NPR and WBUR's live midday news program.
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Radically empathic advice. Produced by WBUR.
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Hosted by Meghna Chakrabarti, On Point is a unique, curiosity-driven combination of original reporting, newsmaker interviews, first-person stories, and in-depth analysis, making the world more intelligible and humane. When the world is more complicated than ever, we aim to make sense of it together. On Point is produced by WBUR.
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Hosts Ben Brock Johnson and Amory Sivertson dig into the internet's vast and curious ecosystem of online communities to find untold histories, unsolved mysteries, and other jaw-dropping stories online and IRL.
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Greater Boston’s weekly podcast where news and culture meet.
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The news you need to know today — and the stories that will stick with you tomorrow. Plus, special series and behind-the-scenes extras from Here & Now hosts Robin Young, Scott Tong and Deepa Fernandes with help from Producer Chris Bentley and the team at NPR and WBUR.
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Stories and commentaries that inform, challenge and occasionally amuse.
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News, interviews, commentaries, reviews and offbeat features.
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A lot happens in Boston every day. To help you keep up, WBUR, Boston's NPR News station, pulled these stories together just for you.
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Created and produced by parents of young children, WBUR's Circle Round adapts carefully-selected folktales from around the world into sound- and music-rich radio plays for kids ages 3-103. Each 15 to 25-minute episode explores important issues like kindness, persistence and generosity. And each episode ends with an activity that inspires a deeper conversation between children and grown-ups.
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Hosted by Meghna Chakrabarti, On Point is a unique, curiosity-driven combination of original reporting, newsmaker interviews, first-person stories, and in-depth analysis, making the world more intelligible and humane. When the world is more complicated than ever, we aim to make sense of it together. On Point is produced by WBUR.
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For 20 years, the Modern Love column has given New York Times readers a glimpse into the complicated love lives of real people. Since its start, the column has evolved into a TV show, three books and a podcast. Each week, host Anna Martin brings you stories and conversations about love in all its glorious permutations, dumb pitfalls and life-changing moments. New episodes every Wednesday. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subsc ...
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Maria GarcÃa combines rigorous reporting with impassioned storytelling to honor Selena Quintanilla's life and legacy. She also explores the indelible mark she left on Latino identity and belonging, whether it’s fatherhood, big-butt politics, and the fraught relationship with whiteness and language. Anything for Selena has been named an Apple Podcasts Series Essential.
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The best long-form audio series from WBUR, Boston's NPR, all in one feed.
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WBUR's reintroducing you to Endless Thread's 2020 series, "Madness," that unraveled the shocking story of forced brainwashing and the murky history of CIA-funded mind-control experiments. This feed is the home of Beyond All Repair, WBUR & ZSP Media's 10-part true crime investigative series as well as Violation, a podcast from WBUR & The Marshall Project, exploring America’s opaque parole system.
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Season 4: "Postmortem" is about the stolen bodies of Harvard and the gray market for human remains. Find out what happened at Harvard Medical School: how body parts were stolen and sold across the country. Who did this and why?
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Provocative stories and authentic voices from around Boston.
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Kind World is a show about how a single act of kindness can change someone's life. In each episode, hosts and reporters Yasmin Amer and Andrea Asuaje search the world for good news stories that will restore your faith in humanity. A production of WBUR.
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An exploration of the life that happens before, behind, and beyond the spotlight. Host Geoff Edgers paints intimate, sound-rich, and surprising portraits of some of the most creative people in the world. The first season includes: Norm Macdonald, Ava Duvernay, Ms. Pat, Hanson and David Letterman. A collaboration between WBUR and The Washington Post.
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A public radio series about sound, music, and listening. From WBUR, Boston's NPR News Station.
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Commentaries on music from NPR's Here and Now and elsewhere... Author Tim Riley has written books on the Beatles, Bob Dylan, and Madonna, and his most recent title is FEVER: HOW ROCK'N'ROLL TRANSFORMED GENDER IN AMERICA (Picador 2005). He is at work on a major new biography of John Lennon for W.W. Norton slated for 2009. His music commentary is featured regularly on NPR's HERE AND NOW, the nationally-syndicated show produced weekdays out of WBUR-FM in Boston.
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A four minute weekly radio comic strip. ...It's what Steve Inskeep and Renee Montagne might be hotly debating as they walk into the studio -- just before they get on mic. This short radiostrip plays out in the kitchen of 11 Central Ave, the home of an extended family where a hodgepodge of other characters regularly drops in.As they rush around in the morning drinking coffee, reading the paper, looking for their shoes, they're talking about everything from the most compelling topics of our ti ...
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NEXT was a radio show and podcast that aired its final episode in May 2021 after a successful five-year run. The weekly program focused on New England, one of America's oldest places, at a time of change. NEXT was produced at Connecticut Public Radio and featured stories from journalists across the New England News Collaborative. Most recently, the program was hosted by Morgan Springer. With New England as our laboratory, NEXT asked questions about how we power our society, how we move aroun ...
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The Washington Post's Presidential podcast explores how each former American president reached office, made decisions, handled crises and redefined the role of commander-in-chief. It was released leading up to up to Election Day 2016, starting with George Washington in week one and ending on week 44 with the president-elect. New special episodes in the countdown to the 2020 presidential election highlight other stories from U.S. presidential history that can help illuminate our current momen ...
