ex-president.
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•
7:19
Janet Evanovich On Love, Laughs And Being A Voyeur
Explosive Eighteen is the 18th in the best-selling series of crime novels featuring Jersey girl Stephanie Plum. Author Janet Evanovich discusses the inspiration for her heroine and how she eavesdrops for ideas.
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•
8:19
A Soothing New Sound For A Crummy New Decade
1970 was a bummer of a year: violence, political unrest and the end of The Beatles. Fire and Rain, a new book by David Browne, chronicles that turbulent year in politics and music.
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•
8:28
Markets May Stumble Or Skyrocket, But This Economist Says Hold On Tight
It's been more than four decades since Burton Malkiel published A Random Walk Down Wall Street. Eleven editions later, Malkiel hasn't wavered in his mantra of patience and broad investing.
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•
6:29
Grandson Finds Only Known Recordings Of Music From Frontlines Of WWII
Everyone thought they were lost, but Jason Burt has found his grandfather's WWII Army Band recordings. It is the only known live music recordings near a battlefield.
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•
2:17
Aparna Nancherla's 5 Favorite Tiny Desk Concerts
Actress and comedian Aparna Nancherla picks her five favorite performances.
Occupy Violence Reignites Criticism Of Oakland Police
Clashes between police and Occupy Wall Street protesters in Oakland, Calif., made news this week. But the violence has less to do with the Occupy movement than with the long history of law enforcement troubles in that city.
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•
3:02
Military Memoirs Offer Unfiltered View of Iraq War
A new crop of memoirs from soldiers in Iraq highlights stories from the front lines, the complications of leadership, and the terrible choices that war presents.
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•
0:00
Pandemic Interferes With Reenactment Of 1965's Bloody Sunday March
In Selma, Ala., the reenactment of the march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge was scaled down because of COVID-19. It was also the first without civil rights icon John Lewis who died last year.
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