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Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them. (article)
The GOP Contenders; NJ and NY's Legal Cannabis Rollouts, One Year Later; Tucker Carlson's Outrage Infotainment & Jerry Springer's TV Spectacle; Your Best Team Names (episode)
The Republicans seeking the presidential nomination in 2024.
Comparing and contrasting how the rollout of legal shops has gone in New York and New Jersey.
WNYC's Albany reporter explains the budget deal that Gov. Hochul announced Thursday evening.
The current moment in TV history, and how the medium continues to shape our public discourse.
Listeners call in to suggest their favorite non-offensive and non-Indigenous team names.
Michael Hill and Brian Lehrer throw down.
The field of Democratic presidential candidates; A look into Mayor Adam's executive budget; Poetry in the place of answers to our biggest questions; Your work flops and fiascos. (episode)
How Biden may campaign, plus his minor-league challengers for the Democratic nomination, Marianne Williamson and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Elizabeth Kim breaks down the mayor's executive budget.
As National Poetry Month winds down and in this month of major religious holidays, we consider poems as an answer for those for whom religion doesn't provide answers, solace or joy.
Listeners call in to share some high-stakes fiascos that have happened in their work lives. Plus, a song based on a listener's story of a fiasco from earlier this week.
A moment for listeners' poems during the newscast
E. Jean Carroll's Allegation Trump Raped Her Goes to Court; Fighting Rental-Voucher Discrimination; What's Holding up the State Budget?; Bidding Farewell to Bed Bath & Beyond (episode)
Legal analysis of the E. Jean Carroll case, and New York's Adult Survivors Act - which opened up a window for adult survivors of sexual assault to file civil lawsuits.
How New Yorkers can get help with "source of income discrimination" and other types of housing and employment discrimination.
WNYC's Jon Campbell explains why the New York State budget deal is nearly a month late, and what Gov. Kathy Hochul and lawmakers are still arguing over.
Listeners call in to talk about their favorite memories of Bed Bath & Beyond, including when they shopped there for milestones like moving into a dorm or having a baby.
Tuesday Morning Politics with Joan Walsh; Governors Island's Climate Exchange with Stony Brook University; Julia Lee's latest book; Listeners share their high-stakes fiascos. (episode)
Nation correspondent Joan Walsh remembers Harry Belafonte, plus analysis of President Biden's announcement he's running again and comments on the cable news churn.
Stony Brook University President Maurie McInnis shares plans for a new climate solutions-focused center on Governors Island, just announced by the city.
Julia Lee shares her story of racial identity growing up in L.A. as a daughter of Korean American storekeepers during the 1992 riots.
Listeners call in to share some high-stakes fiascos that have happened in their lives.
Monday Morning Politics With Rebecca Traister; Shoring Up the Free Press; New York Bans Native American Mascots; Wrestling With Our Guilty Pleasures (episode)
The latest on mifepristone and the federal courts, Sen. Feinstein's future and more.
The 2-day conference for journalists, teachers, and policy makers called Faultlines: Democracy that seeks to shore up one of the bulwarks of democracy -- the free press.
John Kane, Mohawk activist and member of the New York State Indigenous Mascot Advisory Council, discusses the move to ban school team names and mascots that reference indigenous people.
Listeners call in to talk about how they align their consumption habits, budgets and love of guilty pleasures.
For Earth Day: Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them. (article)
Imani Perry reflects on the shooting of Ralph Yarl; WNYC goes to Greenpoint; What the Adderall shortages shows about ADHD treatment issues; Foods are on your Eid tables this year (episode)
Reflections on the shootings of Ralph Yarl and Kaylin Gillis.
WNYC's All Things Considered Earth Day broadcast from Greenpoint and the many environmental challenges of converting former industrial sites into residential areas.
The increasing demand for Adderall fueled by a boom of newly diagnosed ADHD adults.
The traditional dishes for Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan, and what foods listeners are having on their Eid tables this year.
The Latest on the Abortion Pill Case; Call Your Senator: Sen Gillibrand; How Green are NYC's Buildings?; Past Technology Nostalgia (episode)
The latest on the abortion pill mifepristone case and other Supreme Court news.
U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D NY), talks about her work in Washington, including her new Five-Point Aging Plan, preserving SNAP benefits, the mifepristone cases, and more.
What the energy rating systems LEED and Energy Star can—and cannot—tell us about a building's sustainability.
In light of Netflix ending its DVD mailing service, listeners call in to share what past forms of technology — DVDs, cassettes, or even rotary telephones — they miss the most.
Floyd Abrams on the Fox-Dominion trial; Gun violence prevention in schools; Twitter's labeling of public media; This or That Test: Which is better for the environment? (episode)
Lawyer Floyd Abrams talks about the Fox/Dominion case and its first amendment implications.
Marc Zimmerman shares proven gun violence preventive techniques and discusses if hiring armed guards can actually stop gun violence in schools.
Why NPR has decided to pause its use of its Twitter accounts after the disagreement over how it was labeled.
Christiné Datz-Romero joins for an Earth Day game and shares some tips for how to really help reduce your waste.