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More
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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
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Florida And Climate Change
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
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Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
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Social Media Commenting Policy
Meet the Staff
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Google Preferred News Source
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WUSF Rebrand
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Long COVID may be due to the virus sticking around after infection, researchers say
A growing body of evidence points to the idea that the coronavirus can stick around long after an initial infection. Some researchers think that may be a major driver of long COVID.
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•
6:48
Google's 'Shiny' New Web Browser
Google's new browser, Chrome, launched Tuesday and aims to offer a faster and more reliable user experience. Analysts say the browser was created in response to the heavier use of applications on the Web. Tabs are the centerpiece of Chrome, which also offers new security measures and privacy options.
Mosaic wants to test ‘radioactive road’ with 337 tons of phosphogypsum, records show
Documents shed new light on the Tampa fertilizer giant’s plan to test its phosphate byproduct in road construction.
Who's in, who's out and storylines to watch in the Women's World Cup round of 16
The Women's World Cup says goodbye to Germany and Brazil and welcome to Morocco and Jamaica. Here are the teams and games to watch as the tournament's knockout stage begins.
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•
3:18
Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of planning to attack Zaporizhzhia power plant
Ukraine and Russia each say the other is planning to sabotage the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. They've been trading accusations over the past year, but now they say an attack is imminent.
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•
7:00
Private Bridge on Canada Border a Security Concern
The Ambassador Bridge in Detroit is a key link in the busiest trade route between the U.S. and Canada. It's also privately owned --and that has raised questions about who is responsible for ensuring the security of the potential terrorist target.
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•
0:00
Part 1: Investigating how illicit fentanyl is actually getting into the U.S.
Most of the illicit fentanyl coming across the U.S.-Mexico border is smuggled through official ports of entry, according to immigration authorities. But not everyone believes that's the full story.
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•
6:44
How three female artists lead this summer's billion-dollar pop culture revival
This summer, three women at the peak of their powers lead a spectacular pop culture revival. Barbie, Beyoncé and Taylor Swift shattered records and created a communal economy of irrational exuberance.
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•
8:00
AI is biased. The White House is working with hackers to try to fix that
The White House is concerned that AI can perpetuate discrimination. So they helped host a red-teaming challenge at the Def Con hacker convention in Las Vegas to help figure out some of the flaws.
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•
3:56
Author Interview: Annie Dillard, Author of 'The Abundance'
NPR's Melissa Block asks Annie Dillard about the celebrated author's "masculine mind," her decision to write less, and her baseball skills. Dillard's new collection of essays is called The Abundance.
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•
8:01
A Growing Champagne Trend Is Uncorking More Ways To Celebrate
Champagne shouldn't be just for special occasions, says wine writer David White. He explains how to choose it, how to pair it with food and how small growers are changing the industry.
Body camera shows Tampa drug prosecutor offering cops his business card in a DUI crash arrest
Police say Joseph Ruddy appeared drunk when they approached him at his Temple Terrace home to investigate the crash. He was charged with driving under the influence with property damage, and remains employed at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Tampa.
In Jazz-Movie Endings, Some Story Elements Just Keep Bouncing Back
Over 90-some years of movies about jazz, many films have spun a familiar lick, sometimes falling back on stock standards when inspiration fails, and sometimes knowingly quoting from older works.
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•
7:49
'Brown Album' Centers On The Erasure Of Race In American Culture
Porochista Khakpour's work is strongest when she turns the lens on herself to examine how she, too, is complicit; many essays here are just too tantalizingly brief to allow space for deep analysis.
Get Everything 'Under Control' With These 3 Quarantine Comfort Reads
Now's the time for cheerful reads, so we've picked three — including Emma Straub's latest and two lively culinary memoirs — that'll help transport you to a happier place for a few hours.
In 'Dark Mirror,' Reporter Concludes: 'Snowden Did Substantially More Good Than Harm'
Edward Snowden handpicked Barton Gellman as one of three journalists he would work with to reveal government secrets. Gellman's book is an in-depth look at where he agreed and disagreed with Snowden.
As StoryCorps marks 20 years, we commemorate a family's service on Sept. 11
We revisit a 2007 conversation with John Vigiano, a New York firefighter, whose sons Joseph and John Vigiano Jr., both died in the line of duty in the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001.
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•
6:33
Bucking his party, Chris Christie makes his case for 2024
Christie is still a Republican – after all, he's running for that party's presidential nomination. But his views on Ukraine, abortion and other issues put him out of step with many in the party.
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•
4:37
When Mom Is Mary Poppins: Julie Andrews Writes Memoir With Her Daughter
"It was sometimes difficult to share her," Emma Walton Hamilton says of life with her famous mom. Hamilton and Andrews have written 32 books together; their latest is Home Work.
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•
31:55
The Pinkneys Are A Picture Book Perfect, Author-Illustrator Couple
Author Andrea Davis Pinkney and illustrator Brian Pinkney have been together for 30 years and collaborated on nearly 20 books. "It's fun to work with the one you love," Andrea says.
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•
5:30
In 'Permanent Record,' Edward Snowden Says 'Exile Is An Endless Layover'
In his memoir, the former NSA contractor says he believes he has been proven right as the U.S. has amended laws regarding government surveillance. But the government still wants to prosecute him.
Sister Helen Prejean On Witnessing Executions: 'I Couldn't Let Them Die Alone'
The Catholic nun became an outspoken opponent of the death penalty following the events in her book Dead Man Walking. Her new memoir, River of Fire, details her spiritual journey up to that point.
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•
39:00
With These Comics, Learn How to Laugh Like It's 1999 (Hint: Don't)
As part of our summerlong tribute to funny books, we take a look back at the ennui-drenched anti-humor of some of the 1990s, when absurdity and surrealism were the rule — laughs not so much.
How Ron DeSantis used Florida schools to become a culture warrior
Ron DeSantis' educational policies have faced wide criticism, but they also have paid off politically.
Biden will be talking to his counterparts from Japan and South Korea at Camp David
For the first time since 2015, foreign leaders have been invited to the presidential retreat. Biden wants to strengthen ties with both countries as part of a broader push to counter China's influence.
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5:59
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