The Daily - The Case of Kristie Metcalfe

The Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department — founded to focus on fighting race-based discrimination — has drastically changed the kinds of cases it pursues, dropping or setting aside many already in progress.

Sarah Koenig from Serial Productions tells the story of Kristie Metcalfe — her civil rights case and how it was squandered.

Guest: Sarah Koenig, podcast host and producer for The New York Times’ Serial Productions.

Background reading: The Trump administration upended 60 years of civil rights in two months.

Photo: Imani Khayyam for The New York Times

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The Daily Detail - The Daily Detail for 3.13.26

Alabama

  • Sen. Katie Britt pushing for passage of the SAVE American Act 
  • State senate passes a $3.7B general fund budget for FY 2027
  • Governor Ivey signs bill into law requiring English proficiency for CDLs
  • Central Alabama Water release report on past operations under prior leadership
  • Troy to see expansion of Lockheed Martin facility over course of 5 years

National

  • WH corrects ABC News for alarmist news about Iranian drone attacks in CA
  • A refueling tanker goes down into waters in Middle East, 6 on board
  • Driver in MI plows into a synagogue and is shot by security guard
  • Sen. Cornyn of TX gets snippy with a reporter for bringing up his RINO record
  • FL governor to sign bill on voter ID and citizenship verification for elections
  • WY governor signs bill that prohibits abortions after fetal heartbeat found
  • Election attorney Peter Tiktin says Dems plan to steal the midterms, impeach Trump and Vance and entrench establishment control once again

Money Girl - Is My Credit Mistake Permanent? How to Recover from Late Payments & Collections

1003. Is one missed payment going to haunt your mortgage application forever?

On this Finance Friday, host Laura answers a listener's question about a recent late payment and the fear that it might ruin their chances of buying a home. If you’ve ever seen your credit score plummet due to a mistake, this episode is for you.

Laura breaks down the "lifespan" of credit damage and reviews seven specific negative items that can appear on your reports, including:

  • Late Payments: The most common mistake and the "7-year rule."
  • Charge-Offs vs. Collections: What happens when a creditor gives up on you.
  • Medical Debt: Why the rules for medical bills are different (and better!) for consumers.
  • Bankruptcies: The difference between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 reporting.
  • Foreclosures & Settlements: How long they linger and how their impact fades over time.

You’ll also learn why your credit score isn’t a "permanent record" and how the diminishing effect of old mistakes allows your score to rebound faster than you think.

Find a transcript here. 

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What A Day - Why Trump Abandoned America First

The war with Iran has already killed more than a thousand Iranians, including 175 people killed at an elementary school on February 28th. Remember America First? That swath of the MAGA movement that purportedly wanted to stay out of foreign entanglements and wars to focus on problems that Americans were facing right here at home? Today, the same GOP that called Kamala Harris a warmonger is giving the war with Iran two thumbs up. And while some notable anti-war figures on the right have been speaking out against the conflict, Trump and the Republican Party are full speed ahead despite struggling to justify their actions. Tommy Vietor, co-host of Crooked Media’s Pod Save the World and former spokesperson for the National Security Council in the Obama administration, joins to discuss the American First presidency that isn't.

And in headlines, the Senate passes a housing bill with overwhelming bipartisan support but House GOP members are unlikely to get on board, Department of Homeland Security funding talks continue to stall, and the White House is keeping busy posting tasteless memes about the war.

Show Notes:

Pod Save America - Trump Celebrates High Gas Prices

President Trump suggests that the high price of oil—surging upward because of his war in Iran—is a good thing, because the United States makes "a lot of money." Jon and Dan discuss the President's unique affordability message, his claim that the war has already been won, and what Joe Rogan, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and Gen Z men are saying about Iran. Then, they check in on the GOP, including the party's mass deportation messaging "hiccup," the lengths some on the right are going to in order to pass the SAVE Act, and MAGA's full embrace of Islamophobia. Finally, they react to former DOGE staffers trying to explain DEI under oath, and to Marco Rubio allegedly lying about his shoe size to the President of the United States.

WSJ Tech News Briefing - How the Pentagon Standoff is Shaking Up the Fight for AI Talent

Anthropic’s standoff with the Pentagon may be giving it an edge in the AI talent race, while OpenAI’s decision to make a deal with the agency has resulted in at least two resignations from high level employees. WSJ’s Meghan Bobrowsky shares the latest. Plus, WSJ enterprise tech reporter Belle Lin explains why companies are turning to digital AI clones of real people to conduct market research. Isabelle Bousquette hosts.


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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - Are We Ready for A.I. Warfare?

Drone warfare has evolved immensely since Ukraine. The use of artificial intelligence in combat has evolved just since Venezuela. 


Guest: Steven Feldstein, political scientist and senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in the Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program.


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Podcast production by Evan Campbell, and Patrick Fort.


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Short Wave - An icy mystery: What are lake stars?

When producer Berly McCoy was out on her local frozen lake, she saw something she'd never seen before. There were dark spidery, star-shaped patterns in the ice and they freaked her out. So, we called an expert to find out more about them. In today’s episode, geophysicist Victor Tsai tells us about lake stars and how he became the first person to scientifically prove how they form. Plus, he explains how knowing more about lake stars can potentially give us clues about the presence of water on Europa, one of Jupiter’s icy moons.

Read Victor Tsai’s full paper on lake stars here.

Have a question about something in the environment? Email us at shortwave@npr.org.

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The Indicator from Planet Money - A lot of gas trapped, oil reserves tapped, and Live Nation gets a (tiny) cap

It’s  Indicators of the Week (now on YouTube!), our weekly look at some of the most fascinating economic numbers from the news. 

On today’s episode: How big is this gas crisis  and could releasing oil reserves help? Also, Live Nation gets a deal from the government.  

Related episodes: 
Are concert tickets UNDER priced? 
Will Trump’s shipping insurance plan work? 

For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Fact-checking by Julia Ritchey and Corey Bridges. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter 

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