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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
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Defending The Everglades. Again.
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
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WUSF Rebrand
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From across the path of totality: Reactions to the solar eclipse
NPR member station reporters have been stationed along the path of totality — in Arkansas, Ohio, Texas, Maine, and elsewhere — and they're bringing us reactions from observers at these watch-parties.
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•
1:02
Sunday Puzzle: First and last two letters
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe plays the puzzle with Minnesota Public Radio listener Erin Rhode of Plymouth, Minnesota along with Weekend Edition Puzzle Master Will Shortz.
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•
5:56
Tampa is looking to sell its police department headquarters
The city is accepting proposals for "qualified and visionary" developers to purchase the police headquarters property on Franklin Street in downtown Tampa.
Here's the data for Florida's first bear hunt in a decade
A fact sheet posted Friday showed that all but six of the 172 permits purchased were by Florida residents.
Hillsborough commission expansion and elected school superintendent could be on this year's ballot
The measures could possibly increase the number of county commissioners to 11 — if population trends continue.
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•
0:49
Education Commissioner Kamoutsas blasts teachers' unions during Tiger Bay talk
After noting the Legislature and governor have passed bills to support teachers, he accused unions of holding up members' pay and wasting dues to push political agendas.
Schools’ weapon detection systems removed after 10 days
The pilot program will end on Friday. It comes after delays at one of the two schools left students waiting in a parking lot.
The 50 Best Albums of 2023
The album's not dead! Want proof? NPR Music's list of the best albums of 2023 features masterworks by veterans, newcomers, iconoclasts and at least one supergroup.
Tens of thousands of workers in Florida have just lost their labor unions. More is coming
A WLRN investigation begins to reveal the scope of SB 256, a sweeping anti-union labor law passed in 2023. What is emerging is an outright crisis for teachers and other public sector workers. “The work conditions of hundreds of thousands of people are going to be up in the air,” said one advocate.
What does the death of a jailed Jesuit priest say about India's democracy under Modi?
Indian police accused Stan Swamy of terrorism. His supporters say he was framed and evidence planted on his computer. Some call it Narendra Modi's Watergate. Six years on, no one has resigned.
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•
33:32
Don't Call Me Honey: In 2017, Women Confronted The Deep Roots Of Rock's Boys Club
Some of the best rock music of 2017 was made by women reckoning with a fundamental destructive truth of the genre: that it promises freedom to young female listeners but withholds actual liberation.
Could 'uncommitted' voters sway the election?
New Yorker writer Andrew Marantz visited Michigan to understand the uncommitted movement, a group of pro-Palestinian, anti-war activists and voters who emerged during the 2024 Democratic primary.
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•
29:14
Morning news brief
White House lays out plans to replace pandemic border restrictions. Donald Trump's lawyer spent Thursday cross-examining E. Jean Carroll. After Tucker Carlson's firing, viewers have deserted Fox.
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•
11:18
How a Black man's 1970 murder spurred change in rural North Carolina
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe has been profiling members of the civil rights generation. Today, her own family's experiences in rural North Carolina where a Black man's 1970 murder spurred change.
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•
11:12
ESPN Flap Shows People Can't Even Agree On What They're Arguing Over In Trump Era
The ESPN host called the president a "white supremacist" and "bigot." ESPN has not suspended her; conservatives are calling it a double standard, but supporters of Hill are asking what she said wrong.
How Dan Bongino is building a right-wing media infrastructure in time for 2024
New Yorker writer Evan Osnos says no one in media has profited more from the Trump era than Bongino, who hosts the country's fourth most listened to radio show and has 8.5 million weekly listeners.
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•
42:46
How Politics Have Complicated Business For Kushner Companies
Jared Kushner is both a Senior Advisor and son-in-law to President Trump, and, like the president, he and his family were in the real estate business before getting into politics. The Kushner Companies' troubled development on 5th Avenue in New York City shows how politics have complicated that business.
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•
8:14
Heat is killing workers in the U.S. — and there are no federal rules to protect them
Heat has killed hundreds of workers in the U.S., many in construction or agriculture, an investigation by NPR and Columbia Journalism Investigations found. Federal standards might have prevented them.
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•
6:53
The sunset of Sonic Youth: An oral history of the band's final U.S. show
For the first time, the band members, their crew and their fans tell the story of a landmark moment they didn't realize was happening. Sonic Youth's new album, Live in Brooklyn 2011, is out this week.
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•
4:28
Kidnapped, Then Forced Into The Sideshow: The True Story Of The Muse Brothers
Journalist Beth Macy talks about George and Willie Muse, black albino brothers who were born in the Jim Crow South and were forced to become circus freaks. Her new book, Truevine, retells their story.
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•
30:06
Doctors warn that children in Gaza have suffered irreversible damage from starvation
Prolonged and severe malnutrition is permanently damaging the health of children across Gaza. Doctors warn even if Israel lets in more food now, the damage to children's bodies can be irreversible.
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•
6:26
As spring nears, lambing season is upon us
It's the time of year when new lambs are born, and for some shepherds, the process raises difficult questions.
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•
7:33
For Many Florida Ex-Cons, Voting Booth Is Off-Limits
Florida's clemency board has made it harder for former felons to win back their voting rights.
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•
6:27
Report: 'Killer' Heat Days In Florida, U.S. Could Increase Exponentially
A report released Tuesday says that the nation will face extremely hot days - along with deaths from killer heat waves - in the near future if carbon…
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•
1:11
New Online Exams Will Also Test School Districts’ Technology
Ocoee High School just west of Orlando opened less than a decade ago. But technology-wise, the 2,300-student school is already obsolete.Ocoee is part of…
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4:13
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