Marketplace All-in-One - Building a home with future fires in mind

On Jan. 7, 2025, the Eaton and Palisades Fires began, killing 31 people and destroying around 13,00 homes in the Los Angeles area. A year later, residents are looking to rebuild the lives and homes they once had.


Marketplace’s David Branccacio and his wife lost their Altadena home to the Eaton fire, and have yet to break ground on a new building. But as they continue to plan for construction in the new year, they are focusing on fire-resistance for the future.


Branccacio joined “Marketplace Tech” host Meghan McCarty Carino to speak about the technology and building that goes into fire-resistant homes.

The Daily - ‘A Breaking Point’: The Minneapolis Police Chief on ICE

Warning: This episode contains strong language.

Just hours before a federal immigration officer killed Renee Good in her car, Brian O’Hara, the Minneapolis police chief, warned that a tragedy involving ICE seemed inevitable.

In an interview, Chief O’Hara discusses his experience with ICE in Minneapolis and why, in his mind, President Trump’s campaign of mass deportation is undermining faith in police departments.

Guest: Brian O’Hara, chief of the Minneapolis Police Department

Background reading: 

Photo: Ryan Murphy for The New York Times

For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. 

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Start the Week - The arts and health

What is the purpose of the Arts? Can music, literature and visual art change our lives physically and socially, as well as personally? Adam Rutherford explores the power of the arts and how it might be defined and explained.

Engaging with the arts is one of our most powerful tools for unlocking health and happiness argues Daisy Fancourt. She is is Professor of Psychobiology and Epidemiology at University College London and Director of the World Health Organisation Collaborating Centre on Arts and Health. In her new book, Art Cure, she shows how songs support the development of children's brains; how dance can build neural pathways; how theatre and exhibitions can decrease pain, stress and depression and how the arts can improve the functioning of every major organ system in the body. Drawing on the latest research research in a range of scientific fields, she traces a connection between the arts and human flourishing.

Earliest Stories: Stories, Novellas, Humoresques, 1880-1882 is a collection of the Russian writer Anton Chekhov's work while he was still a student of medicine. In his juvenilia we see flashes of insight alongside comedy, compassion and a developing narrative voice. Rosamund Bartlett, translator, biographer and cultural historian writes about how stories have long been dismissed, but written as his family faced financial crisis, reveal much about the threads that connect together in his life and work.

BBC Radio 3 presenter Tom Service explores how music transports and defines us in his new book. In A History of the World in 50 Pieces, he examines how classical music reflects our changing politics, society and technological advances - and how composers, musicians and listeners have shaped history. From Bach to Beethoven via the Happy birthday song, he explores the power of music to connect and and challenge us.

Producer: Ruth Watts

The Daily Detail - The Daily Detail for 1.12.26

Alabama

  • Gov. Ivey indicates she would sign a bill that restricts SNAP purchases
  • Former Pentagon insider spills beans on Army sound weaponry re:J6
  • State senator says West Corridor already draining funds from other projects
  • Four arrests made in Dothan after cold blooded murder of teenager at home
  • CBS "48 Hours" covers case of chiropractor poisoning wife in Hartselle
  • Tuscaloosa City Council approves a new police cadet program in the city

National

  • Federal judge strikes down parts of Trump's election intercity executive order
  • DHS releases more video leading up to fatal shooting in Minneapolis by ICE
  • Treasury Secretary heads to MN to track all fraud payments and transactions
  • USDA Secretary will give no federal funds to MN until fraud is stopped
  • SCOTUS to hear oral arguments on Tuesday re: transgender athletes in high school and collegiate sports programs

What A Day - The ‘Dark Fleet’ Behind Venezuela’s Oil Trade

The United States Coast Guard seized another oil tanker, the Olina, on Friday. It is the fifth Venezuela-linked tanker seized by US forces under President Trump, and the third since the capture of former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. Earlier last week, the US seized a vessel near Iceland following a slow chase across the Atlantic Ocean. That ship, the Bella 1, was renamed the Marinera and started flying the Russian flag after US forces first tried to board it back in December. So, what’s going on with all of these sneaky name changes? To find out, we spoke to Shelby Holliday. She’s a senior video producer and journalist for The Wall Street Journal, where she focuses on geopolitics.

