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Facing the Future of a Shrinking Lake Powell
As the West grows increasingly arid, Lake Powell, the nation’s second-largest reservoir, is dwindling. Its retreat has revealed glimpses of the storied red rock canyon submerged for decades under hundreds of feet of water. Environmental advocate Eric Balken says the facts of Lake Powell’s retreat and Glen Canyon’s return pose significant challenges, as well as exciting opportunities.
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51:46
How Intergenerational Trauma Works
In 2013, researchers trained mice to fear a certain odor. Over time, the study revealed that the next generation of mice had a sensitivity to that odor. Something similar happens to humans, too.
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51:30
The Creative Genius Of Buster Keaton
Film critic Dana Stevens says Buster Keaton is a mirror of his cultural era.
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51:33
The Power Of The Private Confessional
Recent reporting from the Associated Press on child sexual abuse raises important questions about the usefulness of clergy-penitent privilege.
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51:30
The Oldest Cure in the World
If you’re online at all, you’ve probably heard the news: fasting dramatically improves your health, even cures diseases. Will it really?
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51:30
When the Moon Turns to Blood
In late 2019, a boy and a girl went missing in southeastern Idaho. The police investigation centered on the children’s mother, Lori Vallow, and her husband, Chad Daybell. It was a complex case piled with bodies, and to the journalist Leah Sottile, it was more than just a true-crime story.
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51:31
The Science Of Heartbreak
When journalist Florence Williams’ husband left their long marriage, she was heartbroken. But the breakup left more than an emotional wound: the damage was physical, too.
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51:30
The History Of Water
The climate scientist and writer Giulio Boccaletti makes the case that the history of human civilization is inextricably tied to one simple and yet powerful force: water.
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51:30
A Journey To The Edge Of Madness
The poet and journalist Melissa Bond had terrible insomnia. Her doctor prescribed Ativan, a benzodiazepine. Then her life fell apart.
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51:29
The Hidden History Of Gay D.C.
Queer people have worked at all levels of our nation’s politics and government. But in the mid 20th century, when being queer was vilified — and often associated with Communism, Nazism, and plotting against America — coming out was tantamount to social obliteration and career annihilation. So people hid.
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51:30
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