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Local farmers, food organizations in limbo after federal food grant program ends
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3:44Now without that federal money at the start of the summer harvest season, farmers and food organizations are worried about how businesses will survive and how residents in need will access fresh food.By WBUR
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Friday the 13th: Why is it considered unlucky?
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5:31Superstitions around Friday the 13th abound.By WBUR & NPR
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Father and son 'unravel some tangled threads' by learning something new together
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3:53John Stewart and his 5-year-old son have been learning piano together.By WBUR & NPR
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Between 2019 and 2020, nearly 2 million people took to the streets of Hong Kong to fight legislation that could give Chinese authorities the power to criminalize dissent. It's been 5 years since China passed the so-called national security law. How has Hong Kong changed?By WBUR
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Between 2019 and 2020, nearly 2 million people took to the streets of Hong Kong to fight legislation that could give Chinese authorities the power to criminalize dissent. It's been 5 years since China passed the so-called national security law. How has Hong Kong changed?By WBUR
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A father reflects on his relationship with his daughter
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5:53As Father's Day approaches, Jon Kalish reflects on his relationship with his daughter in an essay.By WBUR & NPR
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Why are true crime books so popular? Traci Thomas shares her top picks
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9:32True crime books, podcasts and documentaries capture audiences everywhere.By WBUR & NPR
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Newtok, Alaska, was supposed to be a climate haven. What went wrong?
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9:26People who have relocated to a new town across the river report that the infrastructure there is already failing.By WBUR & NPR
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Meat had taken a backseat to grain bowls and plant burgers, but now it's back. Just like fashion and ever-changing hemlines, food also comes in and out of favor.By WBUR & NPR
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This Father's Day, listen to old-time Tejano fiddle music by Belen Escobedo
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11:06Escobedo says when she plays the old songs nowadays, it makes men cry because they remember how their fathers taught them, too.By WBUR & NPR
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Reporter's notebook: How climate change impacts the Mississippi River
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6:28Here & Now's Chris Bentley and Peter O'Dowd spent a week reporting on the Mississippi River.By WBUR & NPR
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What Israel's escalation in Iran means for the region
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6:29Israel has launched waves of attacks on Iran.By WBUR & NPR
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Iran is promising to retaliate after Israel's strikes targeted nuclear facilities, top military leaders and scientists.By WBUR & NPR
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A new study finds that a moderate level of exercise may lower some people's chances of getting cancer.By WBUR & NPR
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An aviation safety consultant's take on what may have led to Air India's deadly crash
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3:43Thursday's deadly Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad saw just one sole survivor walk away.By WBUR & NPR
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My 5-year-old son and I are unraveling some tangled threads by learning a new thing — and it’s messy, writes John Stewart. I think we both love the feeling of working hard to make something beautiful.By WBUR
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Jeffrey Ngo is from Hong Kong. He used to talk about politics all of the time with his friends in group chats and on social media, from casually sending memes, to planning protests. What happens to online speech when you're unsure how much the government is monitoring your speech, and what the repurcussions will be if they don't like it? Show notes…
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On Point news analyst Jack Beatty on how political activist Christopher Rufo became one of the most influential voices in conservative politics today.By WBUR
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How Apple helped China become a world leader in electronics
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26:24Apple sent engineers to China to make its sophisticated products cheaply. The company sent engineers to train workers and paid for expensive specialized equipment at factories there. This helped push China to become the world's leader in high-tech electronics manufacturing and helped Apple create the iPhone, one of the most iconic products of the 2…
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A weekday morning wrap-up of both national and local news stories.
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1:59:05A weekday morning wrap-up of both national and local news stories.By WBUR
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Mass. officials considering further reductions in state family shelter system
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6:59Officials say demand for shelter is down, and the state and its partners are moving families out of shelter at a record pace.By WBUR
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LA reverend on the 'emotional terror' driving protestors to the streets
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28:34Rev. Zachary Hoover explains what's motivating protesters to go out and oppose the Trump administration's immigration raids in Los Angeles. And, in 2016, the Mississippi River punched a hole in the Len Small levee, built in 1943 to protect farmland along an S-shaped curve in the river known as Dogtooth Bend. That hole was never repaired. Here & Now…
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Celebrating Pride in Boston during an uncertain time for LGBTQ+ people
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4:38Adrianna Boulin, the president of Boston Pride for the People, discusses this weekend's plans for Pride celebrations.By WBUR
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Tulsa has a reparations plan 104 years after race massacre
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5:16More than 100 ago, white residents of Tulsa destroyed a thriving Black neighborhood.By WBUR & NPR
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Several countries expected to recognize Palestinian state
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4:46France is leading the effort.By WBUR & NPR
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Southern Illinois farmers face a growing problem: What to do when nature reclaims your land
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9:42As climate change and development exacerbate the Mississippi River’s environmental problems, many communities will have to grapple with the questions facing Dogtooth Bend: how to balance the costs of maintaining America’s aging levee system against the pain of relocating communities and farmland.By WBUR & NPR
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LA faith leader on why protests are taking to the streets
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6:17Immigration raids have sparked protests in Los Angeles and other cities across the country.By WBUR & NPR
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Author calls for class-based affirmative action in higher education
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10:54Colleges and universities have had to adjust their admissions processes after the Supreme Court struck down race-based affirmative action a couple of years ago.By WBUR & NPR
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