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The Florida Roundup
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Morning Edition
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More
Your Florida
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2026 Florida Legislature
2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
Your Florida
Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Florida Legislature
2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
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About Us
Our Mission
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Social Media Commenting Policy
Meet the Staff
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WUSF Rebrand
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From 'Saturday Night' to 'Sunday Night,' Dick Ebersol looks back on 40 years in TV
If you have an unforgettable live TV moment, chances are Dick Ebersol was involved. The TV executive looks back on an incredible 40-year broadcasting career.
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•
8:01
Mystery at Mar-a-Lago: What were FBI agents looking for and what are the consequences?
A federal search warrant like the kind carried out at the home of former President Donald Trump would require detailed evidence and sign-off at the highest levels of the DOJ, legal experts said.
Illyanna Maisonet's new cookbook reflects the diversity of the Puerto Rican diaspora
Her book, out Oct. 18, is a memoir, cookbook and retelling of Puerto Rican history. It's also a testament to her life's work of documenting and preserving the food of the Puerto Rican diaspora.
A majority of Americans see an 'invasion' at the southern border, NPR poll finds
A new NPR/Ipsos poll shows that half of Americans say there's an "invasion" at the southern border. And that false and misleading claims about migrants are taking hold, particularly with Republicans.
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•
3:37
Is there enough monkeypox vaccine to go around? Maybe yes, more likely no
Only one company makes the currently used monkeypox vaccine. Supply is limited in wealthy nations like the U.S. Less well-off nations, like Nigeria, where the outbreak began, have no vaccines at all.
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•
3:38
Looking Back On 50 Years Of Busing In Boston
For 50 years, Boston has been busing kids to force desegregation. Audie Cornish, who was part of the program as a kid, travels back to Boston to check on its effectiveness all these years later.
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•
11:16
90 Days To Start A New Life: For Refugees In The U.S., What Happens Next?
To help make refugees feel at home, one woman in Charlottesville created an organization where volunteers become neighbors and, ultimately, friends.
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•
5:40
How A Proposal To Reduce Flood Risk In Ellicott City Nearly Destroyed The Community
Climate change is causing more rain and flooding in towns across America. We go back to a town where a proposal to tear down historic buildings to reduce flood risk nearly destroyed the community.
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•
8:15
'Who Killed Daphne' podcast seeks answers and justice for Daphne Caruana Galizia
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks to Stephen Grey, the host of Who Killed Daphne. The podcast investigates the 2017 death of journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia, who was killed in a car bomb in Malta.
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•
8:15
A floating abortion clinic is in the planning stage, and people are already on board
Dr. Meg Autry is raising money to buy and retrofit a vessel that would operate as a reproductive health clinic in federal waters off the Gulf of Mexico, providing services including surgical abortion.
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•
6:50
Here's what Elon Musk will likely do with Twitter if he buys it
Musk says he'd loosen rules against spreading misinformation, allow former President Donald Trump back on Twitter, shake up the company's business model and find new revenue sources.
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•
3:48
On Eve Of Election, Montana GOP Candidate Charged With Assault On Reporter
Greg Gianforte's campaign claimed The Guardian's Ben Jacobs was the aggressor and knocked both men down, but an audio recording and witnesses suggested otherwise, and authorities cited Gianforte.
These 21 House members didn't vote for Kevin McCarthy. Here's what they want
McCarthy is still short of the votes he needs to be speaker, and it's because of a staunch, anti-establishment, intransigent far-right group that wants government to do a lot less.
The House last struggled to elect a speaker 100 years ago. Here's what happened
Both Kevin McCarthy and the nominee for speaker a century ago represented a party establishment regarded with hostility by a potent faction of the party. They became the embodiment of its grievances.
There is a myth about mass migration to Europe. But some people do risk it all
The challenges facing Africa are real, but depending on who you talk to, the solution is either to risk it all for a better life in Europe or stay on the continent and fight for a better future there.
Retired Pope Benedict XVI dies at 95
He is remembered as a staunch conservative who opposed modernizing reforms and as the first pope to step down since the 15th century.
How Bangladesh went from an economic miracle to needing IMF help
Millions emerged from poverty in recent decades. But now, rising fuel prices, weak exports and scant remittances are sabotaging growth, and Bangladesh asked the IMF for $4.5 billion in loans.
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•
4:19
Whatever happened to the 'No Sex for Fish' women after the flood? Hint: It's 'amazing'
That's what a charity worker said of their latest plan. The Kenyan fishmongers got their own boats to escape pressure to trade sex for fish to sell. Then floods wiped them out. Now there's new hope.
What to know about World Cup 2022 — and U.S. team's chances to win the championship
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Roger Bennett, founder of the Men in Blazers media network, on the soccer tournament.
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•
9:20
Teyana Taylor stars in a movie about motherhood and life in a changing New York City
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with actress and singer Teyana Taylor about the new film A Thousand and One, which follows a woman and her son's story for more than a decade.
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•
7:37
3 Reasons We Care About Politicians' Taxes
Knowing everything there is to know about someone's financials is intrusive. So how did the tradition start — and why do we care?
Activists thirst for a national heat standard to protect outdoor workers
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has taken steps that effectively eliminate mandated water breaks for construction workers. In response, protesters came to Washington, D.C., to press for federal protections.
Why the Supreme Court decision on affirmative action matters
Only a small portion of U.S. colleges have selective admissions, where race-conscious admissions can make a difference in who gets in. But the impacts of banning affirmative action are far wider.
'Russians Among Us' Author On Actual Russian Spycraft
It's not a lost episode of The Americans — Russians Among Us dives into the very real, decades-long Russian spy campaign in the U.S. NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with author Gordon Corera.
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•
8:06
5 questions ahead of the first GOP primary debate of the 2024 election cycle
The first Republican primary debate, in Milwaukee on Wednesday, will give many Americans the first chance to hear from the GOP presidential candidates, but the party's frontrunner won't be there.
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