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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
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Florida And Climate Change
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
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Public Health Experts Encourage Social Distancing To 'Flatten The Curve' Of Infection
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Drew Harris, population health expert at Thomas Jefferson University, about what it means to "flatten the curve" when it comes to curbing the spread of coronavirus.
Listen
•
4:32
Republican strategist talks about what the future holds for the GOP
Morning Edition host Leila Fadel asks GOP strategist Alex Conant about the future of the Republican party in 2026 and beyond.
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•
4:34
Oyster farmer and veteran Graham Platner hopes his message lands with Maine voters
In Maine, oyster farmer and military veteran Graham Platner has become something of a phenomenon in his bid to topple Republican Sen. Susan Collins in next year's midterm election.
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•
4:35
Iran rebuilding after U.S. strikes on nuclear facilities, report says
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Joseph Rodgers, the author of a report on Iran's development of nuclear weapons. Rodgers says satellite images indicate activity has resumed after the U.S. strikes on nuclear facilities in Iran.
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•
4:52
Plastic surgeons say transgender youth should wait until age 19 for surgery
The American Society of Plastic Surgeons says transgender youth should wait until age 19 to have any surgeries. Surgery is already rarely performed for transgender young people.
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•
4:38
Trump says more American troops will 'likely' die in war against Iran
President Trump in a video address posted online lays out few details about the U.S.'s objectives in its war with Iran, but says more U.S. service members may die before the conflict is over.
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•
4:06
Son of 'Jaws' star offers behind-the-scenes look at filming in stage production
"The Shark Is Broken," performed by Jobsite Theater and playing at the Straz, was co-written by Ian Shaw, son of late actor Robert Shaw, who played Quint in the 1975 blockbuster film.
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•
1:12
How Suda51 became one the most memorable video game creators
Video game director Goichi Suda, also known as Suda51, has a subversive and genre-bending style that has made his work stand out among gaming fans for more than three decades.
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•
4:16
Trump, Netanyahu meet over ceasefire. And, Russia accuses Ukraine of attempted strike
Conditions are dire for people in Gaza as President Trump and Israel's prime minister discuss the next phase of the ceasefire deal. And, Russia accuses Ukraine of an attempted drone strike.
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•
14:14
A 'college for all' push thrived in New Orleans after Katrina. It wasn't for everyone
After Hurricane Katrina, many New Orleans charter schools united in a mission to send more students to college. Today, some of those students, now adults, wish they'd been given more options.
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•
7:22
Karen Read's high-drama murder trial ended with a hung jury. Here's what to know
Read is accused of killing her boyfriend, but alleges a cover-up by his fellow cops. The high-drama case ended in a mistrial and with the lead investigator dismissed. Prosecutors now plan to retry it.
How did racist mass texts bypass some anti-spam guardrails after the election?
Americans across the country received harmful hate messages via text after the election. The communication industry has been trying to figure out how it happened.
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•
6:09
In Memoriam 2025: The Musicians We Lost
D'Angelo. Brian Wilson. Sly Stone. We lost these greats and so many more in 2025 — singers, producers, conductors and writers whose departures gave us a pang of loss, but whose art still lifts us up.
Tens of thousands remain without power after earthquake in California
Tens of thousands of homes and businesses along the Northern California coast remained without power Tuesday evening, nearly a day after a powerful quake jolted people and shook homes off foundations.
New charges against Trump are similar to House panel's findings, Rep. Schiff says
NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff of California, member of the House Jan. 6 committee, about felony charges facing Donald Trump related to efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
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•
7:20
Darrin Bell's graphic memoir 'The Talk' references a shared experience among Black parents
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial Darrin Bell about his graphic memoir, "The Talk." The title refers to talks about racism Black parents often give their kids.
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•
7:07
The Supreme Court will consider Trump's immunity from criminal prosecution
NPR's Scott Simon speaks to University of Texas law professor Steven Vladeck about the cases former President Trump has before the U.S. Supreme Court and the ethics questions raised over them.
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•
6:54
The death rate for children has dropped dramatically. Yet there's cause for alarm
A new report confirms a deep decrease in the world's childhood death rate. But it takes note of what the authors call an "astronomically high" rate of death after hospitalization.
Flushable wipes and Iran: Water treatment facility adds cyberattacks to worry list
Water treatment workers are grappling with how to protect against a new threat: hackers burrowing into the system and wreaking havoc.
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•
5:29
Before The South Had Something To Say: How A Region Discovered Its Voice
In the early 1990s, you might not think rappers from Atlanta had much in common with rappers from New Orleans or Miami. So when and how did "Southern hip-hop" get to be recognized as an entity?
'Door To Door' Reveals The Magnificent — And Maddening — Story of Traffic
Edward Humes describes his new book as a "transportation detective story" that chronicles the hidden characters, locations and machinery driving our same-day-delivery, traffic-packed world.
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•
19:31
Nicole Bambach
Nicole Bambach
Nicole Bambach is a WUSF Zimmerman School Digital News Reporter for the spring of 2018, she is also serving as a News Staff Writer at The Oracle since the fall of 2017.
News brief: NPR Poll on delta surge, Jon Gruden's emails, espionage case
The surge pushed Americans further behind. Las Vegas Raiders coach resigns after reports he used derogatory language. Ex-Navy engineer and his wife are accused of trying to sell submarine secrets.
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•
10:59
A band, a brand, a spectacle, a Sphere
U2 could sell out stadiums across the globe, but it would have been business as usual. At its Las Vegas residency, the band harnesses its superpower: relentless earnestness.
Life is chaotic. White noise streams can help you tune out (and fall asleep)
White noise streams are a kind of sonic wallpaper. For many, they help keep some parts of the brain distracted so that other parts may better focus on things, like writing, studying or sleeping.
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6:55
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