PBS News Hour - World - Witkoff and Kushner meet with Putin for latest talks to end Russia’s war with Ukraine
PBS News Hour - World - ‘From Hell to Heaven’: American describes teen son’s release from Israeli jail
PBS News Hour - Art Beat - Alicia Keys and Swizz Beatz celebrate Black contemporary art in ‘Giants’ exhibition
Marketplace All-in-One - A Fed divided against itself
The Federal Reserve’s quantitative approach to monetary policy decisions means its governors tend to reach consensus. But in the past few meetings, some FOMC members have disagreed on whether to prioritize jobs or inflation. In this episode, “Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal and former FOMC member Daniel Tarullo discuss why the Fed is divided right now. Plus: Dollar stores weather an uncertain economy, companies use return-to-office policies as a workforce reduction mechanism, and electricity demand grows as data centers pop up nationwide.
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Consider This from NPR - The White House keeps firing immigration judges. He is one of them
What does it mean for immigrants caught in the middle? We speak with one of the judges recently let go.
The firings are part of an ongoing effort by the White House to overhaul the U.S. immigration system. Now, those judges are being replaced by “deportation judges.”
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This episode was produced by Daniel Ofman and Karen Zamora, with additional reporting by Ximena Bustillo and Anusha Mathur. It was edited by Christopher Intagliata and Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.
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The Gist - Daniel Brook & Brandy Schillace: The Sex Expert Who Scared Hitler
Daniel Brook and Brandy Schillace trace the life and legacy of Magnus Hirschfeld, the so-called "Einstein of Sex," from his pioneering Institute for Sexual Science to the Nazis parading his severed likeness at the 1933 book burning. They dig into the longer prehistory of Weimar queer politics and antisemitism, discussing how obsessions with masculinity and "degeneracy" turned sexuality into a political weapon. Plus: Donald Trump's astonishing pardon of convicted Honduran ex-president Juan Orlando Hernández, and a spiel on what Marjorie Taylor Greene's resignation actually says about her district.
Produced by Corey Wara
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The Source - Prop 4 passed but is it enough to meet the state’s future water needs?
Marketplace All-in-One - The human story behind a digital time capsule
If you could send a message to yourself, 20 years into the future, what would you say? On today’s show, Scientific American’s editor-in-chief David Ewalt joins Kimberly to share how he built an e-mail time capsule two decades ago and how human relationships kept the project alive despite the challenges of a rapidly changing technology and media landscape.
Here’s the article we talked about today:
- "How Forbes Sent E-mails to the Future—And What Happened 20 Years Later" from Scientific American
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