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Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them. (article)
Prejudice and Pride: The New American Family; The Non-Binary Generation; President of Howard University on the Power of HBCUs; Your Climate Anecdotes; One Book, One New York (episode)
What's on your summer bucket list? (episode)
Who's in and who's out for the third democratic debate.
Kathryn Garcia, Senior Advisor for Citywide Lead Prevention, says the DOE plans to be transparent about the clean up so parents can have "confidence in sending their kids to school."
"It feels like the biggest rehearsal they've had so far as to whether the people and the government are prepared for another hurricane season." —Nicole Acevedo, NBC News reporter.
After a seven-week trial in Oklahoma, state judge Thad Balkman ordered Johnson & Johnson to pay the state $572 million in damages for the opioid crisis.
What's on YOUR list?
Are we actually living the Unabomber's nightmare? (episode)
How is de Blasio's campaign doing?
How does the world now perceive President Trump?
"The Stakes" podcast three-part series, A History of Persuasion.
New York State Senator Zellnor Myrie talks about why he's proposing to raise the minimum-wage in prisons to $3 an hour.
Redistricting, school shootings and much more.
2020 Catch-Up; Preventing Overdose Deaths; How to Fix the Republic; Late Bloomers; Hercules in Central Park (episode)
The latest developments among those running for president.
One New Yorker dies every six hours from a drug overdose. But a new senate overdose prevention task force aims to tackle the problem with "evidence-based, stigma-free care."
Burt Neuborne on reform and the Constitution.
For all you late bloomers out there
Delacorte's Theater production of the musical "Hercules."
What did you read this summer? (episode)
John Nichols, national affairs correspondent for The Nation, talks national political news.
"This legislation freed me," said New York State Assembly woman Rodneyse Bichotte about the Child Victims Act.
Scientists believe the Amazon is responsibility for 20% of the planet's oxygen, says guest Maria Luisa Mendonça.
Why are Millennials moving back home at a higher rate than generations before. We ask for your anecdotes.
There's still time for summer reading.
Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them. (article)
Prejudice and Pride: 1989 and the AIDS Epidemic; LGBT Visibility in the 1990s; Reefer Managed: Talking to Your Kids; and Frederick Douglass (episode)
New York's court battles with the president. (episode)
A bevy of lawsuits!
Why Greenland?
Two weeks ago the roads to the airport were so congested travelers were seen getting out of cars to walk to their gates. Gothamist Editor explains why the traffic has been so bad.
Juan's 20-year love affair with New York City, and yours too!
How many of New York's islands have you visited?
Is another recession on the way? (episode)
"I feel confident that we’re not going to have a 2008/09 type recession," said Dean Baker, macroeconomist and co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.
"The morality of violence does not belong to the Kashmiri people, it belongs to the occupying force." - Hafsa Kanjwal
"I don't believe you beat Trump by vilifying people who vote for him," said Mike Murphy.