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The Zest Podcast
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Morning Edition
All Things Considered
More
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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
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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Subscribe to our Newsletters
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Google Preferred News Source
Contact BBC and NPR
WUSF Rebrand
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How women over 30 are rewriting the single mom narrative in America
Forty percent of babies in the U.S. are born to unmarried mothers. Increasingly, those moms are over 30, at a time when teen pregnancy has fallen off a cliff and births are declining for younger women.
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•
6:46
Some Hospitals Fail To Separate COVID-19 Patients, Putting Others At Risk
Nurses say COVID-19 patients have sometimes been housed in the same units as uninfected patients. While officials have penalized nursing homes for such failures, hospitals have seen less scrutiny.
Judith Warner's New Book On Middle School Suggests It Doesn't Have To Be All Bad
The author of And Then They Stopped Talking To Me tells NPR, "I expected middle schoolers to be these sorts of monsters. And they weren't. They were just kids."
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•
7:07
Where are the students? For a second straight year, school enrollment is dropping
The declines many school districts reported last year have continued, an NPR investigation finds. What educators don't know is where those students have gone.
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•
4:55
A guide to COVID tests: When to test, what kind to use and what your results mean
We answer key questions about COVID tests: What types are there? Should you self-test right after exposure to someone with COVID? And what should you do if you test positive?
A Father, A Husband, An Immigrant: Detained And Facing Deportation
Manuel came to the U.S. illegally two decades ago, one of 143,470 such people who were arrested in the country's interior last year. Most are ordered to leave. For six months, Manuel awaited his fate.
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•
18:55
At 18 weeks pregnant, she faced an immense decision with just days to make it
About halfway into her pregnancy, Karla found out her fetus had a severe genetic anomaly. As she grappled with an uncertain prognosis, she was up against North Carolina's 20-week abortion limit.
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•
11:11
Teaching Podcasting: A Curriculum Guide for Educators
Guidance on planning classroom instruction.
2022 in photos: NPR station photographers share memorable moments
As we wrap up this year, we look back at an eventful year through the lenses of NPR member and affiliate stations. We asked photographers to share memorable events they covered throughout 2022.
How 'A Star Is Born' Became One Of Judy Garland's 'Biggest Heartbreaks'
Judy Garland's daughter Lorna Luft talks about what her mother went through while making the 1954 film. The movie was produced by Sid Luft, who was Lorna's father and Garland's husband at the time.
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•
18:35
Chronicles Of A Venezuelan Exodus: More Families Flee The Crisis On Foot Every Day
An All Things Considered team recently traveled along a common Colombian route taken by Venezuelans fleeing crisis in their country and discovered dramatic stories of an expanding exodus.
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•
11:23
How Bogotá cares for its family caregivers: From dance classes to job training
More than a million women in Bogotá, Colombia, do unpaid family caregiver work full-time. The country has launched a groundbreaking program called "Care Blocks" to ease their burden.
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•
6:05
A tiny deer and rising seas: How far should people go to save an endangered species?
The Key deer is losing the only place it lives, raising uncomfortable questions for the people tasked with keeping endangered species alive.
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•
7:03
From Trump's comments to climate change: What it's like to cover Greenland
In this series, NPR takes readers and listeners behind the news and explains how we do our journalism. Here, Juana Summers describes what she — and a team from All Things Considered — encountered on a reporting trip to this island of snow and ice, for this week's Reporter's Notebook.
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•
9:52
Air traffic controllers say a push to modernize equipment won't fix deeper problems
Former and current U.S. air traffic controllers say the Trump administration's focus on new equipment doesn't address problems like grueling schedules and stagnating pay that are hurting morale.
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•
6:57
PolitiFact FL: Trump officials say ICE has higher detention standards than prisons. Is that true?
ICE detention standards are difficult to enforce because they aren't written into law. Rather than follow a uniform standard, detention centers operate under a patchwork of different standards.
What happens when your partner has an overnight political conversion?
A California couple's relationship was upended when one partner found a whole new set of beliefs after an overnight video binge. Four years later, they're still navigating how to talk about politics.
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•
7:01
He's 14. He loves soccer. He's the sole caregiver for his little twin brothers
Mahamat Djouma is one of the millions displaced by the civil war in Sudan. He is part of an especially vulnerable group — unaccompanied minors. Here is his story.
PolitiFact FL: Trump is vowing to overturn birthright citizenship. Can he do it?
Legal experts say it’s possible, but they add that the quest to overturn birthright citizenship would face high hurdles, even for a Supreme Court that has sided with Trump on other issues.
Did the unitary executive theory pave the way for President Trump's second term?
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•
16:03
DOGE's effort to slash government is now coming for buildings and people who run them
The federal government is preparing to shed up to a quarter of its 360 million square feet of real estate, an NPR analysis finds. The agency in charge of federal real estate is also slashing staff.
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•
3:40
The 10 Best Classical Albums of 2022
Discover a broad spectrum of this year's most compelling classical music, from booby-trapped string quartets and chilled-out piano to full-throttle percussion, electric guitars and high-flying vocals.
Trump makes the Epstein files public. Here's a timeline of his shifting stance
President Trump has signed off on the release of the Epstein files, after months of resistance and days after an abrupt about-face. Here's how his messaging has evolved since taking office.
ICE deployments created chaos for cities and cost them millions, NPR analysis finds
Local leaders report already-strapped police departments racked up overtime bills in the millions while others report a multi-million dollar hit to business during the worst ICE surges.
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•
3:56
A writer lost his singing voice, then discovered the gymnastics of speech
John Colapinto developed a vocal polyp when he began "wailing" with a rock group without proper warmup. He talks about the frailty and feats of the human voice. Originally broadcast Jan. 26, 2021.
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