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Growing Up With Guns
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2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
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In Orlando, a mountain of coal ash evades EPA rules. It's not the only one.
Environmentalists want Biden's Environmental Protection Agency to aggressively regulate huge piles of toxic coal ash across the nation. The waste has polluted groundwater in 39 states.
'Is this what it had to be?'
In 2005, Kim Osorio sued The Source for gender discrimination, sexual harassment and hostile work environment, retaliation, defamation. Responses to the case reinforced hip-hop's culture of silence.
Why would a musician join OnlyFans? Because making a living is only getting harder
In a volatile music industry, some musicians are gravitating towards OnlyFans, a social media platform that has garnered a reputation for hosting sexual content.
Heads Of Amazon, Apple, Facebook And Google Testify On Big Tech's Power
The CEOs tell Congress that the giant American tech companies do not stifle competition, saying the concern that too much power is concentrated in too few companies is unfounded.
Remembering NBA legend Bill Russell
Russell, who died July 31, led the Boston Celtics to 11 NBA titles. He was also the first Black head coach in the NBA and a civil rights activist. Originally broadcast in 2001.
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•
19:51
Doctors try to explain long COVID. Why don't we know more about it?
There's still not a lot of data available as to why some people get long COVID and others don't.
Her state bans gender-affirming care for teenagers. So she travels 450 miles for it
An estimated 110,000 trans teenagers live in states that ban gender-affirming care for minors. Some travel huge distances every few months to keep getting their treatment out-of-state.
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•
8:16
Diary Of A Saudi Girl: Karate Lover, Science Nerd ... Bride?
For two years, Majd Abdulghani kept a journal during a crossroads in her life: Should she get married or keep studying? Or can she do both?
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•
22:22
50 years ago, teenagers partied in the Bronx — and gave rise to hip-hop
In August 1973, an 18-year-old DJ Kool Herc played his sister's back-to-school fundraiser in the rec room of their apartment building. But he and his friends sparked something much bigger.
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•
11:21
Emails Offer Window Into The Failed Trump Tower Tampa
In November 2007, The Wall Street Journal infuriated Donald Trump with an article that dissected his recent real estate setbacks. Headlined “Stalled Condo…
The 50 Best Albums Of 2017
Consensus wasn't easy to come by in 2017, but the best albums of the year were bolts of clarity, sonic companions for joy, grief and redemption, for battles hard won and for reckonings still to come.
NPR's Movie Preview: 15 New Films To Watch — And Watch Out For — This Fall
From the big studio flicks to the festival favorites, here are some of the best and otherwise noteworthy films coming to theaters.
What to expect in Biden's Oval Office address about the debt ceiling deal
President Biden delivers the first Oval Office address of his presidency. It comes a day after Congress passed a bipartisan deal to lift the debt ceiling, narrowly avoiding the deadline.
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•
12:45
The Capital Gazette: What The Newsroom Looks Like 2 Years After Shooting
In 2018, a gunman killed five staff members of the Capital Gazette after blasting his way into their Annapolis, Md., offices. The remaining staff has seen both traumas and triumphs in the years since.
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•
22:25
As he leaves the Marines, a Navy Cross recipient finds purpose through tragedy
This Veterans Day will be Nick Jones' first day as a civilian upon leaving the Marine Corps. Forced to leave the military after he was wounded in combat, he struggled with what to do next.
On #dementia TikTok, family caregivers find support and bring the disease to light
On TikTok, the hashtag "dementia" has 3 billion views. Caregivers of people with Alzheimer's and other dementias have been using the site to swap tips and share the burdens of life with dementia.
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•
11:36
5 years after Parkland, families cope through good works
After the shooting, their families were left wondering how they could go on with their lives while honoring our loved one’s memory. Most have answered by starting foundations or performing other charitable work.
Medically Unnecessary: Florida holds key to better coverage for disabled kids. Why hasn’t it helped?
Last of a four-part series: Legislators passed a public health insurance expansion that would help poor and disabled children get better coverage over a year ago, but funds remain unused.
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•
7:00
Conozca a su vecino musical: Fernando Traba de la Orquesta de Sarasota
Susan Giles Wantuck, de WSMR, conversó con Traba el pasado noviembre. Se conocieron hace varios años durante una interpretación de "Pedro y el lobo" con Sarasota Música Viva.
Read President Trump's 2025 address to a joint session of Congress
Read President Trump's address to a joint session of Congress delivered on March 4.
'House of the Dragon' episode 9: In King's Landing, a king's missing
In the ninth episode of HBO's Game of Thrones spin-off, usurpation, consternation and coronation. Plus an extended round of Where's Aegon?
What The 1918 Flu Pandemic Can Tell Us About The COVID-19 Crisis
John Barry, author of the 2004 book, The Great Influenza, draws parallels between today's pandemic and the flu of 1918. In both cases, he says, "the outbreak was trivialized for a long time."
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•
25:46
Trump says the U.S. is in a 'period of transition' — and more takeaways from this week
This week, President Trump continued to threaten tariffs as DOGE continued its cuts of the federal workforce. It was another consequential and news-packed week in Trump's presidency.
States send kids to foster care and their parents the bill — often one too big to pay
In every state, governments charge parents for the cost of foster care when children are taken away. When that happens, NPR found, poor parents can't make ends meet, so families are kept apart longer.
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•
12:05
Indian Affairs Promised To Reform Tribal Jails. We Found Death, Neglect And Disrepair
At least 19 people have died since 2016 in tribal detention centers overseen by Indian Affairs, our investigation found. Several died after correctional officers failed to provide proper medical care.
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