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More
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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
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Growing Up With Guns
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Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
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'I was their teacher': A chance encounter as Afghans protest after a suicide bombing
Pierre Kattar edited the pictures for an NPR story about two of the teenagers killed in the Sept. 30 attack. On Oct. 10, he went to a demonstration in Rome and made an unexpected connection.
An 'army' of line crews is reconnecting the power in Southwest Florida
Crews from 30 states have converged on Southwest Florida to restore power after Hurricane Ian devastated the area. The work is precise and dangerous.
Listen
•
4:51
How A Patient's Suicide Changed A Doctor's Approach To Guns
Dr. Frank Dumont never thought of himself as being on the front lines of suicide prevention. But after the death of a patient he was particularly close to, he sees his role changing. He's seeking to reduce suicides by asking his patients about guns in their homes.
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•
6:20
Republicans recast drugs and fentanyl as a crime and border security problem
Ahead of the midterms, Republicans have recast the debate over drugs and fentanyl addiction as a crime and border security problem.
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•
5:27
Putin orders martial law in occupied Ukrainian areas as Kyiv's forces gain ground
The move signals Russia's growing frustration over Ukrainian advances in areas the Kremlin claimed to annex. It came hours after Kremlin-appointed officials ordered civilians to evacuate Kherson.
Singer and songwriter iLe's third album, 'Nacarile,' finds a world deeply in flux
The Puerto Rican artist returns with a new album, her first since protests galvanized San Juan and beyond in 2019.
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•
7:18
Banned Books: Author George M. Johnson on the need to tell all people's stories
Writer and LGBTQ activist George M. Johnson speaks about what's lost when books like their 2020 memoir All Boys Aren't Blue are banned from school libraries.
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•
6:54
The U.S. and South Korea staged a joint air exercise after the North's missile launch
North Korea said Sunday its latest intercontinental ballistic missile test was meant to further bolster its "fatal" nuclear attack capacity against its rivals.
Black History Month is over, but these movies are forever
Seven years ago, Slate magazine published the Black Film Canon, a collection of 50 of the best films directed by Black filmmakers. NPR's Aisha Harris recently teamed up with Slate to update the list.
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•
27:31
Can Brazil's Lula save the Amazon?
NPR's Andrew Limbong speaks with environmental researcher Erika Berenguer about Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's ambitions to save the Amazon rainforest from deforestation.
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•
7:04
A UF researcher describes bias in artificial intelligence and pushes for 'algorithmic justice'
Tina Tallon discusses how language, racial and gender biases are baked into these technologies, and how to fix them.
Florida poet finds a ‘Sunshine State of life’ by empowering others
From staying in laundromats for warmth to becoming an established poet, Yuki Jackson has experienced the dark and light sides of Florida. She uses these experiences, as well as her gift of poetry, to help children in her Tampa community of Sulphur Springs through the organization known as The Battleground.
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•
4:23
Israel-Hamas Aim To Reduce Hostilities As Gaza Restraints Eased
Israel and Hamas are negotiating to pause violence and ease up pressure in the Gaza Strip, allowing thousands of workers to go into Israel and the exports of some food.
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•
6:38
'New York Magazine' Reporter: Sexual Harassment Was 'Endemic' At Fox News
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Gabriel Sherman of New York Magazine about his reporting on Roger Ailes, the ousted head of Fox News.
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•
5:47
What Iran has planned for its morality police
Is Iran taking steps to restrain its so-called morality police force? NPR's Rachel Martin talks with Nahid Siamdoust, assistant professor of Middle Eastern studies at UT Austin.
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•
5:37
Musk threatens legal action against a UCF student who tracks his private jet in real time
Jack Sweeney, 20, an information technology sophomore, created the flight tracker while he was in high school.
Gotta wear 'em all: How Gucci ended up in Pokémon GO
Pokémon fashion has come a long way. The gaming empire now collaborates with luxury brands in clothes you can wear inside and outside of the virtual world.
Excavation Of Lithuania's Great Synagogue Highlights A 'Painful Page' From History
The synagogue is "very important," says an archaeologist, "not only for Jews but all people living in Lithuania." Just 3,000 Jews are left in the capital, compared to some 70,000 before World War II.
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•
4:32
Doctors Say Trump's Condition Is Improving, May Be Released Soon
An update on President Trump's medical condition. Plus, what experimental treatment has he received and has he infected others? Doctors say Trump is improving, and he may be sent home on Monday.
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•
5:17
Hurricane Ian? Fuhgeddaboudit! Mote doesn't stop working to save Florida's Coral Reef
The marine lab has been growing coral at a Summerland Key facility since 2000. Even as Ian sideswiped the Keys, researchers were hosting a conference to teach reef restoration techniques to other scientists.
Review: Heavy, buggy Steam Deck wins over a Nintendo Switch fan
PC gaming behemoth Valve has rolled out a portable console. While it's heavy and buggy, the Steam Deck has already become a hot item for ardent gamers.
Senate panel hearing will look into Ticketmaster's dominance in live entertainment
NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota about Tuesday's hearing that will focus on the problems surrounding Ticketmaster's dominance in the ticketing industry.
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•
6:08
Elon Musk takes the witness stand to defend his Tesla buyout tweets
Two tweets in 2018 led to a class-action lawsuit alleging Musk misled investors, pulling him into court for about a half hour to deliver sworn testimony in front of a nine-person jury.
Yeah, actually, your plastic coffee pod may not be great for the climate
Across social media, headlines this week said that single use coffee pods may be more climate friendly than other ways of making coffee. That may not be the case, based on the science.
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•
4:02
What Janet Yellen hopes to accomplish during her trip to Africa
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen about her upcoming trip to three African countries — Senegal, Zambia and South Africa — and what she hopes to accomplish.
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6:58
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