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AT&T To Buy Time Warner For $85 Billion
It emerged Saturday that AT&T is set to buy Time Warner for about $85 billion. If approved by federal regulators, the merger would create a mammoth media and telecommunications company.
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3:34
Dreadlocks Decision Raises Another Question: What Is Race?
Many experts agree with an appeals court's decision last month that dreadlocks aren't a common racial characteristic. But left undecided: What's a common racial characteristic?
Sexism Is Out In The Open In The 2016 Campaign. That May Have Been Inevitable
With Hillary Clinton, the first woman to head a major party ticket on the ballot, it was always likely there'd be undercurrents of sexism. What surprising is just how out in the open it has been.
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5:09
Police Facial Recognition Databases Log About Half Of Americans
A new report from Georgetown Law's Center on Privacy and Technology says all it takes is a driver's license to be included in the searchable databases. Rachel Martin talks to co-author Alvaro Bedoya.
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3:57
Trump Supporters Point To Gore-Bush As A Precedent For Refusal Of Election Results
Some supporters of Donald Trump look to the election of 2000, when Al Gore conceded to George W. Bush not once but twice — five weeks apart. NPR senior editor and correspondent Ron Elving explains.
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4:54
A Palestinian Preaches Positive Thinking To A Tough Crowd: His Own People
Motivational speaker Saed Karzoun has a tough sell in the West Bank as he tries to preach optimism and self-empowerment at a time when pessimism runs high among Palestinians.
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3:56
In 'Fire At Sea,' Glimpse The Migrant Crisis From The Heart Of Mediterranean
Filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi talks about his documentary Fire at Sea. The film tells the story of the ongoing migrant crisis as experienced by residents of Lampedusa, an island off the coast of Sicily.
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6:31
Atlantic Editor On Acrimony In U.S.: 'I Have To Imagine That It Actually Gets Worse'
Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic's new editor, tells NPR about the magazine's unexpected endorsement of Hillary Clinton for president and anti-Semitic tweets directed at him and other journalists.
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7:02
Improved U.S.-Cuba Relations Are Creating A Surge Of Cuban Migrants
Cuban migrants have received preferential treatment for more than a half-century. But as the U.S. and Cuba normalize relations, that policy could change and Cubans are racing to reach U.S. shores.
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6:50
Longtime Progressive Activist Tom Hayden Dies At 76
Hayden was a radical anti-war activist in the '60s, and was famously prosecuted in the Chicago Seven conspiracy trial. He later became a politician and always remained an advocate for liberal causes.
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