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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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Trucker protests against pandemic mandates are spreading beyond Canada
Big-rig trucks and other vehicles have shut down at least three border crossings between Canada and the U.S. The Ontario government is trying to open up the trucker's blockade of a key trade route.
Listen
•
6:10
Why does Black History Month matter?
There is an ongoing debate as to whether U.S. history segregates Black history in February or whether Black History Month brings forward necessary untold stories.
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•
5:35
O'Brady Is First To Complete Solo, Unassisted Trek Across Antarctica
Rachel Martin talks to adventurer Colin O'Brady, who last month made history by becoming the first person to cross the continent of Antarctica unaided.
Listen
•
7:19
Haitians get a TPS reprieve — but the Trump administration remains set on deporting them
For now, a federal judge's 11th-hour ruling blocks President Trump from ending Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than 350,000 Haitians — but he looks determined to assure their deportation back to gang-ravaged Haiti.
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•
4:45
Amid a child labor crisis, U.S. state governments are loosening regulations
New York Times journalist Hannah Dreier says hundreds of thousands of immigrant kids are working illegally. Washington Post reporter Jacob Bogage explains how states are loosening child labor laws.
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•
37:14
When hospitals and insurers fight, patients get caught in the middle
About 90,000 people spent months in limbo as central Missouri's major medical provider fought over insurance contracts. These disputes between insurers and hospitals are a recurring problem.
They have their haters back home. But at the Olympics, the Tkachuk brothers are stars
The NHL stars Matthew and Brady Tkachuk are elite at getting under their opponents' skin. But at the Olympics, where they are crucial to Team USA's hockey hopes, fans are pressing pause on the hate.
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•
5:13
From Minister To Atheist: A Story Of Losing Faith
Teresa MacBain admits that when she was ordained as a minister, she had big questions. She thought they'd make her faith stronger, but instead they haunted her. Then one day, she couldn't take it anymore. In a move that's left her unemployed and nearly friendless, MacBain has come out as an atheist — and she says it's a big relief.
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•
10:41
White House Statement on "Charting New Course on Cuba"
THE WHITE HOUSEOffice of the Press SecretaryFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEDecember 17, 2014Fact Sheet: Charting a New Course on Cuba Today, the United States is…
Storm Debris Collection Updates
Residents in cities and counties across Tampa Bay heeded the call to place storm debris on the curbs of their homes. But now, some are worrying the debris…
Posers Or Terrorists? Deaths Put Spotlight On Neo-Nazis
The friendship of the four young roommates — though cemented in the dark trappings of an obscure neo-Nazi group called Atomwaffen Division — never seemed…
PolitiFact Florida Checks out Jeb Bush's Tax Cuts, Voter Purge
It's been just a couple of days since Jeb Bush announced his candidacy for president - and already his time in Tallahassee is getting a lot of scrutiny.…
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•
4:27
A Year After Breonna Taylor's Killing, Family Says There's 'No Accountability'
Taylor was shot and killed in her apartment by Louisville police last March. "I can't believe it's a year later and we're still just asking people to do the right thing," her mother said recently.
Why SkySilk Came Out of Nowhere To Save Parler After Capitol Riot
After Amazon took Parler down over violent messages on the site, no tech services firm would help it come back online. Then an obscure Los Angeles-based company offered to help.
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•
3:54
Journalist Investigates Amazon Warehouse Life And The Pitfalls Of 'One-Click America'
Alec MacGillis, author of the new book Fulfillment, says a union vote by Amazon workers in Alabama could determine "what life is going to look like for the working class in America in years to come."
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•
36:23
Sen. Gillibrand isn't ready to give up on paid family leave
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) about national paid family leave and why she thinks it should be included in President Biden's economic spending package.
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•
9:19
At Ukraine-Belarus border, Ukrainians are pretty calm despite Russian troop buildup
Russia is conducting military exercises in Belarus but most Ukrainians living along the border say it's nothing to worry about.
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•
9:19
Floating in a rubber dinghy, a filmmaker documents the Indus River's water woes
Pakistani filmmaker Wajahat Malik pulled together an expedition to raft down the 2,000-mile river. He hopes to reconnect people with the Indus, which is being threatened by overuse and climate change.
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•
6:29
Why cheap, older drugs that might treat COVID never get out of the lab
The hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin fiascoes have soured many doctors on repurposing drugs for COVID. A few inexpensive old drugs may be as good as some of the new antivirals, but they face complex obstacles to get to patients.
How a school in Warsaw is educating kids of Ukrainian families who fled to Poland
NPR's Ari Shapiro reports from Warsaw on how Ukrainian children are being educated in Poland.
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•
10:54
One man's outsized role in shaping the Supreme Court
The U.S. awaits a consequential Supreme Court decision that could overturn federal abortion rights, and one man has had a outsized influence on the conservative makeup of that court: Leonard Leo.
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•
10:53
J Balvin Won't Settle For Anything Less Than World Domination
After cracking the American pop charts last year, the Colombian reggaeton star is following the success of "Mi Gente" with his fifth album, Vibras. And he knows you're still listening.
Why your bad boss will probably lose the remote-work wars
Since 2020, office workers have waged an epic battle to work remotely. They're mostly winning.
Hurricane Irma's impact, five years later
Half a decade later, we look back at Irma’s impact and the changes in hurricane preparedness and response that it brought to Florida.
Where is the economy likely to go next?
Ayesha Rascoe and Scott Horsley speak with economist Austan Goolsbee about what's driving inflation and why so many economic forecasts have been wrong.
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11:14
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