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
OFF AIR NOTICE: June 27 & 28:
Due to necessary tower maintenance, WEOS will be off the air this Saturday from 11AM to 4PM and Sunday from 8AM to 4PM approximately. You can listen online at WEOS.ORG. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
This week's Short Wave news roundup
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks to Regina Barber and Emily Kwong of NPR's Short Wave about an ancient magma ocean on the moon, the snake problem of Florida's Everglades, and why scrolling through video clips bores us.
Listen
•
8:01
The science of siblings and their unusual shared quirks
We meet a brother and sister who share an oddity and in their family, this quirk is unique to them. Sharing an oddball trait isn't that common with siblings unless you're an identical twin.
Listen
•
5:57
Meet Molly Lewis, professional whistler
You may have also heard Molly Lewis' work on the Barbie movie. Lewis is a professional whistler with a new album called On The Lips that's out now via Jagjaguwar.
Listen
•
4:10
This week in science: shared rhythm, electric fish and a methane-tracking satellite
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Regina Barber and Anil Oza about rhythms and the brain, how electric fish sense their environment, and a new methane-detecting satellite.
Listen
•
8:01
White House scrambles to address voters' affordability concerns as Trump dismisses it
When Democrats swept last week's elections, affordability emerged as a key issue for voters. President Trump dismissed those concerns, but his administration is taking the political risk seriously.
Listen
•
3:59
How to tackle talking about money in your personal relationships
Life Kit reporter Andee Tagle talks with experts about how to manage situations when money makes relationships murky.
Listen
•
3:47
Morning news brief
The House could vote next week on the release of the Epstein files, the longest government shutdown in history has ended, with ACA subsidies unaddressed, health insurance shoppers are left in limbo.
Listen
•
11:19
'We want to help': Why climate activists are trying something new
A recent disruption at An Enemy of the People on Broadway by Extinction Rebellion shows a new approach to climate change activism.
Listen
•
7:03
There will be no third party candidate from centrist group No Labels
NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with No Labels co-founder Holly Page about the group's announcement that it won't field a candidate in this year's presidential election.
Listen
•
4:59
'The wolf was his best friend,' a son remembers his father who served in WWII
Growing up in 1950s St. Louis, Judd Esty-Kendall remembers his father taking in wild animals. He told his own son about a special bond that his dad had with one animal in particular.
Listen
•
3:26
Previous
191 of 15,849
Next