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  • We get updates on the potential local impacts from Hurricane Milton.
  • On tonight's program: Florida’s Amendment Four sparks a furious media battle between supporter and opponents; Governor DeSantis and the state’s First Lady turn their attention from Amendment Four to Amendment Three; Are there possible conflicts between medical and recreational marijuana in Florida? There are some who say there are; Florida’s status as a red state keeps growing. But at least one Democratic operative is predicting voter pushback will come, someday; Much has been said about how the issues facing young people are different from oldervoters. But some new reporting suggests there are more similarities than differences; and Florida’s attorney general says it’s time state authorities got involved in the case involving a gunman discovered lurking near Donald Trump’s Mar A Lago golf course.
  • We talk with the reporter behind a yearlong investigation into why the acclaimed arts school became a magnet for sexual misconduct scandals.
  • A new report finds 34 children sent to the notorious school for boys ended up sentenced to death in Florida courts.
  • The director of the critically acclaimed “No Sleep Till” discusses the inspiration behind her locally shot and set film.
  • The University of North Florida's first faculty fellow for artificial intelligence explains what we need to watch, anticipate and possibly even fear.
  • How a promise made 17 years ago led the First Coast News anchorman to help a stranger with leukemia.
  • From a police punching video to political perceptions in a new GOP poll, we talk about all the week’s biggest headlines with our panel of journalists.
  • On this week’s program, protecting children from gun violence. Then, the benefits of breastfeeding.
  • This week on The Florida Roundup, we spoke with Gainesville Mayor Harvey Ward about the state’s plans to audit the city in addition to other local municipalities as part of its effort to reduce unnecessary government spending (00:00). We also spoke about those efforts with the Miami Herald’s Alexandra Glorioso (09:22), who stuck around for our conversation about how Florida is once again at the center of the Epstein case (14:02). Then, we looked at how federal and state cuts to public broadcasting will affect public media in Florida with Paul Grove, president and CEO of WEDU — West Central Florida’s PBS station — and Judith Smelser, president and general manager of Central Florida Public Media, based in Orlando (19:32). Plus, a roundup of immigration news from across the state (37:24).
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