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First the Pandemic Hit, Then the Recession, Now Debt Collectors Are Calling
Even as millions of Californians have filed for unemployment during the coronavirus pandemic, many who are already financially vulnerable are being asked to pay back their debts.
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•
3:33
Key Takeaways From Supreme Court Term
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with lawyer and SCOTUSblog publisher Tom Goldstein and NPR legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg about the decisions reached by the U.S. Supreme Court this term.
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•
5:36
The Best African Music Of 2008
This has been a strong year for African music, with two big trends emerging: the continuing integration of African music into the U.S. and European mainstream, as well as the ongoing unearthing of treasures from Afropop's "golden era," particularly the '70s.
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•
0:00
Food Network stars also juggle work and family. This one made a cookbook for us all
Molly Yeh, author of Home is Where the Eggs Are: Farmhouse Food for the People You Love, took inspiration from her journey into parenthood while also hosting Girl Meets Farm.
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3:29
Palm trees in Florida weathered Hurricane Ian's wrath just fine
Hurricanes — whether big or small — manage to damage or destroy most things in their path. But palm trees tend to escape a hurricane's fury. That was definitely true after Ian.
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4:48
Cut emissions quickly to save lives, scientists warn in a new U.N. report
Cutting greenhouse gas emissions rapidly and immediately will save lives, livelihoods and ecosystems around the world, scientists say. And there are lots of ways to go about it.
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3:28
Politics Rewind: Family Baggage And Fuzzy Math
This week in politics: Jeb Bush isn't doing a great job of separating himself from his brother, the GOP's diversity problem and were the polls really wrong again?
After Greece's worst train crash, young Greeks rally for change ahead of elections
Young people throughout Greece have staged large protests following last month's collision near the city of Larissa, which killed 57 people, many of them students.
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4:49
De Colombia p'al mundo: How Feid became Medellín's reggaeton 'ambassador'
Colombian artist Feid recently became the first artist to sell out Puerto Rico's 'El Choliseo' arena in an hour or less. It's just one example of how he has reached a new level of global stardom.
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4:39
Underground Cities And 'Ghost' Miners: What Some People Do For Gold
South Africa's Mponeng gold mine is a 2.5-mile-deep network of chutes and tunnels that employs about 4,000 miners. Of course, that number doesn't include the miners who wander its tunnels clandestinely, stealing and refining ore. In a new book, journalist Matthew Hart investigates why gold and crime sometimes go hand in hand.
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20:06
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