The latest articles from WNYC News
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A show that samples WNYC’s best podcasts, curated to fit all your travel needs.
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From WNYC, New York Public Radio, join WNYC's cultural attaché Sara Fishko for her personal radio essays on music, art, culture and media.
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Ideas and voices from across New York City, brought to you by WNYC.org
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The latest articles from WNYC 9/11 Specials
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We spoke with the stars, writers and directors of Tony nominated Broadway productions! Check out our favorite conversations as the June 10th awards ceremony approaches!
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Major news events throughout the world continue to be largely ignored until they reach tragic proportions. Underreported, a weekly feature on The Leonard Lopate Show, tackles these issues and gives an in-depth look into stories that are often relegated to the back pages.
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NoneBy WNYC Radio
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Student activists set to attend ‘people’s ceremony’ after Columbia cancels graduation
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An unofficial graduation ceremony for student activists at Columbia University on Thursday will celebrate the protests that roiled campus for months, culminating in mass arrests and the main commencement's cancellation.
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Newark, New Jersey public safety head reflects on two weeks of its youth curfew
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Officials in Newark are bringing back a dormant curfew. Starting May 3, the city mandated that people younger than 18 be accompanied by an adult if out after 11 p.m., with only a few exceptions. After curfew, kids and teenagers can be stopped by police, who will call in a trained social worker and try to contact their parents. City officials have f…
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Many NYC psych patients have no chance to go outside
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Many psychiatric patients at New York City’s public hospitals are cooped up during their stays with no opportunity to go outside, sometimes for weeks or months at a time, according to a new report by a state watchdog agency that monitors treatment of psychiatric patients and a nonprofit legal group. Morning Edition spoke with WNYC's Caroline Lewis …
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The price of specialty coffee drinks keeps going up
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If you go out for coffee, you've probably noticed that prices keep going up. According to our friends at Eater New York, the average price of a specialty coffee drink is between $6 and $7 these days. Melissa McCart, the editor of Eater New York, joins us to talk about some of the reasons for the increase. Speaking with Weekend Edition host David Fu…
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NJ lawmakers could vote on bill gutting public records access
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The latest attempt to diminish OPRA is opposed by 81 percent of the public, according to a recent poll by Fairleigh Dickinson University. Lawmakers are pushing it ahead anyway.
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This Week in Politics: The 2025 New York City mayor's race starts to take shape
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The New York City mayor's race doesn't kick in until next year. We still have a presidential election to deal with between now and then. And at this moment, Mayor Adams is running unopposed in the Democratic primary. But the list of people who might be ready to challenge him continues to evolve. This week, New York state senator Zellnor Myrie said …
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NJ lawmakers try to revise state's public records law. Transparency advocates aren't pleased.
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Lawmakers in New Jersey are moving ahead with a bill that would revise the state’s Open Public Records Act (OPRA). The controversial measure could be voted on by the full state Senate and Assembly as early as Monday. CJ Griffin is a media and public interest attorney whose legal work focuses on OPRA. She’s also a fierce opponent of the new bill and…
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Inside a Brooklyn kitchen that trains migrants for restaurant jobs, lifting an industry
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The five-week course called Culinary Career Pathways for New New Yorkers was launched in April by the nonprofit group Hot Bread Kitchen, which trains New Yorkers for jobs in the food industry. But the benefits and possibilities extend far beyond the individuals in this classroom.
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Sammy's Law, which allows NYC to lower its speed limits, finally becomes law
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A victory for safe street advocates in Albany and the surge in for-hire EVs in New York City headline this week's On The Way roundup of transit news.
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New York high school students will have to fill out a college financial aid application to graduate, under a recent state law
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All New York State high school students are now required to fill out a financial aid application for college or submit a waiver opting out by the time they graduate, under recent state law sponsored by State Senator Andrew Gounardes. It comes after the Education Department redesigned the FAFSA or “free application for federal student aid” with the …
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Columbia University canceled its main graduation ceremony planned for May 15, saying it will instead devote resources to smaller, school-level ceremonies.