And in headlines, protests across the U.S. continue following the death of Renee Good at the hands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Russia’s war in Ukraine rages on, and Trump weighs his options in Iran as state violence against protestors ramps up.

Show Notes:


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Strict Scrutiny - Debunking Trump’s Bullsh*t Legal Arguments for Invading Venezuela

Leah, Kate, and Melissa preview January’s major SCOTUS cases, including disputes over trans kids' participation in team sports, a concealed-carry ban in Hawaii, and Trump’s attempt to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. The hosts are then joined by Georgetown Law Professor Marty Lederman to break down the administration’s flimsy legal case for the regime-change operation in Venezuela, as well as the Court’s shadow docket ruling on the federalization and deployment of the National Guard in Chicago. Finally, some news: the horrific murder of Renee Good in Minneapolis, the Court’s opinion in an important habeas case, and an unhinged tweet from Trump’s Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights.

Favorite things:

Get tickets for STRICT SCRUTINY LIVE – The Bad Decisions Tour 2026! 

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Get tickets for STRICT SCRUTINY LIVE – The Bad Decisions Tour 2025! 

  • 3/6/26 – San Francisco
  • 3/7/26 – Los Angeles

Learn more: http://crooked.com/events

Order your copy of Leah's book, Lawless: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad Vibes

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Python Bytes - #465 Stack Overflow is Cooked

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Michael #1: port-killer

  • A powerful cross-platform port management tool for developers.
  • Monitor ports, manage Kubernetes port forwards, integrate Cloudflare Tunnels, and kill processes with one click.
  • Features:
    • 🔍 Auto-discovers all listening TCP ports
    • ⚡ One-click process termination (graceful + force kill)
    • 🔄 Auto-refresh with configurable interval
    • 🔎 Search and filter by port number or process name
    • ⭐ Favorites for quick access to important ports
    • 👁️ Watched ports with notifications
    • 📂 Smart categorization (Web Server, Database, Development, System)

Brian #2: How we made Python's packaging library 3x faster

  • Henry Schreiner
  • Some very cool graphs demonstrating some benchmark data.
  • And then details about how various speedups
    • each being 2-37% faster
    • the total adding up to about 3x speedup, or shaving 2/3 of the time.
  • These also include nice write-ups about why the speedups were chosen.
  • If you are trying to speed up part of your system, this would be good article to check out.

Michael #3: AI’s Impact on dev companies

  • On TailwindCSS: via Simon
    • Tailwind is growing faster than ever and is bigger than it has ever been
    • Its revenue is down close to 80%.
    • 75% of the people on our engineering team lost their jobs here yesterday because of the brutal impact AI has had on our business.
    • “We had 6 months left”
    • Listen to the founder: “A Morning Walk
    • Super insightful video: Tailwind is in DEEP trouble
  • On Stack Overflow: See video.
    • SO was founded around 2009, first month had 3,749 questions
    • December, SO had 3,862 questions asked
    • Most of its live it had 200,000 questions per month
    • That is a 53x drop!

Brian #4: CodSpeed

  • “CodSpeed integrates into dev and CI workflows to measure performance, detect regressions, and enable actionable optimizations.”
  • Noticed it while looking through the GitHub workflows for FastAPI
  • Free for small teams and open-source projects
  • Easy to integrate with Python by marking tests with @pytest.mark.benchmark
  • They’ve releases a GitHub action to incorporate benchmarking in CI workflows

Extras

Brian:

  • Part 2 of Lean TDD released this morning, “Lean TDD Practices”, which has 9 mini chapters.

Michael:

Joke: Check out my app!

Short Wave - These little microbes may help solve our big problems

Microbes are little alchemists that perform all manner of chemical reactions. A team of microbiologists co-founded a non-profit to try to harness those abilities to solve some of the world’s big problems — from carbon capture to helping coral reefs to cleaning up waste. Recently, the team turned their attention to the microbes living in people’s homes — on and in shower heads, drip pans, and hot water heaters. These rather extreme environments may have pressured microorganisms into surviving in ways that could be advantageous to humans. Science reporter Ari Daniel takes us on a treasure hunt in miniature.

This episode was produced by Hannah Chinn. It was edited by Rebecca Ramirez. Tyler Jones checked the facts. The audio engineer was Robert Rodriguez.


Interested in learning more about the weird and wonderful world of microbes? Email us your question at shortwave@npr.org.


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