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Defending The Everglades. Again.
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
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WUSF Rebrand
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Constituent Services Give Voters Something To Remember
If played just right, members of Congress can see a political payoff from simply doing their jobs and helping out voters who elected them. It's one reason incumbents fare well come Election Day.
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•
4:09
The Share Of U.S. Adults Willing To Get Vaccinated Ticks Up, A New Poll Finds
The NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist survey finds 19% of adults say they won't get vaccinated. That's down 5 points from the month prior, coinciding with the delta surge and FDA approval of the Pfizer vaccine.
The Learning Curve Of Lil Nas X
Lil Nas X is breaking Billboard records and barriers through his music — the pop-rap star joins All Things Considered to discuss his debut album Montero.
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•
8:00
BTS Spoke At The UNGA. And That's Not The Only Surprise At The U.N. Event
The appearance of the popular boy band from South Korea is one of many unexpected moments at the U.N. General Assembly — everything from a U.N. TikTok to a groundbreaking food summit.
After Hurricane Ida Failures, Calls Grow For A Probe Into New Orleans' Power Company
Utility company Entergy failed to provide power for a million people after Hurricane Ida ripped through New Orleans. A new NPR-ProPublica joint investigation examines why.
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•
6:02
'Stronger Than The Truth' Circles Back To Reba McEntire's Own Strengths
The country legend's new album returns to some of her commercial roots, telling stories of domestic betrayal in grand yet thoroughly grounded fashion.
From The Bronx To Cable Stardom, Desus And Mero Are Remaking Late-Night
In the crowded field of late-night talk show hosts, the comedy duo of Desus and Mero are unlike any other, with an irreverent comedy style anchored in their Bronx upbringing.
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•
7:59
Fiona Hill explores why it's tough to get ahead in 'There Is Nothing For You Here'
Fiona Hill had a star turn in front of Congress during Trump's first impeachment inquiry. Now she examines why opportunities are fleeting and how it affects the country's social and political fabric.
Could Florida erase the federal grants awarded to cover defiant districts' penalties? A decision may come soon
Two districts revised mask mandates to allow parental opt-outs, but others aren't backing down. Education Commission Richard Corcoran has now suggested pulling funds equal to federal grants awarded to cover the penalties of noncompliant boards.
Illuminati Hotties Dares You To Laugh
Let Me Do One More, the latest from songwriter, engineer and producer Sarah Tudzin, is proof that ambition doesn't have to be serious and that moments of vulnerability can also make for hooky rippers.
Schiff's book explains how Trump's first impeachment altered the political landscape
NPR's Michel Martin talks to Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff about his new book: Midnight in Washington: How We Almost Lost Our Democracy and Still Could.
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•
7:02
Among the country's supply chain problems? Bottlenecking at ports like Long Beach
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Mario Cordero, the executive director for the Port of Long Beach, about the bottleneck at ports.
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•
5:12
CDC Tells The Vaccinated To Mask Up In Some Settings. Our Questionnaire Can Guide You
The CDC has reversed its position that vaccinated people no longer need masks and recommends masking up again in certain settings. Does that mean grocery stores? What about roller coasters?
Biden Hopes To Boost COVID Vaccination Rates By Focusing On Federal Workers
The federal workforce is one group President Biden can more directly influence. Under new rules, workers will need to get vaccinated or wear a mask and get tested regularly.
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•
4:09
New clues to the biology of long COVID are starting to emerge
Scientists have begun to find abnormalities in the immune systems of some long-COVID patients that might help explain the syndrome, at least in some people. But there is still much more to learn.
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•
6:17
What is and isn't in Biden's infrastructure framework — and where it goes from here
President Biden outlined a framework that he said would win support from all 50 Senate Democrats and pass the House. But it's unclear whether that is true.
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•
5:29
4 of the biggest archaeological advancements of 2021 — including one 'game changer'
We spoke to four archaeologists of different specialties, who told us what they thought were some of the most important developments in their field in 2021.
Why the most powerful space telescope ever needs to be kept really, really cold
The James Webb Space Telescope will give a glimpse of the earliest galaxies formed after the Big Bang — but only if the telescope is kept frigid. That's why there's a tennis court-sized sunshield.
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•
4:34
Growing Demand For Wilderness Education May Widen Learning Inequality
Parents desperate to get their kids outdoors and offline are choosing wilderness schools for their kids, but poor, urban kids are missing out. Educators in Kingston, N.Y., are trying to change that.
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•
4:24
Why airlines aim to train more women and people of color to become pilots
Commercial airline pilots are overwhelmingly white and male. Amid a need for pilots, the industry is stepping up efforts to recruit more women and people of color to become pilots.
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•
5:24
AirTags are being used to track people and cars. Here's what is being done about it
Apple's AirTags were billed as an easy way to track your keys and wallet, but now the small button-sized device are being used by stalkers and thieves to track people and steal cars.
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•
2:20
Republicans are proposing vote-by-mail changes that critics say is a 'recipe for disaster'
Voting-rights advocates say “secrecy” envelopes would make it harder for Floridians to cast their ballots.
From 'Radio Diaries,' an Oral History of the WASPs
In the early 1940s when the Army Air Force faced a shortage of pilots, it launched an experimental program to train new ones — the Women Airforce Service Pilots.
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•
22:07
A China affairs correspondent's long road to get back to 'zero-COVID' China
NPR's China affairs correspondent, details his two-year-long saga to return to his beat in Shanghai amid strict COVID-19 protocols.
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•
5:27
French President Emmanuel Macron beats his far-right rival to win reelection
The French election was a tight race that was overshadowed by the war in Ukraine and saw a surge in support for extremist ideas.
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