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On tonight’s program: A mass shooting on the campus of Florida State University in Tallahassee has left two dead and six hospitalized, including the suspected shooter; A meeting to untangle some of the issues surrounding the Hope Florida Foundation and its alleged diversion of money for political purposes ended in chaos today; If lawsuits to halt the Trump administration from scrapping Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for immigrants fail, nearly 400,000 Venezuelan-born Floridians might be subject to deportation; And advocates of term limits for Florida’s county commissioners and school board members have launched a campaign to put those limits into the state constitution.
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This week on Speaking Of… longleaf pines thrive with regular fire, and humans attempt to aid that with prescribed burns. But fire predates our use of it, leaving humans to try to mimic how fires once burned naturally. Rob Diaz de Villegas talks with Dr. Jean Huffman, a dendrochronologist who is using tree stumps to extract some surprising information from the tree-ring record about fires. Also, Rachel Elspeth Gross joins host Josh Johnson for a wide-ranging conversation on her inspirations, thoughts on art, and future goals. And… we explore the intersection between fast fashion, trade, and tariffs.
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The Capital Tiger Bay Club heard from Florida Senate Minority Leader, Senator Jason Pizzo (D-Hollywood) on Friday, January 24 at the Donald L. Tucker Civic Center. Senator Pizzo talked about the post-2024 election cycle and the pre-2025 legislative session.
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This week on Speaking Of… there are several respiratory illnesses going around, and while most are only affecting your heath… one is already hurting people's wallets. Also… Josh Johnson sits down with the Co-owner of Halisi Africa, a local Afro-fusion restaurant. And we talk to a Youtuber that turned cleaning into content!
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This week, 411 Teen sits down with Randall Woodfin, mayor of Birmingham Alabama. We discuss his journey through politics as well as his memoir "Son of Birmingham".
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Experts say a standoff between Governor Ron DeSantis and the legislature on proposed immigration legislation could be about political ambition; Undocumented immigrants in Florida are worried about what the fight between the governor and the legislature could mean for their futures; Florida’s agriculture commissioner shares his experience with addressing illegal immigration; We’ll hear local reaction to a proposal from President Donald Trump that Could do away with FEMA; The federal government appears to be taking a page from Governor Ron DeSantis’ book as the Department of education says complaints about book bans are unfounded; And we’ll hear about a new approach to tackling Red Tide
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This week on Speaking Of… after many years at the helm as WFSU’s Director of Content, Kim Kelling is retiring. She looks back with Gina Jordan on her decades-long career. Plus, Tom is about town visiting our local bookstores! And, we look into the effects social media can have on mental health--especially for younger users.
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Amber Bixby is a first-year MA student in rhetoric and composition at Florida State University. Her research interests include public sphere and digital rhetorics, popular culture and nostalgia studies, and poetry. Amber also works as the Editor-in-Chief for the online publication Asterisks & Anomalies and has recently published her poem "Window Cling Art" in (a) river rising's sixth volume Metamorphosis.
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On tonight's Capital Report: Florida lawmakers will come to Tallahassee on Monday for a special session; Governor DeSantis wants the federal government to turn over its Everglades restoration program to the State of Florida; It wasn’t exactly a winter wonderland, but a big chunk of North Florida was hit this week by a mix of snow and sleet. Although weather experts point out this isn’t the first time; Although not everyone who endured the frigid assault was unhappy; The head of Florida’s House Democrats talks about the challenges of being so dominated by those in the other party; Speaking of challenge, Florida Democrats are picking new leaders this weekend. Although organizers of the event hope it will project a positive message about the party; And one of those who worked most closely with President Jimmy Carter has memories and stories that didn’t get much coverage during the former president’s funeral earlier this month.
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This week on Speaking Of… Tallahassee recently became a winter wonderland after receiving several inches of snow, and to find out more about this weather event, Gina Jordan sits down with Florida Public Radio Emergency Network meteorologist Megan Borowski. Plus, Tristan Wood talks with RaMell Ross, the director of the newly released and critically acclaimed film based on the Dozier School for Boys, titled "Nickel Boys". And we’ll also discuss budgeting for the new year.
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Christell Victoria Roach is a doctoral student in the English Literature and Creative Writing PhD program at Florida State University. She is a Miami writer using poetry to build monuments to Blackness, Blueswomen, and the Southern Tropics. Christell is an archival writer producing creative work and theory surrounding her relationship to place, people, and living history. As a descendent of the TransAtlantic Slave trade, of Black Miami, and the Caribbean — her work is a love offering to those who survived so she could live.
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This week, 411 Teen talks with Meg Applegate, activist, advocate and author of "Becoming Unsilenced", which exposes the abuses and corruptions within the Troubled Teen Industry, of which she had first hand experience.