Skip to main content
Search Query
Show Search
News
Music
Our Team
Programs
Support
Membership
Corporate Support
Vehicle Donation
Membership
Corporate Support
Vehicle Donation
Schedule
Listen to WEOS on your smart speaker
Listen to WEOS on your smart speaker
About
© 2026 WEOS
Menu
Finger Lakes Public Radio
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
WEOS FM
All Streams
News
Music
Our Team
Programs
Support
Membership
Corporate Support
Vehicle Donation
Membership
Corporate Support
Vehicle Donation
Schedule
Listen to WEOS on your smart speaker
Listen to WEOS on your smart speaker
About
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
Is It OK For Boys To Cry?
We may be more accepting of boys who cry, but only if they cry in the right way, Hanna Rosin suggests. The norm for male behavior may be stuck in a place that isn't doing boys much good.
Vermont Insurers Must Now Cover Vasectomies
State legislatures around the U.S. are debating which birth control benefits insurers must cover. Vermont is one of several states going beyond a focus on female contraception to include vasectomies.
Listen
•
3:57
Rio's Governor Declares 'State Of Calamity' Ahead Of Olympic Games
Just seven weeks before the opening ceremony of the Olympics, the governor of Rio de Janeiro has declared a "state of calamity." He says the state's government is bankrupt.
As Led Zeppelin Faces Copyright Charges, The Line Between Plagiarism And Homage
Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant and Jimmy Page were in court this week answering charges of copyright infringement. Forensic musicologist Joe Bennett and NPR's Scott Simon discuss.
Listen
•
4:43
The Week In Sports
NPR's Scott Simon and Howard Bryant of ESPN.com talk about the latest from the NBA finals, and a few stars in the world of baseball.
Listen
•
4:40
Shanghai To London: What It's Like To Raise A Family Overseas
NPR's Frank Langfitt and his family are moving to London this summer, after five years in Shanghai. He tells NPR's Scott Simon what it's been like to raise a family overseas.
Listen
•
4:52
What Clinton, Trump Responses To Orlando Say About Their Foreign Policy
Scott Simon talks with Council On Foreign Relations President Richard Haass about the presumptive nominees' reactions to the Orlando shootings and their different views of America's role in the world.
Listen
•
4:33
My Big Sister Was Gunned Down In Charleston One Year Ago
On June 17, 2015, Malcolm Graham learned that his sister, Cynthia Graham Hurd, a librarian and a devout Christian, was one of nine victims shot and killed at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston.
Going There: 50 Years After The Chicago Freedom Movement
In 1966, Martin Luther King Jr. visited Chicago to fight for fair and open housing. NPR's Michel Martin and WBEZ examined the state of activism in Chicago around fair housing and other issues today.
Listen
•
7:27
Barbershop: Taking Stock Of Orlando With Members Of The LGBTQ Community
Queer 2.0 host Jacob Tobia, pediatric nurse Alexis Joy Agsaulio, and etiquette writer Steven Petrow talk about how the LGBTQ community is processing the shooting in Orlando, and social media reaction.
Listen
•
11:09
Previous
1,573 of 15,887
Next