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More
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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
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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
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
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Meet the Staff
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WUSF Rebrand
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DeSantis touts Florida as 'free' and mocks COVID restrictions during his State of the State
DeSantis outlined his priorities for the 2022 legislative session — including the economy, education and immigration — while defending his decision not to lock down the state during the coronavirus.
Saxophonist Tony Malaby's unlikely pandemic practice space: the New Jersey Turnpike
Saxophonist Tony Malaby, unlucky at the beginning of the pandemic after catching a very early case of the virus — the subsequent isolation imposed on his playing led him to a unique solution.
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•
4:57
When did America's culture wars begin, and how can they end? Jon Ronson has answers
America's culture wars are creating a world of "magnificent heroes and sickening villains" as people fight a fierce battle in black and white, says writer and podcaster Jon Ronson.
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•
7:44
Comedy Community Mourns The 'End Of An Era' As UCB Closes New York Locations
Upright Citizens Brigade, the improv mainstay and launchpad for many comics, will no longer have a physical space in New York City. Despite UCB's flaws, "people are grieving," a former UCBer says.
Jesus In A Lowrider: El Rito's Santero Carves Saints In Modern Clothing
Nicholas Herrera puts his own touch on the tradition of saint carving. The santero works out of his studio in a small New Mexico town — but his edgy work can be found in museums around the country.
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•
5:24
Many parents are angry over COVID policies. They could be key to GOP 2022 gains
Republicans believe COVID-19 policies largely backed by Democrats are causing a schism among parents of school-age children and that will help the GOP win elections this year up and down the ballot.
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•
4:57
Do restrictive abortion laws actually reduce abortion? A global map offers insights
Click to see how restrictive or liberal local abortion laws are — and to look at the rate of abortion. The data offers a sense of whether stricter abortion laws reduce the number of abortions.
How undated ballots could affect Pennsylvania's GOP Senate race and voters' rights
Mail-in ballots that arrived on time but in envelopes missing dates handwritten by voters have been a flashpoint in recent elections in the key swing state, including a close Republican primary race.
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•
3:33
The latest on the probe into atrocities committed by Russian forces around Kyiv
Russian forces pulling out of the area surrounding Kyiv left behind evidence of atrocities committed against civilians. The effort is now to try to build a war crimes case against the perpetrators.
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•
6:29
'Where We Have Hope': A Journalist on Zimbabwe
In recent weeks, President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe ordered the demolition of shantytowns and left thousands of people without homes or livelihood. Host Renee Montagne speaks with Andrew Meldrum about his book Where We Have Hope: A Memoir of Zimbabwe. Meldrum lived and worked as a journalist in Zimbabwe for 23 years, until he was expelled by the Mugabe regime.
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0:00
'Tristram Shandy': Filming the Unfilmable
Coming soon: the movie version of The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, Laurence Sterne's extravagantly long 18th-century novel. Like Ulysses, Naked Lunch and other books, it represents a daunting list of challenges to those who would turn it into a movie.
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0:00
Oil executives defend against accusations of price gouging at House panel hearing
Profits are rising for oil companies. NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Democratic Rep. Lori Trahan of Massachusetts about accusations that those firms are price gouging and profiting from the Ukraine war.
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5:34
Not just Florida. More than a dozen states propose so-called 'Don't Say Gay' bills
The specific details regarding the bills vary between state. But overall, they seek to prohibit schools from using a curriculum or discussing topics of gender identity or sexual orientation.
Officials say a gunman's attack that killed 10 was a racially motivated hate crime
The alleged shooter, an 18-year-old white male, has been arraigned on a first-degree murder charge. Authorities say most of the victims killed at a Buffalo, N.Y., supermarket were Black.
How a father's gift brought sense to an uncertain life, from 'Zelda' to 'Elden Ring'
Contributor Alexander Tuerk revisits departed family and the virtual worlds that sustained him in uncertain times.
Recalling the Art of Screenwriter Ernest Lehman
Robert Siegel talks with actress Eva Marie Saint, and her husband, producer/director Jeffrey Hayden. Saint and Hayden talk about the recent death of Hollywood screenwriter Ernest Lehman. Saint co-starred in North by Northwest which Lehman wrote, and she and her husband were close friends of Lehman's.
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•
0:00
Transcript of President Bush's Nomination of Miers to the Supreme Court
A transcript of President Bush's announcement of his nomination of White House counsel Harriet Miers to the upreme Court.
In Revival, 'South Pacific' Still Has Lessons to Teach
The 1949 musical is getting its first Broadway remount, and its creative team says the story — about culture, life in wartime and the impact of American power abroad — resonates as profoundly as ever.
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•
0:00
Rudresh Mahanthappa: South Asian Jazz
Alto saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa, son of Indian immigrants, says he didn't think about his ethnic identity growing up. But on his new album Kinsmen, he and other like-minded South Asian American jazz musicians, fuse American jazz with a global sound that embraces the music of India.
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0:00
The partisan divide can undermine Americans' health, researchers say
Health researchers say the political divide is impacting Americans' health. A new study shows there is a growing life expectancy gap between Democratic and Republican counties.
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•
6:14
Ukrainian officials refuse to surrender Mariupol to Russian forces
Russian forces have shown few signs of advancing but are still actively destroying Ukraine. In the southern city of Mariupol, bombs targeted a school which was sheltering about 400 displaced people.
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•
5:58
Fast, the easy checkout startup with a hub in Tampa, shuts down after burning through investors' money
The startup received more than $120 million from venture capitalists in Silicon Valley and the support of Stripe, yet questions remained about its flamboyant CEO's business decisions and past deals.
More States Turning To Toll Roads To Raise Cash For Infrastructure
Tight budgets and shrinking infrastructure money from Washington have more states hiking tolls and adding tollways to raise money to fix and repair roads and bridges.
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•
4:48
French Filmmaker Remakes an American Flop
A French remake of an American movie is rare. Usually, it's the other way around. The new French film The Beat That My Heart Skipped is even more remarkable because it's not a remake of a hit.
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0:00
Black Students Gather At Harvard To Watch 'Dear White People'
Dear White People follows the stories of four black students at a prestigious, majority white college, where racial tensions are threatening to bring chaos to the campus.
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5:21
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