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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
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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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Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass safe after suspect breaks into official residence
Police in Los Angeles arrested a suspect following a break-in at the home of Mayor Karen Bass on Sunday morning, officials said.
Tampa man restores headstones to honor veterans
WUFT’s Charlize Ramos shows us a Tampa good Samaritan who honors the legacy of those who serves one headstone at a time.
Get To Know The Song Of The Year Nominees: Mumford And Sons' 'The Cave'
The band's performance during last year's Grammy Awards show gave the song a second life.
Listen
•
1:27
Feds: Manatees No Longer Endangered
One of the symbols of Florida is no longer an endangered species. That's according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which announced Thursday they're…
Oklahoma teachers will soon have to teach 2020 election conspiracies
The Republican-led state’s new high school history curriculum says students must learn about disproven allegations that mail-in-voter fraud skewed the 2020 election.
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•
6:17
George H.W. Bush, 90, Jumps Out Of A Helicopter
The former president had vowed on his 85th birthday that he would repeat a parachute jump on his 90th. Thursday's jump was his eighth.
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•
0:28
Britain's Hot Summer Reveals Ancient Markings In The Land
The markings show the sites of Iron Age settlements, Roman farms — even Neolithic monuments. The markings were revealed because hot weather across the U.K. is drying out fields.
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•
0:28
How to watch the 2025 Tony Awards on Sunday
The 78th annual Tony Awards are Sunday, June 8. Here's where to stream.
Extremely high rainfall Sunday morning on Sanibel island
Almost a foot of rain fell Sunday in Sanibel
Creole Fried Chicken
Celebrate Public Radio Music Day with these song picks from radio DJs
Public Radio Music Day is a day to celebrate publicly-funded music stations across the country.
Listen
•
10:57
Expert on racial wealth gap reflects on Trump accounts
The Trump Administration is releasing more information this week on the Trump Accounts that Congress recently passed, which would give eligible kids born from 2025 to 2028 $1,000 from the government.
Listen
•
5:49
Sunday Puzzle: Vowel Renewals
NPR's Don Gonyea plays the puzzle with KXJZ radio listener Suzanne Palmer and Weekend Edition Puzzlemaster Will Shortz.
Listen
•
5:57
As Milk Street turns 10, Chris Kimball talks food, tips and upcoming class
Milk Street has TV and radio shows, a magazine, cooking classes, an online blog and a store.
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•
5:48
For 'Such Kindness' novelist Andre Dubus III, chronic pain is a fact of life
Dubus talks about the injuries he faced as a carpenter and his relationship with his dad. His a new collection of personal essays is Ghost Dogs: On Killers and Kin. Originally broadcast in 2023.
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•
38:06
How did Elon Musk become so powerful in the Trump administration?
New York Times journalist Eric Lipton outlines how Musk's companies are benefiting as he cuts federal jobs and agencies, and reporter Teddy Schleifer explains how Musk's political views turned right.
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•
44:50
Broadcasting Legend Georges Collinet Offers Wisdom
Cameroon-born Collinet began his radio career in the 1960s, introducing American soul singers like James Brown to African audiences. Collinet became a famed broadcaster in Africa and a top expert on African Pop music. He speaks with host Michel Martin about his upbringing, worldview, and why black Americans have been slow to embrace Afropop.
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•
17:49
Fox isn't in the apology business. That could cost it a ton of money
When Fox Corp. CEO Lachlan Murdoch addressed investors on Tuesday, he did not apologize for the events that led to a $787 million settlement over the broadcasting of election-related falsehoods.
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•
3:57
How Inuit Parents Teach Kids To Control Their Anger
At the top of the world, the Inuit culture has developed a sophisticated way to sculpt kids' behavior without yelling or scolding. Could discipline actually be playful?
David Rodigan's Life In Reggae: Defined By Fanatical Love, Not Race... Right?
David Rodigan has spent his entire life exulting in and exalting reggae. In his autobiography, published earlier this year, the soundman stays away from a topic that would seem utterly central.
Shining example: Tampa Bay's water quality is declining after a half-century of gains
After decades of pollution suffocated Tampa Bay and killed half its seagrass and much of its marine life, unprecedented political cooperation and hundreds of science-guided projects brought the estuary back to life. Tampa Bay became a symbol for the success of the Clean Water Act of 1972, but seagrasses and fish have begun to die again.
In Arizona, these young Native American voters seize their political power
Young voters and Native American voters are two groups that showed up for President Biden in the 2020 election. But ahead of his 2024 match-up, it's unclear if he'll be able to keep their support.
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•
7:13
He lost his legs fighting for Ukraine. But this story is about love through adversity
Sgt. Mykhailo Varvarych, a commander in Ukraine's 80th Airborne Assault Brigade, lost both legs while fighting in Luhansk. He and his fiancée Iryna Botvynska maintain an unflinching romance.
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•
5:31
How South Africa nearly descended into civil war instead of a multi-racial democracy
Journalist Justice Malala explains how Nelson Mandela and F. W. de Klerk kept the country on a path to peace after the 1993 assassination of Chris Hani. His book is The Plot to Save South Africa.
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•
36:26
CIA, Cheney, Congress And Torture
Did former Vice President Dick Cheney order the CIA to keep Congress in the dark about a program to capture or kill al-Qaeda leaders? NPR Senior Washington Editor Ron Elving, Reps. Jan Schakowsky and Peter Hoekstra discuss a potential congressional investigation. Meanwhile, will Attorney General Eric Holder appoint a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of torture during the Bush administration?
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30:18
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