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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Your Florida
Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
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Social Media Commenting Policy
Meet the Staff
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Contact BBC and NPR
WUSF Rebrand
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They Built Their Own Boating 'Shangri-La.' Preserving It May Be Just As Hard
Born out of necessity during segregation, Seafarers Yacht Club is one of the country's oldest black boating clubs. Over 70 years after its founding, the club's members must decide how to move forward.
Hayley Williams Dives Into The Wreck
Through 16 turbulent and celebrated years leading the pop-punk band Paramore, Williams insisted she'd never make a solo album. Then life showed her that she was a different person than she'd known.
Sell Or Stay? Australia's Fire Zone Experiment
After deadly 2009 wildfires, authorities offered to buy property to encourage people to move. Few accepted. The questions raised by Australia's experience are freshly urgent after its latest fires.
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•
5:21
'Succession' Season 4, Episode 3: 'Connor's Wedding'
It's time for Connor's wedding. It's time for Roman to choose between Gerri and his father. Unfortunately, Logan won't make it to the celebration.
Democrats Reflect On 2020 Presidential Election
Though Biden won the 2020 election, it did not prove to be the blue wave many in his party had hoped would materialize. Key Democratic organizers and strategists discuss.
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•
14:04
Linda McMahon led WWE and the SBA. The U.S. Education Dept. may be next
McMahon has a limited background in education, and a long career as a business executive. She'd be stepping into an agency the president hopes to dissolve.
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•
5:06
They lost their homes in Colorado's biggest wildfire. Here are keepsakes they salvaged
In the ashes of the Marshall Fire, recovered objects hold memories and reveal the costs of the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history. Survivors have found new meaning in old treasures.
Working on the half-shell: Efforts to restore nature's best pollution filters
Florida’s estuaries once teemed with clams, oysters and other bivalves that helped keep waters clean and seagrasses healthy. By the mid-20th century, only a fraction of the state’s vast shellfish beds and reefs remained. Can a small clam make a big difference in serious water pollution hotspots like the Indian River Lagoon?
A government official helped them register. Now they’ve been charged with voter fraud
Ten Florida men with felony convictions have been charged with voter fraud because prosecutors say they registered and voted illegally. Critics say the punishments are unfair.
Florida commits $1 billion to climate resilience. After Hurricane Ian, some question the state’s development practices
Gov. Ron DeSantis has touted a record amount of spending to help his state prepare for the effects of climate change. But his policy on that front is coming under scrutiny by many residents still reeling from Hurricane Ian.
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•
3:41
The NPR Culture Desk shares our favorite stories of 2022
This year, our reporting took us to museums, libraries and symphonies; to Edisto Island, Hollywood, New York and beyond. Culture Desk reporters say these are the stories that will stick with them.
Why Republican elites backed Trump: power, belonging ... and voter pressure
Republicans backed Donald Trump in 2016, changing the party's identity. Former GOP strategist Tim Miller explores this shift in his book Why We Did It: A Travelogue On The Republican Road To Hell.
A divided Congress may sideline protecting the census after Trump's interference
With a Democratic Senate and a GOP House, some census advocates are looking past the new Congress for other ways to help protect the 2030 census and other head counts from political interference.
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•
4:04
Which type of eye doctor do you need? Optometrists and ophthalmologists face off
Optometrists are lobbying for more leeway to treat patients — and physicians' groups are pushing back. But it's more than a turf war, both sides say, as they explain why patients' vision is at stake.
‘People got screwed.’ Despite troubles, green energy lender seeks restart in Florida
Their billboards used to plaster South Florida. Their contractors went door-to-door, offering expensive and much-needed upgrades to roofs, windows and air conditioning units — with no money down, no credit check needed.
'Live free and die?' The sad state of U.S. life expectancy
A decade after a landmark report on Americans' shorter lives, the problem has only gotten worse. Unlike other wealthy nations, U.S. life expectancy has not bounced back from the pandemic.
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•
6:28
How to invite introverted students to share their thinking in class
KQED's Mindshift podcast visits a language arts classroom where an extroverted teacher has developed creative ways of inviting introverted students to share their thinking.
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•
13:52
'Fresh Air' celebrates 50 years of hip-hop: Rapper Melle Mel
Melle Mel was the rapper on the 1982 hit "The Message." He spoke to Fresh Air in 1998 about the early days of rap, music with a social message and how the genre and his life had changed.
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•
4:57
In Book, Former Defense Chief Mattis Sideswipes President Trump's Leadership Skills
In the general's upcoming leadership book, Call Sign Chaos, the Obama administration catches the most flak. Mattis barely mentions President Trump but implies criticism of the sitting president.
New novel explores the continuing influence of poet Sylvia Plath: 'She is all of us'
"The Last Confessions of Sylvia P" uses three interconnected stories to explore the life and literary legacy of poet Sylvia Plath.
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•
11:05
Google Launches 'Chrome' Web Browser
Internet search giant Google unveiled Chrome, a new piece of Web browser software on Tuesday. Danny Sullivan, editor-in-chief of SearchEngineLand.com, explains what Google's open-source browser can do, and why a search engine leader wants to get into the Web software market.
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•
12:29
Pop Culture Happy Hour picks TV's best finales
The hosts of NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour discuss what makes a good TV finale and name some of their favorites.
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•
15:51
Donald Trump Has Brought On Countless Controversies In An Unlikely Campaign
Trump's rise to the Republican nomination had an aura of invincibility, as he unleashed a force in American politics that could carry him to the presidency.
Detainees Transferred Or Freed Despite 'High Risk'
Hundreds of secret documents show that military and counterterrorism analysts sometimes found it difficult to determine whether those held in the detention camp at Guantanamo Bay were truly dangerous.
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•
4:55
From pickleball to Cat'lympics, these are your favorite hobbies of the year
We asked, you answered: fencing, small science projects and seeing national parks were among the top hobbies that NPR readers and listeners told us they were really into this year.
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