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This week, we kept you up to date with the fire recovery efforts in Hawaii. Hear stories shared by some of the heroes and survivors of the fire: ➡️ Doctor Reza Danesh opened his mobile clinic a few years ago. He hits the road in a Sprinter fan that he has outfitted to make patients feel at home. ➡️ Estrella Arquero and her husband lead Koinonia Pentecostal Church, where 20 members of their Filipino congregation are sleeping after they lost their homes. She says she's called to care for people. ➡️ When everyone was trying to escape the flames in Lahaina, Luz Vargas ran toward them to save her son, who was home alone. She found his body days later. Today would have been his 15th birthday. ➡️ Jason Musgrove has been working nonstop to retrace his 69-year-old mother's steps and find out what happened to her. She was last seen being escorted out of her apartment building on Aug. 8. ➡️ Residents aren't just grappling with the loss of human life. They're still trying to understand the loss of priceless artifacts and their connections to the island's ancient past. Last weekend, more than 2,000 people pitted their skills against eight leading AI chatbots at the Def Con hacking convention in Las Vegas. They were tasked with identifying vulnerabilities in the technology. One college student tricked a chatbot into revealing credit card information. The U.S. electricity system still runs mostly on fossil fuels. Thousands of solar and wind projects are available — but the aging transmission system isn't robust enough to connect them all, and building new transmission lines will take years. Experts say grid-enhancing technologies like laser sensors can help speed up the transition. |
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HumaNature, from Wyoming Public Media: Explore where humans and our habitat meet through real stories about human experiences in nature. The Angry Therapist Podcast, from American Public Media: Licensed therapist and life coach John Kim delivers his casual self-help advice three times a week. 🎧 Is your ex living in your head rent-free? Evict them and get those thoughts of your former love off your mind with Kim's advice. Food, We Need to Talk from PRX: Hosts Juna Gjata and Dr. Eddie Phillips take a science-based, humor-laced approach to your burning health and fitness questions. 🎧 What's the deal with protein? Everyone says it's important, but how much do you need? When should you eat it? What if you're vegan? Find out how protein impacts your health and which supplements you shouldn't waste your money on. |
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Black Stories, Black Truths: NPR's New Campaign Celebrates the Black ExperienceTurn on NPR today and you’ll hear a range of voices as varied, nuanced, and Black as the country we reflect. That’s because NPR sounds like whichever one of our hosts is at the mic, and all the passions, quirks, and lived experiences they bring with them. Introducing Black Stories, Black Truths: a video series, a collection of podcast episodes, and—most importantly—a celebration of Black voices in journalism. Our voices aren’t a monolith, and neither is public media. Welcome to NPR, noir. Click here to check out the feed, or search “NPR Black Stories, Black Truths” wherever you get podcasts. |
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I have long tried to avoid saying LOL in emails and text messages. For one, I usually wasn’t laughing out loud when I thumbed someone a message. For another, a man of my years saying LOL reminds me of middle-aged (you know, over 30) teachers in my high school who would say, “Groovy, man!” to try to sound cool and hip (two more words that also betray my ... maturity). But I have young daughters. So I strive to be more fluent in their language. I would reply to their messages with LOL, while they would reply with ROFL — rolling on the floor laughing — or even LMAO — which I don’t believe I can spell out in this newsletter unless I’m quoting a U.N. official. But now, articles have appeared in the MSM (get it?) to announce that the phrase of the moment, or at least the next few months, is IJBOL. It means, "I just burst out laughing." I gather the acronym was minted to convey erupting with a belly laugh in a situation that otherwise calls for decorum (like, say, being in the middle of a tax audit). It’s reported to be especially popular with K-pop fans. That, of course, means millions of people. I’m told there’s even an official pronunciation of IJBOL: eej-bowl. I’ll try. But to revert once more to a phrase from a previous generation, “Every time I find out where it’s at, somebody goes and moves it.” IJBOWL. LMAO. WTM. WTF. |
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