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Chapo Trap House - 985 – The Murder Inc. Doctrine feat. Greg Grandin (11/10/25)
CBS News Roundup - 11/10/2025 | World News Roundup Late Edition
Senate begins a series of votes that could lead to the end of the government shutdown. Continued shutdown-related chaos at airports as the number of flights are reduced. Trump administration askes Supreme Court again to freeze SNAP payments.
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Stuff They Don't Want You To Know - Strange News: Robots, the Louvre Heist is Hilarious, Your Grocery Store Conspires Against You, and Way More
The great game for robots escalates; updates on Elon Musk. The Louvre heist is hilarious. Your grocery store conspires against you. All this and more in this week's strange news segment.
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array(3) { [0]=> string(150) "https://www.omnycontent.com/d/programs/e73c998e-6e60-432f-8610-ae210140c5b1/2e824128-fbd5-4c9e-9a57-ae2f0056b0c4/image.jpg?t=1749831085&size=Large" [1]=> string(10) "image/jpeg" [2]=> int(0) }PBS News Hour - World - Al-Sharaa meets with Trump at White House as Syria seeks closer ties with the West
PBS News Hour - Health - FDA head explains decision to drop ‘black box’ warnings from menopause hormone treatment
Marketplace All-in-One - Where we’re at with tariffs and inflation
Despite expectations surrounding President Donald Trump’s tariffs, inflation doesn’t seem to be speeding up — though it’s hard to say for sure without all that reliable federal data. You can thank cooling services inflation (where most consumer spending goes) and a softer labor market, which has reduced some companies’ ability to raise prices. Also in this episode: Corporate earnings look bright and sunny, Visa and Mastercard reach an agreement with merchants over credit card fees, and retailers revive physical holiday catalogs.
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PBS News Hour - Art Beat - Auction of Bob Ross paintings aims to fill funding gaps for public broadcasting
The Gist - Sarah Goodyear and Doug Gordon on Life After Cars
Mike reflects on the post-election landscape, including Mamdani's win and the hype around Trump's election monitors who reportedly spent their time chatting about cats. Then Mike talks with Sarah Goodyear and Doug Gordon, hosts of The War on Cars and authors of Life After Cars. They discuss traffic fatalities, Dutch street design, the Brightline conundrum, induced demand, EV optimism vs. EV limitations, and what cities gain when they take traffic out of their cores. In the Spiel, Mike explains why expecting a state's congressional delegation to mirror its statewide vote share misunderstands how probability works, using the now-classic gumball example.
Produced by Corey Wara
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Consider This from NPR - FDA reverses decades of guidance on hormone therapy for menopause
The FDA is removing the black box warning on estrogen therapy after two decades. Should it?
Women who want to use estrogen to treat menopause symptoms often face a difficult choice.
That’s because those hormone treatments contain a “black-box warning.”
The Food and Drug Administration uses black box warnings to indicate a medication has potentially life threatening side effects.
In the case of estrogen for menopause symptoms, an increased risk of endometrial cancer, cardiovascular disorders, dementia and breast cancer.
Well those warnings are going away.
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This episode was produced by Mia Venkat and Erika Ryan. It was edited by Courtney Dorning and Scott Hensley.
Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.
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