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The Zest Podcast
The Florida Roundup
Our Changing State
Morning Edition
All Things Considered
More
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2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
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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How Rape Affects Memory And The Brain, And Why More Police Need To Know About This
How a sexual assault survivor is questioned by police can greatly influence the ability to access memories of that traumatic incident. Better interview techniques might help solve more cases.
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•
5:44
News Brief: Panjshir Province, Pakistan's View Of Taliban Takeover, Jobless Benefits
The Taliban say they've taken control of the last holdout of anti-Taliban forces in Afghanistan. Twenty years after the 9/11 attacks, the view from Pakistan. It's Labor Day, but many are jobless.
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•
11:10
After A Slow Start, Florida's Hispanic COVID-19 Vaccination Rates Surpass Non-Hispanics
Despite a wide variety of challenges from job loss to distrust of the establishment, the success the Hispanic community has seen could help other communities tackle vaccine hesitancy.
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•
8:36
Morning News Brief
President Biden announced new vaccine mandates for employers. The Justice Department sues Texas over its abortion ban. And, a look at the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.
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•
11:22
Scientists Examine Kids’ Unique Immune Systems As More Fall Victim To COVID
Doctors are trying to figure out why some kids become much sicker than others and, in rare cases, don’t survive.
How Some Schools Are Using Weekly Testing To Keep Kids In Class — And COVID Out
Many K-12 school districts are tapping federal funds to pay for regular surveillance testing of students. It's an effective pandemic tactic when used alongside mask-wearing and other precautions.
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•
4:23
News Brief: Funding Bill Blocked, R. Kelly's Conviction, Murder Rate Surges
GOP senators blocked a government funding bill in a battle over the debt limit. R. Kelly is found guilty of racketeering and sex trafficking. The FBI reports an unprecedented spike in murders in 2020.
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•
10:50
1 In 7 People Are 'Some Other Race' On The U.S. Census. That's A Big Data Problem
Growing numbers of Latinos turned a mysterious census category into the country's second-largest racial group. Researchers say that makes it harder to address racial inequities over the next decade.
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•
4:15
What's next for Louisiana's LaPlace Parish residents after weathering repeated storms
Residents of LaPlace in Louisiana have stayed hurricane after hurricane due to their deep ties to their community. State and federal officials are trying to deal with the area's repeated devastation.
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•
10:42
News Brief: Infrastructure Vote, Bootleg Fire, Olympics' COVID Concerns
A bipartisan infrastructure bill faces a crucial test in the Senate. Dry, windy conditions fuel Oregon's Bootleg Fire. The Tokyo Olympics, which begin this week, are different because of COVID-19.
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•
11:15
News Brief: COVID Surge And The Unvaccinated, German Floods, DACA Ruling
The delta variant is sparking concerns of a new COVID-19 wave in the U.S. Historic flooding devastates parts of West Germany. And, a federal judge ruled last week that the DACA program is illegal.
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•
11:12
Rodrigo Amarante And His Great Musical Tantrum
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks to musician Rodrigo Amarante about his second solo album, Drama, which he says was inspired by a personal reckoning with his own understanding of manhood.
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•
8:01
'Succession' recap, Season 3, Episode 4: Can Kendall and Logan put on a good show?
Kendall and Logan are forced into an uncomfortable meeting with an investor, while Roman and Shiv continue to maneuver and Tom tries to come to terms with prison.
A Look At The Spread Of Coronavirus
NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro and Global Health Correspondent Nurith Aizenman talks to Dr. Bruce Aylward of the World Health Organization about the spread of the coronavirus.
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•
11:16
Portrait Of A Parent With Alzheimer's
Since 2016, journalist Yvonne Latty has been documenting her mother's journey with Alzheimer's. As part of a collaboration with Latino USA and Black Public Media, she brings us this intimate portrait.
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•
12:16
Here are Bob Mondello's picks for the year's best 10 films
In a year when many films didn't even open in theaters, there were still plenty worth talking about. NPR film critic Bob Mondello celebrates the best of 2021.
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•
8:05
At-Home Beauty Experiments With Jonathan Van Ness
Beauty guru Jonathan Van Ness, from Netflix's Queer Eye, talks with NPR's Michel Martin about at-home beauty tips to try during self-isolation.
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•
8:32
Read Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds' Republican response to the State of the Union
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds delivers the Republican response to President Biden's first State of the Union address.
Cosby's legacy is a third rail conversation we need to have. W. Kamau Bell is ready
Bell's new Showtime documentary grapples with Bill Cosby's tainted legacy and his larger betrayal of the Black community. "It's just like: Why? Why do you have to be this guy?" Bell says.
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•
43:51
Black Voices Missing on Madison Avenue
Ed Gordon examines the lack of black Americans in the advertising industry, and how that affects success in marketing to black communities. Gordon talks with Allen Pugh, executive vice-president of the advertising agency Globalhue, and Ken Smikle, founder and president of Target Market News.
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•
0:00
News brief: Mariupol latest, Biden's Asia visit, DHS Disinformation Board
Concerns mount over Ukrainian soldiers from Mariupol in Russian hands. Joe Biden makes his first presidential trip to Asia. A disinformation expert leaves her post heading a new government board.
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•
11:15
What the DeLay Case Means
E.J. Dionne, a columnist for The Washington Post and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, and David Brooks, columnist for The New York Times discuss Rep. Tom DeLay's indictment by a Texas grand jury with conspiracy in a campaign finance scheme. He is temporarily stepping down from his post of House majority leader.
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•
0:00
A Former President Warns of 'Endangered Values'
Blurring the line between church and state threatens civil liberties and privacy, says former president Jimmy Carter. That's the case he makes in his new book, Our Endangered Values: America's Moral Crisis.
Karl Rove, the President's 'Boy Genius'
The news that Karl Rove will not be prosecuted in the CIA leak investigation ends months of speculation surrounding the man known as the 'architect' or 'boy genius' for his successful management of President Bush's campaigns -- and for crafting a presidential grand strategy for conservatism in the 21st century.
These are the summer movies NPR critics are looking forward to
The Bob's Burgers Movie, Jordan Peele's Nope, and Fire Island with Bowen Yang and Joel Kim Booster are all on our critics' lists.
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