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The Takeaway explores the new film by Sebastian Junger, the ways Texas is transforming America, and we made some pretty funny fake election ads. (episode)
Filmmaker Sebastian Junger says the addictive nature of covering battle makes the transition to civilian life so difficult, but seeing a colleague die makes it too hard to keep going.
For years, Tom Magliozzi and his brother Ray—"Click and Clack the Tappet Brothers"—gave listeners more than just car advice. They redefined what public radio could be.
Thousands of veterans have returned home from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but the Middle East has grown only more chaotic with the rising tide of the Islamic State.
This November, our friends at WQXR are bringing you a month-long tribute to the magnetic and hypnotic music of Johann Sebastian Bach.
Who plays and doesn't play football is an increasingly partisan issue, according to a new column by The New York Times' David Leonhardt.
Did you know there were once 17,000 different varieties grown in North America? Dan Bussey recently completed an encyclopedia of all these apples, and sadly, most of them are gone now.
Election Day in Texas may not have any big cliff hangers, but the state is proving to be a laboratory for 21st century American politics.
It's Election Day, which means we can finally say goodbye to nasty political ads—at least for 10 minutes. To celebrate, we created some fake ads that are just as awful as the real thing.