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Housing costs, safety, and migration dominate conversations with NY metro area voters
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As we inch closer to Election Day in November, WNYC is turning some laundromats in the New York metro area into hubs of civic dialogue. We’re calling the project 'Suds and Civics.' George Bodarky, who leads our Community Partnerships Desk, joins Morning Edition to share some of what he and his team have been hearing from people between loads about …
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City Council Member Tiffany Cabán says NYPD social media attacks are out of bounds
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NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell continues to use social media to attack judges, reporters, and now other city officials with whom he disagrees. Chell recently posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, that councilmember Tiffany Caban "hates our city," after she criticized the NYPD arrests of pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia University and City …
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A push to legalize life-ending medication for terminally ill New Yorkers
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Barbara Thomas stood in the middle of a busy underground hallway entering the New York State Capitol last month, one of roughly a dozen older activists in yellow T-shirts who handed out coaster-sized stickers of yellow roses to lawmakers and lobbyists whizzing by.More than a decade ago, her husband was diagnosed with brain cancer. Thomas said he wa…
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How a Brooklyn center is speaking to the past, present, and future of Crown Heights
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New York City is known for its iconic cultural institutions like the Met and MOMA, but it's also home to many neighborhood gems. WNYC's Community Partnerships Desk is highlighting some of these treasures across the five boroughs. In this segment, we pay a visit to a center in Crown Heights, Brooklyn that's built around one of America's first free …
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A New York City sports moment has fans thinking back to 1994
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30 years ago, the Knicks and Rangers treated New York City to an unforgettable spring. The 1994 Knicks pushed the Houston Rockets to a 7 game NBA championship series. And the Rangers won their only Stanley Cup since 1940. This spring has been giving us some flashbacks. Both teams have moved on to the second rounds of their respective playoffs. And …
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This Week in Politics: Meet the new ballot, same as the old ballot
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In late March, a federal judge ruled that New Jersey's unusual county line ballot system was likely unconstitutional, and couldn't be used in this June's Democratic primary. The 'county line' is the way 19 of 21 county political organizations in the state, displayed their preferred candidates on the very ballot voters see in voting booths. But now …
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Glass eels are endangered, but experts find hope in the Hudson River
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Experts say glass eels, which have long been endangered, are making a “bumpy comeback” in the river after decades of population decline.
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FDNY EMS get a bill giving them body armor. What they want is better job retention.
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This week, Mayor Adams signed a bill into law that requires body armor and safety training for all fire department EMS workers and paramedics. But not all EMS workers think it will solve problems facing their workforce. Anthony Almojera is a lieutenant paramedic with the FDNY EMS, and vice-president of AFSCME DC37 Local 3621, the union that represe…
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MTA's congestion pricing program finally gets a launch date
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This week's roundup of transit news in New York City features the latest on -- what else? -- congestion pricing.
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NYC gardeners push 'year of the milkweed' to save monarch butterflies from extinction
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The flitting fiery orange and black wings of the monarch butterfly, which once signaled the coming of spring, have become an increasingly rare sight. The majestic insect's populations on the East Coast dwindled roughly 90% from 1996 to 2013, according to U.S. Fish and Wildlife estimates. Since then, their numbers have declined even further. But a n…
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In NJ, a struggle with 'range anxiety' for buyers of electric vehicles
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New Jersey has ambitious goals for plug-in vehicle adoption. But many drivers and industry experts say there just isn't enough charging infrastructure even for current owners.' Read more on Gothamist.
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New Jersey’s Democratic primary candidates for the U.S. Senate will take part in a debate moderated by WNYC’s Morning Edition host Michael Hill on Monday, May 13 at the South Orange Performing Arts Center. Candidates Patricia Campos-Medina, Larry Hamm, and Andy Kim will face questions on critical issues facing the state. Listen to the broadcast at …
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A year after Jordan Neely's death, a push to make attacking NY's homeless a hate crime
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One year after homeless New Yorker Jordan Neely was choked to death on the New York City subway by a fellow rider, homeless advocates are pushing to reinvigorate a long-dormant bill that could make targeting homeless people a hate crime.The Homeless Protection Act would make homeless individuals a protected class in New York, awarding them the same…
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