Here & Now
Summary: NPR and WBUR's live midday news program
- Visit Website
- RSS
- Artist: WBUR and NPR
- Copyright: Copyright Trustees of Boston University
Podcasts:
Hour two of Here & Now's June 7, 2016 broadcast.
Hour one of Here & Now's June 7, 2016 broadcast.
Hour one of Here & Now's June 6, 2016 broadcast.
Hour two of Here & Now's June 6, 2016 broadcast.
Stories from this broadcast: Clinton, Trump Trade Names, Sanders Says He Has 'Excellent Chance' To Win California; IMF Post On Neoliberalism Raises Questions About Organization's Policies; Social Media Buzz: A Bible In Emojis, And A Pakistani Bill Allowing Abuse; Economists Caught Off Guard By A Weak Jobs Report; Legal Drama Surrounds 93-Year-Old Media Mogul Sumner Redstone; Summer TV Brings Horror Shows, New Seasons Of Streaming Favorites
Stories from this broadcast: U.S. Economy Adds A Paltry 38,000 Jobs In May; In Texas, Women's Access To Health Care Could Hurt Efforts To Deal With Zika; 'Silver Linings Playbook' Author Explores Conformity, Mental Health In New Teen Novel; Teenagers Create Impromptu Exhibit At San Francisco Museum Of Modern Art; European Union Pays African States In Attempt To Stem Migration; Massachusetts Town Reflects On Year Of Treating, Not Arresting, Opioid Addicts
Stories from this broadcast: Massachusetts Moves Closer To Transgender Bathroom Protections; UCLA Investigating Doors That Couldn't Be Secured During Campus Shooting; World On Pace To Install 700 Million More Air Conditioners By 2030; Don't Like The Weather? Build A Mountain; Federal Government Proposes New Rules Aimed At Payday Lenders; DJ Sessions: Pittsburgh's Unexpectedly Diverse Music Culture; One Year After Floods, Still No Relief For This Small Texas Town
Stories from this broadcast: Clinton Aims At Trump In 'Major Foreign Policy Speech'; Is Donald Trump Getting Too Much Media Coverage?; Our Bodies Ourselves Marches On, Into The 21st Century; NBA Finals Tip Off Tonight In Repeat Of Last Year's Championship; Mountaineers Launch Mission To Recover Lost World War II Soldiers; Nashville High Schoolers Train As Baristas To Help Themselves Through College; Do Meal Kits Provide Great Taste Along with Convenience?
Stories from this broadcast: Court Documents Paint A Sketchy Picture Of Trump University; Former Heroin Addict Helps Users Get Treatment; Former Senator George Mitchell On Intractable Mid-East Issues; In Record Year, World Pours $286 Billion Into Renewable Energy; Teachers Around The Country Get Creative To Improve Student Literacy; Searching For An Alternative Brain Cancer Cure While Fighting The FDA
Stories from this broadcast: 6 Killed In New Wave Of Texas Floods, Which Could Worsen This Week; Idaho Teen Sues School District Over Racism, Bullying He Says Led To Rape; Why It's So Difficult For Presidents To Ask For Less Energy Use; Switzerland Opens World's Longest, Deepest Rail Tunnel; Irish-Influenced Musician Aoife O'Donovan On Her Top American Playlist; How Much Should Hikers Rely On GPS, Or Smartphones?
Stories from this broadcast: After Weeks Of Delay, Trump Unveils Veterans Group Donations; In Less Than A Week, More Than 1,000 People Drowned In The Mediterranean; Author Jojo Moyes Takes 'Me Before You' From Page To Screen; Striking Verizon Workers Head Back To Work After Deal; How A Cheese Factory Can Change A Colorado Landscape; NBA Deploys 3D Video For Virtual Reality Replays; Weighing The Costs And Benefits Of TSA Delays
Stories from this broadcast: Animal Rights Groups Angered Over Silverback Gorilla Shooting; The Kerner Report Is Reissued, As Its Issues Still Resonate; American Tennis Player Shelby Rogers Makes It To French Open Quarter Finals; Water Level At Lake Mead, The Country's Largest Reservoir, Is At Historic Low; Want To Be A Cop In Philadelphia? No College Needed
Stories from this broadcast: Sanders Campaigns In California, Clintons March In Memorial Day Parade; Reporter's Search For A Snowy Owl Takes Him From Maryland To Ontario; What Is The State Of The Airline Industry?; From The Sugar Cane Plantation To The International Swimming Stage; Magic And Music At A South Florida Toll Booth; The Nation, And A Father, Honor The War Dead
Stories from this broadcast: VA Mistakenly Calls Thousands Of Living Veterans Dead, Canceling Their Benefits; Caring For The Caregivers; New Richard Russo Novel, 'Everybody's Fool,' Examines The State Of The Working Class; Rock Creek Park—Washington, D.C.'s Urban Oasis; The Future Of Driverless Cars Is Now; Foxconn And China Turn To Robots
Stories from this broadcast: New Drug-Resistant Bacteria Seen In U.S. For The First Time; The Man Who Filmed The Aftermath Of Atomic Destruction; Louisiana's 'Blue Lives Matter' Law Makes It A Hate Crime To Target Police; New York Considers A Ban On Declawing Cats; Facebook And Microsoft Team Up On Undersea Internet Cable; How Trump, Clinton And Sanders Change Their Voices To Win Over Voters; Netflix Programming Boom Means New Dramas, Cooking Shows And Sandler Flicks